Hack Day
About
Hack Day participants will select a project to work on that seeks to increase the positive impact of open education resources on education, broadly put. Self-organizing teams will aim to rapidly develop a working idea for a project, service, model, program, website or tool into a mockup or prototype by the end of the day, coupled with a creative pitch that includes clear ideas for implementation, funding, workflow, and future development. Participants will include a small group of conference attendees as well as other guests and members of the Berkman community.
Projects will be pre-conceived, based on conference takeaways, or newly presented on the morning of. Teams will combine the expertise and insight of coders, data manipulators, visualizers, big thinkers, community builders, hackers, academics, students and others. Teams will seek to rapidly develop a prototype with the goal of developing implementation, funding, and use models with an example workflow, and in some cases, actual data. The ideal project is fundable and implementable. Projects will be judged at the end of the day by a panel of knowledgeable, connected people from inside and outside the Berkman and open education communities. The event will not be limited to coders or those more technically oriented; it will also be a space for coming up with action items for policy innovation, developing and furthering best practices and norms, and facilitating relationship-building across communities.
For inspiration, see Jonathan Zittrain's call to encourage more hackathons: http://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2011/06/15/computer-sciences-sputnik-moment/encourage-more-all-night-hackathons.
The Hack Day will open with an informal get-together on the evening of Thursday, April 12th that will shared problems in the OER space and means or tools for hacking.
We will have visual- and game-designer Una Lee on hand to help make ideas beautiful, and PRX mobile hacker Becca Nesson to help those making mobile apps.
Project ideas
- Please add ideas below for actionable/hackable/solvable problemss, with 1-2 sentence descriptions or just jotting down ideas.
- Help edit ideas or draw connections between related ideas - and sign up below ideas you are interestd in (you can sign up below more than one).
- Refine mission of P2PU as a lab.
- Possible outputs: Mission statement, elevator pitch video, concrete examples around assessment, badges, and other wild experiments
- Interested in participating: Philipp Schmidt, Karen Fasimpaur, Vanessa Gennarelli
- Create some P2PU challenges around simple ways to participate in the open movement.
- Possible outputs: P2PU challenge on how to open license on Flickr, P2PU challenge on how to use the CC choose-a-license tool, P2PU challenge on metadata
- Interested participants:
- Wikipedia editing event
- This will be an opportunity to learn and/or do, in improving Wikipedia content related to OER. Led by Pete Forsyth
- Interested participants:
- Personal Open Courseware Repository
- Help design a minimum viable website for any scholar to store and share academic resources with transparency and a built-in reputation model to ensure academic honesty and encourage collaborative learning. See KarmaNotes.org and its accompanying development specifications.
- Interested participants:
- An Open Source Clicker Tool
- Build open source tools for live student polls and communication over smartphones (as well as sms-only access). See Socrative and ClassTalk.org to start. Or visit the github repo
- Interested participants:
- Peer-to-Peer Review
- Build free and open tools to bring the peer review process to scholars of all ages. Using open source annotation tools, we can add near-infinite value to the margins of any digital document. See also Mendeley, the Berkman H2O Playlist Tool, PaperGrader.org and RapGenius.
- Interested participants:
- WorldWideAcademy
- While certain innovative institutions as well as amateur educators have demonstrated their capacity to share educational videos online, there is no single website dedicated to encouraging, funding, and promoting the best free and open educational resources. In short, let's design a Kickstarter for OER.
- Interested participants:
- Design a platform that will allow for peer evaluation of assignments
- allowing effective online education to move beyond the limited collection of topics that can be tested automatically. This will permit advanced, nuanced, and subjective topics to be taught and evaluated in a scalable and affordable way, greatly expanding the potential of open online education.
- Interested participants:
- Design a series of compelling, punchy, viral outreach media to prime parents, teachers, and learners to see OER as a civic and cultural good.
- Think of the early Creative Commons animations or, more recently, Kirby Ferguson's "Everything is a Remix" series. What are the broad concepts; the evocative, inclusive stories; the intuitive sells?
- Interested participants:
- Design a platform for skill share using video.
- Connect people who want to learn something with those who want to teach it, and establish reputation doing it. Recent research shows how much young people heavily on YouTube to learn new things, however, there is not a formal way of surfacing these experiences outside a niche community. (Andres Monroy-Hernandez)
- Interested participants:
- Big Data analytics of learning environments
- I'd be willing to share some of the publicly available data from the Scratch online community to do data mining and/or generate visualizations that can help understand what and how people learn. There are 2 million projects shared and more than 1 million users. We can have a session playing with data. (Andres Monroy-Hernandez)
- Interested participants:
From cluster groups
Macro
- Incentivize OER Organizational Partnerships with Project-based Collaborative Funding
- Open Curriculum Pathways
- Working in the Margins
- Common Core State Standards (CCSS)
- Promote OER with Disciplinary Organizations
- Open Virtual Science Labs in Every U.S. High School
- A Global OER Graduate Network
- OER Vision and Policy Advocacy
- OER Information Accuracy Effort
Meso
- Shared Identifiers for OER Learning Objects
- OER.org
- Gathering feedback on teacher PD in rural India mobile phones, SMS and crowdmapping
- Creating a Mechanism to Foster Trust in OER
Micro
- Learning materials for self-directed learners
- Supporting entrepreneurship and sustainability
- Collaborative Professional Learning
- OER K-12 challenge
- Mindsports as Rocket Fuel for OER
Research
- Mapping OER to competency programs
- Instructables for OER; stOERies.us
- Community Colleges OER Retention Pilot Project
- Policy - One step at a time
Synthesized
- Github for OER
- Fix diffs and other parts of the tool
- Make it look familiar to authosr
- Contests and awards for OER
- OER K-12 challenge
- Including national teacher award - make this miply the wniner's curriculum is open.
- Compare with Tech Awards
- Reimagine P2P learning model
- Project-based, low barrier to entry, simple participation for teachers and learners,
- Not broadcast.
- Classification for OER objects
- Registry for learning objects
- standard tagging, identification.
- metadata and comparison to reduce duplication, cluster and merge across isntitutions and curricula
- Build your own learning objectives
- Open Curriculum Pathways
- Gamification for Edumacation
- Teach in ways that suport metacognitive development (charlie)
- OERstructables
- Video intro, how-to, and task for carrying out a project. For creating sharing and tagging stories about building and using OER in the classroom.
Digital Gallery of Learning Artifacts and Material Curated from the web. For users to collect, curate and express the story of their learning through the artifacts they created, from the avante garde pictures of childhood to notes, essays lab reports paintings, etc. Students will ultimately have at their disposal the
Participants
Please be in touch with Nathaniel Levy (nlevy@cyber.law.harvard.edu) to be added to this list or if you have any questions.
- Amar Ashar
- Nathaniel Levy
- Andrew Magliozzi
- SJ Klein
- Erhardt Graeff
- Joshua Gay
- Michelle D'Souza
- Lisbeth Levey
- David Wiley
- Peter Forsyth
- Karen Fasimpaur
- Una Lee
- Beardsley Ruml
- Ann Kurrasch
- Steve Williams
- Alfred Solis
- Sarah Kirn
- Ruth Rominger
- Evan Morikawa
- Jeff Mao
- Nicole Allen
- Justin DuClos
- Mary Ellen Zuppan
- Andrés Monroy-Hernández
- Jesse Campbell
- Lucas Duclos
- Patrick McAndrew
- Cable Green
- Steve Midgley
- Victor Shnayder
- Matthew Battles
- Rebecca Nesson
Location and Schedule
Thursday, April 12th, 6-7:30pm
Evening meetup at MetaLab: 29 Garden St. Snacks and drinks provided.
Thursday, April 12th, 7:45pm
Drinks at the Berkman Center, 23 Everett St. Some of us are going out for dinner afterwards at Cambridge Common.
Friday, April 13th, 9:00am
Location: Milstein A, Wasserstein Hall, Harvard Law School
- Schedule:
- Opening Exercises (9:00-10:15)
- Introductory Pitches and Team Formation (10:15-10:45)
- Development Sprint 1 (10:45-12:30)
- Lunch (12:30-1:00)
- Development Sprint 2 (12:30-1:30)
- Flex Time (1:30 - 2:15pm)
- Final Development Sprint (2:15 - 3:30pm)
- Pitches and Review (3:30-4:30)