tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8101611.post7768340766024181751..comments2023-10-31T05:44:19.969-07:00Comments on Chickens Don't Have Armpits: Take my content, please...Marion Jensenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07888929474349403689noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8101611.post-85332877030850907332007-10-11T09:26:00.000-07:002007-10-11T09:26:00.000-07:00Laura, I posted every single version of my novel. ...Laura, I posted every single version of my novel. From the very first draft, with all it's spelling errors, poorly crafted sentences, etc., clear to the final product. I thought it would be helpful for others to see that sometimes the first stab at a work isn't that good. It only becomes better after time and effort. <BR/><BR/>The few times people did edit the work, it was almost always just a spelling or punctuation error. Never a creative change.<BR/><BR/>I hope you are right about other remixers being too busy establishing their own OER's at their own institution. I am really looking forward to the day when we start to see this wealth of material begin to shift and change...Marion Jensenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07888929474349403689noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8101611.post-22997595141637531452007-10-11T09:18:00.000-07:002007-10-11T09:18:00.000-07:00Good to hear from you. I think the 'one author' is...Good to hear from you. <BR/><BR/>I think the 'one author' issue could be a reason, wrapped up with issues of ownership, plagarism, rights and reputation. Which all point to the fact we are changing an established culture - people can't and don't believe that we really want them to take our materials and amend them. So it's also about how we invite people to change them - what examples we give and suggestions for change - to reinforce the fact we are actively encouraging this. <BR/><BR/>Also the fact that these materials are not 'work in progress'. I'm interested to know whether you posted drafts of your novel as you might to a publishing house and invited editors to craft your work, or did you put up the final, polished version? Your final work might be just too perfect to change! And this is maybe why the remix examples we have seen so far involve localisation of materials (a very valid use of the CC license) rather than rewriting. Even though we post older materials in the LabSpace where we encourage remixing, we also put up current materials that are (if we can say so ourselves!) pretty good as they are. We've talked about removing these more perfect materials (which also exist in the LearningSpace) to position the LabSpace more clearly as a remixing environment.<BR/><BR/>Again its about how we communicate this. We currently don't specifically set challenges to other educators to say "Hey, here's a great set of materials but the images are missing due to rights issues - can anyone provide new ones" or "This is out of date but with a few new insights we could use 60% of the material again" or identify where our curriculum strategies align and where they don't to help us rapidly respond to changing requirements in our own educational markets. It would be interesting to use our knowledge mapping software and networks to help us all identify the gaps that need filling and who in the OER world might fill them. The fact may be that the most likely remixers in the world are too busy establishing OER's in their institutions to remix each other's content!<BR/><BR/>I'd really like to see people in the creative/ visual industries take a stab at remixing educational materials but that's a post for another day.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com