Conference PaperPDF Available

Abstract

The article depicts the blogging platform IDeRBlog as an example of an Open Educational Resources Practice. The exercise databases of IDeRBlog are focussed in the context of orthography training. After briefly outlining Open Educational Resources an overview on how the exercises were researched and reviewed according to an established quality framework is given. This is followed by the Analysis of missing exercises and the creation of IDeRBlog exercises by the project team.
Orthography Training with IDeRBlog -
an Open Educational Resources Practice
Michael Gros
1
, Christian Aspalter
2
, Markus Ebner
3
, Martin Ebner3, Nina Steinhauer1, Hugo Adolph1,
Lena Ankner
4
, Susanne Biermeier4, Mike Cormann
5
, Konstanze Edtstadler
6
, Sandra Ernst5, Sonja
Gabriel
7
, Gabriele Goor5, Anneliese Hupperts5, Kathrin Irmag4, Philipp Leitner3, Susanne Martich2,
Behnam Taraghi3, Marianne Ullmann2 and Martina Wintschnig7
Abstract
The article depicts the blogging platform IDeRBlog as an example of an Open Educational
Resources Practice. The exercise databases of IDeRBlog are focussed in the context of
orthography training. After briefly outlining Open Educational Resources an overview on how
the exercises were researched and reviewed according to an established quality framework
is given. This is followed by the Analysis of missing exercises and the creation of IDeRBlog
exercises by the project team.
Key Words
German Spelling Acquisition, Learning Analytics, Orthography Training, Open Educational
Resources, Primary School, Technology Enhanced Learning, Educational Media
Introduction
The skill of spelling orthographically correct is important ability with regard to the participation
in society. Hence, orthography training plays a central role in teaching. In this context digital
media offers new possibilities. The IDeRBlog website provides databases of exercises
dealing with a wide range of orthographic phenomena. It is used by parents and students at
home and supports teachers while preparing their lessons. Overall, it can be used by
everyone interested in orthography and the improvement of their orthographic skills. The
exercises provided by IDeRBlog are licensed under Creative Commons and contributes to
the idea of Open Educational Resources.
OER a brief historical outline and classification
Giving lessons teachers have always exchanged educational materials. Class tests were
constructed collaboratively according to the curricula. Lesson schedules were created
together and tasks were divided among each other. One colleague took materials from
another colleague, modified it and made use of it.
The exchange and modification of educational materials has increased with the digitalisation
of society offering new possibilities. In the past materials had been exchanged within groups
of teachers or within schools. Nowadays digitalisation enables teachers to exchange their
materials worldwide independent of time and place.
This is where the idea of Open Educational Resources (OER) comes into play. The concept
1
LPM Saarland, Beethovenstraße 26, 66125 Saarbrücken, Germany,
corresponding e-mail: mgros@lpm.uni-sb.de
2
University College of Teacher Education Vienna, IBS/DiZeTIK, Grenzackerstraße 18, 1100 Vienna, Austria
3
Graz University of Technology, Department Educational Technology, Münzgrabenstraße 35a, 8010 Graz,
Austria
4
Albert-Weisgerber School St. Ingbert, Robert-Koch-Straße 4, 66386 St. Ingbert, Germany
5
School of Raeren, Hauptstraße 45, 4730 Raeren, Belgium
6
University College of Teacher Education Steiermark, Hasnerplatz 12, 8010 Graz, Austria
7
University College of Teacher Education Vienna/Krems, Mayerweckstraße 1, 1210 Vienna, Austria
of OER originated in 2002 in context of the UNESCO-Forum on Open Course Ware for
Higher Education hosted by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
The idea behind OER is relatively simply. The point of origin is the “Universal Declaration of
Human Rights (Art. 26.1) everyone is entitled to the Right of Education“. Hence, educational
materials ought to be distributed freely and openly so that everyone has access to it (United
Nations General Assembly, 1948). The idea of OER was further refined in the Cape Town
Open Education Declaration of 2007 which expanded OER from Higher Education to schools
(Cape Town Open Education, 2007). The Dakar Declaration in Open Educational Resources
of 2009, the Commonwealth of Learning and the UNESCO published guidelines on Open
Educational Resources in Higher Education of 2011 emphasize the important role of
Educational Resources being accessible openly, freely and worldwide. During the UNESCO
hosted World Congress on Open Educational Resources (OER) in Paris which took place
from the 20th until the 22nd of June 2012 the Declaration of Paris has been passed. For the
first time through the declaration of Paris the UNESCO calls on to other states to promote the
idea of Open Educational Resources as well as to incorporate it in their institutions within the
bounds of possibility (UNESCO, 2012). This call was repeated and reinforced at the OER
conference in Ljubljana in 2017
8
. This idea is taken into account differently by individual
countries, yet the creation of open, free and accessible materials is promoted in all of these
countries.
The idea of Open Educational Resources is especially interesting / appealing in combination
with the 5 Rs of David Wiley. These depict the way of OER materials in form of a well-made
circular flow, starting with the aspect of retaining and consequently followed by the reuse, the
revision, the remix and finally the redistribution of materials.
The Erasmus+ project (2014 - 2017) IDeRBlog takes the development of OER into account.
The platform is openly and freely accessible on the internet under an open educational
license for teachers, students and everyone interested in using IDeRBlog.
Researching Exercises
Round about 500 exercises are provided on iderblog.eu for free. These exercises are divided
into 300 online exercises and 200 print exercises or worksheets. These exercises solely deal
with the training of various orthographic phenomena and are suited for primary school pupils.
All of these exercises were collected by the IDeRBlog team throughout the internet from
different websites. Via links these exercises are displayed on the IDeRBlog website or more
specifically integrated into the IDeRBlog exercise databases.
The Exercises were researched in two different ways. At first a variety of widely known
websites providing exercises for primary pupils were visited and researched. Links on this
website leading to further websites providing material for orthography training were used in
order to find further exercises. Some of the authors were contacted with regard to small
mistakes in their worksheets as well as to establish cooperation. All of the authors contacted
were grateful for the feedback and happy to help. In some cases they provided the IDeRBlog
team with additional educational materials or advice on where to find these.
In addition to the use of these websites several searches on the internet via search engines
were performed. First, the search was kept wide open with search items like “exercises
orthography” or “exercises orthography primary school”. Systematically the search was
narrowed down until search items of special orthographic phenomena were employed. These
included for example the search for the mixing up of “d” and “t” or “g” and “k” in context of the
final devoicing.
Throughout the research, it became evident that there were many exercises concerning
certain orthographic phenomena whilst other phenomena were not mentioned at all, a
problem that will be discussed later on in the article. Furthermore, some exercises were
8
OER conference in Ljubljana in 2017 http://www.oercongress.org/ (Retrieved February 11, 2018)
already excluded while browsing the search results because those were not suited for
primary pupils. These included exercises not functioning properly or websites with huge
amounts of advertisement. Hence, they were disqualified with regard to being linked on
IDeRBlog.eu. Either way it became clear that the exercises researched needed to adhere to
some sort of quality framework in order to be implemented on the IDeRBlog Website.
Quality Framework of Exercises
The project team came up with a quality framework consisting of criteria that needed to be
met in order to integrate an exercise into the IDeRBlog exercise database. In addition,
criteria being “nice to have” were formulated. Those criteria were regarded as optional and
hence not mandatory for an implementation on the IDeRBlog website.
The final version of the quality framework encompassed six categories. These are presented
in the following including examples of must have criteria. The first category general
included the correctness of the exercise itself. Exercises containing spelling mistakes or
incorrect grammar were excluded. Furthermore, exercises ought to function without
registering or logging in beforehand. There must not be any links within the exercise as well
as any pop-up advertisement. In addition, the introduction and feedback of the exercise
ought to be in German. The second category concerns the task itself. A correct terminology
and a logical sound sequence of the different parts of the exercise was established as a must
have criteria. In addition, the task and the exercise should be self-explanatory to a certain
degree that the teacher instantly knows what to do and hence is able to help students
struggling with the formulation of the task. The third category depicts the design of the
exercise. Implemented media must be retrievable as often as needed by the pupil. For
example, audio tracks should be equipped with a replay function. In addition, texts in the
exercise should not run contrary to the direction of writing. The fourth category concerns the
feedback received by the student while working and after completing the exercise. Mistakes
ought to be pointed out and a direct as well as clear feedback should be given. The fifth
category deals with the methodology. The frequency of the distribution of orthographic
phenomena and the processing depth of the exercises should be taken into consideration. In
the context of orthographic rules, dialectal phenomena should be taken into account as well.
The sixth and last category concerns dyslexia which is an overall “nice-to-have” category.
Hence, the font and the size of the written text should be adjustable. An audio presentation of
the written language and the marking of the exercise as being suited for students with
dyslexia would be of advantage. Yet, not fulfilling the criteria of the sixth category would not
lead to an exclusion of the exercise from the IDeRBlog database.
Reviewing Exercises
All of the exercises linked on iderblog.eu were reviewed and evaluated according to the
developed quality framework. All of the researched exercises were numbered and written
down in a collaborative excel sheet. Each team member or each institution was able to
comment on every single exercise after having solved the task themselves. Over a period of
a few weeks, these comments were collected. During the following meeting, the results of the
review were discussed. In general at least three institutions had to review each exercise and
at least two out of them had to approve of the exercise on grounds of the established quality
framework.
Those exercises that scored three times a yes were directly approved of and consequently
integrated into the IDeRBlog exercise database. Exercises which were not approved of by at
least two out of three institutions or team members were directly excluded from the list of
potential exercises for the IDeRBlog website. In the case that “only“ two out of three partners
approved of the individual exercise reasons for disapproval were discussed aiming at an
approval of a large amount of exercises could by common consent.
Having passed the review process the selected exercises were integrated into the IDeRBlog
via links. In this context two databases were created, one for online exercises and another
one for print exercises. Teachers also receive additional information on each individual
exercise when clicking on it. Within this context, for example the number of words or the topic
of the exercise is displayed. Additionally, the author of the exercise is credited.
Analysis of Missing Exercises
As already mentioned above, many exercises focussed on certain orthographic phenomena.
For example the mix up of “I” or “ie” or when to use “ss” instead of “ß” were dealt with very
often while prefixes or double vowels were mentioned significantly less.
Hence, there was a certain area of orthography that was almost completely neglected. The
result was that the IDeRBlog database could not provide students struggling with these
orthographic phenomena with the matching exercises.
The solution to that was the creation of a medium amount of print and online exercises by the
IDeRBlog team. Yet, before doing so, an analysis was performed in order to determine which
exercises are missing. One project member did the analysis by counting all of the exercises
according to the orthographic phenomenon those dealt with. Within the frame of the next
team meeting the numbers were presented and together a minimum number of exercises
matching each individual orthographic phenomenon was decided on.
The creation of an own spelling training pool in IDeRBlog
Within the project, the PH Wien undertook the task of creating a custom-fit pool of spelling
exercises. As it was still not clear at the beginning of the project, which of these exercises
would be freely accessible on the internet or which quality they would have, first a
quantitative frame for the project’s exercise pool was agreed upon. At least five exercises per
error category should be created in an own training pool. In this way it should be guaranteed,
that enough exercises per error focus should be available for the students on the platform,
even if a search for freely accessible training material online was unsuccessful. In this way all
in all 100 high-quality exercises should be created in an own training pool, which should then
in turn be able to be used freely as OER, even without registering on the platform.
Selection and integration of the training tools
A first important question was which tool would fulfil the high requirements with regard to
exercise design and technical integration. Finally, the project consortium decided for the
“LearninApps.org” (https://learningapps.org), a Swiss OER platform that enables a high
flexibility in the creation of interactive exercises for students. Furthermore the platform itself
disposes of a group management system, so that teachers can create an own class, assign
exercises and have access to different evaluation possibilities independent of IDeRBlog.
Additionally LearningApps.org has a very attractive exercise guide, which is suitable for
children, as well as a clear and friendly design and an easily understandable guide in the
area of exercise creation.
As an autonomous OER platform, the integration of the exercises per single linking from
IDeRBlog was accomplished without any problems. The IDeRBlog exercises were labelled
on a uniform basis with the label “ID” before the exercise number and the exercise
designation, because some exercises in the area of spelling already existed on the platform.
Quality management
The creation of the training pool was affected by primary school teachers in collaboration
with didacticians from university. The goal was not only to compile the predetermined 5
exercises per error focus, but also to achieve a systematic differentiation of the difficulty level
with 9 exercises. All together 180 exercises were created.
In this way finally 3 easy, 3 intermediate and 3 difficult exercises were created per error
focus. The easy exercises pursue the goal to make aware of spelling phenomena by means
of simple formats and short instructions, whereas the intermediate and difficult exercises
train the spelling phenomena in more complex contexts. Moreover, a higher reading and
language competency is required for the more difficult exercises.
Regarding the course of the single exercises instructions concerning the task compilation are
given. Furthermore, partly some hints on spelling strategy are provided at the beginning of
each exercise. If the exercises are more complex, students can receive some help by
clicking on the help symbol (“light bulb”). While solving the task students immediately receive
hints marked in different colours to show, if the input is correct or not. In this way students
are able to make corrections on their own. An evaluation of the whole task is provided at the
end.
In order to create varied exercises, all the different task formats, which the LearningApps can
offer, were exploited.
All exercises underwent a peer-review process before being taken over on the platform in
order to secure a high and long-lasting quality standard.
Conclusion
In conclusion, the IDeRBlog website offers databases containing round about 500 exercises
that are openly and freely accessible on the internet. Those exercises were researched and
reviewed according to a quality framework established by the project team. The exercises
created by the project team adhere to even higher quality standards. Students can use these
exercises in school or at home with their parent. Teachers can use and share materials in the
context or their lesson preparations. In this context, IDeRBlog clearly supports the idea of
Open Educational Resources.
References
Cape Town Open Education Declaration (2007). Cape Town Open Education Declaration:
Unlocking the promise of open educational resources. Retrieved February 11, 2018, from
www.capetowndeclaration.org/read-the-declaration
UNESCO (2012). Paris OER Declaration. Retrieved February 11, 2018, from
http://www.unesco.org/new/fileadmin/MULTIMEDIA/HQ/CI/WPFD2009/English_Declaration.html
United Nations General Assembly (1948). Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Retrieved February
11, 2018, fromhttp://www.un.org/en/universal-declaration-human-rights/index.html
ResearchGate has not been able to resolve any citations for this publication.
Cape Town Open Education Declaration: Unlocking the promise of open educational resources
Cape Town Open Education Declaration (2007). Cape Town Open Education Declaration: Unlocking the promise of open educational resources. Retrieved February 11, 2018, from www.capetowndeclaration.org/read-the-declaration UNESCO (2012). Paris OER Declaration. Retrieved February 11, 2018, from http://www.unesco.org/new/fileadmin/MULTIMEDIA/HQ/CI/WPFD2009/English_Declaration.html United Nations General Assembly (1948). Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Retrieved February 11, 2018, fromhttp://www.un.org/en/universal-declaration-human-rights/index.html