The Go-GN Open Research Handbook

Apr 1, 2023·
Robert Farrow
,
Martin Weller
,
Rebecca Pitt
,
Francisco Iniesto
,
Anne Algers
,
Samia Almousa
,
Marjon Baas
,
Penny Bentley
,
Aras Bozkurt
,
Walter Butler
,
Paula Cardoso
,
Natascha Chtena
,
Glenda Cox
,
Ada Czerwonogora
,
Michael T. Dabrowski
,
Robert Darby
,
Helen DeWaard
,
Essmiller Kathy
,
Funk Johanna
,
Hayman Jenni
,
Helton Emily
,
Kate Huth
,
Sarah C. Hutton
,
Olawale Iyinolakan
,
Kathryn R. Johnson
,
Katy Jordan
,
Caroline Kuhn
,
Sarah Lambert
,
Jenna Mittelmeier
,
Tomo Nagashima
,
Chrissi Nerantzi
,
Jessica O'Reilly
,
Michael Paskevicius
,
Anuradha Peramunugamage
,
Judith Pete
,
Virginia Power
,
Hélène Pulker
,
Eyal Rabin
,
Irina Rets
,
Verena Roberts
,
Virginia Rodés
,
Lorena Sousa
,
Elizabeth Spica
Vidminas Vizgirda
Vidminas Vizgirda
,
Viviane Vladimirschi
,
Gabi Witthaus
· 1 min read
Abstract
This Handbook draws together work done between 2020 and 2023 by members of the Global OER Graduate Network (GO-GN). GO-GN is a network of PhD candidates around the world whose research projects include a focus on open education. GO-GN is currently funded through the OER programme of The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and administered by the Open Education Research Hub from the Institute of Educational Technology at The Open University, UK. In our current phase of activity, we began these collaborative writing efforts with a Research Methods Handbook which was created during the depths of the Covid-19 pandemic. Working together at distance provided an important way to strengthen community links when meeting in person was not possible. The Research Methods Handbook was well received by a much larger audience than we anticipated, and went on to win an Open Research Award. We followed this up with a sister publication, our Conceptual Frameworks Guide. This explores a less well traversed (but nonetheless important) area of scholarly focus. Together, these two explore open approaches to the theory and practice of research in open education. One distinctive feature of our presentation is to foreground the authentic experiences of doctoral researchers who have used specific approaches in researching open education. While it is not possible to cover all approaches in this detail, we hope that important insights are presented in this form of open practice. Throughout 2020-2022 we also regularly engaged our membership through collective reviews of recently published papers and articles. The Research Reviews serve as an overview of recent research but also as a snapshot of the critical responses recorded by doctoral and post-doctoral researchers working in relevant areas. No one volume can claim to comprehensively contain the diversity and variety of open approaches, and this is no exception. But one virtue of openness is that we can draw on the openly licensed works of others to increase our coverage of relevant areas. The Additional Resources at the end of this volume bring together a range of openly licensed texts on open education research and suggests places for further reading and research. Consequently, the information contained here represents a wide range of contributors and collaborators. The original and intended audience for this volume is the doctoral student working on an open education research project - in short, the typical student member of GO-GN and the profile the network exists to support. However, we’ve learned through feedback and analytics that the potential audience for works like this is much larger. Many people who wouldn’t describe themselves as researchers still do research and evaluation. Presenting accessible insights into research foundations and practices helps with this and can be understood as a form of open practice.
Type
Publication
Global OER Graduate Network
publications

This Handbook draws together work done between 2020 and 2023 by members of the Global OER Graduate Network (GO-GN). GO-GN is a network of PhD candidates around the world whose research projects include a focus on open education.

Vidminas Vizgirda
Authors
Postdoctoral Research Associate

Hi 👋😊! I’m Vidminas (most people call me Vid), a postdoc on the CHAILD project splitting time between the Department of Computer Science, University of Oxford and the Institute of Education, University College London.

I am interested in technology and education, and more specifically researching and developing technologies that empower people. The current CHAILD project focus is about defining and designing for agency in children and young people’s use of AI tools.

Before this, I did my PhD at the Institute of Language Cognition and Computation at the University of Edinburgh. My then-supervisors are Professor Fiona McNeill and Professor Judy Robertson. The project was about better understanding and designing tools to help teachers search for educational resources.

I am always keen to chat about teaching and learning, human-computer interaction, participatory research, and designing applications for good, feel free to get in touch!