Role of Open Education Resources (OER)

Saurabh Jain
4 min readMay 15, 2018

Open educational resources have a potential to revolutionise education by making education accessible to all. Open educational resources can take many forms but generally take the form of text, images and videos. Even openness can have many forms. Some believe that only resources in public domain or resources released under open licenses like Creative Commons licenses are open. Others regard anything accessible for free by anyone as open resources.

According to Wikipedia the term Open Education Resources was firstly coined at UNESCO’s 2002 Forum on Open Courseware and designates “teaching, learning and research materials in any medium, digital or otherwise, that reside in the public domain or have been released under an open license that permits no-cost access, use, adaptation and redistribution by others with no or limited restrictions. Open licensing is built within the existing framework of intellectual property rights as defined by relevant international conventions and respects the authorship of the work”.

According to Wikipedia the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation defines OER as:

teaching, learning, and research resources that reside in the public domain or have been released under an intellectual property license that permits their free use and re-purposing by others. Open educational resources include full courses, course materials, modules, textbooks, streaming videos, tests, software, and any other tools, materials, or techniques used to support access to knowledge.

World over governments are very serious about promoting open educational resources. Unfortunately the user experience of most OER sites is not upto the mark. I personally found it difficult to find stuff on some sites. Some sites were easy to use if you know what to find. Unfortunately most parents and kids do not know what to find. They need something like Khan Academy.

I personally found the best user experience in Khan Academy. Khan Academy which was started by Salman Khan has become the defacto place to go to learn concepts being taught in school. Khan Academy’s videos are not openly licensed. I checked a few videos and they had Standard YouTube License. Standard YouTube License is not an open license. We can only watch Khan Academy’s videos for free. We can watch them from anywhere we can access the internet. Unfortunately we cannot edit them or use them in our own work without explicitly taking permission.

What we need is the user experience of visiting Khan Academy with the openness of wikipedia to get the best of all worlds. Wikipedia itself has started Wikiversity to promote open education. It has been helpful but has not been as successful as Wikipedia or Khan Academy.

We need open education resources categorised by class and subject to make open educational resources useful for parents and kids. We also need to make open educational resources fun to use.

Teachers play a major role in school education. At home most kids do not want to study if the resource is not fun to use. Without a teacher it becomes difficult to make a student learn on his own. We need resources which provide fun and entertainment which pulls a kid to do them. Mobile applications and games are good examples of things which pull people to use them. We need resources that motivate a kid to learn. The resources can use design, graphics, stories, songs etc to make them fun to use.

At Fun2Do Labs we are trying to make education open and fun at the same time. Education problem of the world cannot be solved till the time all kids have access to education and till the time kids want education themselves. If education remains a necessary evil for kids no amount of money or technology can make kids educated. Only education which kids want and which is freely available for everyone to use can solve the education problem of the world.

The following are the animated math stories published by Fun2Do Labs

Stories and song for teaching lines and shapes

Stories for teaching numbers and counting

Stories for teaching number comparison

Stories for teaching addition, subtraction, multiplication and division

Story for teaching patterns

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Saurabh Jain

Founder: Fun2Do Labs, Ex-Vice President: Paytm, Author : Mobile Phone Programming Book