Tag: open education

  • School is boring!

    School is boring!

    How often have we heard this sentence!  Googling the expression will give more than 60 million results.

    Most education “innovators” start with the same statement “school is boring” and end up with the same conclusion ” let’s change it”.

    But our innovators arrive late. Let’s look back in history for a moment.

    For centuries, brillant educators have introduced innovative methods and practices based on a simple conviction: school shouldn’t be boring!

    Saint Augustine in the fourth century defined education as “a process of posing problems and seeking answers through conversation”.

    The Saint Augustine Taken to School by Saint Monica. by Niccolò di Pietro 1413-15
    The Saint Augustine Taken to School by Saint Monica. by Niccolò di Pietro 1413-15

    After him, Swedish educator Ellen Key, German education reformer Kurt Hahn, Italian paediatrician Maria Montessori, Austrian philosopher Rudolf Steiner, French educator, Célestin Freinet, British visionary A.S. Neil, Catalan anarchist Francisco Ferrer y Guardia, American psychologist John Dewey, Brazilian educator Paulo Freire all envisaged education as a dialogue, flowing from learner to teachers and back.

    Their ideas and methods are however still considered as marginal and categorized as  “alternative” as no other words seem to fit them.

    We are prompt nowadays to celebrate any innovation in education, advocate for education entrepreneurship but we forget the truly disruptive nature of innovation, i.e. restore freedom to learn and freedom to teach as a central component of any education system.

    Students and teachers require after all two basic “rights” to do their jobs right: engage into continuous dialogue and be free to learn and teach.

    All education innovators should help strengthening these basic rights.

     

  • IP protection and OER: the missing link for innovation in education

    photo by Philippe Tarbouriech
    Photo by photographer Philippe Tarbouriech

    How keen are we to raise awareness about Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) among Open Education Resource (OER) communities? As long as open means ‘free to use’, one may understand that IP is not relevant. “As long as it is available on the internet, it is free to use”, or “As long as it is for educational purposes, it is OK to use” are some of the claims that are most often given. IP concern is not so much about the IP of the OER itself, rather than the IP of the content used to create the OER. And all this content is IP protected in a way or another. (more…)

  • Committed learners wanted

    Networked public by Anne-Lise Heinrichs https://www.flickr.com/photos/snigl3t/
    Networked public by Anne-Lise Heinrichs https://www.flickr.com/photos/snigl3t/

    How do you measure the success of an innovative learning experience? One of the key indicators is the degree of commitment from learners.

    This is obviously true in the classroom and the number of school dropouts reminds us that this is not easy to achieve. This is also true online, and at least as difficult to achieve as the availability of interactive tools doesn’t mean that they are fully used for this purpose.

    (more…)

  • The three Ps of innovation in education

    the elite unit of education entrepreneurs
    The elite unit of education entrepreneurs

    Over the last few weeks we have been evaluating the hundreds of proposals we received for the first round of the Open Education Challenge. The process is complex, as each of these proposals is evaluated simultaneously by two evaluators. The quality and passion that are present in each proposal is remarkable. Key concepts that I thought were only shared by a few experts are widely spread across this new community of ‘education entrepreneurs’. (more…)

  • A samba school for education entrepreneurs

    Learning the Samba ypcofnyc.blogspot.com
    Learning the Samba
    ypcofnyc.blogspot.com

    One of the many lessons learnt from the first round of Open Education Challenge applications has to do with our responsibility to sustain and widen an education entrepreneurship community.

    Why not exclusively proceed with the selection of the ‘10 best European startups’ and just work with them as planned?

    Having received 611 applications has made the OEC much more than a ‘competition. The 611 entrepreneurs from 74 countries that submitted a project in less than 2 months send a powerful message: education entrepreneurship exists! This powerful movement can’t be seen as an extension of the ‘traditional’ startup incubators. It should be one of the main drivers of change for our education systems.

    (more…)

  • Serendipity

    FUN, the French MOOC platform had already registered 226,000 students.
    FUN, the French MOOC platform had already registered 226,000 students. © Robert Kneschke | Dreamstime.com

    Le Monde, the French daily newspaper, recently discussed in an article the French mania with MOOCs. A few weeks after its launch, the French MOOC platform FUN had already registered 226,000 students. The ‘best (non) seller’ among the 30 MOOCs on offer is ‘From Manager to Leader‘, with 36,000 registered students and a 20% completion rate. Its author, Cecile Dejoux, a teacher at CNAM, qualifies this success as a complete – yet pleasant – surprise: a serendipity!

    (more…)

  • Education is ours!

    facebook-adds2

    We are just a few hours from the end of the first round of the Open Education Challenge.  In less than two months, 500 applications have been submitted. This is new evidence of the changes taking place in education worldwide: each proposal we receive is a proxy for new contents and teaching practices, innovative devices, technological assessment tools… And a promise to give users the opportunity to learn what, where and when they want. The Open Education Challenge demonstrates that education is no longer limited to curricula and degrees – it’s about innovation, creativity and… entrepreneurship. (more…)

  • Maracana Open Online Courses (MOOCs)

    Education is the answer

    Education is the answer (photo credit – unknown)

    Let’s dream for a while. In response to the mass demonstrations in Brazil, the government has decided to give priority to education, and has chosen not to hold the FIFA World Cup in June. What would happen with the stadiums that cost a fortune, starting with the mythical Maracanã that has just been remodeled?

    (more…)

  • Pierre, Mathieu, Xavier and the others: How old are the web talents?

    Founders of Openclassrooms: Mathieu Nebra and Pierre Dubuc
    Founders of Openclassrooms: Mathieu Nebra and Pierre Dubuc (credit : Julien Faure / REA)

    Are you too old to go to school? Are you too young to innovate?

    Pierre Dubuc and Mathieu Nebra, co-founders of Openclassrooms, created their first start-up when they were 11 years old (although they had to wait until they turned 18 to register it). They are now one of the main publishers of MOOCs for web skills in French. Xavier Fontanet, on the other hand, started selling his strategy courses for entrepreneurs on the Apple app store at the age of 64, and made them into digital bestsellers.

    Innovation in education is very simple: it is about sharing the right knowledge with the right people using the right tools. It is not about age. (more…)

  • WhatsLearn vs. WhatsApp

    $19bn for a smile

    $19 bn for a smile (credit – WhatsApp)

     

    Is learning worth $19 billion?

    Facebook just bought WhatsApp for $19 billion. Insane, isn’t it? Is chatting worth $19 billion? Is the possibility of sending a two word message (often badly spelled) worth $19 billion? Is a collection of emoticons really worth $19 billion?

    WhatsApp converted a very simple idea – of sending and receiving messages – into a huge social and financial success. 500 million individuals depend on WhatsApp to remain connected to their beloved, their friends and their colleagues. Why? Because being in touch is essential to our lives.

    And what about learning? Isn’t it that essential to our lives? (more…)