Our reflections as we view western civilization through the lens of the digital revolution
Showing posts with label open. Show all posts
Showing posts with label open. Show all posts
Sunday, January 29, 2012
The Open Movement on Seven Fronts
Openness is a core component of digital civilization. And when I say "core component" I mean it is as central as voting is to democracies, as foundational as silicon is to computing, and as game-changing as books have been to education. But openness is not a given. In fact, it has a long, uphill battle against entrenched interests in business, politics, publishing, and education. A lot of people resist the open movement -- often without actually understanding anything but its apparent threat to their status quo. Others blithely advocate for openness as though it were the 21st century equivalent of 1960s counter culture. "Open" sounds attractively liberal or liberating. And it is. But of course, it is not so simple as a slogan.
We need to know what "open" is and what it means. If not, we can become subject either to cultural fads or to devastating business or political practices. At the very least, anyone who cares about how education can succeed in the 21st century must come to terms with how openness can scale educational opportunity for individuals and whole nations.
And so, building here upon work done by David Wiley, a national leader in the open content movement, who is currently teaching "Introduction to Openness in Eduction" at BYU, I have curated a list of seven fronts upon which the battle for openness is being waged. Following the list, I have embedded two video playlists (one from YouTube; one from Vimeo). These videos will give you a quick introduction to the issues (and to some of the important people) in the open movement:
Posted by
Gideon Burton
at
9:53 PM
The Open Movement on Seven Fronts
2012-01-29T21:53:00-07:00
Gideon Burton
creative commons|open|open access|open movement|
Comments
Labels:
creative commons,
open,
open access,
open movement
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
