2015 ncce conference - oer and common core

Post on 14-Jul-2015

121 Views

Category:

Education

2 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

Barbara SootsOpen Educational Resources Program Manager

Office of Superintendent of Public Instructionbarbara.soots@k12.wa.us

Liisa Moilanen PottsLiteracy and Professional Learning Integration Director

Office of Superintendent of Public InstructionLiisa.MoilanenPotts@k12.wa.us

OER and the Common Core2015 Northwest Council for Computer Education Conference

CC BY-SA Beyond definitions http://www.flickr.com/photos/opensourceway/6554315179/

OER are…resources that reside in the public domain or have been released under an intellectual property license that permits their FREEUSE and RE-PURPOSING by others.

Photo by nickwheeleroz - Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License https://www.flickr.com/photos/7762644@N04 Created with Haiku Deck

OPEN is not the same as FREE

Photo by Leo Reynolds - Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License https://www.flickr.com/photos/49968232@N00

The 5 Rs of OER

Reuse — copy verbatim

Redistribute — share with others

Revise — adapt and edit

Remix — combine resources

Retain — make, own, & control copies

Photo by designsbykari – CC BY NC http://www.flickr.com/photos/43726999@N06

OER are not one specific type of resource

Image and audio resources

Books in the public domain

Video and audio lectures

Interactive simulations

Game-based learning programs

Lesson plans

Textbooks

Online course curricula

Professional learning programs

Open Licensing

• Tell people how their material can be used

• Create a pool of material that can be shared and reused legally

• Enable a culture of sharing

All Rights Reserved

No Rights Reserved

Traditional Copyright Alone

Public Domain

Some Rights

Reserved

Open License

Adapted from Creative Commons in the Classroom – J. Goateshttp://www.slideshare.net/Jessicacoates/creative-commons-in-the-classroom-2013#/

http://creativecommons.org/about/licenses/

cc by

cc by-sa

cc by-nd

cc by-nc

cc by-nc-sa

cc by-nc-nd

More accommodating

More restrictive

Six License Types

Photo by Captain Chaos - Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License http://www.flickr.com/photos/53836246@N00

Cost shift from textbooks to other critical areas

Up to date, innovative materials

Collaboration and partnerships

Continual quality improvement and standards alignment

Support for independent and differentiated learning

Solve legal concerns with distribution and adaptation

Benefits of OER

“The legislature finds the state's recent adoption of new learning standards provides an opportunity to develop a library of high-quality, openly licensed K-12 courseware that is aligned with these standards.”

CC BY Washington State Capitol – CIMG2000 by Piutus https://www.flickr.com/photos/alreadytaken/

Washington K-12 OER Project

CC BY Rhino Roadblock by Chris Ingrassia http://www.flickr.com/photos/andryone/445139454/in/photostream/

Challenges with OER

Finding target resources

Access and security issues

District policies that don’t recognize OER as an option

Evaluating quality and alignment

CC BY Leszek Leszczynski http://www.flickr.com/photos/leszekleszczynski/5068940056/in/photostream/

Finding OER

Internet Search Engines

Google Advanced Search

Content Specific Repositories

Full Course OER

EngageNY

Full Course OER

CK12

Full Course OER

Utah Open Textbooks

Reviewing OER

Help educators select high quality materials

Provide information for materials adoptions

Identify gaps in Common Core alignment

CC BY NC SA apples by msr http://www.flickr.com/photos/msr/448820990/

What OER to review?

Unlimited access and redistribution

Permission to adapt

Defined content area and grade band scope

CCSS Worksheet

IMET Rubric

EQuIP Rubrics

Achieve OER Rubrics

Reviewers Comments

How to Evaluate Quality

English Language Arts OER

Washington State Learning Standards for ELA (CCSS-ELA)

Why OER for ELA?

What (and how many) materials do teachers of ELA have:

… in their classrooms?

… in their book rooms at school?

… in their homes?

The Big Picture: Every Day, Every Child Has Access to and Practice in These Components:

WERA P3_2014_Early Literacy

• Reading

• Writing

• Language

• Speaking & Listening

• Literacy in SS/H*

• Literacy in Sci/T*

• *-- 6-12th grades

Three Shifts in English Language Arts

• Building content knowledge throughcontent-rich nonfiction

• Reading, writing, and speaking grounded in evidence from text, both literary and informational

• Regular practice with complex text and its academic language

WERA P3_2014_Early Literacy

CCSS “Text Complexity”the right text for the right child for the right reason at the

right time

WERA P3_2014_Early Literacy

Best made by educators employing their

professional judgment

Sample: ELA or Social Studies

Why OER for Supplemental or Full ELA Curriculum?

1. 100% use of purchased materials

2. Differentiation for students with different needs

3. Ability to mark up texts at de minimis cost

4. Easy context & team- driven collaboration

5. Multiple platform access

Why OER for Math?

http://www.edreports.org/

Sparklines give quick overview of resource

OER Review Report Online

Click on resource title to get more in depth review information.

OER Review Report Online

Aggregated data from reviewers on how they would use the materials “as is” and with adaptations

OER Review Report Online

CC BY Nooksack Stairs by Barbara Soots

Next Steps

Follow us on Twitter: @waOSPI_OER

Visit the Reviewed OER Library

Suggest OER for the next review cycle

Take a look at the Southwest Washington Common Core Mathematics Consortium’s OER Algebra curriculum

Website: http://digitallearning.k12.wa.us/oer

Twitter: waOSPI_OER

OER Project Email: barbara.soots@k12.wa.us

ELA Questions: Liisa.MoilanenPotts@k12.wa.us

Stay Involved with the Project

top related