Top 10 Open Access Journal Articles for 2018: Our Final Selection

Over the past week we have been sharing via Twitter our selection of the top 10 open access journal articles for 2018. This is the third year that the NIDL team has undertaken this exercise. You can read more about our selection criteria and previous top 10 selections for 2017 and 2016 in earlier blog posts. We will also be posting a more detailed blog explaining each of our selections for 2018 along with general comments and observations arising from the experience. In the meantime here is the final list of our top 10 articles for the year:

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The Top 10

No. 1

An Analysis of Peer Reviewed Publications on Openness in Education in Half a Century: Trends and Patterns in the Open Hemisphere, in Australasian Journal of Educational Technology by Aras Bozkurt, Suzan Koseoglu and Lenandlar Singh

No. 2

Helping Doctoral Students Crack the Publication Code: An Evaluation and Content Analysis of the Australasian Journal of Educational Technologyin Australasian Journal of Educational Technology by Melissa Bond

No. 3

Dawn or Dusk of the 5th Age of Research in Educational Technology? A Literature Review on (e-)Leadership for Technology-enhanced Learning in Higher Education (2013-2017), in International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education by Deborah Arnold and Albert Sangrà

 No. 4

UK Higher Education Institutions’ Technology-enhanced Learning Strategies from the Perspective of Disruptive Innovation, in Research in Learning Technology by Michael Flavin and Valentina Quintero

No. 5

Twenty-years of EDECH, in EDUCAUSE Review by Martin Weller

No. 6

Digital Competence and Digital Literacy in Higher Education Research: Systematic Review of Concept Use, in Cogent Education by Maria Spante, Sylvana SofkovaHashemi, Mona Lundin and Anne Algers

No. 7

Higher Education Dominance and Siloed knowledge: A Systematic Review of Flipped Classroom Research, in International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Educationby Mona Lundin, Annika Bergviken Rensfeldt, Thomas Hillman, Annika Lantz-Andersson and Louise Peterson

No. 8

Mapping the Open Education Landscape: Citation Network Analysis of Historical Open and Distance Education Research, in Open Praxis by Martin Weller, Katy Jordan, Irwin DeVries and Viv Rolfe

No. 9

Open Educational Practices in Australia: A First-phase National Audit of Higher Education, in International Review of Research in Open and Distributed Learning (IRRODL) by Adrian Stagg, Linh Nguyen2 Carina Bossu, Helen Partridge, Johanna Funk, and Kate Judith

No. 10

What Research Says About MOOCs – An Explorative Content Analysis, in International Review of Research in Open and Distributed Learning(IRRODL) by Olaf Zawacki-Richter, Aras Bozkurt, Uthman Alturki, and Ahmed Aldraiweesh

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Open Education: Teaching and Learning Away Day

By Professor Grainne Conole

Last week our Open Education team had a very productive teaching and learning away day. The aim was to reflect on the current ways in which we design and support our DCU Connected students. A background document was circulated prior to the meeting, which collated various Learning Design frameworks. We identified two overarching themes to improving our teaching and learning:

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  • New and more systematic design of online, open distance teaching and learning. In terms of thoughtful and explicit design, we need to
    • Ensure the workload across modules in consistent
    • Set up either a week by week or month by month schedule
    • Indicate the indicative time needed to complete activities and content and assignments
    • Split content into core and additional (extension)
  • Supporting, and working with, online, open distance learners and teachers (learning students).

In addition, we identified 10 principles for online teaching and learning:

  1. Flexible learning: An accessible learning experience to transform lives and societies and enable widening access
  2. Teacher presence: Expert academic teaching, guidance and facilitation from specialist, passionate educators
  3. Foster belonging: Fostering a sense of belonging
  4. Meaningful interaction: Commitment to a deep level of meaningful interaction, where self-regulated learning is active, collaborative and participatory
  5. Students as partners: Surfacing the student voice and involving them to design decisions
  6. Rich learning resources: Universal design (accessibility standards); any device;
  7. Authentic and reflective assessment: Use a variety of assessment (and feedback) mechanisms to ensure that learning is: active, authentic and meaningful
  8. Personalised support: Student support personalised to the online distance learner: academic, pastoral, technical, and administrative
  9. Research informed teaching and learning: Commitment to cutting-edge, research-led approaches to Learning Design
  10. Open education practices: Practices, philosophy and co-creation

You can read more about operationalising these principles on Grainne’s personal blog where she expands on each principle.