FHSST
2007-10-22
FHSST Case Study to be presented at OpenLearn 2007
On Oct. 30-31, members of the global open educational resources (OER) community will present their research into the challenges of sustaining and facilitating the movement at the OpenLearn 2007 conference in Milton Keynes, UK. Hosted by the Open University, the conference has four main themes: research agenda, sustainability, user experience, and software and tools. The overreaching aim of the conference is to “help establish the importance of research for this growing area and bring together the community of researchers,” specifically shedding light on the research agenda, tools, research results and models that are emerging from the OER movement.
Cynthia Jimes will present the case study of Free High School Science Texts (FHSST), a South African-based open content initiative that facilitates the online collaborative creation of high-school level science and math textbooks online. The presentation will also discuss the iCommons iCurriculum project more generally, and address the issue of assessing project successes and challenges and creating a framework and knowledge-base among open content projects toward continuous learning and OER sustainability.
Other presenters at the conference include, for example, Peter Batemen of Open University UK, who will discuss how a participatory architecture can make OER more accessible for African universities, and Susan D’Antoni of UNESCO, who will discuss a community-developed research agenda for OER. In drawing together OER community members from across the globe, the conference has the potential to provide a good venue for sharing and insights that can impact the iCommons iCurriculum Case Study Project.
For more information about the FHSST
presentation, contact Cynthia Jimes at cynthia@iskme.org.
For more about the OpenLearn conference, visit the conference website.
2007-08-13
August Case Study Project Update
By Cynthia Jimes, ISKME
The OER Case Study project is progressing, both in terms of data collection and framework development, as well as in terms of engaging the OER community members around the project.
The pre-conference day to the 2007 iSummit in Dubrovnik provided an opportunity to share early learnings about the Case Study Project, and to push thinking around sustainability within and across OER initiatives. The pre-day participants brought to light the importance of recognizing variations in definitions and of incorporating that variation into our understanding of OER sustainability—as, e.g., what we mean by localization, peer production, and user engagement will likely differ across initiatives. The pre-day also underscored the importance of paying heed to sometimes less prevalent OER sustainability factors, including getting students involved in the creation of open content, and ensuring that open content is not created in isolated pockets within any given initiative.
As a result of the iSummit pre-day discussions, revisions and additions to the initial case study framework and its tools have been suggested and posted on the Case Study Wiki. These include an OER primer/lexicon, an OER storytelling template, and activities around internal assessment and facilitation of, e.g., content localization and community engagement. Next steps include refining, augmenting, and developing these and other tools with FHSST and additional OER projects to make them applicable for the wider OER community.
In terms of the FHSST case study, analysis of the project’s online volunteer forums, newsletters and other documents as well as over 6 hours of in-depth interviews have been conducted with the project leaders to understand work practices, success factors and current and future challenges. In late July, Sarah Blyth of the FHSST admin team administered a volunteer survey to ten core volunteers. The survey was written collaboratively by FHSST and the ISKME researchers and sought to understand volunteer perceptions around the recruitment process, the content authoring process, and the communication channels within FHSST. Six volunteers returned the survey, and two of them are expected to participate in a follow up phone interview to delve deeper into themes that arose through analysis of the survey responses. ISKME and FHSST will work collaboratively to analyze the final data sets, and to write the FHSST case study report, which will be distributed to stakeholders August 31, 2007. An important by-product of engaging FHSST’s leadership team as researchers of their own practices is the development of the case study framework and tools. For example, the volunteer survey and the means through which it was distributed, collected and analyzed by FHSST are all tools and insights that other OER projects can potentially use in the analysis of their own practices.
In continuing to inform and facilitate wider participant engagement in the case study project, we will continue to update the Case Study Wiki, and invite you to monitor and edit the project description, the case study framework/tools, and the suggested OER programs initially identified by each of you in phone interviews and discussions with the ISKME project director, Lisa Petrides. We also invite you to comment on this node and the blogs that will be created around it each month.
The contact person for the OER case study research is Cynthia Jimes at cynthia@iskme.org.