ISummit '08 - iCommons

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ISummit '08 - iCommons


Outline Timothy and Garin's Thought Dump

Contents

I. Our Process: dScribe

Model

  • What does it propose? What is it?
  • The dScribe approach to OER publishing:
    • The dScribe initiative is a holistic process that builds upon an existing student-faculty educational relationship to gather, vet, and publish materials on an OER site. dScribe is an opportunity to mobilize student activity in the teaching and learning environment and generate a powerful new participatory paradigm for higher education institutions worldwide.
    • This educational project creates a framework for a cost-effective intellectual property review process and lays out a set of best practices so that other institutions can begin to make decisions about how to effectively publish learning material.
  • The software tools that we’re developing provide institutions around the world with the tools that they need to begin the process of OER publishing. The software is open source, etc.
  • Informed by:
  • Supports:
    • Supports Fair Use: open.michigan demonstrates an awareness of and respect for the right we have to use content for teaching, learning, discourse, commentary, etc.
    • Supports Local Learning Communities: open.michigan demonstrates an awareness of and respect for the approaches and intentions of Faculty

Why do it?

  • 1. Reaction: It builds upon existing OER publishing models.
    • Practical: cost, scaling, etc.
  • 2. Opportunity: Not just response, but an opportunity to build upon a unique educational relationship and mesh with other initiatives that promote a participatory culture.
    • An intermingling of practical and ideological goals: helps to scale OER process, builds upon the educational relationship and other participatory initiatives.
  • 3. Ideological: we have to look at where it comes from: dScribe is instructed by a new participatory culture and helps supports this infrastructure. This is where it scales.
  • 4. Realize the benefits to the approach: students become leaders, take on new roles as educators. Empowering students to take on more responsibility.
    • We’ve got a process through the dScribe model that is about scaling to other models.

Why is it unique

  • Fair Use: teach people to stand up for the rights that they have.
  • Our Thinking in general: create a process that others can learn from and use.
  • This is an educational project that creates a framework and set of best practices so that other institutions can begin to make decisions about publishing content. It’s about teaching.

Where is this going?

  • Open and Transparent process that can be used / implemented other places. Supported by the participants who also utilize the approach.

II. Connections

dScribe meshes with other initiatives that promote a participatory culture, such as…. dScribe flows from this and supports it.

Connecting to New Media Literacy

  • Jenkins: New education environments: People use copyrighted content: this is how we learn and teach. Pushing the closed content world. We need to support new processes.

Connecting to Other Projects

  • Best Practices for Fair Use in Documentary Film
  • User Generated Video: Quoting material in…
  • Notre Dame – pursuing the process of
  • Toronto
  • Medical School note-taking cooperatives.
  • Organizing without Organizations.
  • Participatory culture of anime; how does this connect to students wanting to do this for themselves, but also for the benefit of other students: is this just a side-effect? Web 2.0 effect and Network effect?

III. Questions

  • The Library’s Role
    • Deep Blue
  • Technologies:
    • Bluestream
    • OER Search Engine
  • Standards:
    • XMP metadata
  • Accessibility Issues
    • Translations
    • ADA
  • Legal
    • Licensing options; multiple
    • Fair use jurisdiction
  • Cultural Differences:
    • existing educational paradigms

IV. Conclusion: Why we’re interested in the iSummit and the iCommons

  • What we’re thinking here is that dScribe is a process and that we need the larger input of the Open Community to refine and perfect the model.
  • We also want to help people get away from the idea of OER being “free” - getting away from the whole free speech vs. free beer discussion, to show a how in practice, OER is something different. (It may be in terms of ideology, but not practice.) If people want something they can get it. They will get it.
  • What our model and initiative promotes, however, is that OER is a part of the new practice and new community of CC and Open. dScribe joins initiatives working to connecting communities to strengthen this new community.
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