Category Archives: Conferences

What will I do at Open Education 2009?

The Open Education Conference sponsors made available three travel scholarships for people attending this year's conference. The requirement to apply is to write a blog post answering two questions, so I guess that's a very good excuse to write again in this blog, that has been a little abandoned in the last semester (mostly because I do prefer writing in Spanish, obviously).
 
Anyway, these are the questions:
 

  1. What you would “bring” to the conference? What can you contribute?
     
    Well, I have an already accepted proposal, so based on that I'll say that my contribution is the story of an experiment that we have done with about 700 higher education teachers, that has started to go mildly viral ;). The interesting thing about this experience is that it goes beyond the mere discourse about Learning Objects or OER, exposing participants to a connected/connective learning experience. I'd say it can be a valuable demonstration (that, of course, we expect to improve with the feedback from the attendees) of how can we 'walk the talk' regarding the use of technology in our daily practice.
     
    Something else: In the past, I've had some experience reporting events like this in Spanish, so that's something else I will do during the conference. You can expect me to provide information related to OpenEd to the Spanish-speaking community, both via Twitter and my blog. I also expect to be around with a video camera, asking participants about their thoughts on the pertinence of education. That's the general subject of a national forum that the Colombian Ministry of Education will have in October, so I intend to collect and publish online the ideas and thoughts of people around the world, to enrich our own perspective on this critical issue.
     
    I think of myself as sort of a "bridge builder"... I'm convinced of the importance of helping non-English speakers to get access to many current discussions that have a huge impact on the way we think about learning and the role of education, so I think that attending OpenEd will be, for me, a good opportunity to help bringing a lot of different and interesting ideas to an educational community that can make good use of them.  
  2.  
  3. What you see as the most critical issue facing you in your efforts around Open Education, and how you think the conference can help you address it?
     
    This has to do with something else that I'll definitely bring to the conference: lots of questions. The OER / Open Education movement is just starting in my country, and there are a lot of issues that we'll be able to address through the participation in this conference. For example, since 2006, we have a national work in progress around LO (that I helped to design), so we are facing the usual problems related to sharing resources among institutions, and how to use them in an effective way in teacher's practices. I think OpenEd will a good opportunity to enrich our current approach to this subject.

    Now, on the other hand, I think Open Education (in general) has a huge potential to improve the way we think about both teaching and formal education. I believe that the possibility of getting first-hand knowledge about the issues faced by institutions and new initiatives around the world could be useful to build a strong case for Open Education in a country like Colombia, helping us to go beyond the mere content approach, to explore the political and economical issues involved.

    Finally, it won't be fair to end this without saying that going to OpenEd is, clearly, a fantastic opportunity to meet a lot of people that I have read over the years, who have helped me change the way I see the world. I'll be really honored to be there.

So, that's it. That's my reflection about the things I can bring to OpenEd, and the things I expect to learn about. I hope it makes some sense…! :)


Seminar: Quality on Distance Higher Education: Luis Miguel Romero

This is the Rector of UPTL.

Again, lots of text. So sad..

There is a strong need to QA and accreditation. According to them, Colombia seems to be doing very well on Distance Education reglamentation. It is the only country, along with Brasil and Costa Rica, to have Distance Education guidelines.

If Colombia is one of the strongest countries in the region, who is working in CALED? It seems to be the UNAD and University Javeriana. The thing is that Distance Education is not e-Learning.

Self-question: Making studies on, let's say, e-Learning, and writing reports on those studies makes someone an expert on the development of e-Learning solutions?

http://www.utpl.edu.ec/centrovirtual. CHECK!!!

Alfa-Rueda network, on Distance Education quality standards. I remember something I heard (maybe from Jay Cross?) in the Future of Education conference: something like "Standards are built for things that doesn't change frequently"...

There is an online self-assessment tool…

http://www.uptc.edu.ec/caled

They were doing courses on DE quality. They found that people didn't even knew what was DE, so they made courses on this basic subject.

Myths of e-Learning quality:

  • Market as origin of the subject of quality.
  • Discovering the wheel.
  • The purpose of quality evaluation is quality evaluation.
  • Making life hard: The myth of perfect rationality.
  • We discuss little details, but accept willingly big mistakes. (Colamos un mosquito y nos tragamos un camello).
  • ICT as key factor
  • Change anything in order to be original, even if there's no need to.

Knowledge assessment scorecards!!!

The rector highlights the importance of focusing on the USE.

It is so refreshing to see a Rector who is so well informed about these issues.

Quality and values are the most important subjects for the LAC Universities on the 21st century.

Mental note: The great breakthroughs of humanity didn't happen on comitees.



Seminar: Quality on Distance Higher Education: Piet Henderikx

Finally, I'm at UNIVAP/Urbanova. Surprisingly, no laptops in the auditorium, so far. Maybe a couple of Blackberrys, but that's it. Restricted wireless access, by the way. You would expect to have open access in an event like this one.

EADTU (www.eadtu.nl): Lifelong open and flexible learning (LOF).

Bullet-style presentation. In English, with a translator…

Single mode universities: 100% distance education. Athabasca y TELUQ are associated with EADTU.
Dual mode across Europe.

Driving forces: Bologna, Lisbon Strategy (??), lifelong learning, internationalization, educational technology, global development.

Task forces: Virtual mobility, eLearning QA & Benchmarking, EPICS (European portal for international courses and services -check!-), funding & researching LOF, sustainability…

Looks like this people makes no difference between distance learning and e-Learning…

Principles: Interactivity, flexibility, accessibility…

Requirements: Learner centered Pedagogy, curriculum & course design & organization, pedagogical services. The most important thing is not the platform, but the learning processes involved.

Virtual mobility: Erasmus mobility: Take a course, take a module, international learning communities, support for physical mobility, virtual internship, virtual libraries. Funny thing: Some of these amazing "innovative" projects sound just like the kind of collaborative projects that you have found in Kidlink, for example, all these years… Higher Education is definitely walking a very slow path...

OER: MIT OCW, OpenLearn (UKOU), MORIL (??). They seems to be developing Multilingual educational resources. He calls "second generation", resources which include learning activities, in addition to content. Go figure, our LO definition is "second generation"… The difference is that they seem to be working a lot in localization of the resources (they are using 10 languages, it seems). They have an operational plan, and they are working now on its implementation.. But this is only multilingual, not multicultural approaches. They talk only about localization. If the institution that translates wants to include cultural aspects, it's their choice.

What about the intellectual property issues of these materials?

Are these resources synchronized? In a centralized LOR?

MORIL stands for Multilingual Open Educational Resources.

Task force: QA Assurance & Accreditation: Develop a core of facets, criteria parameters and procedures for QA for LOF learning/e-Learning.

E-xcellence (??): Set of 33 european benchmarks (which ones?) Who knows about this? Who could talk about this? They say the have manuals, books, etc.

Time's up. Not a very good time management strategy, so the presentation is over in the middle of it. The presenter says that the information is on the Web. If that is the case, what was the point of the talk?

That was Mr. Piet Henderikx, General Secretary, European Association of Distance Teaching Universities (EADTU), talking about Current trends on Virtual Education in Europe.

So far, nothing that I'm not aware of, at least in the conceptual sense. A lot of common places, sometimes oxymoron.. I have yet to see the Downes, Leinonen, Wiley, Warlick characters in this conference...