Open source: A view of the “open” landscape at the NSBA Conference
What can K-12 districts gain in knowing about Open Source? At the
recent 2007 National School Board Association Teaching and Learning
Conference, held in October in Nashville, Tennessee, a group of school
board leaders, technology administrators, and teachers gathered in a
Mini-Academy session to delve into the subject of Open Source for their
own schools. The conference was featuring Open Source as one of six
major themes facing education. The intention of the in-depth session
was to broaden participants’ definition of open source by understanding
current trends worldwide and to provide a case study of how one
district is taking the strides to embrace open source systems and
software.
People generally understand Open Source to refer to software
collaboratively created and offered back freely to the public and the
development community for use and modification. The Gnu Free
Documentation License instantiates this legal freedom, moving away from
the copyright, “all rights reserved” tradition, to allow adaptation
while giving credit to creators. On Wikipedia, Open Source is defined
as a “set of principles and practices that promote access to the design
and production of goods and knowledge”. Building on the shoulders of
the Open Source movement and as well open cultural trends in music,
photo, and video sharing, the open education movement is developing
both tools and content to make learning freely available, and by
extension, customizable to the needs of the learner. Like the open
source software phenomenon, open education has the potential to birth
new economic models and empower new contributors.
I presented about these trends and showed examples of the use of open
educational resources (OER) worldwide and our work with OER Commons,
http://www.oercommons.org in particular. Next, a school district in
Wisconsin, the D.C. Everest Area, http://www.dce.k12.wi.us/ described
their approach to bring the entire district onto Open Source platforms.
Marie Wardall, in charge of libraries and coordinating the effort with
Cory Jaeger, head of technology for the district, sited the example of
giving away free CDs with Open Source software programs to students.
The students can now work in the same software environment at home and
at school, removing the challenges around versions and compatibility
between in-school and at-home work. The district has shown considerable
financial savings in this effort and has been able to use that savings
to put new technologies into every classroom to augment sharing and
connectivity services that are saving teachers and staff time and
enhancing learning.