@inproceedings { title = {Open Learning Network: The evidence of OER impact}, year = {2010}, month = {09/2010}, author = {McAndrew, Patrick and Cropper, Karen}, keywords = {research, policy, Open Educational Resources, collective intelligence}, address = {Barcelona}, language = {eng}, abstract = {Much of the initial work on Open Educational Resources (OER) has inevitably concentrated on how to produce the resources themselves and to establish the idea in the community. It is now eight years since the term OER was first used and more than ten years since the concept of open content was described and a greater focus is now emerging on the way in which OER can influence policy and change the way in which educational systems help people learn. The Open University UK and Carnegie Mellon University are working in partnership on the OLnet (Open Learning Network), funded by The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation with the aims to search out the evidence for use and reuse of OER and to establish a network for information sharing about research in the field. This means both gathering evidence and developing approaches for how to research and understand ways to learn in a more open world, particularly linked to OER, but also looking at other influences.}, url = {http://openaccess.uoc.edu/webapps/o2/bitstream/10609/4844/6/McAndrew.pdf}, attachments = {McAndrew.pdf}, }