Post on 19-Aug-2014
description
30 min update…
@cgreen
Except where otherwise noted, this work is licensed under: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0
(1)CC 4.0 Licenses
Late November, 2013
CC Education will run webinarsRe: “CC 4.0 for Education”
(2)Intergovernmental
OrganizationCreative Commons Licenses
November, 2013
(3)
Open resources can improve access to and participation in research, education, technology, and culture...
But not enough people know what “open” means or how to
apply it.
openpolicynetwork.org
(4)
Current educational resource funding cycle does not maximize dissemination, economic efficiency, social impact
Government RFPs announced,
education grants awarded
Educational resources produced
Peer review
limited to grantee's institution
Copyright with grantee, no
obligation to share
Content only used at grantee institutionPublic does not
know about education resources
Public granted little or no reuse rights
Slowed learning, poor return on
public investment
Optimized educational resource funding cycle maximizes public access, economic efficiency, social impact
Government RFPs announced, open
license requirements
included, education grants awarded
Educational resources produced
Peer review
broadened to
education communit
y
Copyright vests with grantee, all
resources openly licensed
Content used by grantee and beyond
Public knows about education resources
Public granted full reuse rights
Accelerated learning, maximum
return on public investment
Publicly funded resources should be openly licensed resources.
$500 million – Round 3($2 billion over four years)
● Warsaw CC Summit 2011● OER on the radar of policymakers● CC affiliates requested support● current efforts decentralized and uncoordinated● need a network to share and discuss● need best data, toolkits, arguments● let’s not miss opportunities that arise!
IDEA
MISSION● Foster the creation, adoption, and
implementation of open policies that advance the public good.
● Do this by supporting advocates, organizations, policymakers, and connecting policy opportunities with those who can provide assistance.
PRINCIPLES● ‘Open Policy’ mantra: publicly funded resources
are openly licensed resources● Default aim for licensing: Open Definition (with preference
for CC BY and CC0).● Do not recreate the wheel; leverage expertise● Work with existing policy recommendations: Paris OER,
BOAI, Panton Principles, Communia, etc.● Free for anyone to join. Contribute and abide by mission
and guiding principles.
WORK PLAN● Link to, catalog, and curate existing policy resources.● Build new resources and/or services only where capacity or
expertise does not currently exist.● Connect policy makers to experts. ● Provide baseline level of assistance for all opportunities. ● Share information with openly with members and the
public, using open licenses (of course), multiple languages, transparent fashion.
Institute for Open Leadership
Draft CC Education Strategy
revising now…CC Education will host webinar(s)
& post to OER liststo get your feedback
(5)
Credits
● Open Policy Network slides – from Tim Vollmer @ Creative Commons
● Big idea Icon - from the Noun Project, Public Domain
● Blueprint Icon - by Dimitry Sokolov, from The Noun Project - CC BY
● Check List Icon - by fabrice dubuy, from The Noun Project - CC BY
● Hackathon - by Iconathon 2012 - CC0
● Question Icon - by Rémy Médard, from The Noun Project - CC BY
Dr. Cable GreenDirector of Global Learning
cable@creativecommons.org@cgreen