Open Conference on Open Education/Examples of assessment in open education

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Copy of these slides on Slideshare. Audio recordings at Archive.org.
Archive.org copy.

This session was one of the Scholarship of Learning and Teaching seminar program (SoLT) held at La Trobe University. Leigh Blackall presented three examples of open and networked learning through approaches to assessment that aimed to engage students in authentic learning, to enable students to conduct research, be peer assessed & publish in open and collaborative modes. The examples of open assessments – see "Examples" below - demonstrate:

  1. approaches that mark a shift from traditional, closed, assessment of individuals, to an approach that is open and networked, shared with peers, and benchmarked with practitioner-based communities of practice
  2. open education practices by publishing to collaborative learning communities such as wikiversity, a commons-based platform for open education
  3. pedagogical approaches that prepare students for the networked knowledge practices developing in many professional environments
  4. production of learner-generated knowledge that is quality assessed and published openly, to the benefit of participating students’ career development, and public information generally.
  5. opportunities for real-world collaborative projects with tangible outputs that are peer assessed for quality, and that can be used as examples and adopted by future students
  6. student accomplishments that demonstrate graduate capabilities to a high standard
  7. academic integrity through open and transparent practices that are accountable and verifiable


Background and links[edit | edit source]

Copied from: http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/User:Leighblackall/Assessment_in_open_education

This is a presentation followed by discussion at the Scholarship of Learning and Teaching seminar series (SoLT) being held at La Trobe University, Bundoora Campus, Building HUED, Room 108, at 1pm.

This presentation was initially prepared for the Faculty of Health Sciences at La Trobe University. La Trobe's Centre for Teaching, Learning and Curriculum asked me to present in to their Scholars of Learning and Teaching (SoLT) seminar series on Tuesday 12 March 2013, which coincided with La Trobe's Open Education Week event.

Introduction[edit | edit source]

This session will look at examples of open and networked learning and discuss the practical opportunities to university teaching work, and the underlying principles of such practice – principles that seem to challenge, inspire and confront the practices typically found in today’s universities including community engagement, research, teaching and assessment. The related field of Open Educational Resources and Practices are having a growing influence in Australian universities, and this session presents an approach to OERP that has been piloted at the University of Canberra (2011) and Otago Polytechnic (2009), and now La Trobe University’s Faculty of Health Sciences.

I am interested in open and networked learning, including in academic practice. Here I will briefly talk about assessment methods I've been involved in, that seek to bring together community engagement, research, publication and peer assessment in an open and networked way. I hope to stimulate discussion with these ideas and projects, and challenge, inspire, and confront traditional university based practice.

Examples[edit | edit source]

  1. Psychology student authored open textbook
  2. Sport studies open and networked course
  3. Journalism course with Wikinews assignment

Psychology student authored open textbook[edit | edit source]

James Neil explaining the project at its beginning. Copy on Youtube.
  • Formal textbook was inadequate and expensive
  • Essay assignment changed to textbook chapter
  • Finished textbook became basis for next semester, with eBook and printed option
  • Assessment was formative and included peers

​Sport studies course[edit | edit source]

  • Simple Google search gains access to the course
  • Essay assignment into published papers in a student authored journal
  • Presentation assignment 'screen based'
  • Exam made 'open book' with wireless Internet and questions that were impossible to answer individually

Google search BPS2011

​Journalism course with Wikinews assignment[edit | edit source]

  • Problem of quality in a troubled sector
  • Wikinews found to be a quality news outlet using innovative and contemporary methods
  • Assignment: get a story published on Wikinews to pass
  • Assessment assisted by Wikinews volunteers
  • Wikinews invited more faculty engagement

See notes on Wikiversity - http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Journalism_studies_and_Wikinews

Principles of practice[edit | edit source]

  • Situated and convivial
  • Community engaged, relevant and useful
  • Permeable boundaries, networked, participatory
  • Transferable/sustainable
  • The skills, instruments, methods and content can transfer across platforms, institutions, across a reasonable public skills base
  • Open and transparent
  • Accountable, verifiable, open data, responsibility

Work in progress - http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/User:Leighblackall/An_ethical_framework_for_ubiquitous_learning


Suggestions[edit | edit source]

  • Use Wikipedia etc as assignment, assessment and learning platforms
  • Use Wikiversity to document teaching and research work
  • Use Yahoo Answers as an assignment space
  • Use Blogger for journal based learning and professional portfolios
  • More ideas for activity, assignments and assessment - http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Activity,_assignments_and_assessment

Supporting initiatives[edit | edit source]