Archive for the ‘Open Source Software’ Category

Open Source Software and Open Educational Resources

Thursday, August 30th, 2007

Here’s a great summary of articles posted in the not-too-distant past in Terra Incognita addressing the relationship between open source software and open educational resources. Here is the abstract of the summary:

In March 2007, a group of authors wrote short articles about the impact of Open Educational Resources and Open Source Software on education and engaged in dialog on the topic. The articles were posted on Terra Incognita. Several themes surfaced from the 11 articles, which included the roles of common-based peer production as an emerging economic and social model, organizational enablers and challenges, the critical nature of localization for reuse, and Learning Design as a form of Open Source Teaching.

A cloud lifted

Tuesday, August 14th, 2007

William Patry gives his take on the lifting of one of the darkest clouds hanging over open source software.  The New York Times covered this as well.  A judge recently ruled that SCO, a software company, had no claim to some of the underlying code in UNIX, contrary to its long-held assertion.

This claim has been one reason many companies had been skittish about open source software–the nightmare scenario being they would wake up to find out one day that the software they thought was open source was actually proprietary and suddenly have to pay steep licensing fees.

While an exact analogy for open education would be problematic, the scenario is nonetheless instructive, as it’s not a stretch, given the current liberal intellectual property practices of many faculty, to imagine some materials under full copyright might slip–intentionally or not–into supposedly openly-licensed materials, exposing downstream users to some risk.

I’m not a lawyer, so this may not be an exactly accurate reading of potential risk, but one of the more interesting ways this might happen with content is through application of fair use.  Materials protected by full copyright might legitimately be included in an open publication in the context of fair use (a careful publisher would note the full copyright status of such materials).  Downstream users mistaking them as openly licensed, however, might remix the materials into a different context that is not defensible under fair use, thus exposing themselves to litigation.

This is just one illustration of the many complexities surrounding open licensing of content.

Open Innovation & Crowdsourcing: Carnival

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

Open Innovators has included WOE in the first edition of the Open Innovation & Crowdsourcing Carnival. A carnival, if you are not familiar, is a meta-blog where a carnival organizer assembles interesting blog posts and articles on a given topic, and then puts all those posts together in a blog post called a “carnival”. WOE is pleased to have been included, and the carnival promises to be a great opportunity to see how open innovation models operate across a range of fields beyond education.

Open content management

Tuesday, July 24th, 2007

InfoWorld has a nice piece on Plone, which occupies an interesting place at the interface of open source software and open content.  As an open source content management system, it’s the tool of choice for open education folks committed to more than just the spirit of OSS.  Plone, of course, is the guts behind the increasingly popular eduCommons OpenCourseWare management system out of Utah State University’s Center for Open and Sustainable Learning.

UNESCO, FOSS and education

Tuesday, July 10th, 2007

Penn State’s Terra Incognita has a nice summary of some of the Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) initiatives UNESCO has undertaken in the education space, as well as a suggested roadmap for future activities. The posting has two parts: the first part describes the past and current UNESCO FOSS activities and the second part suggests a new activity aimed at building an integrated FOSS Education solution targeting universities. I’ve mentioned before the forums that UNESCO has supported, which I’ve found to be particularly useful, but this gives a somewhat wider look at UNESCO’s activities and the interrelationships between open source software and open educaitonal resources.

Influences on the open educational resources movement

Monday, July 2nd, 2007

I’ll explore these in more depth in later postings, but for those new to open educational resources, I think it’s helpful to sketch out a few of the important influences that have contributed to the development of the movement. These different influences underlie many of the approaches taken by OER project and can be of help in understanding the differences between projects. They are also at the root of many OER community debates. This is a posting I expect to refer back to with some regularity as a context-setter for other posts.

Open Source Software: There’s no doubt that the single most important influence to date has been the OSS movement, and a starting point for many in thinking about OER is as open source applied to content instead of software. It’s an imperfect metaphor, but one that gets you part way down the road to understanding OER, and is close enough to have been a major inspiration for OER. The two gifts of OSS to OER are the open license concept and a demonstration of the power of collaborative community development models.

Open Content: The term “open content” was coined by David Wiley, and the genesis story is that–lawn mower in hand–he had exactly the thought that the principles of open source software could be applied to content as well. David adapted open source source software licenses to create his Open Content License. The Open Content movement really gained traction when then-Harvard Professor Larry Lessig and others fought back against the ever increasing length of copyright protection by creating open licenses that could allow content creators to forgo some of their copyrights without giving up ownership entirely. Lessig et al’s gift to OER was the observation that most content really didn’t need to be under full copyright and wasn’t intended to generate profit. Further, by forgoing some of the protections guarding financial benefit, these materials could produce tremendous social benefit, either by promoting wider distribution of the work or by permitting the creation of derivatives (not necessarily through community creation, but through chains of individual creators building on and incorporating prior works). In short, the biggest gift of Open Content to OER has been a passionate belief in the power of openness, that less copyright means more social benefit.

Learning Objects: In the 1990’s, as digital learning materials were emerging, it became apparent to many–including the afore-mentioned David Wiley, who has written at length on the subject–that especially in the emerging web environment, learning materials might be made in a modular and reusable fashion, so that they could be reused and reconfigured by many learners and educators for many different purposes. This is often described as the Lego model, where simulations and course units could be unplugged from one another and stacked up in different ways for different uses. Quite a number of educational technologists became energized by this model and developed it in a number of contexts, in both for-profit and open sharing models. The excitement over learning objects had died off somewhat, as technical and contextual challenges have been hard to overcome, but many people involved in the learning object discussions (including myself) have made the transition to the OER field, and many have brought with them a strong interest in technological solutions to educational problems.

I’m sure there are some in the OER community who would debate finer points of the above but this is (I hope) at least close enough to provide a starting point for understanding the field. These three influences express themselves in different ways in different OER projects. Connexions is in many ways a child of the open source software movement, with its community development model; MIT OpenCourseWare is largely an experiment in openly sharing content that was previously held under lock and key; MERLOT is a repository of learning objects. Understanding the influences behind these project helps to understand how they have developed and what they have to offer.

Open Source Programs for the K-12 Desktop

Friday, May 18th, 2007

While we will generally only cover open education as it pertains to higher education, most of the software on this list of K-12 open source programs from Steve Hargadon is applicable to university-level education as well. Noteworthy FOSS programs on the list include FreeMind, GIMP, KNOPPIX, Moodle, OpenOffice.org, and Ubuntu. The rest of the list is worth checking out. [Hat tip to Stephen Downes.]