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In Short

Why 14 States Are Choosing to #GoOpen

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Leaders from 14 states and 40 school districts gathered at Skywalker Ranch in Marin County, California, last Friday to announce their support for using high-quality, openly educational resources in classrooms鈥攁 step that brings public education closer to realizing the full potential of using, sharing, and improving upon educational materials to meet the needs of all learners.

Gathered at a daylong summit hosted by the U.S. Department of Education, aptly titled the聽, these state and district leaders committed to 鈥済o open鈥 and support schools as they transition to using high-quality, open educational resources鈥攁lso known as OER鈥攊n their classrooms. Joined by education technology companies and nonprofit organizations committed to the effort, the meeting represented a real exchange of ideas, with a shared goal of bringing OER to scale.

Go Open State
U.S. Department of Education
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But why turn to OER? Those three letters signify a whole array of resources鈥攊ncluding things like lesson plans, worksheets, and videos, but also increasingly textbooks and full course materials鈥攖hat are free for the public to use, share, and improve upon. The ability to modify these kinds of materials provides states, districts, and teachers with the unprecedented opportunity to (legally) adapt and share resources that both reflect their higher academic standards, and also fully tap into the technological capabilities of an increasingly large portion of today鈥檚 classrooms.

Not that long ago, this may have seemed more like science fiction than reality. Before the Internet, proprietary textbooks were the primary (often the only) educational resource relied upon in classrooms for instruction, given the cost-prohibitive nature of publishing and distributing information. This environment allowed textbook producers to thrive, and restrictive copyright permissions鈥攚hich legally inhibited textbook owners from changing, modifying, or reproducing their materials, questions of 鈥渇air use鈥 aside鈥攌ept schools on the hook for purchasing each new edition, pushed out regularly on multiyear cycles.

Speaking to those education leaders present last week, Joseph South, director of the Office of Educational Technology at the U.S. Department of Education, framed the daylong conversation by emphasizing just how out of sync this approach to procuring resources is with where schools are at today. He said, 鈥淭he goals that we have for our schools, for our students, are changing. The approaches that we鈥檙e taking to teach our students are changing. Our infrastructure is changing. But,鈥 he cautioned, 鈥渙ur resources are not keeping pace.鈥

As South pointed out, as district infrastructure changes and more schools continue to get online, information is flooding into classrooms and is available at a student鈥檚 fingertips. Widespread adoption of the Internet has rapidly broken down the cost of publishing and distributing information. And while traditional textbook publishers have scrambled to erect paywalls and access codes to maintain control over their resources, many educators have begun to question the value of what they are selling.

I really don鈥檛 believe that this kind of information, at this level, is proprietary anymore.

鈥淲e know that what we鈥檙e getting is outmoded, unchanging, and once the deal is inked it鈥檚 locked in for years to come,鈥 said Sean Nash, district online learning coordinator at North Kansas City School District, of the proprietary textbooks they had been buying year after year. He said, 鈥淚 really don鈥檛 believe that this kind of information, at this level, is proprietary anymore.鈥 Instead, Nash described his district鈥檚 decision to co-create instructional materials, leveraging the expertise of teachers to create content that is more dynamic and responsive to their needs. 鈥淎lready,鈥 he said, 鈥渨e feel that this is a more sustainable, systemic system than we鈥檝e ever had.鈥

Cara Bosler, a sixth grade science teacher in the district, agreed. 鈥淚鈥檝e seen firsthand how this has changed teaching and learning,鈥 said Bosler. 鈥淲e as teachers feel more respected and empowered. We鈥檙e able to dig deeper into our standards and ask, what are the big pieces of learning?鈥

From a student perspective, it鈥檚 definitely brought about changes as well. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e actually allowed to write鈥攈eaven forbid鈥攐n their materials,鈥 she joked. But more than that, she said, students can see their resources changing with the world around them: 鈥淚t鈥檚 helped students live the lives of scientists.鈥

North Kansas City School District is one of nine that are already well on their way to implementing OER districtwide. In addition to their sharing their own work, each has committed to mentoring others from the 31 national 鈥淟aunch Districts鈥 as they begin to determine their strategy to replace traditional materials with OER. For their part, the Launch Districts have committed to, at minimum, replace at least one textbook with OER over the course of the next year, as well as document and plan their implementation process to share with others. Akin to , districts now launching their efforts will hopefully then serve as ambassadors to other districts looking to #GoOpen.

At the state level, Utah has been leading on OER for years. Alan Griffin, curriculum content specialist with the Utah State Office of Education, emphasized the state has been supporting the development of math, English, and science resources since 2012. Along with this statewide strategy for developing OER, Utah and the 13 other #GoOpen states have committed to developing a statewide repository for sharing resources as well as publish their OER to the Learning Registry, share their progress publicly online, and collaborate with other #GoOpen states and districts to share their work. 鈥淲e have communication continually with districts using OER,鈥 he said.

As states and districts move forward with their planning and implementation, there is enormous potential for collaboration and shared learning鈥攁fter all, that is the promise of 鈥渙pen.鈥

鈥淪tates and districts are leading the way in innovation in a number of areas,鈥 said John King, acting secretary of education for the U.S. Department of Education, videoconferencing in from DC on Friday afternoon, 鈥渁nd #GoOpen is just one of those.鈥 Over 20 million additional students to high-speed broadband in schools since 2013. In that time, more than 2,000 superintendents signed on to the Department鈥檚 pledge to support personalized learning. If the movement to #GoOpen builds similar momentum, our educational resources will indeed begin to keep pace.”

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Lindsey Tepe
Why 14 States Are Choosing to #GoOpen