Declaring myself on LiDA103



I have created this blog in connection with an online course, Open education, copyright and open licensing in a digital world (LiDA103), that I am taking through OERu. While it will serve as a venue for my learning reflections on these course topics, I hope to continue it after the course ends, as the relationship between metaliteracy (my primary research area) and open pedagogy is something I've been working on lately, and hope to continue. 


With members of the Metaliteracy Learning Collaborative, I have been involved in co-creating quite a bit of open content: 4 MOOCs (1 cMOOC, like LiDA 103, and 3 xMOOCs), quests and challenges for a digital badging system (the system itself is being worked on, but the content is available), a metaliteracy module for students transitioning from high school to college as part of the SUNY system's iSucceed online course, and more.

I use a major open resource in my undergraduate information literacy course--Wikipedia--as a non-disposable assignment. I do this through the Wiki Education program for the US and Canada, which is great.

You can find out more about me on the About page. I look forward to the learning that we will be engaging in this course.

Comments

  1. Greetings from New Zealand and welcome to LiDA103. We're fans of "non-disposable" assignments (hence our encouragement for learners to maintain learning journal blogs which the retain after the course). LiDA103 has a participation badge option plus free certification on Copyright and CC licensing. Welcome aboard!

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