Abstract

The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether educators and students in the aquaculture and fisheries sector might use and benefit from Open Educational Resources (OERs). The use of OERs has the potential to increase teaching efficiency, increase quality of teaching, and reduce economic and geographic barriers to education. The main barriers to use are academic competition between institutions and educators, low awareness and availability of OERs and copyright policies, mistrust in OER quality, and technological limitations around adaptation and sharing. This study used online questionnaires of students and educators in aquaculture and fisheries subjects to examine perspectives and opinions on OERs and other online educational resources. Questionnaire data showed that a demand for OERs exists from both educators and students, who already utilize online materials for learning and teaching. Furthermore, students were more likely to enroll and respect institutions that offered OERs but were not willing to pay higher tuition fees. Despite the demand, little OER material exists for higher education in the aquaculture and fisheries sector, mainly due to lack of awareness, institutional support, and technological structure, which are common barriers found in other sectors. This paper concludes that OER initiatives associated with higher education institutions in aquaculture and fisheries subjects have the potential, in theory, to support the enhancement of a skilled workforce that will meet the increasing global demand for seafood production.

Highlights

  • UNESCO defines Open Educational Resources (OERs) as Bany type of educational materials that are in the public domain or introduced with an open license

  • One educator wrote: BI cannot answer most of the questions on this page as I have never heard of OERs before.^ None of the students said that they did not have enough information or experience with Bonline materials^ to form opinions

  • Analysis of the survey data suggests that OERs associated with higher education institutions have the potential to benefit educators, students, and institutions in the aquaculture and fisheries sector

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Summary

Introduction

UNESCO defines OERs as Bany type of educational materials that are in the public domain or introduced with an open license. As the importance of OERs is increasingly recognized in international policies (Cape Town Open Education Declaration 2017, European Commission 2013, UNESCO 2012, Bologna Declaration 1999), individual countries have responded with national OER centers such as the Australian DEHub or OERAfrica (Falconer et al 2016). Both national and private higher education institutes have established OERs and OER repositories (Wiley 2007). Falconer et al report that as of 2016, there were over 1700 courses from seven university-based projects in the USA, 451 courses from 176 university members in China, 350 courses from ten universities in Japan, and 178 courses by 11 universities in France

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