2021
|
 | Lorenz, Anja: Frei lizenzierte Bildungsmaterialien (nicht nur) von der TH Lübeck. In: Helmkamp, Kerstin; Schütt, Rüdiger; Stockhusen, Sabrina (Hrsg.): Offen und vernetzt für alle: Beiträge zur Open-Access-Roadshow Schleswig-Holstein, S. 57–61, Universitätsverlag Kiel, Kiel, 2021, ISBN: 978-3-928794-59-6. @inbook{Lorenz2021c,
title = {Frei lizenzierte Bildungsmaterialien (nicht nur) von der TH Lübeck},
author = {Anja Lorenz},
editor = {Kerstin Helmkamp and Rüdiger Schütt and Sabrina Stockhusen},
url = {https://macau.uni-kiel.de/receive/macau_mods_00001137
https://doi.org/10.38072/978-3-928794-59-6/p7
https://doi.org/10.38072/978-3-928794-59-6},
doi = {10.38072/978-3-928794-59-6/p7},
isbn = {978-3-928794-59-6},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-03-03},
booktitle = {Offen und vernetzt für alle: Beiträge zur Open-Access-Roadshow Schleswig-Holstein},
pages = {57–61},
publisher = {Universitätsverlag Kiel},
address = {Kiel},
abstract = {In dem Beitrag werden die Aktivitäten des Instituts für Lerndienstleistungen (ILD) der technischen Hochschule Lübeck (TH Lübeck) rund um freie Lernmaterialien beschrieben. Ausgehend von den Anfängen und ersten Experimenten wird dargestellt, wie die Öffnung selbst produzierter Lernmaterialien nicht nur die Sichtbarkeit und damit die Reputation des Instituts gesteigert hat, sondern auch zu neuen Partnerschaften und Projektförderungen führte.},
keywords = {coer16, higher education, L3T, LOOP, massive open online course (MOOC), moochub, mooin, OER-Fachexperten (OERexp), OERde, open educational ressources (OER)},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inbook}
}
In dem Beitrag werden die Aktivitäten des Instituts für Lerndienstleistungen (ILD) der technischen Hochschule Lübeck (TH Lübeck) rund um freie Lernmaterialien beschrieben. Ausgehend von den Anfängen und ersten Experimenten wird dargestellt, wie die Öffnung selbst produzierter Lernmaterialien nicht nur die Sichtbarkeit und damit die Reputation des Instituts gesteigert hat, sondern auch zu neuen Partnerschaften und Projektförderungen führte. |
2020
|
 | Lorenz, Anja; Tacke, Oliver; Hirsch, Nele: Zusammenspiel von Materialarten und Werkzeugen – Der Gold-Standard für Onlinekurse als OER. In: Fabri, Blanche; Fahrenkrog, Gabi; Muuß-Merholz, Jöran (Hrsg.): Der Gold-Standard für OER-Materialien: ein Kompendium für die professionelle Erstellung von Open Educational Resources (OER), S. 45–51, ZLL21, Hamburg, 2020, ISBN: 9789403613987. @inbook{Lorenz2020t,
title = {Zusammenspiel von Materialarten und Werkzeugen – Der Gold-Standard für Onlinekurse als OER},
author = {Anja Lorenz and Oliver Tacke and Nele Hirsch},
editor = {Blanche Fabri and Gabi Fahrenkrog and Jöran Muuß-Merholz},
url = {https://open-educational-resources.de/goldstandard-onlinekurs/
https://www.oercamp.de/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Goldstandard-fuer-OER-2021.pdf
https://www.oercamp.de/2021/02/16/gold-standard-buch-release-party/
https://open-educational-resources.de/gold-standard-buch-artikel/},
isbn = {9789403613987},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-09-21},
urldate = {2020-09-21},
booktitle = {Der Gold-Standard für OER-Materialien: ein Kompendium für die professionelle Erstellung von Open Educational Resources (OER)},
pages = {45–51},
publisher = {ZLL21},
address = {Hamburg},
organization = {OERinfo: Informationsstelle Open Educational Resources},
abstract = {Online-Kurse sind aus verschiedenen Materialarten und Werkzeugen zusammengesetzt. Das macht sie zu einem besonderen Format für OER. Wie es gelingen kann, den Gold-Standard für OER Online-Kurse zu erreichen, beschreiben Anja Lorenz, Oliver Tacke und Nele Hirsch in diesem Beitrag.},
keywords = {freelancing, massive open online course (MOOC), moodle, OERde, OERinfo, online-course, open educational ressources (OER)},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inbook}
}
Online-Kurse sind aus verschiedenen Materialarten und Werkzeugen zusammengesetzt. Das macht sie zu einem besonderen Format für OER. Wie es gelingen kann, den Gold-Standard für OER Online-Kurse zu erreichen, beschreiben Anja Lorenz, Oliver Tacke und Nele Hirsch in diesem Beitrag. |
2018
|
 | Lorenz, Anja: OER: Wie sieht das in Echt aus?. Lightningtalk auf der MetaNOOK 2018, Lübeck, 09.11.2018. @misc{lorenz2018metanook,
title = {OER: Wie sieht das in Echt aus?},
author = {Anja Lorenz},
url = {http://bit.ly/metanook18-OER
https://youtu.be/gGYtr-Xdjmw
https://2018.nook-luebeck.de/2018/talk/lightning-talks-2},
year = {2018},
date = {2018-11-09},
urldate = {2018-11-09},
address = {Lübeck},
abstract = {Eigentlich steckt hinter Open Educational Resources (OER) nicht mehr, als Lernmaterialien, die unter einer freien Lizenz veröffentlicht werden. Diese freien Lizenzen erlauben anderen Lernenden und Lehrenden, dass sie dieses Material weiterverbreiten, aber auch für ihre Zwecke anpassen dürfen. Damit man sich noch besser vorstellen kann, wie OER in der Praxis aussehen können, werden einige der Projekte vorgestellt, die sich um den OER-Award 2016 oder 2017 beworben hatten.},
howpublished = {Lightningtalk auf der MetaNOOK 2018},
keywords = {lightning talk, OER-Award, OERde, open educational ressources (OER)},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {presentation}
}
Eigentlich steckt hinter Open Educational Resources (OER) nicht mehr, als Lernmaterialien, die unter einer freien Lizenz veröffentlicht werden. Diese freien Lizenzen erlauben anderen Lernenden und Lehrenden, dass sie dieses Material weiterverbreiten, aber auch für ihre Zwecke anpassen dürfen. Damit man sich noch besser vorstellen kann, wie OER in der Praxis aussehen können, werden einige der Projekte vorgestellt, die sich um den OER-Award 2016 oder 2017 beworben hatten. |
 | Lorenz, Anja; Preusse, Sabine: OER-Fachexperten: Open Educational Resources – Macher und Multiplikatoren in der Weiterbildung, OER-MuMiW. In: Synergie: Fachmagazin für Digitalisierung in der Lehre, Sonderband "Projekte der BMBF-Förderung OERinfo 2017/2018", S. 146–155, 2018, ISBN: 978-3-924330-63-7. @article{lorenz2018synergie,
title = {OER-Fachexperten: Open Educational Resources – Macher und Multiplikatoren in der Weiterbildung, OER-MuMiW},
author = {Anja Lorenz and Sabine Preusse},
url = {https://www.synergie.uni-hamburg.de/publikationen/sonderbaende/oer-info-2017-2018.html},
doi = {10.25592/978.3.924330.64.4},
isbn = {978-3-924330-63-7},
year = {2018},
date = {2018-09-01},
journal = {Synergie: Fachmagazin für Digitalisierung in der Lehre, Sonderband "Projekte der BMBF-Förderung OERinfo 2017/2018"},
pages = {146–155},
abstract = {Die Fortbildung zur/zum OER-Fachexpertin bzw. -Fachexperten richtet sich an Akteurinnen und Akteure in der Weiterbildung. In einem fünfstufigen Blended-Learning-Programm werden Kompetenzen rund um freie Lernmaterialien aufgebaut, die bis zur Entwicklung eines eigenen OER-Projekts führen.},
keywords = {BDVT, competences, digitalisation, learning material, massive open online course (MOOC), OER-Fachexperten (OERexp), OERde, open educational ressources (OER)},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Die Fortbildung zur/zum OER-Fachexpertin bzw. -Fachexperten richtet sich an Akteurinnen und Akteure in der Weiterbildung. In einem fünfstufigen Blended-Learning-Programm werden Kompetenzen rund um freie Lernmaterialien aufgebaut, die bis zur Entwicklung eines eigenen OER-Projekts führen. |
 | Lorenz, Anja: Ein eigenes OER als Prüfungsleistung: Ergebnisse aus dem Weiterbildungsprogramm der OER-Fachexperten. Vortrag auf der Informations- und Netzwerktagung "University goes OER - Offene Bildungsmaterialien an Hochschulen und in der akademischen Weiterbildung" im Rahmen des Projekts OpERA, Ulm, 03.05.2018. @misc{lorenz2018opera,
title = {Ein eigenes OER als Prüfungsleistung: Ergebnisse aus dem Weiterbildungsprogramm der OER-Fachexperten},
author = {Anja Lorenz},
url = {http://bit.ly/oerulm-oerexp
https://www.uni-ulm.de/einrichtungen/saps/projekte/opera/netzwerkveranstaltung-2018/},
year = {2018},
date = {2018-05-03},
urldate = {2018-04-11},
address = {Ulm},
school = {Universität Ulm},
abstract = {Nach zwei Workshops und zwei Online-Veranstaltungen nehmen einige Teilnehmerinnen und Teilnehmer nun noch die letzte Stufe in unserer Fortbildung zum/zur OER-Fachexpert*in: eine mündliche Prüfung zu einem selbst erstellten OER. Die Prüfungskommission besteht dabei immer aus mindestens einer Person aus unserem Projektteam sowie einem externen Prüfer, der bereits eine weitreichende Expertise im Themenfeld OER aufweisen kann.
So bekommen wir in diesen Tagen eine immense Vielfalt freier Lernmaterialien der Teilnehmenden zu Gesicht: Neben Arbeitsblättern und Checklisten sind auch Videos und ganze Online-Kurse entstanden. Einen guten Einblick dazu kann man im Forum der 2. Online-Phase erhalten, in denen die Teilnehmenden ihr OER und das dahinterliegende Konzept vorstellen.
Nach einer erfolgreich bestandenen Prüfung nehmen wir die frisch gebackenen OER-Fachexpertinnen und -Fachexperten in unsere „Hall of Fame“ auf, die sich in den nächsten Tagen sicher noch weiter füllen wird.},
howpublished = {Vortrag auf der Informations- und Netzwerktagung "University goes OER - Offene Bildungsmaterialien an Hochschulen und in der akademischen Weiterbildung" im Rahmen des Projekts OpERA},
keywords = {eAssessment, massive open online course (MOOC), mooin, OER-Fachexperten (OERexp), OERde, open educational ressources (OER)},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {presentation}
}
Nach zwei Workshops und zwei Online-Veranstaltungen nehmen einige Teilnehmerinnen und Teilnehmer nun noch die letzte Stufe in unserer Fortbildung zum/zur OER-Fachexpert*in: eine mündliche Prüfung zu einem selbst erstellten OER. Die Prüfungskommission besteht dabei immer aus mindestens einer Person aus unserem Projektteam sowie einem externen Prüfer, der bereits eine weitreichende Expertise im Themenfeld OER aufweisen kann.
So bekommen wir in diesen Tagen eine immense Vielfalt freier Lernmaterialien der Teilnehmenden zu Gesicht: Neben Arbeitsblättern und Checklisten sind auch Videos und ganze Online-Kurse entstanden. Einen guten Einblick dazu kann man im Forum der 2. Online-Phase erhalten, in denen die Teilnehmenden ihr OER und das dahinterliegende Konzept vorstellen.
Nach einer erfolgreich bestandenen Prüfung nehmen wir die frisch gebackenen OER-Fachexpertinnen und -Fachexperten in unsere „Hall of Fame“ auf, die sich in den nächsten Tagen sicher noch weiter füllen wird. |
 | Lorenz, Anja; Muuß-Merholz, Jöran: An Award for Open Educational Resources – an innovative approach to defining quality in OER. Beitrag auf der Open Education Global Conference (OER Global), Delft, 24.04.2018. @misc{lorenz18oeglobal3,
title = {An Award for Open Educational Resources – an innovative approach to defining quality in OER},
author = {Anja Lorenz and Jöran Muuß-Merholz},
url = {http://joeran.de/oeglobalawards/
http://sched.co/DpZv},
year = {2018},
date = {2018-04-24},
urldate = {2018-03-22},
address = {Delft},
abstract = {o promote the efforts of practioners in the field OER to a wider public, the German OER-Award has been granted for the first time as part of the OER-Festival in February 2016. Elected by a jury of OER experts, there was not only an OER-Award in several educational field, but also in special domains. The second OER-Awards will have been granted in November 2017 following the collaboratively-designed process to identify deserving nominees and winners.
The presentation describes the short history of the German OER-Awards including changes that has been made for the second edition. Next to best practices also the challenges will be discussed. Finally, we will welcome your feedback to improve the process for the 3rd edition of our OER-Awards.},
howpublished = {Beitrag auf der Open Education Global Conference (OER Global)},
keywords = {OER-Award, OERde, OERde16, OERde17, open educational ressources (OER)},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {presentation}
}
o promote the efforts of practioners in the field OER to a wider public, the German OER-Award has been granted for the first time as part of the OER-Festival in February 2016. Elected by a jury of OER experts, there was not only an OER-Award in several educational field, but also in special domains. The second OER-Awards will have been granted in November 2017 following the collaboratively-designed process to identify deserving nominees and winners.
The presentation describes the short history of the German OER-Awards including changes that has been made for the second edition. Next to best practices also the challenges will be discussed. Finally, we will welcome your feedback to improve the process for the 3rd edition of our OER-Awards. |
 | Muuß-Merholz, Jöran; Fabri, Blanche: 10 years EduCamps, 6 years OERcamps: Transforming Education through Open Conference Formats. Beitrag auf der Open Education Global Conference (OER Global), Delft, 24.04.2018. @misc{mm2018oeglobal,
title = {10 years EduCamps, 6 years OERcamps: Transforming Education through Open Conference Formats},
author = {Jöran Muuß-Merholz and Blanche Fabri},
url = {http://joeran.de/oeglobalbarcamps/
http://sched.co/DpZl},
year = {2018},
date = {2018-04-24},
urldate = {2018-05-07},
address = {Delft},
abstract = {Barcamps represent an unconference format with a common theme but without pre-planned programme. The session schedule is designed collaboratively at the beginning of each (un-)conference day. In Germany there are several barcamps in the field of education. Two of them will be highlighted from the position of members of their organising teams. “Educamps” on digital media in education started in 2008 and have since taken place 21 times. “OERcamps” on Open Educational Resources started in 2012 and have since taken place 9 times.
A recent review of OER-related activities in Germany on behalf of UNESCO (Orr, Neumann, Muuß-Merholz 2017, 8) found: “Since OER activities are mostly driven bottom-up, there has been a need for sharing questions, experiences and materials between players, who have been isolated in their own institutions. These players found opportunities for sharing in cross-sector events and communities. Especially the barcamp/unconference format turned out to fit tremendously well developing a strong German OER community. Indeed, Germany so far has seen a remarkably strong cross-sector community with common interest in OER.”
Barcamps open up new and contemporary formats for learning based on openness, sharing, personal meaning, participation and equality. They are the appropriate format of education for a time in which we are depending on not only transferring fixed knowledge but also co-creating new knowledge. Barcamps are about sharing, discussing, negotiating solutions for a world in change. Barcamps are one way of transforming education through open approaches from bottom-up.
Barcamps are not only a real best practice of open pedagogy and open educational practices. They are also the source of collective development and use of open educational materials. The documentation with collaboratively text documents, blogging, podcasts etc. are mostly shared under a CC BY licence. The organisers also provide templates for documentation and planning under CC BY.},
howpublished = {Beitrag auf der Open Education Global Conference (OER Global)},
keywords = {BarCamp, educamp, OERCamp, OERde, OERde16, OERde17, open educational ressources (OER)},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {presentation}
}
Barcamps represent an unconference format with a common theme but without pre-planned programme. The session schedule is designed collaboratively at the beginning of each (un-)conference day. In Germany there are several barcamps in the field of education. Two of them will be highlighted from the position of members of their organising teams. “Educamps” on digital media in education started in 2008 and have since taken place 21 times. “OERcamps” on Open Educational Resources started in 2012 and have since taken place 9 times.
A recent review of OER-related activities in Germany on behalf of UNESCO (Orr, Neumann, Muuß-Merholz 2017, 8) found: “Since OER activities are mostly driven bottom-up, there has been a need for sharing questions, experiences and materials between players, who have been isolated in their own institutions. These players found opportunities for sharing in cross-sector events and communities. Especially the barcamp/unconference format turned out to fit tremendously well developing a strong German OER community. Indeed, Germany so far has seen a remarkably strong cross-sector community with common interest in OER.”
Barcamps open up new and contemporary formats for learning based on openness, sharing, personal meaning, participation and equality. They are the appropriate format of education for a time in which we are depending on not only transferring fixed knowledge but also co-creating new knowledge. Barcamps are about sharing, discussing, negotiating solutions for a world in change. Barcamps are one way of transforming education through open approaches from bottom-up.
Barcamps are not only a real best practice of open pedagogy and open educational practices. They are also the source of collective development and use of open educational materials. The documentation with collaboratively text documents, blogging, podcasts etc. are mostly shared under a CC BY licence. The organisers also provide templates for documentation and planning under CC BY. |
 | Muuß-Merholz, Jöran; Lorenz, Anja: The OER Awards in Germany. Promoting #Open through awarding best practice. 9th annual conference for Open Education research, practice and policy (OER18), 18–19 April 2018, Bristol, UK, Bristol, 19.04.2018. @misc{lorenz2018oer18,
title = {The OER Awards in Germany. Promoting #Open through awarding best practice},
author = {Jöran Muuß-Merholz and Anja Lorenz},
url = {http://joeran.de/oer18award/
https://oer18.oerconf.org/sessions/the-oer-awards-in-germany-promoting-open-through-awarding-best-practice-1909/},
year = {2018},
date = {2018-04-19},
urldate = {2018-03-22},
address = {Bristol},
organization = {Association for Learning Technology (ALT)},
abstract = {The Ljubljana Action Plan 2017 puts a strong emphasis on “high quality” of OER (UNECO 2017), that is not a trivial issue when it comes to education (Ehlers 2009). The German “OER awards” aim at new ways of discussing and promoting OER.
Though Germany has been a latecomer to the OER scene, there is a strong OER community now (Orr, Neumann, Muuß-Merholz 2017). To promote the idea and the sharing of OER in German-speaking regions, there have been OER awards in early 2016 and in November 2017.
Overview
The OER awards highlight the efforts of OER practitioners in more than 10 categories. Furthermore, there was an audience award in 2016 that was linked to a funding for the best OER idea, that must be realized with the prize money, and special awards by the jury in 2016 and 2017 without submission options.
Criteria
A special focus was set on the elaboration of definitions for requirements and criteria. Contributions must be
- Open as described in the Open Definition (published by Open Knowledge International).
- Educational as in “designed for educational purposes”.
- Resource in the sense of “delimitable and transferable”. This explicitly includes software and concepts.
- German, i.e. in German language or (!) predominantly developed in a German language country.
In 2017 the following criteria were used for assessment:
- temporal relevance (must date from later than early 2016)
- participation and collaboration in the making
- didactic quality, innovative pedagogical settings
- licencing
- range, use, impact
- potential for actual reuse
- quality development and quality assurance
- technical quality
- X-factor (wild card for positive qualities not covered in the criteria mentioned above)
Quality of the content regarded from a subject perspective was NOT among the criteria.
It should be noted that these criteria were developed in an open and collaborative process among a jury of OER experts. All steps of the election processes were organized online as the jury never met before the ceremony. Supported by a moodle course and a set of Google Documents and Formulas, the process was adapted to the several steps and needs of the jury.
Outline of the Session
In our presentation we will give an overview on the idea and the process behind the OER award and show some statistics and figures. A special focus will be set on the community driven work within the “oer academy” in which the process, the criteria and the selection of awardees are discussed openly. Showcasing awarded projects will NOT be part of the presentation. We will instead focus on the question how an award can contribute to promoting the idea and the sharing of OER.
References
Ehlers, U. D. (2009). Understanding quality culture. Quality Assurance in Education, 17(4), 343-363.
Orr, D.; Neumann, J.; Muuß-Merholz, J. (2017). German OER Practices and Policy – from Bottom-up to Top-down Initiatives. http://iite.unesco.org/publications/3214746/
UNESCO (2017). “Ljubljana OER Action Plan 2017.” Adopted by the second World Open Educational Resources (OER) Congress in Ljubljana in September 2017. https://en.unesco.org/sites/default/files/ljubljana_oer_action_plan_2017.pdf},
howpublished = {9th annual conference for Open Education research, practice and policy (OER18), 18–19 April 2018, Bristol, UK},
keywords = {OER-Award, OERde, OERde16, OERde17, open educational ressources (OER)},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {presentation}
}
The Ljubljana Action Plan 2017 puts a strong emphasis on “high quality” of OER (UNECO 2017), that is not a trivial issue when it comes to education (Ehlers 2009). The German “OER awards” aim at new ways of discussing and promoting OER.
Though Germany has been a latecomer to the OER scene, there is a strong OER community now (Orr, Neumann, Muuß-Merholz 2017). To promote the idea and the sharing of OER in German-speaking regions, there have been OER awards in early 2016 and in November 2017.
Overview
The OER awards highlight the efforts of OER practitioners in more than 10 categories. Furthermore, there was an audience award in 2016 that was linked to a funding for the best OER idea, that must be realized with the prize money, and special awards by the jury in 2016 and 2017 without submission options.
Criteria
A special focus was set on the elaboration of definitions for requirements and criteria. Contributions must be
- Open as described in the Open Definition (published by Open Knowledge International).
- Educational as in “designed for educational purposes”.
- Resource in the sense of “delimitable and transferable”. This explicitly includes software and concepts.
- German, i.e. in German language or (!) predominantly developed in a German language country.
In 2017 the following criteria were used for assessment:
- temporal relevance (must date from later than early 2016)
- participation and collaboration in the making
- didactic quality, innovative pedagogical settings
- licencing
- range, use, impact
- potential for actual reuse
- quality development and quality assurance
- technical quality
- X-factor (wild card for positive qualities not covered in the criteria mentioned above)
Quality of the content regarded from a subject perspective was NOT among the criteria.
It should be noted that these criteria were developed in an open and collaborative process among a jury of OER experts. All steps of the election processes were organized online as the jury never met before the ceremony. Supported by a moodle course and a set of Google Documents and Formulas, the process was adapted to the several steps and needs of the jury.
Outline of the Session
In our presentation we will give an overview on the idea and the process behind the OER award and show some statistics and figures. A special focus will be set on the community driven work within the “oer academy” in which the process, the criteria and the selection of awardees are discussed openly. Showcasing awarded projects will NOT be part of the presentation. We will instead focus on the question how an award can contribute to promoting the idea and the sharing of OER.
References
Ehlers, U. D. (2009). Understanding quality culture. Quality Assurance in Education, 17(4), 343-363.
Orr, D.; Neumann, J.; Muuß-Merholz, J. (2017). German OER Practices and Policy – from Bottom-up to Top-down Initiatives. http://iite.unesco.org/publications/3214746/
UNESCO (2017). “Ljubljana OER Action Plan 2017.” Adopted by the second World Open Educational Resources (OER) Congress in Ljubljana in September 2017. https://en.unesco.org/sites/default/files/ljubljana_oer_action_plan_2017.pdf |
 | Muuß-Merholz, Jöran; Fabri, Blanche: Conferences open to all! Mainstreaming open education through unconferences and barcamps. 9th annual conference for Open Education research, practice and policy (OER18), 18–19 April 2018, Bristol, UK, Bristol, 19.04.2018. @misc{mm2018oer18,
title = {Conferences open to all! Mainstreaming open education through unconferences and barcamps},
author = {Jöran Muuß-Merholz and Blanche Fabri},
url = {http://joeran.de/oer18oercamp/
https://oer18.oerconf.org/sessions/conferences-open-to-all-mainstreaming-open-education-through-unconferences-and-barcamps-1873/},
year = {2018},
date = {2018-04-19},
urldate = {2018-05-07},
address = {Bristol},
organization = {Association for Learning Technology (ALT)},
abstract = {Barcamps or open conferences are open education events which are open to all. They represent an unconference format with a common theme but without pre-planned programme. The session schedule is designed collaboratively at the beginning of each (un-)conference day. In Germany there are several barcamps in the field of education. Three of them will be highlighted. “Educamps” on digital media in education started in 2008 and have since taken place 21 times. “OERcamps” on Open Educational Resources started in 2012 and have since taken place 9 times. “InklusionsCamp” on inclusive education which has taken place for the first time in 2015.
A recent review of OER-related activities in Germany on behalf of UNESCO (Orr, Neumann, Muuß-Merholz 2017, 8) found: “Since OER activities are mostly driven bottom-up, there has been a need for sharing questions, experiences and materials between players, who have been isolated in their own institutions. These players found opportunities for sharing in cross-sector events and communities. Especially the barcamp/unconference format turned out to fit tremendously well developing a strong German OER community. Indeed, Germany so far has seen a remarkably strong cross-sector community with common interest in OER.”
Barcamps open up new and contemporary formats for learning based on openness, sharing, personal meaning, participation and equality. They are the appropriate format of education for a time in which we are depending on not only transferring fixed knowledge but also co-creating new knowledge. Barcamps are about sharing, discussing, negotiating solutions for a world in change. Barcamps are one way of transforming education through open approaches from bottom-up.
Barcamps are not only a real best practice of open pedagogy and open educational practices. They are also the source of collective development and use of open educational materials (Bernhardt & Kirchner 2009). The documentation with collaborative text documents, blogging, podcasts etc. are mostly shared under a CC BY licence. The organisers also provide templates for documentation and planning under CC BY.
Barcamps provide a radical “Open to all” approach by lowering the barriers by removing participation fees and any formal requirements, fostering cross sectoral collaboration, encouraging volunteering and peer to peer support for participants, facilitate ways of participation via digital media. Barcamps aim to be truely inclusive events.
In this presentation we will give an overview on these characteristics. We would also like to encourage the participants to discuss how they can bring open conferencing to their home turfs.
References
Bernhardt, T., & Kirchner, M. (2009). Web 2.0 Meets Conference: The EduCamp as. Looking Toward the Future of Technology-Enhanced Education: Ubiquitous Learning and the Digital Native, 192.
Greenhill, K., & Wiebrands, C. (2008). The unconference: a new model for better professional communication.
Wenger, E. (1998). Communities of practice: Learning, meaning, and identity. Cambridge university press.
Orr, D., Neumann, J., & Muuß-Merholz, J. (2017). German OER Practices and Policy — from Bottom-up to Top-down Initiatives. UNESCO Institute for Information Technologies in Education (IITE).},
howpublished = {9th annual conference for Open Education research, practice and policy (OER18), 18–19 April 2018, Bristol, UK},
keywords = {BarCamp, educamp, OERCamp, OERde, OERde16, OERde17, open educational ressources (OER)},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {presentation}
}
Barcamps or open conferences are open education events which are open to all. They represent an unconference format with a common theme but without pre-planned programme. The session schedule is designed collaboratively at the beginning of each (un-)conference day. In Germany there are several barcamps in the field of education. Three of them will be highlighted. “Educamps” on digital media in education started in 2008 and have since taken place 21 times. “OERcamps” on Open Educational Resources started in 2012 and have since taken place 9 times. “InklusionsCamp” on inclusive education which has taken place for the first time in 2015.
A recent review of OER-related activities in Germany on behalf of UNESCO (Orr, Neumann, Muuß-Merholz 2017, 8) found: “Since OER activities are mostly driven bottom-up, there has been a need for sharing questions, experiences and materials between players, who have been isolated in their own institutions. These players found opportunities for sharing in cross-sector events and communities. Especially the barcamp/unconference format turned out to fit tremendously well developing a strong German OER community. Indeed, Germany so far has seen a remarkably strong cross-sector community with common interest in OER.”
Barcamps open up new and contemporary formats for learning based on openness, sharing, personal meaning, participation and equality. They are the appropriate format of education for a time in which we are depending on not only transferring fixed knowledge but also co-creating new knowledge. Barcamps are about sharing, discussing, negotiating solutions for a world in change. Barcamps are one way of transforming education through open approaches from bottom-up.
Barcamps are not only a real best practice of open pedagogy and open educational practices. They are also the source of collective development and use of open educational materials (Bernhardt & Kirchner 2009). The documentation with collaborative text documents, blogging, podcasts etc. are mostly shared under a CC BY licence. The organisers also provide templates for documentation and planning under CC BY.
Barcamps provide a radical “Open to all” approach by lowering the barriers by removing participation fees and any formal requirements, fostering cross sectoral collaboration, encouraging volunteering and peer to peer support for participants, facilitate ways of participation via digital media. Barcamps aim to be truely inclusive events.
In this presentation we will give an overview on these characteristics. We would also like to encourage the participants to discuss how they can bring open conferencing to their home turfs.
References
Bernhardt, T., & Kirchner, M. (2009). Web 2.0 Meets Conference: The EduCamp as. Looking Toward the Future of Technology-Enhanced Education: Ubiquitous Learning and the Digital Native, 192.
Greenhill, K., & Wiebrands, C. (2008). The unconference: a new model for better professional communication.
Wenger, E. (1998). Communities of practice: Learning, meaning, and identity. Cambridge university press.
Orr, D., Neumann, J., & Muuß-Merholz, J. (2017). German OER Practices and Policy — from Bottom-up to Top-down Initiatives. UNESCO Institute for Information Technologies in Education (IITE). |
 | Lorenz, Anja: H5P: Interaktive Lerninhalte ohne Programmierkenntnisse erstellen. Workshop im Rahmen der Landesfachtag Open Educational Resources (OER) Schwerpunkt Elektrotechnik, Flensburg, 2018. @workshop{Lorenz18loersh,
title = {H5P: Interaktive Lerninhalte ohne Programmierkenntnisse erstellen},
author = {Anja Lorenz},
url = {http://bit.ly/loersh-h5p
https://www.uni-flensburg.de/medienbildung/projekte/loersh/},
year = {2018},
date = {2018-03-16},
urldate = {2018-03-16},
booktitle = {Workshop im Rahmen der Landesfachtag Open Educational Resources (OER) Schwerpunkt Elektrotechnik},
address = {Flensburg},
school = {Europa-Universität Flensburg},
keywords = {eLearning, freelancing, h5p, learning content, loersh, OERde, open educational ressources (OER), reusability, school},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {workshop}
}
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2017
|
 | Lorenz, Anja: Gute Lehre zitiert, großartige Lehre remixt: OER für eigene Kontexte anpassen. Projekt „OpERA – Open Educational Resources in der akademischen Weiterbildung“ Oldenburg, 2017. @workshop{loranz2017opera,
title = {Gute Lehre zitiert, großartige Lehre remixt: OER für eigene Kontexte anpassen},
author = {Anja Lorenz},
url = {http://bit.ly/oeroldenburg-oerexp},
year = {2017},
date = {2017-12-14},
urldate = {2017-12-14},
address = {Oldenburg},
organization = {Projekt „OpERA – Open Educational Resources in der akademischen Weiterbildung“},
school = {Universität Oldenburg},
abstract = {Freie Lernmaterialien (OER) zeichnen sich nicht nur dadurch aus, dass sie kostenlos zur Wiederverwendung zur Verfügung stehen. Die entsprechenden Lizenzen der Creative Commons (nicht NC) erlauben vor allem auch eine Bearbeitung und Remix. Damit können OER leicht an den eigenen Kontext angepasst werden – zumindest aus rechtlicher Perspektive. Aber wie kann das in der Praxis aussehen?
Nach einem kurzen Input zu einigen Grundlagen und dem MOOC OER-Fachexperten als Best Practice Beispiel (https://mooin.oncampus.de/oerexp) schauen wir uns einfache Werkzeuge zum Remixen an (allen voran H5P) und erarbeiten einige Möglichkeiten zum Anpassen von OER für den eigenen Lehrkontext.},
howpublished = {Workshop auf der OER-Informations- und Netzwerktagung im Projekt OpERA},
type = {Workshop},
keywords = {authoring tools, eLearning, higher education, learning content, massive open online course (MOOC), mooin, OER-Fachexperten (OERexp), OERde, open educational ressources (OER), OpERA, remix, wissenschaftliche Weiterbildung},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {workshop}
}
Freie Lernmaterialien (OER) zeichnen sich nicht nur dadurch aus, dass sie kostenlos zur Wiederverwendung zur Verfügung stehen. Die entsprechenden Lizenzen der Creative Commons (nicht NC) erlauben vor allem auch eine Bearbeitung und Remix. Damit können OER leicht an den eigenen Kontext angepasst werden – zumindest aus rechtlicher Perspektive. Aber wie kann das in der Praxis aussehen?
Nach einem kurzen Input zu einigen Grundlagen und dem MOOC OER-Fachexperten als Best Practice Beispiel (https://mooin.oncampus.de/oerexp) schauen wir uns einfache Werkzeuge zum Remixen an (allen voran H5P) und erarbeiten einige Möglichkeiten zum Anpassen von OER für den eigenen Lehrkontext. |
 | Lorenz, Anja: OER für (freiberufliche) Trainer*innen: In 5 Schritten zum OER-Fachexperten. Soloauftritt und Lightningtalk auf dem OER-Fachforum 2017, Berlin, 29.11.2017. @misc{lorenz2017oerdeOERexp,
title = {OER für (freiberufliche) Trainer*innen: In 5 Schritten zum OER-Fachexperten},
author = {Anja Lorenz},
url = {http://bit.ly/oerde17-oerexp
https://open-educational-resources.de/oer-fuer-freiberufliche-trainerinnen-5-schritten-zum-oer-fachexperten/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1SyBq1MXCs},
year = {2017},
date = {2017-11-29},
urldate = {2017-11-29},
address = {Berlin},
abstract = {Dass OER für freiberufliche Trainerinnen und Trainer kein Selbstläufer ist, scheint offensichtlich: Ein direkter Gewinn ist zunächst nicht zu erwarten, wenn sie ihre Lernmaterialien unter einer freien Lizenz veröffentlichen und teilen. Im Weiterbildungsprogramm zum OER-Fachexperten macht der BDVT zusammen mit der FH Lübeck auf das Thema in dieser Zielgruppe aufmerksam und motiviert dazu, OER pädagogisch nutzenstiftend einzusetzen. Mehr Informationen dazu unter www.oer-fachexperten.de},
howpublished = {Soloauftritt und Lightningtalk auf dem OER-Fachforum 2017},
keywords = {eLearning, lightning talk, massive open online course (MOOC), mooin, OER-Fachexperten (OERexp), OERde, OERde17, open educational ressources (OER)},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {presentation}
}
Dass OER für freiberufliche Trainerinnen und Trainer kein Selbstläufer ist, scheint offensichtlich: Ein direkter Gewinn ist zunächst nicht zu erwarten, wenn sie ihre Lernmaterialien unter einer freien Lizenz veröffentlichen und teilen. Im Weiterbildungsprogramm zum OER-Fachexperten macht der BDVT zusammen mit der FH Lübeck auf das Thema in dieser Zielgruppe aufmerksam und motiviert dazu, OER pädagogisch nutzenstiftend einzusetzen. Mehr Informationen dazu unter www.oer-fachexperten.de |
 | Lorenz, Anja: Bildungspolitik trifft OER-Community – und begreift(?). Keynote auf dem Kick-Off des Projekts OERsax, Dresden, 17.03.2017. @misc{lorenz2017oersax,
title = {Bildungspolitik trifft OER-Community – und begreift(?)},
author = {Anja Lorenz},
url = {https://secret-cow-level.de/wordpress/2017/03/deja-vu-oer-in-sachsen-oersax/
http://bit.ly/oersax-lorenz
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yYBNFcy2v-k
http://blogs.hrz.tu-freiberg.de/oersax/ready-steady-go-kick-off-oersax-am-17-03/
http://blogs.hrz.tu-freiberg.de/oersax/keynote-vortrag-von-anja-lorenz-online/},
year = {2017},
date = {2017-03-17},
urldate = {2017-03-17},
address = {Dresden},
organization = {OERsax},
school = {Technische Universität Dresden, Bergakademie Freiberg und HTW Dresden},
howpublished = {Keynote auf dem Kick-Off des Projekts OERsax},
keywords = {coer16, keynote, L3T, OER-Award, OERde, OERde16, OERsax, open educational ressources (OER), SOOC, SOOPAL},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {presentation}
}
|
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