posted on 2016-12-12, 17:19authored byB. Schreurs, A. Van den Beemt, F. Prinsen, Gabi Witthaus, Gráinne Conole, M. de Laat
By investigating how educational practitioners participate in activities around open educational practices (OEP), this paper aims at contributing to an understanding of open practices and how these practitioners learn to use OEP. Our research is guided by the following hypothesis: Different social configurations support a variety of social learning activities. The social configuration of OEPs is investigated by an operationalization into the dimensions (1) practice, (2) domain, (3) collective identity, and (4) organization. The results show how practitioners of six different OEPs learn, while acting and collaborating through a combination of offline and online networks. The findings of our study lead to practical implications on how to support participation in OEP, and thereby stimulate learning in (online) networks of OEP.
Funding
This study is conducted within the frame of the POERUP project, funded by the lifelong
learning program of the European Commission (POERUP, 2013). The POERUP project
aims to enable the development of policies to stimulate the uptake of open educational
resources. Within the POERUP project, partners from the Open University of the
Netherlands, Sero Consulting and the University of Leicester, and the University of
Athabasca collaborated to gather all the data with help from the OEP initiatives under
investigation.
History
Citation
International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning, 2014, 15 (4), pp. 2-20
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/Institute of Learning Innovation
Version
VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning