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Teacher Education through School-based Support in India Removing unfreedoms’ through OER use in India’s teacher education system #OpenEd14 #OER4D @OER_Hub @laperryman @TESSIndia Presented by Leigh-Anne Perryman, OER Research Hub Fellow Additional researchers Alison Hemmings-Buckler, Open University Tim Seal, TESS-India Technical Director

Removing 'unfreedoms' through OER use in India's teacher education system

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OER Research Hub fellow Leigh-Anne Perryman's presentation at OpenEd 2014, Washington DC in November 2014.

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Page 1: Removing 'unfreedoms' through OER use in India's teacher education system

Teacher Education

through School-based

Support in India

Removing

‘unfreedoms’ through

OER use in India’s

teacher education

system

#OpenEd14 #OER4D @OER_Hub @laperryman @TESSIndia

Presented by

Leigh-Anne Perryman, OER Research Hub FellowAdditional researchers

Alison Hemmings-Buckler, Open UniversityTim Seal, TESS-India Technical Director

Page 2: Removing 'unfreedoms' through OER use in India's teacher education system

• Amartya Sen: ‘Unfreedoms’: e.g.

poverty, limited economic opportunity,

inadequate education and access to

knowledge, deficient health care, and

oppression;

• ‘Increasing the freedoms that men

and women enjoy is a definition of

development, and greater freedom

empowers people to be more effective

agents of development.’ (CoL 3 yr

Plan);

• OER: more teachers; better teachers;

more engaged learners; improved

learner retention; better access to

The power of OER to remove ‘unfreedoms’

Ph

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Page 3: Removing 'unfreedoms' through OER use in India's teacher education system

The need for OER localisation

Photos: Leigh-Anne Perryman CC-BY

“What is the future of open

education? Where is it going?

I think there is only one

answer: localisation.” (David Wiley,

2005)

“Localization unlocks the power of OER.” (Tiffany Ivins, 2012)

Page 4: Removing 'unfreedoms' through OER use in India's teacher education system

• What are the challengesto localising OER for use in development education?

• What is the impact of context and localiserperceptions?

• How can OER localisersbest be supported?

• What is the relationship between institutional control, localiserfreedom, and the spirit of open?

Research questions

Photo: Leigh-Anne Perryman CC-BY

Page 5: Removing 'unfreedoms' through OER use in India's teacher education system

Background● India: needs 1.33 million

teachers;

● Bihar: 75% of teacher ed.

colleges did no training

between 2007-2010;

● India - Bihar: 45% of teachers

don’t have minimum

qualification;

● India: some states, only 1%

pass Teacher Eligibility Test;

● India – ASER: “A ritual

exercise bringing the same

disturbing but worsening news”

(Deccan Herald, 2013).

Photo: Eric Parker CC-BY-NC

Page 6: Removing 'unfreedoms' through OER use in India's teacher education system

Focus States

Assam, Bihar, Karnataka,

Madhya Pradesh, Odisha, Uttar

Pradesh, West Bengal

Subject areas

English, Math Science,

Leadership, Language & Literacy

Content

• 125 Pan Indian study units;

• Developed collaboratively;

• Standalone, self-directed;

• Support teachers in changing

their practice;

• Suggest and inspire, not

prescriptive;

• Promote reflection.

Photo: TESS-India CC-BY-SA

Page 7: Removing 'unfreedoms' through OER use in India's teacher education system

Photos: TESS-India CC-BY-SA

The TESS-India OER

Page 8: Removing 'unfreedoms' through OER use in India's teacher education system

Research methods

ResearchMethods

Interviews with localisersand localisation facilitators

Document analysis of adapted OER

Participant observation at localisation workshops

Conducted in Hindi and English

Photo: Leigh-Anne Perryman CC-BY

Page 9: Removing 'unfreedoms' through OER use in India's teacher education system

TESS-India localisation process State based workshops led by third party NGO;

State Localisation Managers (SLM) – QA;

Subject Localisation Experts (SLE);

No direct control of adaptation;

Materials translated into Hindi before

localisation.

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Page 10: Removing 'unfreedoms' through OER use in India's teacher education system

Challenges: Translation● Localisers don’t have

translation skills +

translation agency doesn’t

have context/educational

knowledge;

● Possible distortion of

meaning;

● Localisers have to correct

this, but have to look at

English version to do so;

● Little use of Hindi keyboard

so annotated hard copies

used - time consuming.Photo: Leigh-Anne Perryman CC-BY-SA

Page 11: Removing 'unfreedoms' through OER use in India's teacher education system

Photo: TESS-India CC-BY-SA

Impact of context• Navigating localiser

preferences, perceptions and

experiences;

• Hierarchical view of

knowledge ownership and

expertise;

• Little understanding of OER

or online learning.“Localization must involve locals; [...] effective localization is directly proportional to understanding local contexts.” (Tiffany Ivins, 2012)

Photos: TESS-India CC-BY-SA

Page 12: Removing 'unfreedoms' through OER use in India's teacher education system

Navigating perceptions and experience• SLEs’ background

as textbook writers

• Focus on subject

over method

• Preference for

formal, rather than

conversational

writing style

• Unfamiliarity with

activity-based

pedagogy

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Page 13: Removing 'unfreedoms' through OER use in India's teacher education system

Improving localiser support

• More time on OER familiarisation;

• More development re. unfamiliar

pedagogies;

• Time for reflection after the workshops;

• Follow-up meetings allowing communities of

practice to be nurtured.

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Page 14: Removing 'unfreedoms' through OER use in India's teacher education system

Empowerment, development & OER

The OER Engagement Ladder © 2012 Joanna Wild, CC-BY

Neo-Colonialism Knowledge partnership

Page 15: Removing 'unfreedoms' through OER use in India's teacher education system

Creating a knowledge partnership

Knowledge partnership

Respect for individual

perceptions & experience

Institutional (quality) control

& guidance Sensitivity to context (e.g.

status of knowledge ownership)

Openness & ‘embedded’ engagement with OER

Page 16: Removing 'unfreedoms' through OER use in India's teacher education system

Control, freedom and openness

Page 17: Removing 'unfreedoms' through OER use in India's teacher education system

Thank you for listening.

www.TESS-India.edu.inwww.oerresearchhub.org

@TESSIndia @oer_hub @laperryman@tim10101 @goldensyrupgirl