Closed LauraHilliger closed 9 years ago
I guess the issue here might be that we know too much and therefore lack empathy with those new to this area. I'm a big fan of the things you mention, but we could start with just why work open?
Starting work on this soon. For now, will just point to the Open Practices competency on webmaker.org, and list the skills (these aren't learning objectives yet):
OK, think a lot of this will probably depend on the activities we choose, but here's some learning objectives as a starter for ten:
/ @ldecoursy is the plan to put these into Discourse again and ask the community to help? :)
That sounds great. Let me know if you have time to set that up before the call tomorrow or I can do.
OK @ldecoursy have created thread here, ready for the call: http://discourse.webmaker.org/t/learning-objectives-open-practices/1194
As of right now we have:
Unless there's any further action on the Discourse thread, let's go with these! :+1:
Update after further activity in the Discourse thread:
I'm happy with these learning objectives, but won't be around for creating activities around them for 3rd Club test on 20th February. I'll be on holiday!
/ cc @thornet
The final session for Web Literacy Basics I should be Open Practices, and boy do we know about that :wink: On Training, we have a lot of diverse content that we can pull from if were looking for language, but also collaborative activities like scrumming, mindmapping or speedgeeking are good ways to prepare people for the working openly pieces inherent in the entire Connecting Strand.
Other places to look at, particularly for the skills under Open Practices, include P2PU and School of Open