Hi Anil,

I think you're very right about consensus on resources where there is an
intent to collaborate on the development of a "universal" resource which
would be applicable in a wide variety of contexts.

However, consider for example a Ugandan teacher who is developing an OER on
Ugandan history for a Year 10 Class in accordance with the Ugandan national
curriculum. For instance, lets say a New Zealand teacher discovers this
resource for possible use in a social studies lesson on East Africa under
the New Zealand curriculum.  Obviously the New Zealand curriculum
requirements will be different regarding emphasis, year level and learning
objectives. I don't think that it would be fair on the Ugandan teacher for
the New Zealand teacher to edit and change the resource.

In this example -- I don't think that we are delaing with a collaboration VS
protection issue. The Ugandan teacher would like to make his/her teaching
materials avialble for adaptation and reuse in other contexts, but would not
want teachers from other countries to alter the teaching materials in ways
that it may not align with their national curriculum. (If you see what I
mean.)

I'm thinking here of ways to best communicate the intentions of the resource
creator. Its not protected becuase the content is freely available to be
copied and modified for use in another learning situation.

On the other hand -- resources which are intended for univeral use (and
ultimately part of an International Qualifications Framework) would need to
focus and support WikiEducator's evolving consensus processes.

Does this make sense?

Cheers
Wayne







2009/10/20 aprasad <[email protected]>

> Dear Dr. Wayne and other friends,
>
> It is Collaboration Vs Protection; we need to fine tune
> http://www.wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Consensus
>
> On Tue, Oct 20, 2009 at 12:46 PM, Wayne Mackintosh <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Hi Everyone,
>>
>> WE is a unique educational wiki project in many respects. We are
>> different, for example, from Wikipedia in the sense that our collaboration
>> is not focused on developing an objective encyclopedia entry resulting from
>> the micro-contributions of a large number of editors. At the same time, we
>> benefit from the advantages associated with mass collaboration, for example
>> shared training materials.
>>
>> Moreover, WE has organised itself as a community of educators working on a
>> wide range of different OER artifacts, for example: open textbooks, OER
>> courses for online teaching, learning activities based on external
>> resources, lessons, articles and research papers, handouts, glossary
>> projects for use as a reference resource, the establishment of project or
>> community nodes, the development of funding proposals as free content etc.
>> Other wiki projects within the OER landscape have organised themselves
>> around the nature of the objects being produced, for instance: Encyclopedia
>> articles in the case of Wikipedia <http://www.en.wikipedia.org/> or books
>> in the case of Wikibooks <http://www.en.wikibooks.org/> .
>>
>> Therefore we need to think creatively about how our community develops
>> procedures to support the attainment of our individual and collective aims,
>> while respecting the intent of the original creators. For example:
>>
>>
>>    - There are institutions which develop courses on WikiEducator which
>>    are not intended for collaborative authoring due to local curriculum
>>    requirements.
>>    - There are individuals who develop materials on WikiEducator which
>>    they would like to make available for others to create derivative works, 
>> but
>>    would prefer not to have other educators edit their materials.
>>    - There are many projects in WikiEducator which are seeking wide
>>    collaboration and contributions from the community.
>>
>> So the question is: How do we support and respect educator contributions
>> in WE given the different intentions of our individual contributions?
>>
>> Valerie has alerted my attention to this important topic (see:
>> http://wikieducator.org/Thread:Ownership,_status,_granularity_and_category_(3)<http://wikieducator.org/Thread:Ownership,_status,_granularity_and_category_%283%29>)
>>  -- Thanks Valerie. So what is the best way to signify intent and
>> "ownership" of OER materials in WikiEducator. How do we communicate and
>> respect a contributor's intention where they do not want collaborative
>> authoring and participation on their OER resources? If an educator finds a
>> valuable resource they want to use and improve -- can they edit and change
>> the resource without creating problems for the original authors resulting
>> from their modifications?
>>
>> Clearly we need a mechanism to visually communicate the intent of the
>> creator to prospective editors. We need a messaging system which says, for
>> instance:
>>
>>
>>    - I need help and welcome WikiEducators to collaborate, edit and
>>    improve this resource, or
>>    - I have no problems if you copy this resource and modify for your own
>>    purposes -- but will appreciate if you don't make changes because I'm 
>> using
>>    this in my course, or
>>    - I don't mind editorial improvements but don't want editors to make
>>    substantive changes to my OER --- suggestions and comments are welcome on
>>    the corresponding talk page.
>>
>> It seems to me that we need a template or content infobox which clearly
>> communicates the intent of the original OER creator in terms of
>> "permissible" contributions and/or restrictions with regard to community
>> edits.
>>
>> Thoughts? Are there any other intents than those listed above?
>>
>> You gotta love the WikiEducator project -- we're figuring out solutions
>> that work for education. We're pioneering the future that has already
>> happened :-).
>>
>> Cheers
>> Wayne
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Wayne Mackintosh, Ph.D.
>> Director,
>> International Centre for Open Education,
>> Otago Polytechnic, New Zealand.
>> Board of Directors, OER Foundation.
>> Founder and Community Council Member, Wikieducator, www.wikieducator.org
>> Mobile +64 21 2436 380
>> Skype: WGMNZ1
>> Twitter: OERFoundation, Mackiwg
>>
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Warm regards
>
> Anil
> >
>


-- 
Wayne Mackintosh, Ph.D.
Director,
International Centre for Open Education,
Otago Polytechnic, New Zealand.
Board of Directors, OER Foundation.
Founder and Community Council Member, Wikieducator, www.wikieducator.org
Mobile +64 21 2436 380
Skype: WGMNZ1
Twitter: OERFoundation, Mackiwg

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