Difference between revisions of "A toolkit for creating OER using FOSS tools"

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In a society that is becoming increasingly digital, it is no surprise that educational processes are also getting impacted by digital technologies.  A significant development in the educational domain has been the rise of Open Educational Resources, with the promise of delivering quality education. An essentially, digital phenomenon, OER seek to leverage the possibilities of digital methods for accesing, creating, modifying and sharing educational content.  As they developed, OER also redefined licensing and copyright, with content being shared with license to re-use, modify and share.  (‘’’Embed a video from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_educational_resources#History, titled turning a resource into an OER’’’).  While the advantages seem obvious in terms of increased availability of curricular materials and reducing costs of education, research suggests that OER seems to have not achieved its potential for adoption.
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#REDIRECT [[Teachers%27_toolkit_for_creating_and_re-purposing_OER_using_FOSS/A_toolkit_for_creating_OER_using_FOSS_tools]]
 
===What limits OER adoption===
 
‘’Build it and will they come?’’  This captures the current context in the OER space with more and more materials being made available from educators and institutions alike, but limited uptake from users.  One important reason behind this is the low level of awareness about OER and its possibilities. Other parameters are:
 
#'''''legal''''' , with limited awareness of open licensing possibilities amongst people
 
#'''''cultural''''', OER availability is more in English than in local languages, thus limiting access and use
 
#'''''social''''', OER creation is largely ‘expert-driven’ with limited participation of teachers and other resource creators and hence it is not disseminated widely
 
#'''''pedagogical''''', teaching restricted to ‘text books’ in many education systems and teachers are yet to look beyond the text books for sourcing materials for their teaching and
 
 
 
What is not often talked about however is the role the technology ecosystem plays in OER adoption.  With OER being essentially digital, the means and processes of accessing OER for reuse, revision and sharing must be freely available.  The digital allows creation possibilities in multiple ways – textual, graphics and audio-visual – and the availability of software applications for creation becomes critical.  OER began as a digitization of textual resources and thus text was dominant.  In a  proprietary software dominant desktop environment, where the use of Free and Open Source (FOSS) tools is limited, it becomes prohibitively expensive to license proprietary applications for creating resources in audio, video and other media formats, thus limiting their creation.  With the dominance of text (which was limiting its use), and the lack of appropriate software applications, users did not have the means and tools for accessing and repurposing OER, thus limiting its adoption.
 
 
 
However, as technologies have evolved, today, we have a wide variety of mature and high quality Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) applications which can allow resource creators and editors to create, re-mix, revise and re-distribute OER in multiple formats. These are available on the desktop environment, some of them are web-based and some available on mobile phone platforms.  The power of OER comes from its ‘openness’, that it can be freely re-used, revised and re-distributed. Similarly, software that can be freely  re-used, revised and re-distributed can create a rich learning environment, by providing the tool-set for OER creation and re-purposing.
 
 
 
===Free and open technology environment===
 
An important power of the digital is the negligible marginal cost of production of digital resources, whether software or content. As [[wikiquote:Talk:George_Bernard_Shaw|Bernard Shaw said]]
 
 
 
'''"If you have an apple and I have an apple and we exchange apples then you and I will still each have one apple. But if you have an idea and I have an idea and we exchange these ideas, then each of us will have two ideas."'''
 
 
 
This is applicable to digital resources as well. If digital resources are allowed to be freely shared, modified and shared again, then it can result in a resource rich environment. This is the idea that triggered of the Free Software and the Open Educational Resources movements.
 
 
 
Promoting a free and open digital technology environment will have a positive influence on OER adoption (which includes both production and consumption) as well.
 
====Democratizing OER production and consumption====
 
There is a possibility to provide a fillip to the creation of OER, by promoting the relevant and meaningful use of a variety of FOSS applications for authoring, editing and publishing OER. In a free and open technology environment where many free and open software applications are being used, resource creators / editors will be more able to create and share OER in multiple formats.  Popularizing the use of these applications amongst writers, editors and course developers can be hugely beneficial in enabling the larger and wider development of OER, and in richer formats.
 
 
 
This process can help us move from a paradigm where OER is created by 'experts' for all, to a more participatory process where many more people can participate in OER production and exchange. Every teacher usually has to make or customise materials for her teaching-learning.
 
 
 
This toolkit is an introduction to possibilities of OER creation and repurposing through the use of various FOSS applications.  We hope that access to a free and open environment will encourage every teacher to become an OER creator.
 
 
 
==== Facilitating Technological knowledge ====
 
Many, if not most users of ICT, restrict their use to a few software applications. However, if you are able to become familiar with many more applications, over time you will acquire a 'technology felicity', which will enhance your confidence. The FOSS universe has thousands of applications you will find useful. In any area of work, you will find more than one application. Your learning need not be restricted to just one application in any area, learning more will increase your expertise and confidence. For instance, even in the area of text editing, you can familiarise yourself with LibreOffice Writer, gedit, KWrite etc. This will also enable you to explore any new application and learn its features on your own. Such 'learning to learn' ability can be a useful outcome from fearlessly exploring multiple applications.
 
 
 
On your Ubuntu GNU/Linux system you can actually download innumerable applications (<u>Applications -> Other -> Software Centre</u>) from the Internet, you can download free and open source applications in different domains/areas. For instance, you could type 'mathematics' and see all the mathematics software applications available in the Ubuntu GNU/Linux repository.
 
 
 
===About the tool-kit===
 
The “''Hands-On Toolkit for Teachers to Create, Re-purpose and Publish Open Educational Resources (OER) using Free and Open Source Software (FOSS)''”, aims to promote the creation, re-purposing and publishing of OER using FOSS applications. The toolkit has been developed by IT for Change, an organization working with teachers and school systems on the use of FOSS for OER creation.  This toolkit is aimed at native and non-English native speakers, hence the language has been kept simple and accessible.
 
 
 
The toolkit is available in two formats. One is this ''print edition'', (soft copy through a  PDF format, which you can use for printing, if you need a hard copy). The second format is an ''on-line edition'' in the form of a “Wiki book<sup>2</sup>”. The Wiki book edition will also be shared ''off-line on a DVD'', with the printed version of the tool-kit, which will enable user to read the digital version without internet connectivity.
 
 
 
Along with the tool-kit, a ''custom software distribution'' which contains the FOSS desktop tools covered in the handbook is shared as a DVD, which you should install on your computer, to create OER.
 
 
 
In line with the philosophy of OER, the tool-kit is released under the CC-BY license, and the custom software distribution is released under the General Public License (GPL). The CC BY license enables you to make copies of the tool-kit with or without modifications and distribute it for profit or not for profit. The GPL license enables you to make copies of the software applications with or without modifications. Modifications if any, will also need to be distributed as FOSS.
 
 
 
====How to use this tool-kit====
 
The “hands-on toolkit for teachers to create, re-purpose and publish Open Educational Resources (OER) using Free and Open Source Software (FOSS)” discusses the creation of OER in three separate chapters, dealing with text, image and animations, audio and video OER respectively. In each chapter, the features of a few applications that will enable you to create, re-purpose OER are explained. The selection of the tools from its universe is been based factors such as its popularity, ease of use, level of community support available.
 
 
 
‘’’Each chapter begins with information on commonly used open repositories for that resource format. ''In creating OER, keeping with the OER principle of ‘give and take’, it is necessary to first check for OER that is already available for the topic you are working on, and use these OER as an input to your own creation processes. Many find it easy to create based on what they currently know, ignoring existing OER. However, it is an academic principle to actively build on existing knowledge, hence accessing OER is the first step in creating OER.’’’''
 
 
 
In order to provide a step by step guide through real-world examples on how to create and re-purpose OER, the tool-kit takes a case of “How to create an OER on Digital storytelling”. Over the three chapters, the tool-kit will develop the OER for digital story telling, in text, graphic and audio visual formats. This is followed by a chapter on ‘Publishing OER’, to help you publish your OER on-line, for the re-use by others.
 
 
 
You are now ready to begin using the tool-kit. The first step is to ensure you have the software applications required.
 
====Install the custom distribution on your computer====
 
You need access to the FOSS applications taught in this tool-kit, for which you should install the ''custom software distribution'' provided. The distribution includes the Ubuntu GNU/Linux free and open source operating system which can be installed as a full fledged software system on your computer. You can install it ‘side-by-side’ with any other operating system on your computer as well. A video on installing this custom distribution is available here.
 
 
 
Many of these desktop applications are also available on the Microsoft Windows operating system. You can also download these from the net and install on your Windows operating system. The installation of each application is covered in the relevant chapter
 
====Install the FOSS applications on your mobile phone====
 
You can install the FOSS applications for the mobile phone (Android), used in the tool-kit, using the link for the app installer for each app. The installation of each app is covered in the relevant chapter.
 
====Create your own OER as a part of using this tool-kit====
 
Identify an area which you are very keen to learn more about, or where you feel you need resources for your own work as a teacher. Your own work as a teacher may require you to have materials for classroom teaching-learning processes, or for sharing with colleagues for mutual learning, or simply for your self-development. It will be much more meaningful learning, if as a part of using this tool-kit, you could access, create, re-purpose and publish a OER on a topic which you want to learn/ know more about. The topic could be from the subject you teach (a science topic like ‘Light’ or a mathematics topic such as ‘number system’ or a geography topic as ‘forests’), or a larger issue in education (“Challenges of teaching in inner-city public schools”), or larger social issue (“global warming”). You could create this OER in English or in your own native language (where the need for such an OER may be even greater).
 
====Assumption about the user of this tool-kit====
 
The tool-kit assumes that you have a basic comfort in using computers, you can start and shut down a desktop computer. It assumes very basic familiarity with the commonly used applications on a computer – file explorer, web browser and text editor. The tool-kit assumes similar basic comfort in using a feature mobile phone (aka ‘smart phone’).
 
===Help===
 
You can anytime access this tool-kit, off-line or through the on-line Wiki repository to learn FOSS tools to create, re-purpose and publish OER.
 
 
 
Note
 
#The term ‘adoption’ of OER is used in this note in a comprehensive manner, to include creation, use, re-use, revision, re-mixing,retaining and re-distributing.
 
#WikiBooks is a MediaWiki extension for creating collaborative books, this is a e-book creation platform. MediaWiki is the software used by Wikipedia, the world’s most popular encyclopedia.
 
 
 
[[Category:Teachers' toolkit for creating and re-purposing OER using FOSS]]
 

Latest revision as of 07:36, 27 February 2017