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LongTerm Retention

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Title: LongTerm Retention


1
Long-Term Retention Reuse of E-Learning Objects
and Materials
  • Dr Roger Rist
  • Director ICBL
  • Heriot-Watt University
  • Edinburgh

2
Team of ICBL and AHDS
  • Institute for Computer Based Learning
  • Roger Rist
  • Ed Barker
  • Colin Milligan
  • Arts and Humanities Data Service
  • Hamish James
  • Gareth Knight
  • Malcolm Polfreman

3
JISC Requirement
  • The Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC)
    commissioned this study on long-term retention
    and re-use for e-Learning Objects and Materials.
  • Part of the implementation of the JISC Continuing
    Access and Digital Preservation Strategy 2002-5
    and its support for e-learning programmes.

4
ICT for Learning
  • There is growing recognition that Information and
    Communications Technology (ICT) has a
    considerable amount to offer as a tool to support
    many areas of learning and teaching from its
    administration, through to face-to-face or remote
    delivery.

5
E-Learning
  • The perceived potential of ICT to help colleges
    and universities address the challenges presented
    by increased student numbers, new student
    demographics and widening participation has
    brought the concept of E-Learning to the fore.

6
Still in early stages
  • E-Learning is at an early phase of evolution and
    current research and  development is focussed on
    the creation of materials and implementation and
    inter-operability of current systems.

7
Study Aims
  • Complementary to JORUM
  • Focusing on
  • Creation and use of useful e-learning materials
  • Infrastructure for long-term management of
    e-learning materials
  • Digital preservation issues with e-learning
    materials

8
Intended Audience
  • Study on three major levels
  • Findings and recommendations for three
    constituencies
  • JISC as a central agency within UK HE/FE
  • Individual HE/FE institutions
  • Individual teachers and staff

9
Creation and Reuse
  • Why no large banks of E-Learning resources?
  • New and experimental a lot of hype, plus some
    substance
  • Development has been driven by technology, not
    pedagogy
  • Technology itself is evolving
  • E-Learning is not yet commonly accepted by FE
    HE staff
  • Still the domain of a small number of early
    adopters

10
History
  • Since 1990 many Learning Technology initiatives
    e.g. CTI, TLTP, Use of MANs, 5/99, ...
  • Little evidence that outputs of UK projects have
    been retained and reused on a significant level
    to date

11
Some Long-Lived Projects
  • Developed with clear short term advantages
  • SCRAN, COLEG, EUROMET
  • What these projects have in common
  • Focus on distinct market areas
  • Responsive to end users
  • Clear and specific aims about what sort of
    materials they are accepting/producing
  • Emphasis on quality and evaluation of outputs
  • Avoid reliance on external websites or other
    resources

12
Long-Term Implications
  • Custodianship
  • Coherent funding strategies
  • Who assesses quality, how is quality assessed
  • Maintaining pedagogical relevance
  • Other sustainability and preservation activities

13
Current Developments
  • Focus is on development of interoperable
    repository infrastructure to support e-learning
  • Development of standards for E-Learning
  • Repository Projects are being set up HLSI,
    JORUM, institutional repositories, NLN etc
  • VLE use is increasing
  • Repositories to manage learning objects

14
A Learning Object is
  • an aggregation of one or more digital assets
    incorporating metadata which constitute an
    educationally meaningful stand-alone unit,
    Dalziel
  • Defined here as any resource that can be used to
    facilitate learning and teaching and has been
    described using metadata, JORUM

15
E-Learning Objects
  • are Learning Objects comprised of digital
    resources
  • Reusability the aim to reduce duplication of
    effort and improve quality

16
Factors Affecting Reusability
  • Granularity
  • Technical dependency
  • Content dependency

17
Granularity
  • If a LO is too large or conceptually complex it
    may be difficult to reuse in different contexts.

18
Technical and Content dependency
  • Technical dependency is the LO technically
    dependent on other resources? E.g. HTML linked
    in a linear navigation sequence, interactive
    content with server side scripts.
  • Content dependency does the content of the LO
    reference other related, but external, resources?
    E.g. a glossary or the next module in a sequence.

19
-abilities
  • Interoperability
  • Re-usability
  • Manageability
  • Accessibility
  • Durability
  • Scalability
  • Affordability

20
Technical Considerations
  • Learning objects may contain any type of content
  • Wide range of preservation problems, and
    potential solutions
  • Need more connections between digital
    preservation work and e-learning work

21
Repositories and Learning Objects
  • Facilitate movement of resources
  • Allow cross searching
  • Support long term retention of materials,
    packaged as learning objects
  • Be able to cater for the varying different end
    user groups in FE and HE
  • Interoperability with institutional VLE

22
Model
23
Key Elements
  • E-Learning coordination
  • Institutions
  • National/regional/consortia?
  • Multiple implementations
  • National archival repository
  • Institutional other types of repository

24
Current Work
  • IPR
  • Pedagogy for e-learning
  • Social and practical issues
  • May be implemented through metadata attached to
    e-learning objects

25
IPR
  • Institutions recognise value of learning
    materials and will want to control access
  • Individuals want rewards
  • Need to allow for variety of IPR scenarios e.g.
    sharing, buying etc
  • Need clarity and simplicity for end user
  • Needs to be considered at creation and publishing
    phase
  • Needs to be retained in the long term

26
Pedagogy
  • Learning Object Theory
  • Granularity, disaggregation/ reaggregation
  • Brick and Mortar analogy
  • Dangerous to enforce pedagogy
  • Experimentation necessary for different purposes
    (especially for face to face teaching)

27
Future Quality Assurance
  • Users want quality assurance
  • A publishing process is needed
  • Peer review
  • Establishment of rights
  • Standardised quality mark?

28
Summary of Requirements
  • Creation of E-Learning objects needs to be
    focussed on requirements of end-users
  • Encourage uptake of E-Learning objects
  • Plan and build a sustainable infrastructure for
    discovery, delivery and management of E-Learning
    objects

29
Recommendations End Users
  • More awareness of the limitations of e-learning
    resources and this may mean large-scale end-user
    studies that start from a non-technical
    perspective before looking at how technology can
    help.
  • Work has been done into looking at reusing
    resources for distance learning by the Open
    University.
  • Research still needed into the practicalities of
    reusing learning materials in Face-To-Face
    situations.

30
Recommendations Uptake
  • Studies into how end users make use of existing
    e-learning objects
  • Efficient methods of resource discovery must be
    established
  • Development and promotion of portals
  • Adoption of standards for descriptive metadata
  • Improved communication between end-users and
    resource creators.

31
Recommendations Infrastructure
  • Greater communication between e-learning
    activities and digital preservation activities.
  • Support for a distributed network of repositories.

32
Contact
  • Dr Roger Rist
  • Institute for Computer Based Learning
  • Heriot-Watt University
  • roger_at_icbl.hw.ac.uk
  • Report on JISC website www.jisc.ac.uk/index.cfm?
    nameprogramme_preservation
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