Opening up Education: Vassiliou welcomes 'Opening up Slovenia' initiative

European Commission

Press release

Brussels, 22 April 2014

Opening up Education: Vassiliou welcomes 'Opening up Slovenia' initiative

Europe's schools and universities risk losing ground against their international counterparts if they fail to make the most of the digital revolution. This will be one of the themes addressed at an event promoting 'open courseware' - free-to-use educational material for teachers - in Ljubljana tomorrow, 23 April. Androulla Vassiliou, European Commissioner for Education, Culture, Multilingualism and Youth, and Jernej Pikalo, the country's Minister for Education, who will unveil a new 'Opening up Slovenia' initiative to promote open educational resources, will be among the speakers.

"I am delighted that Slovenia has adopted a national strategy to promote open educational resources. This complements the Commission's own 'Opening up Education' initiative. Our shared objective is not to replace traditional textbooks or face-to-face teaching, but to make the most of the opportunities created by digitisation and new technologies. Europe cannot afford to lag behind its international rivals if we want to ensure our young people have the skills needed in the modern world. I hope that this Slovenian initiative is successful and inspires similar schemes in other Member States," commented Commissioner Vassiliou.

During the conference, the Commissioner is also expected to emphasise the potential gains for education in terms of quality and access that will result from a stronger uptake of open educational resources and practices.

A nationwide platform aimed at increasing the uptake of open educational resources and courseware is at the heart of 'Opening up Slovenia'. The platform involves all Slovenian universities, as well as compulsory and vocational education institutions, and partners from research and industry.

The idea is to create an open educational system in parallel to the formal one, and to exploit all aspects of open education. For example, it will encourage rigorous, transparent and replicable testing of open learning environments, open education theories, new business models, open education computational tools, and new and emerging technologies in the educational technologies market-place.

Background

More than 60% of nine year olds in the EU are in schools which are not digitally equipped and up to 80% of students never use digital textbooks, exercise software, broadcasts/podcasts, simulations or learning games, according to the Commission's 'Opening up Education' strategy ( IP/13/859 ).

Open courseware and open educational resources are increasingly provided by, and used in, education systems worldwide.

The US Open Courseware Consortium, a worldwide network including the Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie, Open University of the Netherlands and Technical University of Madrid, currently provides access to more than 30 000 courses in 29 languages, offered by nearly 300 organisations in 40 countries.

The OpenEducationEuropa.eu portal, launched by the Commission last September, provides access to more than 500 MOOCs (Massive Open Online Courses) provided by European institutions. This number represents 20% of the courses available worldwide. The number of European MOOCs has increased by 55% in the past six months.

For more information

Open Education Europa

The OpenCourseWare Consortium (OCWC)

OCWC Conference, 23-25 April, Slovenia

Openingup Slovenia

European Commission: Education and training

Androulla Vassiliou's website

Follow Androulla Vassiliou on Twitter @VassiliouEU

Contacts :

Dennis Abbott (+32 2 295 92 58); Twitter: @DennisAbbott

Dina Avraam (+32 2 295 96 67)