Featured presentation at the OE Global conference of the Open Education Consortium, TU Delft, Netherlands, 25th April 2018. Focus on open education policies
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
Going Open: Leveraging Open Education to Enhance Teaching and Learning in the Digital Age
1. The European Commission’s
science and knowledge service
Joint Research Centre
Going Open in Europe:
Leveraging open education to enhance
teaching and learning in the digital age
Dr Andreia Inamorato
OE Global, 2018
Delft, Netherlands
24-26th April 2018
@aisantos
andreia-inamorato-dos.santos@ec.europa.eu
2. Openness: modernisation of
teaching and learning practices
• More access routes, content, pathways, etc
• Diverse pedagogical models
• Use of digital technologies
• Opportunities for innovation
• + challenges!
•
3. The European Commission and the
Open Education movement
- Advisory role
- No binding instruments: Member States are
autonomous regarding decisions about their
educational systems
- Different directorates perform different roles:
EAC (DG EDUCATION AND CULTURE)
JRC ( DG JOINT RESEARCH CENTRE)
4. Agenda setting instrument:
Communications
A Communication sets out an Action Plan for the EC
Three EC Communications point to open
education:
2013: Opening up Education
2017: A Renewed Agenda for HE
2017: School Development and Excellent
Teaching for a Great Start in Life
10. Openness as a core value
• Open education approaches education practices
through a set of core values, based on
transparency, sharing and collaboration. It
proposes a shift in mindset in order to allow the
implementation of a number of practices focused
on openness.
• Going Open Report, JRC 2017
13. OpenCases OpenCred MoocknowledgeOpenSurvey
OpenEdu Project
OpenEdu Framework
90+ stakeholders consulted
9 case studies 4 case studies 5 countries survey of learners
OpenEdu supports the 2013 Communication ' Opening up Education: Innovative Teaching and Learning
for all through New Technologies and Open Educational Resources
in-house
research
Final
Report
15. Opening up Education report, JRC 2016
It can be downloaded from:
http://bit.ly/openeduframework
16. Challenge # 2
• Focus on key areas in which little research
had been carried out
17.
18.
19. Report content overview
Identification and engaging with the key issues which are
influencing policy-makers and other key stakeholders in
considering the use of the Blockchain as a value-added
proposition within an education landscape (social value
proposition: 1. self-sovereignty and identity; 2: trust; 3.
transparency and provenance; 4. immutability; 5.
disintermediation and 6. collaboration)
Exploration of how education institutions and learners can
use the technology as a transparent, trusted system
for securing, sharing and verifying academic achievements
in Europe ( e.g. ontology of certifications, smart contracts,
digital signatures, grants issuing, etc)
20. Challenge # 3
• Make EU-based research evidence on open
education policies available for everyone
22. OpenEdu Policies
OpenEdu Policies
OpenEdu
Framework for HE
institutions
Research on
Member States'
OE policies
Workshop with
policy makers
on OE policies
Policy
Recommendations
Case studies on
28 Member
States
23.
24. Challenge # 4
• Make sense of those policies within the broad and
diverse educational landscape that we have in
Europe
29. • Four types
of policies
on Open
Education
Q2 Focusing on
ICT for learning
with some
components of
open education
Q4 Policies from
national open
government plans
with some
components of
open education
Q 3 Educational
strategy policies
with some
components of
open education
Q1 Focusing on
open education,
promoting OER
and open
educational
practices
Source: Case studies on policy approaches to OE,
JRC 2017 in collaboration with UNIR
30. • Four types
of policies
on Open
Education
Q2 Focusing on
ICT for learning
with some
components of
open education
Q4 Policies from
national open
government plans
with some
components of
open education
Q 3 Educational
strategy policies
with some
components of
open education
Q1 Focusing on
open education,
promoting OER
and open
educational
practices
31. Policy examples
• France’s Fun MOOC (National, Quadrant 1:
OE; OER and OEP)
• “In FUN MOOC universities benefit from traffic, learners and visibility. It is known
that these three aspects are very important for a successful MOOC strategy.
University membership in FUN MOOC is optional, but it is beneficial to universities to
become members because apart from these three aspects previously mentioned,
there is no cost related to infrastructure building. All is ready and available for
universities to use as they wish when they become members. They also benefit from
the platform's marketing and communication strategies. Fun MOOCs has 29
members, but under the umbrella of a 'member' there can be a network of
universities. In total, FUN MOOC has over 200 institutions using the platform, plus
external partners, which are in the range of 40 to date. ”
• ( Extract from ‘Policy Approaches to Open Education – EU Member States’, JRC 2017)
32. • Four types
of policies
on Open
Education
Q2 Focusing on
ICT for learning
with some
components of
open education
Q4 Policies from
national open
government plans
with some
components of
open education
Q 3 Educational
strategy policies
with some
components of
open education
Q1 Focusing on
open education,
promoting OER
and open
educational
practices
33. Policy examples
• Portugal’s Conta-nos uma história (National, Quadrant 2: ICT)
• Conta-nos uma história is a national initiative for schools with State
government support, which focuses on ICTs. It is a competition, in which
stories are submitted to the initiative's website by the schools. This
initiative fosters the use of media. As producers of content, students learn
to be responsible and critical consumers of media content. All the content
available on Conta-nos uma história is CC licensed. The initiative cross-
references with the following the access, content, pedagogy, leadership
and collaboration dimensions of the OpenEdu Framework.
• ( Extract from ‘Policy Approaches to Open Education – EU Member States’,
JRC 2017)
34. • Four types
of policies
on Open
Education
Q2 Focusing on
ICT for learning
with some
components of
open education
Q4 Policies from
national open
government plans
with some
components of
open education
Q 3 Educational
strategy policies
with some
components of
open education
Q1 Focusing on
open education,
promoting OER
and open
educational
practices
35. Policy Examples
• Flanders’ RPL Policy ( National, Q3)
• In the Flanders region in Belgium, open and online education is not itself a policy
objective; it is related to other HE policy objectives, with regards to
accessibility and flexibility, lifelong learning and innovation in HE. It is seen as a
tool that contributes to improving flexibility and innovation in HE. The legislation in
HE covers many different areas, including some aspects of open (and online)
education, such as recognition of prior learning – RPL (formal, non-formal and
informal learning). Thus, in Flanders, policies on open education (RPL specifically) are
embedded into higher-level policies.
• ( Extract from ‘Policy Approaches to Open Education – EU Member States’, JRC 2017)
36. • Four types
of policies
on Open
Education
Q2 Focusing on
ICT for learning
with some
components of
open education
Q4 Policies from
national open
government plans
with some
components of
open education
Q 3 Educational
strategy policies
with some
components of
open education
Q1 Focusing on
open education,
promoting OER
and open
educational
practices
37. Policy examples
• Greece’s Action Plan on Open Government
(National, Q4)
• In Greece, the 3rd National Action Plan on Open Government 2016-2018 has a
clear commitment to open education.
• The two main projects (initiatives) of open education that were launched by the
Ministry as part of the Action Plan were Open Academic Lessons and the repository
Photodentro. These projects aimed to create open lessons on all academic levels
for everyone. Some of the policy dimensions of the 3rd National Action Plan on Open
Government 2016-2018 are: open data (access), open materials (OER), open
lessons (pedagogy), open collaboration, open research, and open source
(technology).
• ( Extract from ‘Policy Approaches to Open Education – EU Member States’, JRC 2017)
38. Challenge # 5
• How to create an ecosystem to foster
open education?
41. Open Education Ecosystem
1. awareness raising
2. regulation, legislation and funding
3. partnerships
4. teachers' professional development
5. accreditation and recognition of learning
6. open educational resources
7. support and infrastructure
8. research and evaluation
42.
43.
44. Important finding from OpenEdu
Policies study:
• “Most MS have implemented some type of
initiative on open education, but there’s still a
long way to go. In most MS the vision of open
education is rather broad, going beyond OER and
open content – even if in a number of MS, when
this vision is applied to actual policy, the
approach is still limited to OER”.
• Policy Approaches to Open Education report, JRC 2017
45. What’s next?
• …
• Challenge #6
• Strengthening institutional and national-level
leadership on open education
46. Current opportunities – policy
agenda:
Creating the European Education Area by 2025
(Council REC, 2018)
European Network of Universities (HE COMM, 2017)
(Could we have OE contemplated in each network
sub-set?)
New HE Plataform- one stop shop for HE
New Europass Decision (accepted this month)
How best integrate non-formal learning?
Communication on Mutual Recognition of
Diplomas (COMM,UPCOMING)
47. The most important shared understanding in
relation to open education is that it is not a case of
one size fits all. Flexibility is the key to operating
within this complex scenario, and it is also vital to
have a strategy in place.
Going Open report, JRC 2017
48. Bernard Shaw:
• “The reasonable man adapts himself to
the world; the unreasonable man persists
in trying to adapt the world to himself.
Therefore all progress depends on the
unreasonable man.”
Open Education (OE) is not only (or not just) about OER and MOOcs
Open Education is about Opening up Education (OE), modernising and innovating our HE systems in Europe through the use of digital technologies
There is no shared understanding what OE means (at all levels)
Most universities do not seem to have an OE strategy
If there is a strategy, it is usually not embedded within overall institutional strategy
As a result:
Ad-hoc, arbitrary and experimental activities
Little collaboration and sharing of experiences
European Network of universities: (Could we have OE contemplated in each network sub-set?)
The research on open education carried out by the JRC is a contribution to the European Commission's Communication 'Opening up Education: Innovative Teaching and Learning for All Through New Technologies and OER' (EAC, 2013). It also contributes to the two most recent Communications "Renewed Agenda for Higher Education" and "School Development and Excellent Teaching for a Great Start in Life" (EAC, 2017). In addition, OpenEdu Policies aims to support the Education and Training 2020 agenda, the new priorities of which include open education.
http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-13-859_en.htm
http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-15-5568_en.htm