By launching the National Repository of Open Educational
Resources (NROER) portal‒a free online repository of National Council of
Educational Research and Training (NCERT) courseware‒the government has taken a
significant step towards widening and improving access to learning resources
and has provided a fillip to the movement for free and open knowledge in the
country.
Rohini Lakshane (rohini.lakshane@gmail.com) is a freelance technology
journalist and Wikimedian based in Mumbai.
Imagine a student learning a science experiment at school
and supplementing her knowledge by watching a programme on the subject aired on
Doordarshan many years ago. Or learning a difficult concept in geometry by
using interactive software free of cost. Or a teacher adapting a useful lesson
from a curriculum taught in a different language elsewhere in the country. All
this and more is now possible, after the National Repository of Open
Educational Resources (NROER), a free online repository of National
Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) courseware, was launched
in August 2013, by the Ministry of Human Resource Development. The launch of
the portal, which houses open-licensed school textbooks and other educational
content developed and published by the government-funded NCERT, comes as a big
breakthrough for the movement for free and open knowledge in the country;
knowledge that can be accessed, applied, and shared freely.
What Does the Open License Mean?
All the NCERT course books for students from class 1 to
12 for all subjects have been available for free downloading, though
under copyright restrictions, for many years. However, copyright meant that
students, self learners, or teachers could not legally modify, reuse, or
redistribute the books without written permission from the NCERT. About 30
textbooks of class 9 and 10 put together are now accessible on the NROER under
a Creative Commons-Attribution-Share
Alike 3.0 License (CC-BY-SA).
The Creative Commons license is a legal tool which
enables copyright owners to manage their rights over their works. The CC-BY-SA
license enables the creators of educational content to reuse, modify, build
upon, or redistribute with attribution the vast collection of text files, audio
files, videos, images, interactive applications and documents uploaded to the
NROER. In case the content is tweaked, the same license will apply to the new
work, setting up endless possibilities for NCERT courses to be modified and
re-modified till they become an inextricable part of the expansive digital
commons. The content could be used in classroom presentations, blogs, or books,
be harvested for use on other open education resource (OER) projects such as
WikiEducator and repositories such as Wikipedia or its sister projects.
Licensing knowledge resources is a way of bringing knowledge to those who find
accessing it either difficult or impossible.
Those who wish to collaboratively create new courses,
start their own courses, or donate the open educational resources they create
can upload them to the repository. Those who remix or adapt the NCERT content
can give back to the community by posting the new work on the NROER.
Students and self learners can now freely access the
courseware, including some finely scripted and directed audio and video
programmes and appealing interactive content, which would aid their learning.
Some of the videos are distance learning programmes created by the NCERT and
previously aired on Doordarshan.
Initially, the CC-BY-SA-NC ‒a license with
a clause to disallow commercial use of the content‒ was going to be appended to
the NROER. This would have ruled out the use of the content, in say, a paid
app, a paid online tutorial or a paid course. After much lobbying by the
Wikimedia Chapter (India), a non-profit organisation that promotes Wikimedia
projects, and other proponents of open knowledge, the CC-BY-SA license was
adopted instead. The move was in keeping with the 2012 Paris Open Educational Resources
(OER) Declaration of the UNESCO, which recommends that governments
freely license educational resources developed with public funds “to maximise
the impact of the investment”. As the NCERT is an autonomous government body,
much of the lobbying was driven by the belief that knowledge, research and
information funded with public money should be freely accessible to the public.
The Platform
The Homi Bhabha Centre for Science Education built the
NROER website over a period of six months on the open source Gnowsys-Studio
kernel. Simply put, the website is powered by a customised semantic network.
All the content has been broken down into small web pages. The user interface
allows the content to be searched, edited, rated, modified, described and
commented on. The website has the potential to build a community around the
content and to rope in more people to contribute to it.
The Road Ahead
The portal needs to iron out a few creases to fully
achieve its purpose of enabling access to education for all. Open access to
knowledge and information is linked to the use of open source software, the
implementation of open standards and the licensing of open content. Usually the
content on open education portals such as the NROER and Institute of Distance
and Open Learning (IDOL), University of Mumbai is present in proprietary file
formats (for example, docx). To ensure flexibility across platforms, it is
crucial that all content is posted using open standards.
Only 30 out of the 334 NCERT textbooks have been uploaded
to the NROER, since work on the website started six months ago. The rest are
expected to be uploaded over the next four and half years along with graphs,
maps, photos, graphics, diagrams and audio-visual material.
As of now, the textbooks are available in Hindi, English,
and Urdu. Hopefully over time . textbooks and course materials in different
regional languages would be uploaded. The NROER website should display a
consent form for contributors so that they do not unknowingly upload
copyrighted content. Also, they would be made aware that they are licensing
away the content they put up. Overall, the user interface needs some
improvement for better usability.
Numerous universities and institutions in India are
working towards the creation and diffusion of open education resources ‒from
crafting and digitising content to building quality assurance frameworks. The
NROER is the first open educational resources portal to be launched by the
government under the CC-BY-SA license. The rest are under either the
CC-BY-SA-NC license (Project Oscar, National Program for Technology Enhanced
Learning) or copyright (eGyankosh, IDOL). The NROER may set the ball rolling
for other entities in India to throw open their repositories of precious
knowledge and impart momentum to the country’s open knowledge movement.
Source | http://www.epw.in/
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