posted on 2015-10-30, 10:29authored byGabi Witthaus, Mark Childs, Bernard Nkuyubwatsi, Grainne Conole, Andreia Inamorato dos Santos, Yves Punie
This paper shares some of the findings of the OpenCred study, conducted by the
Institute of Learning Innovation at the University of Leicester in collaboration with
the European Commission’s Institute for Prospective Technological Studies (IPTS),
and funded by the IPTS. It describes a range of initiatives by higher education and
professional training institutions in Europe in which non-formal, open learning
achievements are recognised. Recognition of learning is almost always conferred in
consideration of the type of assessment used, and so a matrix has been developed
to show the relationship between these two features. The vertical axis of the matrix
comprises a five-level hierarchy of formality of recognition (from no recognition to
full recognition in line with the European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System),
while the horizontal axis represents a five-level hierarchy for robustness of assessment
(from no assessment to formal examinations). Examples of European open education
initiatives are discussed and plotted on the assessment-recognition matrix. The paper
concludes with a summary of the tensions between the assessment procedures used
and the recognition awarded, and offers recommendations for institutions wishing to
evaluate the nature of recognition awarded to open learners. It also identifies further
areas in which the framework could develop.