Category Archives: News & Research

How MOOCs are derailing Open Education: George Siemens ICDE World Conference keynote

icdelogo“A pioneer of Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs), George Siemens of Athabasca University, Canada, is one of the impressive list of keynote speakers confirmed for ICDE’s World Conference to be hosted by Tianjin Open University, China, 16-18 October 2013. Siemens contends that the most prominent MOOCs are failing the ideals of the Open Education movement.”

http://www.icde.org/How+MOOCs+are+derailing+Open+Education%3A+George+Siemens+ICDE+World+Conference+keynote.b7C_wJLMZ1.ips

Experiments in Open Education and Active Learning: A Report from the Celebration of Teaching

“I have long regarded scholarship as the noblest aspect of academia– the scholar’s tenacity in identifying, acknowledging, addressing and building on the intellectual contributions of others. I have not experienced the same profound sense of community among my colleagues in the education realm, however – I have largely been a lone wolf. Now there has been a profound shift in my mindset – I use and build on the educational production of others; I do it openly on public sites, of which I am proud rather than embarrassed; I contribute back, and my students see and learn from this practice of scholarly appreciation, and are even encouraged to contribute to it through their own content creation and sharing. This opportunity for “scholarship” in educational practice is what, as an educator and scholar, I find most exciting about this nascent and exploding online education movement. ” – Professor Doug Fisher, Vanderbilt University.

Experiments in Open Education and Active Learning: A Report from the Celebration of Teaching

Penguin agrees to $75M settlement in Apple iBooks price fixing lawsuit

Why can’t everyone be a good corporate citizen?

Book publisher Penguin announced on Wednesday it has reached a $75 million “comprehensive agreement” with U.S. State Attorneys General and private class plaintiffs over e-book price fixing allegations connected to Apple and its iBookstore for iOS.

http://appleinsider.com/articles/13/05/22/penguin-agrees-to-75m-settlement-in-apple-ibooks-price-fixing-lawsuit

Apple goes to court on June 3 for allegedly colluding in this price-fixing scheme., prefering to have their day in court instead of settling with the attorney general.   Why can’t everyone be a good corporate citizen?

New Open Education Organization – ICORE International Council for Open Research and Education

Newly founded international open research and open education organization.  First meeting held in Rome, May 15th, 2013.

“ICORE aims to support the design and implementation of innovative strategies, instruments and services for facilitating Open Research and Open Education such as Open Access, Open Educational Practices and Resources.”

http://www.icore-online.org/

Top Community College Courses by Enrollment

 Sorted by Course Rank
Organization Course Title Rank Category
CCOTC Algebra, Elem, Pre(1) 1 Algebra
FLA College Algebra 1 Algebra
CCC Fall 2008 Mathematics, General                                                        1 Algebra
CSU/UC F2007 Business Administration and Management, General 1 Business
Washington State English Composition I 1 Engl
FLA Intermediate Algebra 2 Algebra
CCC Fall 2008 English                                                                     2 Engl
CCOTC English Composition I, II(2) 2 Engl
Washington State General Psychology 2 Psy
CSU/UC F2007 Psychology, General 2 Psy
FLA Elementary Algebra 3 Algebra
CSU/UC F2007 Biology/Biological Sciences, General  3 Biology
Washington State English Composition II 3 Engl
CCC Fall 2008 Physical Education                                                          3 PE
FLA Intro to Psychology 3 Psy
CCOTC Sociology, Intro(3) 3 Soc
FLA Pre-calculus 4 Algebra
CSU/UC F2007 Liberal Arts and Sciences/Liberal Studies 4 Liberal Arts
CCC Fall 2008 Psychology, General                                                         4 Psy
CCOTC Psychology, Intro(4) 4 Psy
Washington State Introduction To Sociology 4 Soc
CCC Fall 2008 Biology, General                                                            5 Biology
CCOTC Chemistry, Gen(5) 5 Chem
Washington State Introduction to Chemistry (inorganic) 5 Chem
CSU/UC F2007 Sociology 5 Soc
CCOTC Biology, Gen(6) 6 Biology
CSU/UC F2007 English Language and Literature, General  6 Engl
CCC Fall 2008 History                                                                     6 History
Washington State Precalculus I 6 Pre-Calc
Washington State General Biology w/Lab 7 Biology
FLA Freshman Composition Skills I 7 Engl Comp
CCOTC History, U.S. I, II(7) 7 History
CCC Fall 2008 Music                                                                       7 Music
CSU/UC F2007 Political Science and Government, General 7 Pol. Sci
FLA General Biology 8 Biology
Washington State Introduction To Business 8 Business
CCC Fall 2008 Chemistry, General                                                          8 Chem
CCOTC Speech Communications(8) 8 Commun
FLA Composition Skills II 8 English Comp
CSU/UC F2007 History, General 8 History
FLA United States History to 1877 8 History
FLA Music Appreciation 8 Music
CCOTC Human Anatomy, Physiology(9) 9 Anatomy
FLA General Chemistry (1 of 2) 9 Chem
CCC Fall 2008 Speech Communication                                                        9 Commun
FLA Human Nutrition 9 Health
FLA United States History after 1877 9 History
CSU/UC F2007 Health and Physical Education, General 9 PE
Washington State Lifespan Psychology 9 Psy
CCOTC Accounting, Intro(10) 10 Accounting
FLA College Chemistry I Laboratory 10 Chem
FLA Humanities I 10 Humanities
Washington State Spanish I 10 Lang
CCC Fall 2008 Pre-Algebra (Basic Math/Arithmetic)                                         10 Math Fund
CSU/UC F2007 Multi-/Interdisciplinary Studies, Other 10 Other
FLA Developmental Psychology: Life Span 10 Psy
Washington State Principles of Accounting I 11 Accounting
FLA American National Government 11 Civics
CSU/UC F2007 Criminal Justice/Safety Studies  11 Criminal Justice
FLA Diversity for Humanities 11 Humanities
CCC Fall 2008 Spanish                                                                     11 Lang
CCOTC Math, Fundamentals(11) 11 Math Fund
Washington State Human Anatomy and Physiology 1 12 Anatomy
CSU/UC F2007 Mechanical Engineering 12 Engineer
FLA Humanities II 12 Humanities
FLA Topics in Mathematics /Mathematics for Liberal Arts I 12 Math Fund
CCOTC Govt, Pol Sci.(12) 12 Pol. Sci
CCC Fall 2008 Writing                                                                     12 Writing
CSU/UC F2007 Art/Art Studies, General 13 Art
Washington State Microeconomics 13 Econ
CCOTC Spanish I(13) 13 Lang
FLA Mathematics for Liberal Arts II 13 Math Fund
CCC Fall 2008 Child Development/Early Care and Education         13 Psy
Washington State Introduction To Communication 14 Commun
CCOTC Criminal Justice, Intro(14) 14 Criminal Justice
CSU/UC F2007 Electrical, Electronics and Communications Engineering 14 Engineer
FLA Spanish I 14 Lang
CCC Fall 2008 Sociology                                                                   14 Soc
CSU/UC F2007 Accounting 15 Accounting
CCC Fall 2008 Accounting                                                                  15 Accounting
Washington State Public Speaking 15 Commun
CCOTC Econ(15) 15 Econ
FLA Introductory Sociology 15 Soc
Washington State Interpersonal Communicatn 16 Commun
CSU/UC F2007 Pre-Nursing Studies  16 Nursing
CCC Fall 2008 Registered Nursing                                                          16 Nursing
FLA Introduction to Statistics 16 Stat
CCOTC Statistics(16) 16 Stat
Washington State Macroeconomics 17 Econ
CSU/UC F2007 Civil Engineering, General 17 Engineer
CCOTC Green Technology(17) 17 Engineer
CCC Fall 2008 Political Science                                                           17 Pol. Sci
FLA Trigonometry 17 trig
CCC Fall 2008 Anatomy and Physiology                                                      18 Anatomy
CSU/UC F2007 Computer Science 18 C. Science
Washington State Calculus I 18 Calculus
CCOTC Physics(18) 18 Physics
FLA Anatomy and Physiology I 19 Anatomy
CCOTC Business, Intro(19) 19 Business
FLA Calculus I with Analytic Geometry 19 Calculus
FLA Calculus II w/ Analytic Geometry 19 Calculus
CCC Fall 2008 Administration of Justice                                                   19 Criminal Justice
CSU/UC F2007 Nursing – Registered Nurse Training (RN, ASN, BSN, MSN) 19 Nursing
Washington State Introduction To Philosophy 19 Phil
FLA General Physics w/Calculus I (2 sem seq) 19 Physics
FLA Anatomy and Physiology II 20 Anatomy
CCC Fall 2008 Art                                                                         20 Art
Washington State Microbiology 20 Biology
FLA Calculus III with Analytic Geometry 20 Calculus
FLA Differential Equations I 20 Calculus
CSU/UC F2007 Communication Studies/Speech Communication and Rhetoric 20 Commun
FLA Principles of Macroeconomics 20 econ
CCOTC TBD (20) 20 Other
FLA Physical Science (category) 20 Physical Sci.
FLA General Physics I (2 sem seq) 20 Physics
FLA General Biology/Core Biology 21 Biology
FLA Calculus for Management 21 Calculus
FLA Public Speaking 21 Commun
FLA Principles of Microeconomics 21 econ
FLA Biology (category) 22 Biology
Sources:
CCOTC Community College Open Textbook Collaborative
CCC Fall 2008 California Community Colleges
CSU/UC F2007 California State University/University of CA
Washington State Washington State
FLA Flordia Top 40

International Open Education Resource (OER) Links (2011)

The Global Text Project has published a document listing international open education resource (OER) links.  Continents include Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, North America, and the rest of the world.   There are links to OER  View/Download

Excerpt:  “We are on the cusp of a global revolution in teaching and learning. Educators worldwide are developing a vast pool of educational resources on the Internet, open and free are for all to use.” -The Cape Town Open Education Declaration

Hurdles to Open Textbooks

runners jumping over hurdlesI am finding that the biggest impedance to open textbooks is not with instructors or supply, but college administrators, government administrators, and those who provide the money, including grant foundations.

Administrators’ primary job is to ensure the health, survival, and reputation of their institution. Their priority is to provide an education infrastructure that is capable of achieving the outcomes expected by formal and informal sources. They compete for funds and will avoid any activities, no matter how innovative, that will seem to risk the institution’s health, survival, and reputation. Those of us in the open textbook movement have so far failed to adequately demonstrate the low risk, the long-term value of open textbooks, and how to sustain them. For example, the loss of potential revenue from their bookstores alone is sufficient to continue with exclusivity agreements with traditional publishers. Besides, anyone providing open textbooks may be a “vaporware” organization. Traditional publishers have a solid longevity and reputation. Administrators are not risk takers.

Grant foundations’ primary job is to carry out their charter while complying with complex tax laws. Though many want innovation in both process and products, most of their money is given to status quo institutions, which makes sense since they must avoid any investments the IRS might consider as a “jeopardy investment.” They also fund projects that require approaches already established in some form. Foundations are not risk takers either.

The primary point is that the education industry and its supporting organizations are not constructed to innovate very quickly (i.e. within a generation.) What many are calling innovations is only innovative to the education industry. For those of us outside education we see the efforts and funding aimed at technological and pedagogical breakthroughs getting lost in organizational and institutional isolation and competitiveness. If they so desired all the heads of all the institutions could pull together their resources to quickly and efficiently provide open textbooks and ancillary resources.

My Solution? Demonstrate the commercial feasibility of open textbooks as a textbook competitor among the giants. Once the perceived risk is mitigated education institutions will adjust accordingly. Textbook prices will fall back into normal ranges. Economically, students and taxpayers will be much better off. And, naturally, the quality of textbooks will increase.

Textbook Selection Problems 90 Years Ago

Image Textbook SelectionIn 1922 educators were looking for objective methods for evaluating textbooks:

Text-book selection is obviously a process of making choices, and choices can be made in many ways. It is quite possible that certain texts have been chosen not because they were better tools of instruction than other books, but because the salesman urging their adoption had a more persuasive vocabulary, more agile and plastic sales methods, or was politically more canny than his competitors. Other texts have had large sales because they were or professed to be exponents of some pedagogical doctrine which momentarily hypnotized the buying agent. Better than the above, many texts have been adopted by schools because the proper authority, having studied the matter deliberately, chose those particular books.1

Franzen and Knight categorized their criteria as shown by their quote below.

The major criteria for selection of text-books are five:

  • (a) the factor of interest
  • (b) the factor of comprehension
  • (c) the permanent methods of study involved in the text
  • (d) the permanent value of content
  • (e) the mechanical construction of the text

 


1p. 13, “Textbook Selection“, R.H. Franzen and F.B. Knight, Warwick and York, Inc. Baltimore, MD 1922.
Franzen’s and Knight’s book (pdf) is in the Supplemental Materials section below.