Littlejohn, A. (2003) Re-Using online resources: a sustainable approach to e-learning. Chapter 1: Seven issues in the reuse and sharing of Online Resources

Abstract: This is an era marked by rapid developments in three different educational arenas -- access, lifelong learning and e-learning. In both developed and developing countries there is a growing demand for access to education... Alongside this growing demand for access, increased numbers of adul...

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Main Author: Allison Littlejohn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2003-04-01
Series:Journal of Interactive Media in Education
Subjects:
LO
CAL
Online Access:https://jime.open.ac.uk/articles/47
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spelling doaj-1e9730c9b17e4388923d6fb2bfa54d602020-11-25T01:44:55ZengUbiquity PressJournal of Interactive Media in Education1365-893X2003-04-012003110.5334/2003-1-reuse-0252Littlejohn, A. (2003) Re-Using online resources: a sustainable approach to e-learning. Chapter 1: Seven issues in the reuse and sharing of Online ResourcesAllison Littlejohn0Centre for Academic Practice, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, G1 1QEAbstract: This is an era marked by rapid developments in three different educational arenas -- access, lifelong learning and e-learning. In both developed and developing countries there is a growing demand for access to education... Alongside this growing demand for access, increased numbers of adults are returning to colleges and universities for additional education and training (CIHE, 2002). Lifelong learning has come of age, brought about by changes in attitudes to learning and in employment patterns, where jobs and careers are recast many times during a lifespan. Permeating and supporting these first two developments, in access and lifelong learning, are developments in information and communication technologies (ICT). New technologies are beginning to transform how higher education is organized and delivered both on campus and at a distance. E-learning affords new opportunities to increase flexibility in time and location of study, in forms of communication (for example, asynchronous discussions) and types of interaction... Although e-learning has the potential to provide the kinds of flexibility required by wider access and lifelong learning there are some major obstacles. On the one hand, wider access and lifelong learning require vast increases in specially designed course materials to satisfy the greater range of demands for learning. On the other hand, creating the digital resources necessary for online course delivery requires considerable investment, a factor that makes resource development only viable for courses with large student numbers or sizeable budgets. In order to address this difficulty, numerous national and international initiatives have been funded to investigate ways in which digital learning resources might be developed, shared and reused by teachers and learners around the world (so as to benefit from economies of scale). Behind these initiatives lies a vision of a future in which reusable resources (or 'learning objects' as they are called) could comprise a new currency of exchange within a learning economy. Learning objects, produced by publishers, teachers, support staff and students themselves, would be stored in digital repositories, where they could be easily accessed, recombined and reused within online courses. However, despite this vision, the idea of reusing electronic resources is more complex than the object economy scenario, outlined above, may suggest. The next section identifies seven issues associated with the reuse and sharing of resources. These sections focus on educational design, the need for standards, and on the culture and organization that would be necessary in institutions (and across institutions) if reuse were to become a reality.Editors: Allison Littlejohn (Centre for Academic Practice, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow G1 1QE) Reviewers: Allison Littlejohn & Simon Buckingham Shum Notes: Reprinted with permission from: 'Reusing Online Resources: A Sustainable Approach to eLearning', (Ed.) Allison Littlejohn. Kogan Page, London. ISBN 0749439491.https://jime.open.ac.uk/articles/47Educational resourceseducational technologydigital resourcessharingreuselearning object economyLOeducational modelsstandardisationstandardizationoptimum sizecontextualisationchangeeducational institutionsglobal sharingdistance educationdistance learningteachingcomputer aided learningCAL
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
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author Allison Littlejohn
spellingShingle Allison Littlejohn
Littlejohn, A. (2003) Re-Using online resources: a sustainable approach to e-learning. Chapter 1: Seven issues in the reuse and sharing of Online Resources
Journal of Interactive Media in Education
Educational resources
educational technology
digital resources
sharing
reuse
learning object economy
LO
educational models
standardisation
standardization
optimum size
contextualisation
change
educational institutions
global sharing
distance education
distance learning
teaching
computer aided learning
CAL
author_facet Allison Littlejohn
author_sort Allison Littlejohn
title Littlejohn, A. (2003) Re-Using online resources: a sustainable approach to e-learning. Chapter 1: Seven issues in the reuse and sharing of Online Resources
title_short Littlejohn, A. (2003) Re-Using online resources: a sustainable approach to e-learning. Chapter 1: Seven issues in the reuse and sharing of Online Resources
title_full Littlejohn, A. (2003) Re-Using online resources: a sustainable approach to e-learning. Chapter 1: Seven issues in the reuse and sharing of Online Resources
title_fullStr Littlejohn, A. (2003) Re-Using online resources: a sustainable approach to e-learning. Chapter 1: Seven issues in the reuse and sharing of Online Resources
title_full_unstemmed Littlejohn, A. (2003) Re-Using online resources: a sustainable approach to e-learning. Chapter 1: Seven issues in the reuse and sharing of Online Resources
title_sort littlejohn, a. (2003) re-using online resources: a sustainable approach to e-learning. chapter 1: seven issues in the reuse and sharing of online resources
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Journal of Interactive Media in Education
issn 1365-893X
publishDate 2003-04-01
description Abstract: This is an era marked by rapid developments in three different educational arenas -- access, lifelong learning and e-learning. In both developed and developing countries there is a growing demand for access to education... Alongside this growing demand for access, increased numbers of adults are returning to colleges and universities for additional education and training (CIHE, 2002). Lifelong learning has come of age, brought about by changes in attitudes to learning and in employment patterns, where jobs and careers are recast many times during a lifespan. Permeating and supporting these first two developments, in access and lifelong learning, are developments in information and communication technologies (ICT). New technologies are beginning to transform how higher education is organized and delivered both on campus and at a distance. E-learning affords new opportunities to increase flexibility in time and location of study, in forms of communication (for example, asynchronous discussions) and types of interaction... Although e-learning has the potential to provide the kinds of flexibility required by wider access and lifelong learning there are some major obstacles. On the one hand, wider access and lifelong learning require vast increases in specially designed course materials to satisfy the greater range of demands for learning. On the other hand, creating the digital resources necessary for online course delivery requires considerable investment, a factor that makes resource development only viable for courses with large student numbers or sizeable budgets. In order to address this difficulty, numerous national and international initiatives have been funded to investigate ways in which digital learning resources might be developed, shared and reused by teachers and learners around the world (so as to benefit from economies of scale). Behind these initiatives lies a vision of a future in which reusable resources (or 'learning objects' as they are called) could comprise a new currency of exchange within a learning economy. Learning objects, produced by publishers, teachers, support staff and students themselves, would be stored in digital repositories, where they could be easily accessed, recombined and reused within online courses. However, despite this vision, the idea of reusing electronic resources is more complex than the object economy scenario, outlined above, may suggest. The next section identifies seven issues associated with the reuse and sharing of resources. These sections focus on educational design, the need for standards, and on the culture and organization that would be necessary in institutions (and across institutions) if reuse were to become a reality.Editors: Allison Littlejohn (Centre for Academic Practice, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow G1 1QE) Reviewers: Allison Littlejohn & Simon Buckingham Shum Notes: Reprinted with permission from: 'Reusing Online Resources: A Sustainable Approach to eLearning', (Ed.) Allison Littlejohn. Kogan Page, London. ISBN 0749439491.
topic Educational resources
educational technology
digital resources
sharing
reuse
learning object economy
LO
educational models
standardisation
standardization
optimum size
contextualisation
change
educational institutions
global sharing
distance education
distance learning
teaching
computer aided learning
CAL
url https://jime.open.ac.uk/articles/47
work_keys_str_mv AT allisonlittlejohn littlejohna2003reusingonlineresourcesasustainableapproachtoelearningchapter1sevenissuesinthereuseandsharingofonlineresources
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