What I've Learned About Ed Tech from Open Source Software
After my first post to TechLearning two weeks ago, I've had more and more time to think about the basic idea which had formed in my mind and which was expressed in that post: that the new technologies of the Web will have a greater impact in driving educational change than pedagogies will. A good comment dialog here, on my own blog, and the ever-thoughtful Glenn Moses have challenged my thinking and helped me to better understand why I have come to this conclusion--and it turns out, many of my opinions (an my ultimate optimism) have been greatly influenced by my experiences with Open Source Software and education.
I've spent the last four years as something of an Open Source Software (OSS) evangelist to schools, and I'd like to propose that the reaction of the educational technology community to OSS might be helpful in some understanding of what the role of technology in education has been, why schools find it difficult to change, and how and why change occurs when it does.
I've run the Open Source lab areas and speaker series for the CUE and NECC shows for the last three years, and am the director of CoSN's K-12 Open Technologies initiative. At pretty much any ed tech show I go to, I live in an Open Source bubble, spending most every waking moment discussing Open Source Software and its progeny, the open technologies of the Web. The number one lesson I've learned from that work is that there is typically a huge gulf between those who are responsible for acquiring and maintaining computer equipment, and those who are expected to use that technology to teach. It's one thing to keep computers working, available, and virus-free, and quite another to actually figure out how to use them for teaching purposes. While there are organizations that do a good job bridging that gulf (the technology curricular specialists like Laura Taylor in Indiana or Marci Hull at SLA in Philadelphia), I quickly came to see how separate the two worlds are.
This has been confusing to Linux and OSS advocates for years. In a world without marketing budgets, they have been accustomed to being able to slowly turn the tide on proprietary software through a personal and grass-roots "conversion" process where success depends on discussing the virtues of OSS and working individually with folks who then become part of the "team." So, of course, these evangelists have typically gone straight to the teachers--those poor, overworked, and really-without-decision-making-influence teachers--thinking that the teachers would understand the virtues of OSS, would start using it, and then schools would adopt it in a widespread movement of educational liberation. Little have the evangelists realized how separated those teachers actually are from being able to have an impact on the corporate-like decision-making on educational technology.
Until I understood this division, it doesn't make sense to me that schools wouldn't immediately adopt OSS. The fundamental principles of the Free and Open Source Software movements (I'll link to Wikipedia to spare the tempting history lesson) are in such harmony with the ideals of education that one would imagine an wonderful synergy as students and teachers learn the values of sharing, collaboration, and intellectual freedom inherent in the use of OSS. Schools would immediately save thousands to tens of thousands of dollars on software licensing fees, could put old computers to reuse, could build high-powered computing clusters, and could have students learning and helping to build many of the most prominent software programs of the new millennium through open code in an apprenticeship model. Indeed, the vocational opportunities alone would be so seriously and significantly better were there such an adoption by schools of OSS that one can only come to the conclusion that pedagogy does not drive technology adoption in most schools, it is rather the marketing and selling of technology that drives technology adoption.
My understanding why schools find it so hard to change actually comes out of watching the successful adoption of certain OSS programs. No matter when we've held a conference session in the last three years on the Open Source e-learning program Moodle (even if it's the least session of the last day, when most people have already cut out to catch flights or make it home that day) we are always "standing room only." It's pretty amazing. Moodle has done more for raising awareness of OSS than any other program that I know. It wasn't until this year's K12 Open Minds Conference in Indiana, when a world-wide panel of Open Source experts was gathered for a pre-conference brainstorm session, that it suddenly became clear to our group that the adoption of Moodle by schools actually demonstrates a pattern for Open Source adoption in education (and likely everywhere else) that had not been clearly articulated before: by and large, OSS programs are adopted by schools when they are "non-displacing," that is, when the OSS program is not displacing or replacing another program. One might remark that Moodle is displacing proprietary competitors (Blackboard, for instance), but most schools looking at Moodle can't even consider the cost of Blackboard, so in effect, Moodle is adopted because it is not replacing or competing with any another program.
This lesson is significant, and it's not exclusive to schools by any means. When a software program has been installed and in use, and when training programs have been held, templates built, lesson plans made, and routines established, it would take a HUGE increase in benefit to switch from one program to another. As long as OSS programs merely duplicate existing programs, no matter how much money might be saved, or how much "freedom" and collaboration encouraged, it really doesn't make sense from an administrative standpoint to switch programs. While there may be some notable exceptions (I'm thinking of Randy Orwin at Bainbridge Island School District, who made an agreement with the teachers that if they would switch to the OSS Office program OpenOffice.org, he would use the savings in licensing to run professional development workshops in the summer), they are exceptions. For most people, the cost of making the switch would seem to outweigh the benefits--again, I believe, because the pedagogy is not the driving factor.
For Open Source folks, this means that while we might be thinking that the adoption of Moodle and other OSS programs in schools reflects a pedagogical drive, it most likely reflects a market condition. And if my over-simplification of the dynamics of educational technology has any truth to it, it helps to explain the history of computer adoption in schools and give us an understanding of why it is that the computer has not actually transformed education--because the implementing of computer technology is largely driven by practical, and not pedagogical, concerns. In fact, it now seems quite understandable that most folks look at the money that has been spent on computers in schools and would say that we have been "oversold" on technology (hat nod to Larry Cuban) at the expense of other important academic or extra-curricular programs. The computer, most of my neighbors would say, has not transformed education, nor do they expect it to at this point. And while this may not appear to be great news for educational technology or for Open Source, I am actually very optimistic.
Here's why: In an interesting twist, once OSS does find its way into education through providing a non-displacing functionality, it often brings with it changes in pedagogy. In my experience, teachers in school who are using Moodle largely report a change in their teaching styles because of the collaborative and constructivist elements that are "baked into" Moodle as a part of its Open Source heritage. One of our European guests at the Indiana conference indicated that in his experience it takes three or four years after implementation of OSS programs for educators to even begin to understand what "Open Source" actually means and why it is beneficial--but they do begin to understand.
Web 2.0 technologies also have a collaborative revolution "baked into" them, and because their use is so dramatically different than traditional uses of the computer, they are almost all "non-displacing." I don't believe their adoption will be constrained in the same way that OSS has. Even the programs that have strong legacies of traditional functionality--like collaborative documents--are still so different than what we are used to using in schools that I don't believe they will face same practical hurdles to adoption that OSS programs have faced. Of course, they have their own battles to fight--mostly on the safety and liability issues--but they represent such a radical culture shift in the creation of content that I don't believe it will be possible for schools to ignore the transformations that are taking place in how we learn, collaborate, and connect on the web right now. These technologies will be brought into education, and they will bring with them in their wake the pedagogical pedigree and heritage of the Free and Open Source software movement which helped to build them--a culture of contribution, with amazing new opportunities for teaching and learning.







Comments
Steve,fascinating perspective.
So, if you could boil it down to 3 points, what would those be?
My read is as follows:
1) Suggest FOSS where it is NOT in direct competition to an established technology. One example is Moodle, but others include Read/Write Web tools like blogging, podcasting, digital storytelling.
2) Facilitate discussion about the impact these FOSS tools are having on pedagogy.
3) Avoid focusing on teachers and get leadership to reflect on the impact these FOSS tools are having.
Am I hearing you right?
With appreciation,
Miguel Guhlin
Around the Corner-MGuhlin.net
http://mguhlin.net
Posted by: Miguel Guhlin | January 1, 2008 4:08 AM
Just browsing the internet. You have a very, very interesting blog.
Posted by: Freddie Sirmans | January 1, 2008 6:15 PM
Miguel:
I think those are three reasonable conclusions, if the focus is on the use of FOSS in schools.
Additionally, a big point for me is watching the difference that curricular-technology specialists have made--which I'm not sure is really FOSS specific. I've only heard Laura Taylor report on her work in Indiana working with teachers to create curricula when in an immersive computer environment, but I got to watch Marci Hull at SLA work with both teachers and students each day to help make the use of their 1:1 laptop computers effective.
Another "point" I might make is that the lack of FOSS adoption may not actually forecast the lack of Web 2.0 adoption, and that some of the pedagogical changes that we might have hoped would come from FOSS will come from Web 2.0. Indeed, in many ways Web 2.0 helps to open the door to FOSS--I can tell you that it has been way easier to talk about FOSS to educators now that people are familiar with Wikipedia, since it helps create the understanding of why people would contribute to something without getting directly compensated for it. That was previous really hard for folks to understand when discussing FOSS.
But really, my main point remains that the use of technology in education seems largely divorced from pedagogy, and that this is the reason that computers have not transformed education. It's a very understandable circumstance, since the wholesale adoption of the specific pedagogies that became possible with computers would have been so far ahead of the cultural norm that it would not be reasonable to think that public education would have embraced such a change, or that parents would have supported it. But now that the culture is changing, it's exciting to think about how schools will have a chance to start to adopt and teach with the read/write Web as a new platform.
Which is why, although I applaud the new intiative by Will Richardson and Sheryl Nussbaum-Beach to do some high-level training, I still think that individual exposure to the radically transformative aspects of Web 2.0 by regular teachers is having an impact that FOSS wasn't able to, because the general technology trend outside of schools reinforces it.
Posted by: Steve Hargadon | January 1, 2008 6:16 PM
Steve-
For me, your post is incredibly timely. We are getting ready to prepare our list of software for our 2008-2009 base images for our student computer lab machines. I'm going to make the recommendation that we dump MS Office on the student lab machines in favor of Google docs (which we started using in our Middle School more extensively this year) and Open Office. We've started to use more Web 2.0 apps like wikis and Voicethread over the past year as well-I simply don't really see a reason to deploy the weighty and expensive MS Office suite on our labs anymore with the plethora of wonderfully powerful alternatives.
Unfortunately I will not have the final say in this process and my recommendation will undoubtedly be trumped. But the wheels are in motion and the stage is set for the eventual adoption of FOSS within a few years at our site.
Great post...thanks for sharing and Happy New Year!
Posted by: Matt Montagne | January 1, 2008 7:50 PM
Great post! I think you are correct in observing that decisions about technology use in schools are too often driven by the practical considerations of people who are not educators. In my experience, there is sometimes another barrier to adopting FOSS in the minds of the decision makers. They have difficulty comprehending that software can offer true value and be supported if no money is paid for it.
I agree that the uses of web 2.0 applications hold more promise of being adopted and of having a more widespread impact on pedagogy. Again, however, it is the non-educator decision makers who most often put up barriers that keep learners from accessing the tools of the Read/Write Web. They restrict access for their own practical purposes, not for sound educational reasons.
I believe that we won't see truly significant gains until the decisions about implementation of technology are made by the educational leaders in our school districts. --Paul
Posted by: Paul Hamilton | January 1, 2008 9:51 PM
Matt: Good luck. Hope you'll keep us posted.
Paul: Yes, the concen about support is a big one, and there is truth behind it. If you're used to going outside for tech support, you want someone to hold accountable. On the other hand, schools with confident IT managers, or that work closely with students for tech support, won't have the same issue.
Your final point about leadership is central to a lot of the discussions I've been part of. It was another conclusion of the K12 Open Minds conference that I didn't focus on, but maybe should have. There is also a clear pattern of OSS/FLOSS adoption when it is mandated from the top down by someone with vision.
Thanks!
Posted by: Steve Hargadon | January 2, 2008 7:00 PM