The document provides advice for organizations looking to implement a badge system based on lessons learned from other organizations. It recommends starting with a small core team of 5-6 people, identifying all stakeholders to understand their needs, engaging teachers and faculty as co-designers, establishing a common language around badges, explaining the badge concept early to stakeholders, designing badges to be relevant to learners and communities, building external partnerships to give badges value, taking an iterative design process to test assumptions, and focusing on user experience and visual design.
ICT role in 21st century education and it's challenges.
What Counts as Learning: Open Digital Badges for New Opportunities
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2. Mozilla Open Badges Community Call
Wednesday, November 19, 2014
http://etherpad.badgealliance.org/CCNov19
3. • What are the three most important things you would share with another
organization just getting started?
• What are the three main challenges to widespread adoption of your badge system
for your organization?
• What are three things have you learned about badge system design?
• What would you do differently if you were to start over?
4. Building the team
• Average core team size was roughly 5 to 6
people.
• Teams were as large as 10 people, especially
for those with content and multimedia
experts, and for those who built custom-designed
badge systems.
• Choose your team wisely.
5. Who are my stakeholders?
• Stakeholders will define the boundaries of
your system.
• Every stakeholder group represents a
boundary that must be navigated and crossed.
• Don’t skip the process of identifying
stakeholders, no matter how tempting it may
be to do so.
6. Teachers are stakeholders
• Engage teachers and faculty as co-creators in
the design of the system.
• Train teachers first, and well, and make this
training an ongoing process.
• Think carefully how teachers will be involved
in the badge-issuing process.
7. Find a common language
• Identify terminology specific to badges.
• Make sure everyone working on the system
can understand the language of badges.
• Communicating design ideas from content
experts to design experts to programming
experts is hard.
• Have early conversations with the web
development team.
8. Explain badges early
• Give all of your stakeholders time to become
familiar with the concept of badges.
• Get started before the badge system design
process begins.
• Create a shared understanding among anyone
who will have a stake in the system.
• Develop strong stories about how badges
work.
9. Design for relevance
• Map your badges to whatever your
community finds valuable.
• Ask your learners what they value — avoid
assumptions as much as possible.
• Same for other stakeholders, including faculty,
administrators, and external stakeholders.
• Think early about data. What can your badge
system tell you?
10. Build external partnerships
• Build value and relevance at the beginning of
the design process.
• Define your trust network.
• Think hard about what gives your badges
“weight” with external stakeholders.
11. Trust networks
• Answer the “so what?” question.
• Have meaningful answers that go beyond
badges as an aspect of a learner’s identity.
• Foster the collective belief in the value of your
badges.
12. Iterative design
• Fail fast.
• Put all aspects of the system in harm’s way
and test with real users.
• Release smaller parts first instead of big
chunks.
• Engage all users in the design process early.
13. Learning pathways
• Designing learning pathways is more complex
than developing curricula and defining course
requirements.
• Create shared assessment criteria so that
badges can be connected between different
programs.
• Align badges to standards where possible.
• Think about tagging badges so others can find
them.
14. User experience
• Check your assumptions about navigation!
• The system will fail if you don’t get this right.
• A “clunky” platform will make understanding,
earning, and sharing badges difficult.
• Without a seamless user experience, learners
may not even share their badges.
15. Visual design
• Do not underestimate the design elements of
the badges.
• Simpler designs are better.
• Think how badges will display on different
screen sizes.
• Distinguish single-lesson achievements from
more significant achievements.
16. Number and type of badges
• Experiment early. Start small.
• Keep things simple.
• Consider using other features to increase
engagement and chart progress.
• Carefully consider learning outcomes and
values.
17. Badge system technology
• Hire the most experienced programmers
possible.
• Focus early and hard on the technical side of
badge system design.
• Prepare for complex technical challenges if
you are integrating with legacy systems.