Open Content Development Model (OCD)

Szerzők

  • András Benedek Budapest University of Technology and Economics

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3311/ope.149

Absztrakt

The research group that, besides experienced and academic researchers, includes practitioners as well as students who are engaged in scientific student work and are attending their engineer and economist teacher evening courses while being present in school practice, was established in 2015 within the framework of the Department of Technical Education and the Teacher Training Centre of the Budapest University of Technology and Economics (BME) with the aim to implement a project focused on researching methods supporting learning, and initiated and financed by the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (HAS).  Relying on this specific base of researchers and practitioners, our project undertook to develop and introduce new procedures based on the experiences and analysis of the educational methods used by vocational teachers during their work. By presenting the research topic, this paper intends to introduce the process, in this case the open content development and the work done in order to create a new model of this, which allows the active participation of students in research and development as well as the connection of smaller researches into bigger research projects.pen Content Development Model (OCD)Open Content Development Model (OCD)

Információk a szerzőről

András Benedek, Budapest University of Technology and Economics

 

Professor and Head, Department of Technical Education, BudapestUniversity of Technology and Economics, has published some 150 papers to date in connection with human resource development issues, among them the essays “New Vistas ofLearning in the Mobile Age”, in Kristóf Nyíri (ed.), Mobile Understanding: The Epistemologyof Ubiquitous Communication, Vienna: Passagen Verlag,2006, and “Mobile Learning: New Horizons and Unstable Summits”,in Kristóf Nyíri (ed.), Engagement and Exposure: Mobile Communicationand the Ethics of Social Networking, Vienna: Passagen Verlag,2009. From 1976 to 1979 he studied systems analysis on a scholarshipand acquired a PhD at the Academy of Sciences in Moscow.During the 1980s he was a scientific advisor at the Hungarian Academyof Sciences. He was the Director of Vocational Training (from1984 to 1989), then Director General (from 1989 to 1990) at the NationalPedagogical Institute. As its first Director General in 1990, heestablished the National Institute for Vocational Education. He was involved in numerousUNESCO and ILO projects, and continues to participate in the preparation of variousWorld Bank and Phare projects in the area of human resource development. 1991–2006he held the positions of deputy and permanent state secretary in different ministries. In2004 he acquired a DSc at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. E-mail: benedek.a@eik.bme.hu.

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Megjelent

2016-12-24

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