A Bordini’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Figure 1: Participant schools
Figure 2: Route map
Figure 3: Activity board
Figure 4: Free books on the Project Gutenberg website: https://www.gutenberg.org/.
Figure 5: An example application of the type that students produced for the e­reader coursework.

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Open Data as Open Educational Resources: Case studies of emerging practice
  • Book
  • Full-text available

November 2015

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6,487 Reads

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26 Citations

J Alperin

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A Bordini

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A Tannhäuser

This collection presents the stories of our contributors’ experiences and insights, in order to demonstrate the enormous potential for openly-licensed and accessible datasets (Open Data) to be used as Open Educational Resources (OER). Open Data is an umbrella term describing openly-licensed, interoperable, and reusable datasets which have been created and made available to the public by national or local governments, academic researchers, or other organisations. These datasets can be accessed, used and shared without restrictions other than attribution of the intellectual property of their creators1.While there are various definitions of OER, these are generally understood as openly-licensed digital resources that can be used in teaching and learning. On the basis of these definitions, it is reasonable to assert that while Open Data is not always OER, it certainly becomes OER when used within pedagogical contexts. Yet while the question may appear already settled at the level of definition, the potential and actual pedagogical uses of Open Data appear to have been under-discussed. As open education researchers who take a wider interest in the various open ‘movements’, we have observed that linkages between them are not always strong, in spite of shared and interconnecting values. So, Open Data tends to be discussed primarily in relation to its production, storage, licensing and accessibility, but less often in relation to its practical subsequent uses. And, in spite of widespread understanding that use of the term ‘OER’ is actually context-dependent, and, therefore, could be almost all-encompassing, the focus of OER practice and research has tended to be on educator-produced learning materials. The search for relevant research literature in the early stages of this project turned up sources which discuss the benefits of opening data, and others advocating improving student engagement with data3, but on the topic of Open Data as an educational resource specifically, there appeared to be something of a gap.

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Citations (1)


... Oltre a questa azione specifica, è interessante notare come il Piano Nazionale Scuola Digitale (PNSD) fosse ispirato a una visione piuttosto aperta dell'educazione, in termini sia di pratiche e di risorse di apprendimento sia di coinvolgimento di attori esterni alla scuola come imprese e amministrazioni locali (Inamorato dos Santos et al. 2017). Oltre al PNSD, nel settore scolastico esistono alcune importanti iniziative relative alle OER, come per esempio il progetto A scuola di Open Coesione, che lavora con le scuole secondarie sul monitoraggio dei dati aperti e sul datajournalism, rilasciando esplicitamente tutte le risorse prodotte con licenze aperte, e che ha recentemente lanciato un MOOC su giornalismo e dati aperti (Ciociola e Reggi 2015). ...

Reference:

Open Education. OER, MOOC e pratiche didattiche aperte verso l'inclusione digitale educativa
Open Data as Open Educational Resources: Case studies of emerging practice