Erkennen-en-waarderen-werken-met-open-educational-practices-en-resources

Recognition and Rewards: working with Open Educational Practices and Resources

zone-open-leermaterialen

This article was written by: Mira Buist-Zhuk, Hans Beldhuis, Susanne Täuber (University of Groningen) &

Robert Schuwer (captain of the Educational Resources zone).

 

Introduction

One of the issues for achieving sustainable adoption of open educational resources (OER) is how to recognise and reward (R&R) activities in the field of open education, more specifically, using OER in an educational setting (known as Open Educational Practices). These OER-focused R&R activities may well be part of the broader Recognition & Rewards reform already happening in Dutch Higher Education.

To support this endeavour, the Towards digital (open) educational resources zone has collected examples of R&R of Open Educational Practices. These examples include good practices, frameworks and focal points. This blog post describes the methodology used and presents the findings which may serve as an inspiration for those who are involved in setting up R&R activities and informing relevant policies in their institution.

Results

The R&R developments in the educational domain of higher education institutions have been primarily studied in the United States context. Through our research, we have identified two key findings. Firstly, the examined R&R practices are relatively new, with the earliest results dating back only five years. Secondly, for the successful implementation of R&R of Open Educational Practices, a combination of several activities and initiatives at a given institution is required.

To organise these findings, we have grouped the identified instruments for Recognition & Rewards for working with OER and Open Educational Practices into three categories:

  1. Instruments for policy
  2. Criteria for assessment (of researchers/lecturers)
  3. Strategies for change management

After reviewing the literature, it became evident that in addition to actual practical tools and protocols, favourable conditions (e.g., clear vision statements and policies) are crucial for the successful implementation of Recognition and Rewards for OER and Open Educational Practices.

Each result is briefly described in below table, with a reference to the corresponding source. 

Authors

Country

Outcomes regarding use of instrument

Type of instrument

Coolidge et al. (2022)

USA, Canada

Describes an advisory model to help guide faculty as they attempt to include their OER work in their tenure and promotion portfolios. It connects the three primary tasks for faculty: Research, Teaching, Service into one advisory model. The model uses six types of contributions (Adopt, Adapt, Create, Improve Learning, Community, Research), each subdivided into clearly described activities and the necessary evidence. The model is adaptable to suit local circumstances     .

Criteria for promotion

Elder (2021)

USA

Overview containing four chapters:

  1. Literature review
  2. Examples of OER in Tenure & Promotion policies, all from USA
  3. Tenure & Promotion statements that may pertain to OER
  4. Alternative methods for amplifying and supporting faculty

Criteria for promotion

Policy

Change management

Elder et al. (2021)

USA

Contains a communication strategy: Talking points and stakeholders; What they can do for you; When to contact.

Change management

Elder et al. (2021)

USA

Contains a list of examples of Open Educational Practices in Tenure & Promotion policies. It also describes how OER fit into the three major Tenure & Promotion categories identified: Research, Education and Services.

Policy

Elder et al. (2021)

USA

Specifies activities on Open Education into Tenure & Promotion categories: What you’ve done and Evidence to present.

Criteria for promotion

Gallant et al. (2022)

USA

Advisory Model for Open Education in Tenure & Promotion Processes. The model is intended to guide faculty as they attempt to include their work with OER in their tenure and promotion portfolios.

Policy

Gallant et al. (2022)

USA

Clear Examples of the type of Contribution, supported by Evidence, yes/no options for Potential Categories (Research, Teaching, Success, Service).

Criteria for promotion

Graham (2018)

UK

Sweden

Singapore

Peru

Malaysia

Australia

Netherlands

A framework providing:

– A structured pathway to guide career progression on the basis of the academic’s contribution to university teaching and learning;

– An evidence base through which to evaluate and demonstrate the academic’s teaching achievement during appointment, professional development and annual appraisal.

Change management

Policy

Criteria for Promotion

 

 

Graham (2019)

 

Describes strategies for the following:

–       Fitting Open Education into existing Tenure & Promotion Requirements;    

–       Advocating for including OER explicitly in institutional or departmental Tenure & Promotion guidelines.

These strategies are conditional to have Recognition & Rewards with inclusion of Open Educational Practices.

Change management

Policy

Criteria for Promotion

Skidmore et al. (2019)

World

Opinions about the policy context in which Recognition & Rewards should fit. Policies are a significant area of opportunity in removing barriers to engaging with Open Educational Practices.

Policy

University of British Columbia (2022)

USA, Canada

Scan of North American Higher Education institutions for their Open Educational Practices. Describes motives and barriers for adoption of these practices and the role of Recognition & Rewards to overcome the barriers.

Policy

University of Massachusetts Amherst (2022)

USA

Detailed description of the Tenure & Promotion process in terms of tasks, responsibilities and authorities.

Policy

University of Miami (2023)

USA

Example of a program teachers have to follow for promotion purposes.

Criteria for promotion

Van Dijk et al. (2020)

Netherlands

Description of a teacher expertise framework that is a prerequisite to have Recognition & Rewards assessments.

Policy

Criteria for promotion

Methodology

For the purposes of identifying and mapping the evidence in terms of Recognition & Rewards activities in the field of OER, we employed the rapid review method[1]. In order to collect a comprehensive set of relevant articles for the literature review section, we searched through several large databases and platforms with relevant publications, such as ERIC, ProQuest Education, DOAJ, APA PsycInfo, Web of Science and Scopus. These searches were conducted between 19 and 21 October 2022, and supplementary hand searches across grey literature were conducted on 23 October 2022 and 11 January 2023.

The identified databases were searched using the following keywords and queries: (open education OR open educational resources OR open educational practices OR OER) AND (recognition and rewards OR continuous professional development OR HR OR promotion OR tenure OR tenure track) AND (higher education OR university).

The search results were downloaded into the EndNote and Zotero reference management programs and the duplicates were removed. The total number of retrieved references amounted to 176. After excluding 26 duplicates, the final number of references was reduced to 150.

The inclusion or exclusion decision was based on the information in the title and abstract and its relevance to our search queries. Scholarly publications without an English-speaking abstract, those not accessible digitally or irrelevant to the higher education context were excluded from the review. The types of sources included in the review span scholarly articles, reports, university policy documents, white papers, blogs, etc.

Using the established criteria, we organised the remaining 150 references alphabetically – first by title, then also by author. Due to time constraints, we selected 66 sources for full-text assessment. Of those, 11 met both our selection criteria and the review goal and were further analysed with regard to identifying instruments for Recognition & Rewards for working with OER and Open Educational Practices. The results of this analysis are organised into three categories and presented in the tables above.

We plan to extend the analysis to all sources in the forthcoming period. If you notice any important publications that are not included in this overview, please reach out to us with your suggestions. To do so, approach author h.j.a.beldhuis@rug.nl.

[1] See Dobbins (2017) and Garritty et al. (2021) for guidance on rapid review method protocols.

Header photo by Martin Adams on Unsplash.

Coolidge, A., McKinney, A., & Shenoy, D. (n.d.). Tenure and promotion. DOERS3. Retrieved 20 November 2022 from https://www.doers3.org/tenure-and-promotion.html

van Dijk, E.E., van Tartwijk, J., van der Schaaf, M.F. & Kluijtmans, M. (2022). What makes an expert university teacher? A systematic review and synthesis of frameworks for teacher expertise in higher education. Educational Research Review, 31, 100365. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.edurev.2020.100365

Dobbins, M. (2017). Rapid Review Guidebook. Hamilton, ON: National Collaborating Centre for Methods and Tools. Retrieved from https://www.nccmt.ca/tools/rapid-review-guidebook

Elder, A. K. (2021). Getting OER into Promotion and Tenure Documents. Open Education in Promotion, Tenure, and Faculty Development. Retrieved 8 November 2022, from https://oept.pubpub.org/pub/ko3xdyo3

Elder, A. K., Gruber, A. M., Burnett, M., & Koch, T. (2021). Open Education in Promotion, Tenure & Faculty Development. Open Education in Promotion, Tenure, and Faculty Development. Retrieved 8 November 2022, from https://oept.pubpub.org/pub/1xl1zqxs

Gallant, J. & Tijerina, T. (2022). Advisory Model for Open Education in Promotion and Tenure Processes. By Affordable Learning Georgia. Retrieved 23 October, 2022, from  https://alg.manifoldapp.org/projects/t-p-guidelines

Garritty, C., Gartlehner, G., Nussbaumer-Streit, B., King, V. J., Hamel, C., Kamel, C., Affengruber, L., & Stevens, A. (2021). Cochrane Rapid Reviews Methods Group offers evidence-informed guidance to conduct rapid reviews. Journal of clinical epidemiology, 130, 13–22. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclinepi.2020.10.007

Graham, R. (2018). The Career Framework for University Teaching. Retrieved 15 December 2022, from https://teachingframework.com/

Graham, R. (2019). ​​Improving University Reward for Teaching A Roadmap for Change. Retrieved 15 December 2022, from https://www.rhgraham.org/resources/Roadmap-for-change-web-version.pdf

Skidmore, J., & Provida, M. (2019). A Place for Policy: The Role of Policy in Supporting Open Educational Resources and Practices at Ontario’s Colleges and Universities. eCampusOntario. Retrieved 8 November 2022, from https://www.ecampusontario.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/2019-08-07-skimore-oe-policy-report.pdf

University of Miami (2023). OER: Adopt program. Miami University. Retrieved 19 January 2023, from https://miamioh.edu/academic-affairs/teaching/open-educ-res/oer-adopt/index.html

University of Massachusetts, Amherst. (2022). Provost Annual Promotion and Tenure Memo. Retrieved 23 October, 2022, from https://www.umass.edu/provost/resources/all-resources/academic-personnel/reappointment-promotion-and-tenure

University of British Columbia (2022). Guide to Reappointment, Promotion and Tenure Procedures at UBC. Retrieved 15 December 2022, from https://hr.ubc.ca/sites/default/files/documents/SAC%20Guide.pdf

 

Share this page

News

Read the latest news and more
News
The curtain falls (almost)

The Acceleration Plan for Educational Innovation with ICT officially comes to an end at the end of this month after

Column
Column Berent Daan: On to (May 1) 2023

Author: Berent Daan, programme director Digitalisation Catalyst When I came across the vacancy for the Programme Director of the Digitalisation