Design and its Publics
Ronald Macintyre
@roughbounds
Cite as: Macintyre R (2018) Design and its Publics, International Research
Society for Public Management: Creating and Co-Creating Value in Public Service
Delivery, Edinburgh, Scotland, 11th -13th of April 2018, CC BY SA 4.0
Structure
• Open Education
• Open Education as a Public Good?
• Open Education and its Publics
• The Reality of Design Work with Volunteer Scotland
• Conclusion
OPEN EDUCATION
OpenLearn
Source: Patrina Law (Head of Free Learning) The Open University, “10 Years of OpenLearn”, April 2016
What do we mean by OEP?
We think of Open Educational Practices as those
educational practices that are concerned with and promote
equity and openness. Our understanding of ‘open’ builds
on the freedoms associated with “the 5 Rs” of OER,
promoting a broader sense of open, emphasising social
justice, and developing practices that open up
opportunities for those distanced from education.
OPEN EDUCATION AS A PUBLIC
GOOD?
What do we mean by OEP?
We think of Open Educational Practices as
those educational practices that are
concerned with and promote equity and
openness. Our understanding of ‘open’ builds
on the freedoms associated with “the 5 Rs” of
OER, promoting a broader sense of open,
emphasising social justice, and developing
practices that open up opportunities for
those distanced from education.
The P in OEP?
… Practice
… Participation
… the public
Is Open Education as a Public
Good?
In economics a public good is non excludable and non rivalrous, so knowing can
be a public good but education is often a mix of public and private
Expressions of Education as Public Good within the rhetoric around Open
Education are expressions of a set of values
Is Open Education as a Public
Good?
A
What
A
Who
Design
Who is “The
Public” in Open
Education?
Is Open Education as a Public
Good?
A
What
A
Who
Design
Exceptions Aside
…The Public, the who
of Open Education are
well educated
professionals … “the
educational haves”
(Cannell and
Macintyre 2017)
OPEN EDUCATION AND ITS
PUBLIC
Locating “the public”
In the review … Public Value … “the public” as …
• out there acting as an authorising environment …
(Moore 1995)
• “The Public Sphere” (Habermas [1962] 1991), see
also Bennington (2009)
• having formed or formable views which one can
treat as normative (Bozeman 2008)
• a useful fiction we hold inside (Meynhardt 2009)
• Questions of participation are questions of equity
(Dahl and Soss 2014),
Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, Vol XXV, January-June 1829, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_19th-
century_British_periodicals#/media/File:Blackwood%27s_Edinburgh_Magazine_XXV_1829.jpg, Public
Domain
Locating “other” publics
Alternatively… “the public” as …
called into being through being addressed
(Hauser 2007, Warner 2002),
Realised and imagined… (Di Salvo 2012)
Promotional Still Citizen Kane, 1941,
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Citizen-Kane-Welles-Podium.jpg , Public
Domain
Locating “other” publics
… an alternate reading … “the public” as …
having questions of legitimacy how inclusive and
participatory, and efficacy, how well civil society
can mobilise and realise “the public” (Fraser
2007)
The Public Sphere, Frederic Sorrieu lithograph from
1848 commemorating universal male suffrage in
France entitled “Suffraege universal dedie a Ledru-
Rollin, Public Domain
Locating “other” publics
In the review … an alternate reading … “the public”
as …
A site of contestation, with counter publics, a need
for a plural reading (Negt and Kluge [1993] 2016;
Laclau and Mouffe ([1985] 2014)
Macintyre 2018, Anti Gun protest Santa Fe, New
Mexico, 24th of March 2018, CC BY SA 4.0
THE REALITY OF DESIGN WORK
WITH VOLUNTEER SCOTLAND
Volunteer Scotland.
The Education Team at a
workshop on the 17th of
January 2018
Group Work First Design Workshop at Volunteer Scotland, Stirling, 17th
of January 2018, Ronald Macintyre CC BY SA 4.0
We Start with the value
you want to create for the
learner and/or your
organisation rather than
what you know (or think
learners ought to know)
and how you think we
ought to communicate
VALUE How What
Hand Up! First Design Workshop at Volunteer Scotland, Stirling, 17th of
January 2018, Ronald Macintyre CC BY SA 4.0
Calling a Public into Being
• Starts with the Learner, use of
data to profile learner – e.g front
line care staff, possibly distanced
from education, unfamiliar with
learning online
• Build a journey based on their
needs, think about where they
are, their context, experience,
where they want to go
• Builds on the resources and
capabilities you bring and/or want
to develop – strategic and
operational alignment
What
Learners
Want
Resources
and
Capabilities
of the
Organisation
The
learner
Journey
Exploring Learners Journeys
Drawing a “rich picture”
• “Rich Pictures” are a way to capture issues and
relationships that can be difficult to put into
words
• You don’t need to be able to draw, and people
should “share the pen”
• Try to come to a shared view, note differences
of view
• The discussion about what you might draw is
just as important as the drawing.
Ideal Crofting Learner, SFC Workshop,
Kyle of Lochalsh, 15th of October 2015,
Ronald Macintyre CC BY SA 4.0
Exploring Learners Journeys
Draw out an “rich picture” of your “ideal”
learner
• Think about the learner, who are they at the
start of the journey
• Who are they at the end, what is it they are
able to do
• Think about the value realised by the learner
and the organisation.
More Group Work First Design Workshop at Volunteer Scotland, Stirling,
17th of January 2018, Ronald Macintyre CC BY SA 4.0
Themes from the Ideal Learner Pictures
• Diverse backgrounds and experiences,
• Recognise problems they need to solve
• Willing to learn, and willing to learn from
each other
• Be able to apply the learning within their
context
• Recognise learning is a journey that does
not stop at the end of the course
• Continue to support others after the course
is finished
• Be advocates for volunteering within the
organisation,
• Promote Volunteer Scotland and its values
The Ideal Learner, Volunteer Scotland, Stirling, 17th of January 2018,
Ronald Macintyre CC BY SA 4.0
“The Public” they presently call into being
The same exercise picturing your actual learners:
• Geographically clustered around the central belt
• Tend to be in large organisations that can pay
• A spectrum from the dominant “hand up” to the
non contributor
• Some get spooked by the formal procedures
• People form into “wee groups”
Ideal
Learner
Actual
Learners
The
learner
Journey
Exploring Learning Journeys
Traditional SSM Learner Centred
C/B – Originally Customer later
beneficiaries
Who are the learners? Learners are not customers in any normal sense,
in open education the question is who is “your public”?
A – who are the main actors Actors, who is around them, helping create the content, supporting the
learner, what is around them, think about the socio-material/technical
context.
Activities, what is the nature of the activities, where and with what or
whom
T – Transformation Process What is it they will be able to do in the world at the end of the journey
W – Worldview What is the worldview, does it represent/challenge particular positions or
sets of values
O/V – Owners, later also to
include victims
Who is are all those affected
E – Environment What is the wider context in which this sit?
Exploring Learning Journeys
Learner Centred
SSM
Volunteer Scotland
Who are the
learners, who is “your
public”?
Tension between the ideal and the actual learner, reflecting organisational tension between “the public” they presently serve as the
“national centre for volunteering” and the one they want to serve.
Actual Public
• At present the actual learner relates to a long term strategic focus on large organisations often with named people/positions who
look after volunteers.
• The learners from larger organisations are practitioners often with little support from the organisation, which is why the come to
VS.
• The focus on them relates to relates to the market for courses, these are the only organisations that can pay, a sense that this is
what they have always done, and the expectation of funders in this case the Scottish Government.
• In evoking the actual learner participants “speak for” them, and from their own experience in these organisations, as a public it is
more than the organisational norms but often deeply personal and tied to professional identity
Imagined Public
• Ideally learners come from a diverse range of backgrounds, in particular they want to engage in informal volunteering,
• Informal volunteering is increasing due for a number of reasons, top down Scottish Government policy, and bottom up anti-
austerity.
• It is also under threat through formalising pressures, would VS intervention help?
• Ideal learners emerged from the organisations own review of its own values, but is contentious, as it cuts across personal and
professional identities.
Exploring Learning Journeys: Exercise 2
• The ideal learner tells us a great deal
about the values of the organisation and
the resources and capabilities of the
organisation –often a mix of what we are
good at, and what we wish we were good
at
• The actual learner tells us a similar story
• [often] both highlight the limits of our
knowledge about learners needs and
wants
Ideal
Learner
Actual
Learners
The
learner
Journey
I have found … is this true for you
Exploring Learning Journeys: Exercise 2
• It is Obvious …. “Listen”, …. but more
than listen allow “the public” to take
part, participatory process …
• [However] for many Voluntary Sector
organisations their learning materials
are a set of values whose role is as an
act of persusasion
Ideal
Learner
Actual
Learners
The
learner
Journey
OEP, from Public to Participation
CONCLUSION
Speculating on Design and its
Public(s)
• Education design involves imagining “a public” into
being in order to realise the learner in the design
process
• Care needs to be taken of how you bring “who” into the
design process;
• We can learn about organisation from how they imagine
and realise their publics.
Reflection on Public(s) in the
Voluntary Sector
• Organisational narratives over “who they are for” and
their public plays on questions of value(s).
• The Public as real and imagined is influenced by
different aspect top down, internally resonant, and
bottom up images of “the public”.
• Engaging with a new public, drawing in counter publics
leads tensions, and one needs to take care over what
happens to these publics once folded into more formal
structures.
Centre for Voluntary Sector Leadership
The Open University Business School
The Open University
Walton Hall
Milton Keynes
MK7 6AA
www.open.ac.uk
Acknowledgements
• Some of the work presented here would not have been possible
without funding from the Scottish Government for Open
Educational Practices Scotland (OEPS) a programme hosted by
the OU in Scotland, and special thanks to Pete Cannell the
Director of OEPS.
• James Rees and Alessandro Sancino for support and hard
questions
• Adrian Murtagh at Volunteer Scotland for being open and honest
and helping me understand value and values a little better.
References
Benington J. (2009) Creating the Public In Order To Create Public Value?, International Journal of Public Administration, 32(3-4), pp. 232-
249
Bozeman, B., 2008. Debate: Public Value Trade-Offs and Methodological Trade-Offs. Public Money and Management, 28(3), pp.135–
136.
Cannell P. Macintyre R. (2017) Free open online resources in workplace and community settings – a case study on overcoming barriers,
Widening Participation and Lifelong Learning, 19(1), pp. 111-122
Dahl, A. & Soss, J., 2014. Neoliberalism for the common good? Public value governance and the downsizing of democracy. Public
Administration Review, 74(4), pp.496–504.
Di Salvo C. (2012) Adversarial Design, MIT Press: MA Cambridge
Dorst, K. & Cross, N., (2001). Creativity in the design process: co-evolution of problem–solution. Design Studies, 22(5), pp.425–437.
Fraser, N. (2007), Transnationalizing the Public Sphere on the Legitimacy and Efficacy of Public Opinion in a Post-Westphalian World.
Theory, Culture & Society, 24(4), pp7-30
Habermas J. ([1962] 1991). The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere: An Inquiry into a category of Bourgeois Society. MIT
Press: Cambridge
Hauser, G.A., 2007. Vernacular discourse and the epistemic dimension of public opinion. Communication Theory, 17(4), pp.333–339.
Laclau E., Mouffe C. ([1985] 2014) Hegemony and Socialist Strategy: Towards a Radical Democratic Politics, Verso: London
Meynhardt, T., 2009. Public Value Inside: What is Public Value Creation? International Journal of Public Administration, 32(3–4), pp.192–
219.
Moore M. H. (1995) Creating Public Value: Strategic Management in Government, Harvard University Press: London
Negt O., Kluge A. ([1993] 2016) Public Sphere of Experience: Analysis of the Bourgeois and Proleterian Public Sphere. Verso: London
Warner, M., (2002). Publics and Counterpublics. Public Culture, 14(1), pp.49–90.

More Related Content

PPT
Romania london sept 2012 - part2
PDF
Macintyre 2018 Design as a Way of Knowing
PPT
Exploring Value and Values through Openness: Third Sector Partnerships approa...
PPT
Exploring Value and Values through Openness: Third Sector Partnerships approa...
PPT
Using Open Educational Resources to Support Student Transitions
PPTX
Cilip Ireland Workshop 2016
PPTX
EBLIP10 workshop: Advocacy through impact: A practical workshop
PPTX
Learning for Sustainability and Open Educational Practice Workshop (3rd of Ma...
Romania london sept 2012 - part2
Macintyre 2018 Design as a Way of Knowing
Exploring Value and Values through Openness: Third Sector Partnerships approa...
Exploring Value and Values through Openness: Third Sector Partnerships approa...
Using Open Educational Resources to Support Student Transitions
Cilip Ireland Workshop 2016
EBLIP10 workshop: Advocacy through impact: A practical workshop
Learning for Sustainability and Open Educational Practice Workshop (3rd of Ma...

Similar to Macintyre Design and its Publics (20)

PPTX
Learning for Sustainability and Open Educational Practices Scotland Workshop
PPT
Global perspectives
PPT
Global perspectives in the classroom - phil casas
PDF
Intersections Between Your Domain and SAIL - May 1, 2018 "Learning Everywhere...
PDF
Intersections Between Your Domain and SAIL - May 1, 2018 "Learning Everywhere...
PPT
Global Dimension Presentation
PPTX
SPrED & social capital_110515
PPTX
2019 Connexion D2L: Édition Ottawa - Emily Wills
PPTX
Aejmc 2015 pre-conference_media-entrepreneurship
PPTX
Presentation Bettie Higs
PDF
Exploring Identity, Fostering Agency, Discovering How Students Benefit.pdf
PPT
Littlejohn mooc collective_final
PPTX
Launching Open Education Campus Campaigns, Oct 2/17
PPTX
Globalisation and education innovation in the classroom cc project local gl...
PPT
Final Messaging
PPTX
On Ways of Framing Experiential Learning
PDF
Pathways to Employment project - Reference Group workshop presentation
PPT
Global Dimension Presentation
PPTX
Lilac 2014 Scottish Information Literacy Community of Practice presentation
PPTX
Developing and running a National Information Literacy Community of Practice ...
Learning for Sustainability and Open Educational Practices Scotland Workshop
Global perspectives
Global perspectives in the classroom - phil casas
Intersections Between Your Domain and SAIL - May 1, 2018 "Learning Everywhere...
Intersections Between Your Domain and SAIL - May 1, 2018 "Learning Everywhere...
Global Dimension Presentation
SPrED & social capital_110515
2019 Connexion D2L: Édition Ottawa - Emily Wills
Aejmc 2015 pre-conference_media-entrepreneurship
Presentation Bettie Higs
Exploring Identity, Fostering Agency, Discovering How Students Benefit.pdf
Littlejohn mooc collective_final
Launching Open Education Campus Campaigns, Oct 2/17
Globalisation and education innovation in the classroom cc project local gl...
Final Messaging
On Ways of Framing Experiential Learning
Pathways to Employment project - Reference Group workshop presentation
Global Dimension Presentation
Lilac 2014 Scottish Information Literacy Community of Practice presentation
Developing and running a National Information Literacy Community of Practice ...
Ad

More from Ronald Macintyre (9)

PPTX
Designing for Openness: Values Based Organisations Place in the Digital Lands...
PPT
What we talk about when we talk about open ...
PPT
Designing for Openness : LERMOOC Case Study
PPT
Exploring Opportunities and Challenges in Open and Online Content in the Thir...
PPT
Open Education as Disruption: Lessons for Open and Distance Learning from Ope...
PPT
Approaching Participatory Design in"Citizen Science"
PPT
Open Education and the Hidden Tariff
PPT
Reflecting on Open Educational Practices in Scotland
PPT
Open education and digital engagement through a widening participation lens
Designing for Openness: Values Based Organisations Place in the Digital Lands...
What we talk about when we talk about open ...
Designing for Openness : LERMOOC Case Study
Exploring Opportunities and Challenges in Open and Online Content in the Thir...
Open Education as Disruption: Lessons for Open and Distance Learning from Ope...
Approaching Participatory Design in"Citizen Science"
Open Education and the Hidden Tariff
Reflecting on Open Educational Practices in Scotland
Open education and digital engagement through a widening participation lens
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
IGGE1 Understanding the Self1234567891011
PDF
BP 704 T. NOVEL DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEMS (UNIT 1)
PPTX
B.Sc. DS Unit 2 Software Engineering.pptx
PPTX
202450812 BayCHI UCSC-SV 20250812 v17.pptx
PDF
Complications of Minimal Access-Surgery.pdf
PPTX
20th Century Theater, Methods, History.pptx
PDF
FORM 1 BIOLOGY MIND MAPS and their schemes
PDF
BP 704 T. NOVEL DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEMS (UNIT 2).pdf
PDF
What if we spent less time fighting change, and more time building what’s rig...
PDF
CISA (Certified Information Systems Auditor) Domain-Wise Summary.pdf
PDF
medical_surgical_nursing_10th_edition_ignatavicius_TEST_BANK_pdf.pdf
PDF
advance database management system book.pdf
PPTX
Computer Architecture Input Output Memory.pptx
PDF
Vision Prelims GS PYQ Analysis 2011-2022 www.upscpdf.com.pdf
PPTX
A powerpoint presentation on the Revised K-10 Science Shaping Paper
DOCX
Cambridge-Practice-Tests-for-IELTS-12.docx
PDF
Practical Manual AGRO-233 Principles and Practices of Natural Farming
PDF
MBA _Common_ 2nd year Syllabus _2021-22_.pdf
PPTX
Introduction to pro and eukaryotes and differences.pptx
PDF
Chinmaya Tiranga quiz Grand Finale.pdf
IGGE1 Understanding the Self1234567891011
BP 704 T. NOVEL DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEMS (UNIT 1)
B.Sc. DS Unit 2 Software Engineering.pptx
202450812 BayCHI UCSC-SV 20250812 v17.pptx
Complications of Minimal Access-Surgery.pdf
20th Century Theater, Methods, History.pptx
FORM 1 BIOLOGY MIND MAPS and their schemes
BP 704 T. NOVEL DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEMS (UNIT 2).pdf
What if we spent less time fighting change, and more time building what’s rig...
CISA (Certified Information Systems Auditor) Domain-Wise Summary.pdf
medical_surgical_nursing_10th_edition_ignatavicius_TEST_BANK_pdf.pdf
advance database management system book.pdf
Computer Architecture Input Output Memory.pptx
Vision Prelims GS PYQ Analysis 2011-2022 www.upscpdf.com.pdf
A powerpoint presentation on the Revised K-10 Science Shaping Paper
Cambridge-Practice-Tests-for-IELTS-12.docx
Practical Manual AGRO-233 Principles and Practices of Natural Farming
MBA _Common_ 2nd year Syllabus _2021-22_.pdf
Introduction to pro and eukaryotes and differences.pptx
Chinmaya Tiranga quiz Grand Finale.pdf

Macintyre Design and its Publics

  • 1. Design and its Publics Ronald Macintyre @roughbounds Cite as: Macintyre R (2018) Design and its Publics, International Research Society for Public Management: Creating and Co-Creating Value in Public Service Delivery, Edinburgh, Scotland, 11th -13th of April 2018, CC BY SA 4.0
  • 2. Structure • Open Education • Open Education as a Public Good? • Open Education and its Publics • The Reality of Design Work with Volunteer Scotland • Conclusion
  • 4. OpenLearn Source: Patrina Law (Head of Free Learning) The Open University, “10 Years of OpenLearn”, April 2016
  • 5. What do we mean by OEP? We think of Open Educational Practices as those educational practices that are concerned with and promote equity and openness. Our understanding of ‘open’ builds on the freedoms associated with “the 5 Rs” of OER, promoting a broader sense of open, emphasising social justice, and developing practices that open up opportunities for those distanced from education.
  • 6. OPEN EDUCATION AS A PUBLIC GOOD?
  • 7. What do we mean by OEP? We think of Open Educational Practices as those educational practices that are concerned with and promote equity and openness. Our understanding of ‘open’ builds on the freedoms associated with “the 5 Rs” of OER, promoting a broader sense of open, emphasising social justice, and developing practices that open up opportunities for those distanced from education. The P in OEP? … Practice … Participation … the public
  • 8. Is Open Education as a Public Good? In economics a public good is non excludable and non rivalrous, so knowing can be a public good but education is often a mix of public and private Expressions of Education as Public Good within the rhetoric around Open Education are expressions of a set of values
  • 9. Is Open Education as a Public Good? A What A Who Design Who is “The Public” in Open Education?
  • 10. Is Open Education as a Public Good? A What A Who Design Exceptions Aside …The Public, the who of Open Education are well educated professionals … “the educational haves” (Cannell and Macintyre 2017)
  • 11. OPEN EDUCATION AND ITS PUBLIC
  • 12. Locating “the public” In the review … Public Value … “the public” as … • out there acting as an authorising environment … (Moore 1995) • “The Public Sphere” (Habermas [1962] 1991), see also Bennington (2009) • having formed or formable views which one can treat as normative (Bozeman 2008) • a useful fiction we hold inside (Meynhardt 2009) • Questions of participation are questions of equity (Dahl and Soss 2014), Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, Vol XXV, January-June 1829, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_19th- century_British_periodicals#/media/File:Blackwood%27s_Edinburgh_Magazine_XXV_1829.jpg, Public Domain
  • 13. Locating “other” publics Alternatively… “the public” as … called into being through being addressed (Hauser 2007, Warner 2002), Realised and imagined… (Di Salvo 2012) Promotional Still Citizen Kane, 1941, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Citizen-Kane-Welles-Podium.jpg , Public Domain
  • 14. Locating “other” publics … an alternate reading … “the public” as … having questions of legitimacy how inclusive and participatory, and efficacy, how well civil society can mobilise and realise “the public” (Fraser 2007) The Public Sphere, Frederic Sorrieu lithograph from 1848 commemorating universal male suffrage in France entitled “Suffraege universal dedie a Ledru- Rollin, Public Domain
  • 15. Locating “other” publics In the review … an alternate reading … “the public” as … A site of contestation, with counter publics, a need for a plural reading (Negt and Kluge [1993] 2016; Laclau and Mouffe ([1985] 2014) Macintyre 2018, Anti Gun protest Santa Fe, New Mexico, 24th of March 2018, CC BY SA 4.0
  • 16. THE REALITY OF DESIGN WORK WITH VOLUNTEER SCOTLAND
  • 17. Volunteer Scotland. The Education Team at a workshop on the 17th of January 2018 Group Work First Design Workshop at Volunteer Scotland, Stirling, 17th of January 2018, Ronald Macintyre CC BY SA 4.0
  • 18. We Start with the value you want to create for the learner and/or your organisation rather than what you know (or think learners ought to know) and how you think we ought to communicate VALUE How What Hand Up! First Design Workshop at Volunteer Scotland, Stirling, 17th of January 2018, Ronald Macintyre CC BY SA 4.0
  • 19. Calling a Public into Being • Starts with the Learner, use of data to profile learner – e.g front line care staff, possibly distanced from education, unfamiliar with learning online • Build a journey based on their needs, think about where they are, their context, experience, where they want to go • Builds on the resources and capabilities you bring and/or want to develop – strategic and operational alignment What Learners Want Resources and Capabilities of the Organisation The learner Journey
  • 20. Exploring Learners Journeys Drawing a “rich picture” • “Rich Pictures” are a way to capture issues and relationships that can be difficult to put into words • You don’t need to be able to draw, and people should “share the pen” • Try to come to a shared view, note differences of view • The discussion about what you might draw is just as important as the drawing. Ideal Crofting Learner, SFC Workshop, Kyle of Lochalsh, 15th of October 2015, Ronald Macintyre CC BY SA 4.0
  • 21. Exploring Learners Journeys Draw out an “rich picture” of your “ideal” learner • Think about the learner, who are they at the start of the journey • Who are they at the end, what is it they are able to do • Think about the value realised by the learner and the organisation. More Group Work First Design Workshop at Volunteer Scotland, Stirling, 17th of January 2018, Ronald Macintyre CC BY SA 4.0
  • 22. Themes from the Ideal Learner Pictures • Diverse backgrounds and experiences, • Recognise problems they need to solve • Willing to learn, and willing to learn from each other • Be able to apply the learning within their context • Recognise learning is a journey that does not stop at the end of the course • Continue to support others after the course is finished • Be advocates for volunteering within the organisation, • Promote Volunteer Scotland and its values The Ideal Learner, Volunteer Scotland, Stirling, 17th of January 2018, Ronald Macintyre CC BY SA 4.0
  • 23. “The Public” they presently call into being The same exercise picturing your actual learners: • Geographically clustered around the central belt • Tend to be in large organisations that can pay • A spectrum from the dominant “hand up” to the non contributor • Some get spooked by the formal procedures • People form into “wee groups” Ideal Learner Actual Learners The learner Journey
  • 24. Exploring Learning Journeys Traditional SSM Learner Centred C/B – Originally Customer later beneficiaries Who are the learners? Learners are not customers in any normal sense, in open education the question is who is “your public”? A – who are the main actors Actors, who is around them, helping create the content, supporting the learner, what is around them, think about the socio-material/technical context. Activities, what is the nature of the activities, where and with what or whom T – Transformation Process What is it they will be able to do in the world at the end of the journey W – Worldview What is the worldview, does it represent/challenge particular positions or sets of values O/V – Owners, later also to include victims Who is are all those affected E – Environment What is the wider context in which this sit?
  • 25. Exploring Learning Journeys Learner Centred SSM Volunteer Scotland Who are the learners, who is “your public”? Tension between the ideal and the actual learner, reflecting organisational tension between “the public” they presently serve as the “national centre for volunteering” and the one they want to serve. Actual Public • At present the actual learner relates to a long term strategic focus on large organisations often with named people/positions who look after volunteers. • The learners from larger organisations are practitioners often with little support from the organisation, which is why the come to VS. • The focus on them relates to relates to the market for courses, these are the only organisations that can pay, a sense that this is what they have always done, and the expectation of funders in this case the Scottish Government. • In evoking the actual learner participants “speak for” them, and from their own experience in these organisations, as a public it is more than the organisational norms but often deeply personal and tied to professional identity Imagined Public • Ideally learners come from a diverse range of backgrounds, in particular they want to engage in informal volunteering, • Informal volunteering is increasing due for a number of reasons, top down Scottish Government policy, and bottom up anti- austerity. • It is also under threat through formalising pressures, would VS intervention help? • Ideal learners emerged from the organisations own review of its own values, but is contentious, as it cuts across personal and professional identities.
  • 26. Exploring Learning Journeys: Exercise 2 • The ideal learner tells us a great deal about the values of the organisation and the resources and capabilities of the organisation –often a mix of what we are good at, and what we wish we were good at • The actual learner tells us a similar story • [often] both highlight the limits of our knowledge about learners needs and wants Ideal Learner Actual Learners The learner Journey I have found … is this true for you
  • 27. Exploring Learning Journeys: Exercise 2 • It is Obvious …. “Listen”, …. but more than listen allow “the public” to take part, participatory process … • [However] for many Voluntary Sector organisations their learning materials are a set of values whose role is as an act of persusasion Ideal Learner Actual Learners The learner Journey OEP, from Public to Participation
  • 29. Speculating on Design and its Public(s) • Education design involves imagining “a public” into being in order to realise the learner in the design process • Care needs to be taken of how you bring “who” into the design process; • We can learn about organisation from how they imagine and realise their publics.
  • 30. Reflection on Public(s) in the Voluntary Sector • Organisational narratives over “who they are for” and their public plays on questions of value(s). • The Public as real and imagined is influenced by different aspect top down, internally resonant, and bottom up images of “the public”. • Engaging with a new public, drawing in counter publics leads tensions, and one needs to take care over what happens to these publics once folded into more formal structures.
  • 31. Centre for Voluntary Sector Leadership The Open University Business School The Open University Walton Hall Milton Keynes MK7 6AA www.open.ac.uk
  • 32. Acknowledgements • Some of the work presented here would not have been possible without funding from the Scottish Government for Open Educational Practices Scotland (OEPS) a programme hosted by the OU in Scotland, and special thanks to Pete Cannell the Director of OEPS. • James Rees and Alessandro Sancino for support and hard questions • Adrian Murtagh at Volunteer Scotland for being open and honest and helping me understand value and values a little better.
  • 33. References Benington J. (2009) Creating the Public In Order To Create Public Value?, International Journal of Public Administration, 32(3-4), pp. 232- 249 Bozeman, B., 2008. Debate: Public Value Trade-Offs and Methodological Trade-Offs. Public Money and Management, 28(3), pp.135– 136. Cannell P. Macintyre R. (2017) Free open online resources in workplace and community settings – a case study on overcoming barriers, Widening Participation and Lifelong Learning, 19(1), pp. 111-122 Dahl, A. & Soss, J., 2014. Neoliberalism for the common good? Public value governance and the downsizing of democracy. Public Administration Review, 74(4), pp.496–504. Di Salvo C. (2012) Adversarial Design, MIT Press: MA Cambridge Dorst, K. & Cross, N., (2001). Creativity in the design process: co-evolution of problem–solution. Design Studies, 22(5), pp.425–437. Fraser, N. (2007), Transnationalizing the Public Sphere on the Legitimacy and Efficacy of Public Opinion in a Post-Westphalian World. Theory, Culture & Society, 24(4), pp7-30 Habermas J. ([1962] 1991). The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere: An Inquiry into a category of Bourgeois Society. MIT Press: Cambridge Hauser, G.A., 2007. Vernacular discourse and the epistemic dimension of public opinion. Communication Theory, 17(4), pp.333–339. Laclau E., Mouffe C. ([1985] 2014) Hegemony and Socialist Strategy: Towards a Radical Democratic Politics, Verso: London Meynhardt, T., 2009. Public Value Inside: What is Public Value Creation? International Journal of Public Administration, 32(3–4), pp.192– 219. Moore M. H. (1995) Creating Public Value: Strategic Management in Government, Harvard University Press: London Negt O., Kluge A. ([1993] 2016) Public Sphere of Experience: Analysis of the Bourgeois and Proleterian Public Sphere. Verso: London Warner, M., (2002). Publics and Counterpublics. Public Culture, 14(1), pp.49–90.