ou score marsh gruszczynska 9 m ar2010

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This is our back-up powerpoint presentation for the Open University SCORE regional meeting (the presentation we used can be accessed here http://prezi.com/jphb_wf-4wkz/)

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EVALUATING THE PRACTICE OF OPENING UP RESOURCES FOR LEARNING AND TEACHING IN SOCIAL SCIENCES

Darren Marsh, C-SAP

Anna Gruszczynska, C-SAP

Social sciences perspective on OERs

Motivations Challenges Critique Communities of practice model Collaborative methodology

Materials submitted: 6 partners, 4 subjects, 360 credits

Partner name/ institution Modules released Credit weighting

No. of discrete items (usually includes module handbook, lecture slides, assessment material etc.)

Pam Lowe, Aston University [Sociology]

Comparative sociology 10 10Embodiment 10 10Gender and society 10 11Race and ethnicity 10 10Sociology of health and illness

10 9

Sociology of reproduction 10 11Angels Trias i Valls, Regent’s College (materials were produced during a previous role at Lampeter University) [Anthropology]

Anthropological ideas 20 1Exploring religions and cultures

20 27

Visual anthropology 20 25

Cathy Gormley-Heenan, University of Ulster [Politics]

Government of UK and Ireland

20 13

Public policy 20 12State crime 20 12

Jon Parker, Keele University [Politics]

Mass media in America 15 17Why politics matters 15 11Politics of sustainability 15 24British politics since 1945 15 13

Dave Harris, MARJON (Plymouth) [Sociology]

Sociology of leisure 3010

Introduction to research methods

30 11

Helen Jones, Manchester Metropolitan University [Criminology]

International e-communication exchange

15 9

Learning and employability 15 7Gender, crime and justice 15 15Crime and violence 15 12

Series of development activities

“Before” and “after” narratives

Encouraging reflection

Mapping the modules

Providing the context

An iterative process

Shared working space: pbworks wiki

Teaching materials

Tacit understandings Localised Context-bound Located on institutional VLEs The need to tease out the teaching

rationale

Some propositions for pedagogical frameworks

What is a pedagogical framework? The point is not to construct one ideal pedagogical framework; but neither are all possible frameworks equally satisfactory.

Goodyear, P & Jones, C (2004) Pedagogical frameworks for DNER (Distributed National Electronic Resource)

Some propositions about the framework for the use and re-use of open educational resources: Part 1

a. courses are designed as 'sets' of modules (i.e. they have been modularised)

b. modules (in line with HE convention and practice) are aligned with learning outcomes, and a form of assessment

c. the contextualisation of modules involves intent that is often implicit / tacit / invisible - and constructing them to be shared requires this intent to be re-examined by a) the originator b) future user(s)

Some propositions about the framework for the use and re-use of open educational resources: Part 2

d. the re-use of modules that require strong context might afford (cultural) reproduction rather than a (re)design for learning

e. stripping away contextual info in modules in order that they might be re-used is problematic in that insufficient structure may remain for others to use

Dimensions of transformation:

translation ownership re-userecontextualisation

Producing materials which are:

Shareable Customisable Accessible Pedagogically robust Open (CC licensing)

Case studies

Partners’ reflections on the process: before, during, after

Focused around one module but reflect across the scope of the project

Project toolkit

MapDiagnose

Generate (work in progress!)

Questions? Comments?

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