Refine
H-BRS Bibliography
- no (2)
Document Type
- Conference Object (1)
- Report (1)
Language
- English (2)
Has Fulltext
- no (2)
Keywords
- Learning Context (2) (remove)
One idea behind Open Educational Resources (OERs) is opening up the access to learning resources for stakeholders who were not the originally targeted users. Even though making educational resources available for the public already is a remarkable achievement, their usefulness often is limited to a very particular context because of unclear or missing appropriateness regarding other contexts. In this paper, contextual appropriateness is investigated as a special quality criterion for OERs. We will introduce barriers against the use of OERs and demands from the educational community that need to be addressed in order to overcome such barriers. We will show that the hitherto implemented quality standards for Technology Enhanced Learning do not yet fully support such particular demands and discuss which additional steps are required for the context of OERs. We conclude with an outlook and recommendations that can open up the full potential of OERs.
Education is widely seen as an important means of addressing both national and international problems, such as political or religious extremism, poverty, and hunger. If publicly available educational resources (OERs) shall help overcoming the educational gap, localization is one of the major issues we need to deal with. Educators as well as learners need to be supported to determine adaptation needs. This paper provides a list of possible in-fluence factors on educational scenarios which are defined as context metadata. In the given form, the list needs to be understood as an addendum for the paper entitled ‘Open Educational Resources: Education for the World?’ from Thomas richter and Maggie McPherson; It is being published in the volume 3, issue 2 of the Journal Distance Education in 2012.