OERs across sectors

The Synthesis and Support team were keen to facilitate a meeting for UKOER phase 2 projects with an FE focus or with FE partners. We  wanted to ensure that such a meeting would provide a space for projects to share initial findings, issues and positive approaches at this stage of the programme. The team were also keen to ensure that this might be the start of a broader conversation across the programme about OERs across all sectors – HE, FE, work and independent learning. We feel that it it would be helpful to tease out the specific sectoral challenges and issues as well as identifying synergies and potential linkages across the sectors.

We held the meeting on 12th April as one of the regular online Elluminate meetings and asked projects to offer some slides highlighting the following:

Four project teams offered slides and these stimulated some great discussion highlighting both differences and similarities between HE and FE focussed projects. We have created a page on the OER Infokit which draws together the slides and resulting blog posts. This page will hopefully be a place we can keep the conversation alive. We were pleased to have particpation from every strand and the audience also included projects from the HE sector who revealed an openess to learning from the FE sector. We also invited Chris Kelland from the Learning Skills Improvement Service who highlighted the Excellence Gateway, which some HE based projects had been unaware of. The session proved to be an excellent start to an ongoing conversation and seemed to be very timely, as projects have enough experience to understand the issues and could also share their approaches taken so far.

We have produced a list of bullet points as a summary of the session on the OER Infokit. here are some of the points that I personally found very interesting:

“There is considerable experience in HE in FE- it has grown up and a signature Pedagogy is emerging that supports curricula that involves employers as academic imperatives and is delivered increasingly through a blended and/or WBL format”

This is already a very long post so I’ll leave space for my colleagues to add their thoughts…

I very much hope to keep the conversation alive!