open, share, learn: the university of michigan's open educational resources

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The Open.Michigan initiative provides a platform for faculty, students and staff to share their educational resources and research with the world. This initiative operates on the principles that universities have a responsibility to share the knowledge and resources they create, as well as, provide the transparency necessary for the health and growth of educational institutions. As faculty and academic communities become aware of the opportunities for innovation, sharing and collaboration afforded by OER, they will incorporate these practices more fully into their everyday processes.

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Except where otherwise noted, this work is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.Copyright 2011 The Regents of the University of Michigan

Open, Share, Learn:

The University of Michigan’s Open

Educational Resources

e-Cornucopia: 2011: The Open Digital University

May 26, 2011

http://open.umich.edu

Emily Puckett Rodgers,Open Education

Coordinator

Brenda Anderson

FindView and download course materials and educational resources made by the U-M communityShareLearn how to create your own open resources and share them on the web using tools and guides.ConnectExplore the U-M open community and its many projects.open.umich.edu

There are two principles on which Open.Michigan is founded:

1) Public universities have a responsibility to share the knowledge and resources they

create with the public they serve.

2) We are dedicated to increasing knowledge dissemination across

the higher education community through encouraging a culture of

sharing.

knowledge

Sharing

Learning

Creativity

CC: BY-SA bengrey “Sharing”

Standing on the shoulders of giants…(and sharing what you know with others)

Some rights reserved: a spectrum.

Public Domain

least restrictive

most restrictiveAdaptability

means…TranslationLocalization

Bridge materialsInnovation

Collaboration

All Rights Reserved

licenses Share, Reuse Remix--Legally

Open Access &

OA: Open Access

OER: Open Educational Resources

•OA focuses on sharing content, but no underlying licensing requirement

•OER includes any educational content that is shared under an open license

OA

OER

“The Health OER program provides the opportunity for the University of Michigan health science schools and the School of Information to collaborate in an innovative, comprehensive approach to work with others to improve education opportunities for health care providers globally.”

James O. Woolliscroft, M.D., Dean, U-M Medical School.

U-M receives grant to provide free, open online electronic health professions educational materials

dScribe, short for "digital and distributed scribes," is a participatory and collaborative model for creating open content. It brings together enrolled students, staff, faculty, and self-motivated learners to work together toward the common goal of creating content that is openly licensed and available to people throughout the world.

open.umich.edu/dscribe

Intellectual Property and

Copyright Policy tools

and resources developed by Open.Michiga

n

open.umich.edu/oerca

OERca is a web-based content clearing application that supports the dScribe process. People engaged in the process of creating open content can use OERca to organize materials, track changes within the resource, manage rights and license information, and collaborate with others with whom you’re working to create and clear content.

groups.google.com/group/oer-dScribe

OERbit provides a basic set of functionality for OER/OCW publishers, including course and resource-based navigation, flexible content hierarchies, Creative Commons license integration, and RSS distribution, as well as RDFa output.

open.umich.edu/oerbit

Measurable Activities

• Building communities of OER producers and users

• Consulting and Outreach Services to facilitate OER production

• Development of Processes and Software to support OER production and publishing

Guiding Objectives • How and Why is our OER being

used? • Who is using our OER? • What value does OER bring to U-

M? • In what contexts are people

using our OER?

From the Vision document

From the Evaluation plan

http://tinyurl.com/omevaluation

http://tinyurl.com/openmichiganvision

(Some) ResultsThemes from survey comments

• Establish Open.Michigan in main channels of U-M communication

• Clarify copyright in OER and provide resources

• Consistently define Open.Michigan and OER

• Describe why/how to use/create OER• Make short-term improvements to OER• Encourage cultural shifts in learning

CC: BY Emily Puckett Rodgers

1) Public universities have a

responsibility to share

the knowledge and

resources they create with

the public they serve.

2) We are dedicated to

increasing knowledge

dissemination across the

higher education community

through encouraging a

culture of sharing.

In the next three years, Open.Michigan will:

① Produce more and richer content as OER with the various campus units, improve modularity, instructional design, and accessibility of U-M OER

② Increase the visibility and discoverability of U-M resources through a combination of marketing and metadata

③ Draw participants from more parts of campus to expand its disciplinary coverage

④ Ensure OER production is an embedded part of the academic life on campus

https://open.umich.edu/wiki/Badges

CC: BY-NC-SA adafruit “Soldering badge”

A badge is a symbol of identity, signifying a level of achievement or character, participation in an

event or activity, or belonging to a group.

Open.Michigan wants to harness the excitement created by those who share or advocate for sharing scholarly material and use that

to gain momentum in the open education movement at the

University of Michigan.

What’s next at Open.Michigan?

OER is made

and shared

across the

world!

Tips for all content creation:

1. Choose your LicenseBe clear about your license choice and about what it covers.

2. Use Open Content! Promote open content by using open content and remixing others’ work

3. Attribute your sources!Include license info and link to license on website

4. Make it adaptable!Make your content available in multiple file formats (pdf, .ppt, .odt, .doc, etc) Ensure that users can download your content, not simply access.

Tools you can use: All legal. (and there are lots more.)

oerglue.com

openattribute.com

open.umich.edu/oerbitccmixter.org

Contact:

Emily Puckett RodgersOpen Education Coordinator,Open.Michigan

epuckett@umich.edu@epuckett

open.umich.edu

“Share your ideas” by britbohlinger

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