posted on 2019-10-24, 09:13authored byFreda Wolfenden, Pritee Auckloo, Alison Buckler, Jane Cullen
<p>This study examines the use of Open Educational Resources (OER) in
six teacher education institutions in three contrasting East African
settings – Mauritius, Tanzania and Uganda – all of which had previous
engagement with OER initiatives. Drawing primarily on interviews with
teacher educators, the study examines how and when teacher educators
engage with OER, the factors that support and constrain sustained OER
engagement, and the influence of such engagement on their teaching
practice. It seeks to answer the following three research questions:
What kinds of OER are teacher educators aware of and how do they access
them? How and for what purpose are they using the OER? What intended and
enacted pedagogic practices are associated with OER use?</p>
<p><br></p><p>The study takes a sociocultural approach, paying attention to the
practices of teacher educators and the context and culture of the
teacher education institutions within which they work, as well as the
national policies relevant to these institutions. Surveys were sent to
academic staff at each of the participating institutions who were, or
had been, involved in curriculum development work involving OER. Male
and female educators from different disciplinary backgrounds and with
varying roles and periods of service within the institutions were
targeted. From the respondents, selected individuals were asked to
participate in semi-structured interviews concerning OER and their
pedagogical practices. A total of 58 surveys were completed by teacher
educators along with 36 in-depth teacher educator interviews and six
institutional stakeholder interviews.</p>
<p><br></p><p>The results of the study indicate that teacher educators’
understanding and use of OER is highly fragmented, with little traction
at department or institutional level. At all the study sites there was
dissonance between the ways in which individual educators are using OER
and the dominant institutional values and discourse. There were also
numerous structural and cultural factors acting to limit agency with
regards to OER use. The demands of curriculum and assessment,
professional identity, digital skills, provision of equipment and
connectivity, values and weak cultures of collaboration all exerted an
influence and enabled or constrained teacher educators’ efforts to
achieve agency with OER.</p>
<p><br></p><p>For a small number of teacher educators (OER “champions”), OER
provides a tool for extending their agency to move towards more
participatory practices. In their interviews, several of these educators
spoke of the formative role of academic training and many were linked
to external OER networks. These elements of historic identity formation
influence how they respond to OER, and enhance their confidence to take
risks in moving beyond conventional practice.</p>
<p><br></p><p>Enabling educators to act in an agentive way with OER is not easy.
Moving forward, attention should be given to issues of access so that
educators are able to locate and view OER relatively easily and
experiment with their use. This study recommends that time be made
available for educators to enhance their skills in working digitally and
to become familiar with principles of learning design such that these
become integral dimensions of their professional identity. It is also
argued that extending and deepening engagement with OER requires
opportunities for professional dialogue and collaboration to support the
development of productive educator identities with OER and
transformation of the community’s field of practice.</p>
Hodgkinson-Williams, C. & Arinto, P. B. (Eds). (2017). Adoption and impact of OER in the Global South. Cape Town & Ottawa: African Minds, International Development Research Centre & Research on Open Educational Resources for Development. Retrieved from http://www.africanminds.co.za/dd-product/adoption-and-impact-of-oer-in-the-global-south/