Tag Archives: resource discovery

What am I doing here? 2. Open Competencies Network⤴

from @ Sharing and learning

I am continuing my January review of the projects that I am working on with this post about my work on the Open Competencies Network (OCN). OCN is a part of the T3 Network of Networks, which is an initiative of US Chamber of Commerce Foundation aiming to explore “emerging technologies and standards in the talent marketplace to create more equitable and effective learning and career pathways.” Not surprisingly the Open Competencies Network (OCN) focuses on Competencies, but we understand that term broadly, including any “assertions of academic, professional, occupational, vocational and life goals, outcomes … for example knowledge, skills and abilities, capabilities, habits of mind, or habits of practice” (see the OCN competency explainer for more). I see competencies understood in this way as the link between my interests in learning, education, credentials and the world of employment and other activities. This builds on previous projects around Talent Marketplace Signalling, which I also did for the US Chamber of Commerce Foundation.

About the work

The OCN has two working groups: Advancing Open Competencies (AOC), which deals with outreach, community building, policy and governance issues, and the Technical Advisory Workgroup. My focus is on the latter. We have a couple of major technical projects, the Competency Explorer and the Data Ecosystem Standards Mapping (DESM) Tool, both of which probably deserve their own post at some time, but in brief:

Competency Explorer aims to make competency frameworks readily available to humans and machines by developing a membership trust network of open registries each holding one or more competency frameworks and enabling search and retrieval of those frameworks and their competencies from any registry node in the network.

DESM was developed to support data standards organizations—and the platforms and products that use those standards—in mapping, aligning and harmonizing data standards to promote data interoperability for the talent marketplace (and beyond). The DESM allows for data to move from a system or product using one data standards to another system or product that uses a different data standard.

Both of these projects deal with heterogeneous metadata, working around the theme of interoperability between metadata standards.

About my role

My friend and former colleague Shiela once described our work as “going to meetings and typing things”, which pretty much sums up the OCN work. The purpose is to contribute to the development of the projects, both of which were initiated by Stuart Sutton, whose shoes I am trying to fill in OCN.

For the Competency Explorer I have helped turn community gathered use cases into  features that can implemented to enhance the Explorer, and am currently one of the leads of an agile feature-driven development project with software developers at Learning Tapestry to implement as many of these features as possible and figure out what it would take to implement the others. I’m also working with data providers and Learning Tapestry to develop technical support around providing data for the Competency Explorer.

For DESM I helped develop the internal data schema used to represent the mapping between data standards, and am currently helping to support people who are using the tool to map a variety of standards in a pilot, or closed beta-testing. This has been a fascinating exercise in seeing a project through from a data model on paper, through working with programmers implementing it, to working with people as they try to use the tool developed from it.

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Mapping learning resources to curricula in RDF⤴

from @ Sharing and learning

Some personal reflections on relating educational content to curriculum frameworks prompted by some conversation about the Oak National Academy (a broad curriculum of online material available to schools, based on the English national curriculum), and OEH-Linked-Frameworks (an RDF tool for visualizing German educational frameworks). It draws heavily on the BBC curriculum ontology (by Zoe Rose, I think). I’m thinking about these with respect to work I have been involved in such as K12-OCX and LRMI.

If you want to know why you would do this, you might want to skip ahead and read the “so what?” section first. But in brief: representing curriculum frameworks in a standard, machine-readable way, and mapping curriculum materials to that, would help when sharing learning resources.

Curriculum?

But first: curriculum. What does it mean to say  “a broad curriculum of online material available to schools, based on the English national curriculum”? The word curriculum is used in several different ways (there are 71 definitions in the IGI Global dictionary). ranging from “the comprehensive multitude of learning experiences provided by school to its students” (source) to “the set of standards, objectives, and concepts required to be taught and learned in a given course or school year” (source).  So curriculum in one sense is the teaching, in the other all that should be learnt. Those are different: the Oak National Academy provides teaching materials and activities (for learning experiences); the English National Curriculum specifies what should be learnt. Because very few people are interested in one but not the other, these two meanings often get conflated, which is normally fine but here I want to treat them separately and show how they relate to each other. Lets call them Curriculum Content and Materials, and Curriulum Frameworks respectively, think about how to represent the framework, and then how to relate to content and materials to that framework.

Curriculum Frameworks

This is where the BBC curriculum ontology comes in. It has a nice three-dimensional structure, creating the framework on the axes of Field of Study, Level and Topic.

The three dimensions of the BBC Curriculum Onology model. From https://www.bbc.co.uk/ontologies/curriculum

The levels are those that are defined by the national curriculum for progression English schools (KS = Key Stage, children aged 5 to 7 are normally at Key Stage 1; GCSE is the exam typically taken at 16, so represents the end of compulsory education, though students may stay on to study A-levels or similar after that). The levels used in curriculum frameworks tend to be very contextual, normally relating to the grade levels and examinations used in the school system for which the framework is written. It may be useful to relate them to more neutral (or at least, less heavily contextualised) schemes such as the levels of the EQF, or the levels of the Connecting Credentials framework.

The field of study may be called the “educational subject” (though I don’t like to writing RDF statements with Subject as the object) or, especialy in HE, “discipline”. Topics are the subjects studied within a field or discipline. I don’t much like the examples given here because the topics do just look like mini fields of study. I would wonder where to put “biology”–is it a topic within science or a field of study in its own right. A couple of points about field of study and one about topic may help clarify. In higher education a field of study if often called a discipline, which highlights that it is not just the thing being studied, but a community with a common interest and agreed norms on the tools and techniques used to study the subject. Most HE disciplines have an adjectival form that relates to people (I am a Physicists, she is a Humanist). In schools, fields of study are sometimes artifacts of the curriculum design process with no real equilavent outside of school. These artifacts often seem to have names that are initialisms that you won’t come across outside of specific school settings, for example RMPS ( Religious, Moral and Philosophical Studies), PE (Physical Education), PSHE (personal, social, health and economic education), ESL (English as a Second Language) / ESOL (English for Speakers of Other Languages), ICT (Information and Computer Techonolgy) DT (Design and Technology) — but very often the fields of study will have the same names as the top levels of a topic taxonomy (math/s, english, science). Most fields of study will have someone in a school who is a teacher of that field or leader of its teaching for the school. Topics are more neutral of context, less personal, more like the subjects of the Dewey Decimal System (at least more like they are supposed to be). It’s important to note that the same topic may be covered in different fields of study / disciplines in different ways. For example statistics may be a discipline itself (part of maths), with a very theoretical approach taken to studying the topics, but those topics may also be studied in biology, physics and economics. Crucially when it comes to facilitating discovery of suitable content materials for the curriculum, the approach taken and examples used will probably mean a resource aimed at teaching a statistics topic for economics is not very useful for teaching the same topic as part of physics or mathematics.

On to these axes get mapped the what are variously called learning objectives, intended learning outcomes, learning standards, and so on: the competences you want the students to acheive. They exist in the framework as statements of what  knowledge, skills, abilities a student is expected to be able to demonstrate. Let’s call them competences because that is a term that has wides currency beyond education, for example a competence can link educational outcomes to job requirements. There is a lot written about competences. There’s lots about how to write competence statements, including the form the descriptions should take (“you will be able to …”; how to form them as objectives (specific, mearsurable, …); how they relate to context (“able to … under supervision”); how they relate to each other (“you must learn to walk before you learn to run”); what tools should be used (“able to use a calculator to …”). And, of course, there are the specifications, standards and RDF vocabularies for representing all these aspects of competences, e.g. ASN, IMS CASE, ESCO. Let’s not go into that except to say that a curriculum framework will describe these competences as learning objectives and map them to the Field of study, topic and level schemes used by the framework. The same terms described below for mapping content to frameworks can be useful in doing this.

Mapping Curriculum Content to Curriculum Frameworks

So we have some curriculum content material; how do we map it to the curriculum framework?

It may help to model the content material in the way K12-OCX did, following oerschema, as a hierarchy of course, module, unit, lesson, activity, with associated materials and assessments:

Shows a hierarchy of course, module, unit, lesson, activity, with associated materials and assessments
The content model used by K12-OCX, based on oerschema.org

(Aside: any given course may not have modules or units, or either.)

Breaking curriculum materials down from monolithic courses to their constituent parts (while keeping the logical and pedagogical relationships between those parts) creates finer grained resources more easily accomodated into existing contexts.

At the Course level, oerschema.org gives us the property syllabus which can be used to relate the course to the framework as a whole, called by oerschema a CourseSyllabus, (“syllabus” is another word used in various ways, so lets not worry about any difference between a syllabus and a curriculum framework). This may also be useful at finer-grained levels, e.g. Module and Unit.

@prefix oer: <http://oerschema.org/> .
@prefix sdo: <http://schema.org/> .
@base <http://example.org/> .
<myCurriculumFramework> a oer:CourseSyllabus .
<myCourse> a oer:Course, sdo:Course ;
    oer:syllabus <myCurriculumFramework> .

[example code in tutle, there’s a JSON-LD version of it all below]

We can use the schema.org educationalLevel property to relate the resource to the educational level of the framework:

<myCourse> sdo:educationalLevel <myCurriculumFramework/Levels/KS4> .

Lets say our course deals with Mathematics and has a Unit on Statistics (no modules). We can use the schema.org AlignmentObject to say that there is an educationAlignment between my Course and my Unit to the field of study (that is, in the language of the alignment object, the educational subject). We can use the schema.org about property to say what the topic is:

<myCourse> sdo:hasPart <myUnit> ;
    sdo:educationalAlignment [
        a sdo:AlignmentObject ;
        sdo:alignmentType "educationalSubject";
        sdo:targetUrl <myCurriculumFramework/FieldsOfStudy/Mathematics>
    ] .

<myUnit> a oer:Unit, sdo:LearningResource ;
    sdo:educationalAlignment [
        a sdo:AlignmentObject ;
        sdo:alignmentType "educationalSubject";
        sdo:targetUrl <myCurriculumFramework/FieldsOfStudy/Mathematics>
    ] ;
    sdo:about <myCurriculumFramework/Topic/Statistics> .

For lessons, and especially for activities, we can relate to competences as individual learning objectives. The schema.org teaches property is designed for this:

<myUnit> sdo:hasPart <myLesson> .
<myLesson> a oer:Lesson, sdo:LearningResource ;
    sdo:hasPart <myActivity> .

<myActivity> a oer:Activity, sdo:LearningResource ;
   sdo:teaches <myCurriculumFramework/Objective/Competence0123> .

Whether you repeat about and educationalAlignment statements linking to “Field of Study” and “Topic” in the descriptions of Lessons and Activities depends on how much you want to rely on inferencing that something which is a part of a course has the same Fields of Study, something which is a part of Unit has the same topic, and so on. If your parts might get scattered, or used by systems that don’t do RDF inferencing, then you’ll want to repeat them (they will, you should). I haven’t done so here just to avoid repetition.

Finally, let’s link the competence statement to the framework (the framework here represented in a fairly crude way, not wanting to get into the intricacies of competence frameworks):

<myCurriculumFramework> a oer:CourseSyllabus, sdo:DefinedTermSet ;
    sdo:hasDefinedTerm <myCurriculumFramework/Objective/Competence0123> .

<myCurriculumFramework/Objective/Competence0123> a sdo:DefinedTerm,  
                                                   sdo:LearningResource ;
    sdo:educationalAlignment [ 
        a sdo:AlignmentObject ; 
        sdo:alignmentType "educationalSubject"; 
        sdo:targetUrl <myCurriculumFramework/FieldsOfStudy/Mathematics> 
    ] ;
    sdo:about <myCurriculumFramework/Topic/Statistics> ;
    sdo:educationalLevel <myCurriculumFramework/Levels/KS4> ;
    sdo:description "You will be able to use a calculator to find the mean..." ;
    sdo:name "Calculate the arithmetic mean" .

(Aside: Modelling a learning objective / competence as a defined term and a LearningResource is probably the most  controversial thing here, but I think it works for illustration.)

So What?

Well this shows several things I think would be useful:

  • Having metadata for a curriculum (whatever it is) will help others find it and use it, if suitable tools for using the metadata exist.
  • Tools are more likely to exist if the metadata is nicely machine readable (RDF, not PDF) and standardised (widely used vocabularies like schema.org).
  • A common model for curriculum frameworks will make mapping from one to another easier. For example. it’s easier to map from UK to US educational levels if they are clearly and separately defined.
  • Breaking curriculum materials down from monolithic courses to their constituent parts (while keeping the logical and pedagogical relationships between those parts) creates finer grained resources more easily accomodated into existing contexts.
  • Mapping curriculum materials to learning objectives in a given framework makes it easier to find resources for that curriculum, which is great, but the world is bigger than one curriculum.
  • Mapping both learning objectives and curriculum materials to the axes of the curriculum framework model makes it easier to find resources appropriate accross different curricula.

Finally, if you prefer your RDF as JSON-LD:

{
  "@context": {
    "oer": "http://oerschema.org/",
    "rdf": "http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#",
    "rdfs": "http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#",
    "schema": "http://schema.org/",
    "sdo": "http://schema.org/",
    "xsd": "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#"
  },
  "@graph": [
    {
      "@id": "http://example.org/myCurriculumFramework",
      "@type": [
        "oer:CourseSyllabus",
        "schema:DefinedTermSet"
      ],
      "schema:hasDefinedTerm": {
        "@id": "http://example.org/myCurriculumFramework/Objective/Competence0123"
      }
    },
    {
      "@id": "http://example.org/myActivity",
      "@type": [
        "oer:Activity",
        "schema:LearningResource"
      ],
      "schema:teaches": {
        "@id": "http://example.org/myCurriculumFramework/Objective/Competence0123"
      }
    },
    {
      "@id": "http://example.org/myCourse",
      "@type": [
        "schema:Course",
        "oer:Course"
      ],
      "oer:syllabus": {
        "@id": "http://example.org/myCurriculumFramework"
      },
      "schema:educationalAlignment": {
        "@id": "_:ub132bL12C30"
      },
      "schema:educationalLevel": {
        "@id": "http://example.org/myCurriculumFramework/Levels/KS4"
      },
      "schema:hasPart": {
        "@id": "http://example.org/myUnit"
      }
    },
    {
      "@id": "http://example.org/myLesson",
      "@type": [
        "schema:LearningResource",
        "oer:Lesson"
      ],
      "schema:hasPart": {
        "@id": "http://example.org/myActivity"
      }
    },
    {
      "@id": "http://example.org/myUnit",
      "@type": [ 
        "oer:Unit",
        "schema:LearningResource"
       ],
       "schema:about": {
        "@id": "http://example.org/myCurriculumFramework/Topic/Statistics"
      },
      "schema:educationalAlignment": {
        "@id": "_:ub132bL21C30"
      },
      "schema:hasPart": {
        "@id": "http://example.org/myLesson"
      }
    },
    {
      "@id": "_:ub132bL12C30",
      "@type": "schema:AlignmentObject",
      "schema:alignmentType": "educationalSubject",
      "schema:targetUrl": {
        "@id": "http://example.org/myCurriculumFramework/FieldsOfStudy/Mathematics"
      }
    },
    {
      "@id": "_:ub132bL40C30",
      "@type": "schema:AlignmentObject",
      "schema:alignmentType": "educationalSubject",
      "schema:targetUrl": {
        "@id": "http://example.org/myCurriculumFramework/FieldsOfStudy/Mathematics"
      }
    },
    {
      "@id": "http://example.org/myCurriculumFramework/Objective/Competence0123",
      "@type": [
        "schema:LearningResource",
        "schema:DefinedTerm"
      ],
      "schema:about": {
        "@id": "http://example.org/myCurriculumFramework/Topic/Statistics"
      },
      "schema:description": "You will be able to use a calculator to find the mean ...",
      "schema:educationalAlignment": {
        "@id": "_:ub132bL40C30"
      },
      "schema:educationalLevel": {
        "@id": "http://example.org/myCurriculumFramework/Levels/KS4"
      },
      "schema:name": "Calculate the arithmetic mean"
    },
    {
      "@id": "_:ub132bL21C30",
      "@type": "schema:AlignmentObject",
      "schema:alignmentType": "educationalSubject",
      "schema:targetUrl": {
        "@id": "http://example.org/myCurriculumFramework/FieldsOfStudy/Mathematics"
      }
    }
  ]
}

 

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Book chapter: Technology Strategies for Open Educational Resource Dissemination⤴

from @ Sharing and learning

A book with a chapter by Lorna M Campbell and I has just been published. The book is Open Education: International Perspectives in Higher Education edited by Patrick Blessinger and TJ Bliss, published by Open Book Publishers.

There are contributions by people I know and look up to in the OER world, and some equally good chapters by folk I had not come across before. It seems to live up to its billing of offering an international perspective by not being US-centric (though it would be nice to see more from S America, Asia and Africa), and it provides a wide view of Open Education, not limited to Open Education Resources. There is a foreword by David Wiley, a chapter on a human rights theory for open education by the editors, one on whether emancipation through open education is theory or rhetoric by Andy Lane. Other people from the Open University’s Open Education team (Martin Weller, Beatriz de los Arcos, Rob Farrow, Rebecca Pitt and Patrick McAndrew) have written about identifying categories of OER users.  There are chapters on aspects such as open science, open text books, open assessment and credentials for open learning; and several case studies and reflections on open education in practice.

Open Education: International Perspectives in Higher Education is available under a CC:BY licence as a free PDF, as very cheap mobi or ePub, or reasonably priced soft and hard back editions. You should get a copy from the publishers.

Technology Strategies for OER

The chapter that Lorna and I wrote is an overview drawing on our experiences through the UKOER programme and our work on LRMI looking at managing the dissemination and discovery of open education resources. Here’s the abstract in full, and a link to the final submitted version of our chapter.

This chapter addresses issues around the discovery and use of Open Educational Resources (OER) by presenting a state of the art overview of technology strategies for the description and dissemination of content as OER. These technology strategies include institutional repositories and websites, subject specific repositories, sites for sharing specific types of content (such as video, images, ebooks) and general global repositories. There are also services that aggregate content from a range of collections, these may specialize by subject, region or resource type. A number of examples of these services are analyzed in terms of their scope, how they present resources, the technologies they use and how they promote and support a community of users. The variety of strategies for resource description taken by these platforms is also discussed. These range from formal machine-readable metadata to human readable text. It is argued that resource description should not be seen as a purely technical activity. Library and information professionals have much to contribute, however academics could also make a valuable contribution to open educational resource (OER) description if the established good practice of identifying the provenance and aims of scholarly works is applied to learning resources. The current rate of change among repositories is quite startling with several repositories and applications having either shut down or having changed radically in the year or so that the work on which this contribution is based took. With this in mind, the chapter concludes with a few words on sustainability.

Preprint of full chapter (MS Word)

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Sustainability and Open Education⤴

from @ Sharing and learning

 

Last week I was on a panel at Edinburgh University’s Repository Fringe event discussing sustainability and OER. As part of this I was asked to talk for ten minutes on some aspect of the subject. I don’t think I said anything of startling originality, but I must start posting to this blog again, so here are the notes I spoke from. The idea that I wanted to get over is that projects should be careful about what services they tried to set up, they (the services) should be suitable and sustainable, and in fact it might be best if they did the minimum that was necessary (which might mean not setting up a repository).

Between 2009 and 2012 Jisc and the HE Academy ran the UK Open Education Resources programme (UKOER), spending approximately £15M of Hefce funding in three phases. There were 65 projects, some with personal, institutional or discipline scope releasing resources openly, some with a remit of promoting dissemination or discoverability, and  there were some related activities and services providing technical, legal, policy support, & there was Jorum: there was a mandate that OERs released through the project should be deposited in the Jorum repository. This was a time when open education was booming, as well as UKOER, funding from foundations in the US, notably Hewlett and Gates, was quite well established and EU funding was beginning. UKOER also, of course, built on previous Jisc programmes such as X4L, ReProduce, and the Repositories & preservation programme.

In many ways UKOER was a great success: a great number of resources were created or released, but also it established open education as a thing that people in UK HE talked about. It showed how to remove some of the blockers to the reuse and sharing of content for teaching and learning in HE (–especially in the use of standard CC licences with global scope rather than the vague, restrictive and expensive custom variations on  “available to other UK HEIs” of previous programmes). Helped by UKOER, many UK HEIs were well placed to explore the possibilities of MOOCs. And in general showed the potential to change how HEIs engage with the wider world and to help make best use of online learning–but it’s not just about opening exciting but vague possibilities: being a means to avoid problems such as restrictive licensing, and being in position to explore new possibilities, means avoiding unnecessary costs in the future and helps to make OER financially attractive (and that’s important to sustainability). Evidence of this success: even though UKOER was largely based on HEFCE funding, there are direct connections from UKOER to the University of Edinburgh’s Open Ed initiative and (less directly) to their engagement with MOOCs.

But I am here to talk sustainability. You probably know that Jorum, the repository in to which UKOER projects were required to deposit their OERs, is closing. Also, many of the discipline-based and discovery projects were based at HE Academy subject centres, which are now gone. At the recent OER16 here, Pat Lockley suggested that OER were no longer being created. He did this based on what he sees coming in to the Solvonauts aggregator that he develops and runs. Martin Poulter showed the graph, there is a fairly dramatic drop in the number of new deposits he sees. That suggests something is not being sustained.

But what?

Let’s distinguish between sustainability and persistence: sustainability suggests to me a manageable on-going effort. The content as released may be persistent, it may still be available as released (though without some sort of sustainable effort of editing, updating, preservation it may not be much use).  What else needs sustained effort? I would suggest: 1, the release of new content; 2, interest and community; 3, the services around the content (that includes repositories). I would say that UKOER did create a community interested in OER which is still pretty active. It could be larger, and less inward looking at times but for an academic community it doing quite well. New content is being released. But the services created by UKOER (and other OER initiatives) are dying. That, I think , is why Pat Lockley isn’t seeing new resources being published.

What is the lesson we should learn? Don’t create services to manage and disseminate your OERs that that require “project” level funding. Create the right services, don’t assume that what works for research outputs will work for educational resources, make sure that there is that “edit” button (or at least a make-your-own-editable-copy button).  Make the best use of what is available. Use everything that is available. Use wikimedia services, but also use flickr, wordpress, youtube, itunes, vimeo,—and you may well want to create your own service to act as a “junction” between all the different places you’re putting your OERs, linking with them via their APIs for deposit and discovery. This is the basic idea behind POSSE: Publish (on your) Own Site, Syndicate Elsewhere.

RIP Yahoo Directory⤴

from @ Sharing and learning

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Last Friday Yahoo announced that it will retire its original service, the Yahoo directory, at the end of 2014.  Perhaps the only surprise was that the Yahoo directory is still running. I don’t suppose it will be missed by many, but I noticed it going because the first article I ever wrote on learning technology was  Finding Information on WWWwhich I wrote for the CTI-Physics newsletter in Jun 1995. It was prompted by my boss at the time, Dick Bacon, saying that he thought there were lots of really useful resources on the web, but it was really difficult to find them. I suggested three approaches: social, organised collections and search, which I think stands up reasonably well today, though we’ve kind of moved on from mailbase to twitter. Search at the time was in its infancy, Lycos being the search engine of choice (yes, not only was this before Google, it was before Alta Vista). I still work on that question “how do you find information on the web?” Through LRMI and schema.org we are helping search engine providers improve their products, and one of my favourite initiatives of the last few years, the Learning Registry, and specifically the kritikos project has seen the coming together search and social, allowing students to share what they find to be useful for their courses.

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