Open Educational Resources: American Ideals, Global Questions
Educational relations between societies and cultures that begin with benevolent intentions can come to be seen as threats to national autonomy and local preferences. Indeed, side by side with the growth since the first years of this century of Open Educational Resources (OER) there has been worry ab...
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doaj-d2b2a5105c63443ea703ba9dd169edb92020-11-24T22:30:05ZengMercy CollegeGlobal Education Review2325-663X2015-09-0123422Open Educational Resources: American Ideals, Global QuestionsSteven Weiland0Michigan State UniversityEducational relations between societies and cultures that begin with benevolent intentions can come to be seen as threats to national autonomy and local preferences. Indeed, side by side with the growth since the first years of this century of Open Educational Resources (OER) there has been worry about their impact on global educational development. Evaluation and research have lagged behind the steady expansion of access to online resources, leaving estimates of the value of digital innovation to the enthusiasm of OER providers and technology minded educational reformers. The advent of the “Massive Open Online Course” (or MOOC) has exacerbated the problem, with attention moving toward a form of OER reflecting the enthusiasm of leading institutions in industrialized nations. The American led movement on behalf of the MOOC requires new questions about the motives, impact, and future of OER. This essay accounts for the history of OER, culminating in the MOOC, including how the latter in particular is an expression of American pedagogical and institutional interests representing belief in the transformative educational powers of the latest communications technologies. Criticism of OER and MOOCs can reflect organizational, operational, and ideological considerations. But it should recognize what they offer when there are few other opportunities for formal learning, and as research demonstrates their uses and impact.http://ger.mercy.edu/index.php/ger/article/view/128/139Open Educational Resources; MOOCs; Online Learning;Global Higher EducationOpen Educational ResourcesMOOCSOnline learning |
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language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Steven Weiland |
spellingShingle |
Steven Weiland Open Educational Resources: American Ideals, Global Questions Global Education Review Open Educational Resources; MOOCs; Online Learning; Global Higher Education Open Educational Resources MOOCS Online learning |
author_facet |
Steven Weiland |
author_sort |
Steven Weiland |
title |
Open Educational Resources: American Ideals, Global Questions |
title_short |
Open Educational Resources: American Ideals, Global Questions |
title_full |
Open Educational Resources: American Ideals, Global Questions |
title_fullStr |
Open Educational Resources: American Ideals, Global Questions |
title_full_unstemmed |
Open Educational Resources: American Ideals, Global Questions |
title_sort |
open educational resources: american ideals, global questions |
publisher |
Mercy College |
series |
Global Education Review |
issn |
2325-663X |
publishDate |
2015-09-01 |
description |
Educational relations between societies and cultures that begin with benevolent intentions can come to be seen as threats to national autonomy and local preferences. Indeed, side by side with the growth since the first years of this century of Open Educational Resources (OER) there has been worry about their impact on global educational development. Evaluation and research have lagged behind the steady expansion of access to online resources, leaving estimates of the value of digital innovation to the enthusiasm of OER providers and technology minded educational reformers. The advent of the “Massive Open Online Course” (or MOOC) has exacerbated the problem, with attention moving toward a form of OER reflecting the enthusiasm of leading institutions in industrialized nations. The American led movement on behalf of the MOOC requires new questions about the motives, impact, and future of OER. This essay accounts for the history of OER, culminating in the MOOC, including how the latter in particular is an expression of American pedagogical and institutional interests representing belief in the transformative educational powers of the latest communications technologies. Criticism of OER and MOOCs can reflect organizational, operational, and ideological considerations. But it should recognize what they offer when there are few other opportunities for formal learning, and as research demonstrates their uses and impact. |
topic |
Open Educational Resources; MOOCs; Online Learning; Global Higher Education Open Educational Resources MOOCS Online learning |
url |
http://ger.mercy.edu/index.php/ger/article/view/128/139 |
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