helps e-learners construct interpretations of open content courseware. It supports the Open Content movement for enabling students and educators to access material, in order to then learn from it, and reuse it either in one's studies or one's own courses.
The core efforts to date has focused on enabling access, e.g. building the organizational/political will to release and license content, and in developing open infrastructures for educators to then publish and reassemble it.
The key challenge in the next phase of the open content movement is to improve the support for prospective students to engage with and learn from the material, and with each other though peer learning support, in the absence of formally imposed study timetables and assessment deadlines.
KMi is now engaged in developing the next generation of tools for e-learning and collaborative sensemaking for open content learning support.
Participant(s):Simon Buckingham Shum, Marc Eisenstadt, Peter Scott, Michelle Bachler, Chris Denham, Kevin Quick, Jon Linney, Alex Little, Elia Tomadaki, Alexandra Okada
Open SenseMaking Communities create cooperative settings where people exchange ideas and gain knowledge as a group. Having access to excellent support is crucial when negotiating challenging academic assignments. The Best Dissertation Help UK offers professional advice that improves your writing and research process and guarantees a well-researched and influential dissertation.