http://www.capetowndeclaration.org/

Hi all,

It is great that this document has been shared.

I offer one comment relating to the "Most importantly ..." sentence,
and some "wrong forest" statements.

Suggestion: change the "Most importantly" sentence to take cognisance
of these points:

i. Whose opportunity? (recall "enabling people to empower themselves
with knowledge" - http://communities.libre.org/)

ii. Quality can only be defined in local terms (by the users).

So, reword the sentence to

"Most importantly, hundreds of millions of people around the world
will be able to improve their lives dramatically through the
opportunity to participate in this global (libre) knowledge society."

Optionally clarify with something like: "Participants have the freedom
to use knowledge resources (or any parts thereof) for any purpose, the
freedom to co-create, adapt, enhance and share knowledge for
collective benefit."

(the reference to quality becomes implicit - 'adapt' includes
localisation)

This apparently minor change is actually highly significant and points
to a possible systematic bias in the "open education" movement - see
"wrong forest" below.


WRONG FOREST

>From the libre knowledge (conocimiento libre) perspective (
http://communities.libre.org ):

QUESTION: Does the declaration work towards our higher aims?

* "knowledge for all, freedom to learn, towards collective wisdom"

* "enabling people to empower themselves with knowledge"

[Collective wisdom is an implicit reference to sustainable development
incorporating simultaneous consideration of social, economic and
environmental concerns. UNESCO's goal of fostering a culture of peace
falls under Social].

ANSWER: To some extent (I think the writers of the declaration mean
"libre" when they say "open").
But it falls short and might grow one of our biggest challenges:
eliminating the misguided "property" and "ownership" mindset.

Suggestions and points to ponder:

1. The word "open" will never capture the essence of what we are
really trying to do (ultimately) - liberate learning towards knowledge
for all for effective participation in the global knowledge
society ... in turn towards collective wisdom for sustainability (in
the true sense of the word).

The word "free" may be confused with "gratis" (or free of charge).
Say "Libre" and take this movement to the next level:
http://communities.libre.org/philosophy/saylibre - discuss:
http://www.wikieducator.org/Say_Libre

2. Tactics 1 - 3 in the declaration are important components of a
strategy, but it is unclear towards what goal? - Promoting the OE(R)
movement? Improved and appropriate educational practices for a
connected world? Motivating fundamental changes to copyright law ...
towards a free culture? Or some higher aim around quality of life for
millions of people?

3. The most promising tactical note in the declaration is '1 Educators
and learners'. This draws attention to the people with passion for
their field of interest. Here you will find success stories of sharing
and collaboration across institutions independent of the "OER
Movement".  Learn from these and grow the energy while serving their
needs for specialised collaborative learning resources.

4. As with most "open" movements, the emphasis is on encouraging
"owners" to "open" up existing resources for societal benefit.
Although this needs to be done, there is something more fundamental
that needs to change - a rejection of the notion of "owning" knowledge
and liberating learners in the copy-modify-mix-share culture.

5. Funders (see 3 above): support more bottom-up initiatives around
needs-driven co-creation of knowledge resources and sharing (to
augment the top-down institutional intiatives).

6. Consider renaming the declaration to the "Libre Learning
Declaration" and redrafting it to include some of the principles and
values of Libre Knowledge. Here is a draft declaration for libre
knowledge:

http://www.wikieducator.org/Declaration_on_libre_knowledge

Kim

----------------

PS Alternative venues for continuing this angle of the discussion:

* http://www.wikieducator.org/Say_Libre (the discussion page)

* http://www.wikieducator.org/Libre_knowledge - includes links to a
draft libre knowledge declaration and some ideas around a libre
license.

-----------------

PPS I will post these comments widely to stimulate some discussion.
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