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The California
bill I covered
a few weeks ago, authorizing the establishment of “a pilot program to
provide faculty and staff from community college districts around the state
with the information, methods, and instructional materials to establish
open education resources centers” has inspired me to do finally do
one of those things on my “one of these days…” list.
As we drafted the language for the Cape
Town Declaration’s Strategy 3 on Open Education Policy, I worked
to champion the idea that ‘taxpayer-funded educational resources
should be open educational resources.’ This is the line of argument
that helped secure legislative funding for the Utah
OpenCourseWare Alliance. This language and other great ideas did
eventually make it into the Strategy:
3. Open education policy: Third, governments, school
boards, colleges and universities should make open education a high
priority. Ideally, taxpayer-funded educational resources should be open
educational resources. Accreditation and adoption processes should give
preference to open educational resources. Educational resource repositories
should actively include and highlight open educational resources within
their collections.
So now what is obviously needed is some legislation that makes these
policies real! Borrowing and improving the definition of OERs from the
California bill, I’m thinking something along these lines:
Open educational resources are curriculum materials or
learning resources whose copyrights have expired, that have been placed in
the public domain, or that have been released with an intellectual property
license that permits their free use, reuse, revision, and redistribution by
others without further permission from the original authors or creators.
Open educational resources include items such as courses, course materials,
textbooks, lesson plans, videos or podcasts of classroom lectures, homework
assignments, activities, tests, and any other tools, materials, or
techniques that have an impact on teaching and learning.
Utah?s public schools spend a significant amount of taxpayer money each
year purchasing or licensing curriculum materials and other learning
resources. Given the limited nature of public funding available, Utah?s
public schools can become better stewards of public resources by making
greater use of open educational resources. Specifically, in cases where
existing open educational resources provide a viable educational
alternative to traditional curriculum materials, these should be strongly
considered for adoption by the schools and districts. In cases where public
funds are used to purchase or license materials instead of adopting
educationally equivalent open educational resources, schools and districts
have an obligation to justify these decisions to the taxpaying public.
Utah?s public schools also spend a significant amount of taxpayer money
each year producing original curriculum materials and other learning
resources. In order to provide the largest possible benefit to Utah?s
public schools, any time public funds are used to produce curriculum
materials these should immediately become open educational resources and be
made available for free use, reuse, revision, and redistribution by other
public schools and the public at large.
Such measures will create real cost savings for districts and schools.
These cost savings can be redirected back into the schools and districts in
a number of ways, including supporting teacher professional development
regarding the discovery, creation, use, and sharing of open educational
resources, summer funding for teachers to improve existing open educational
resources, and summer funding for teachers to develop new open educational
resources.
I realize right away that a bill espousing these principles may be far
too right-headed to have a chance of passing, but as I was recently
reminded, “being sure you will lose the fight does not free you from
the moral obligation to fight the fight.” And yes, I realize this
isn’t the proper format, &c., for a bill, but I’m only
testing the ideas at this point. And yes, the ideas in the final paragraph
probably don’t actually belong in the bill.
Know anyone who might want to sponsor legislation like this in Utah?
Let me know! I’m doing my own searching in the meantime…
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