How Do AI Educators Use Open Educational Resources? A Cross-Sectoral Case Study on OER for AI Education

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

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How Do AI Educators Use Open Educational Resources? A Cross-Sectoral Case Study on OER for AI Education. / Rampelt, Florian; Ruppert, Raphael; Schleiss, Johannes et al.
in: Open Praxis, Jahrgang 17, Nr. 1, 15.04.2025, S. 46-63.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

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Rampelt F, Ruppert R, Schleiss J, Mah DK, Bata K, Egloffstein M. How Do AI Educators Use Open Educational Resources? A Cross-Sectoral Case Study on OER for AI Education. Open Praxis. 2025 Apr 15;17(1):46-63. doi: 10.55982/openpraxis.17.1.766

Bibtex

@article{ca0f0d3172104c9891f65dcefac93ccc,
title = "How Do AI Educators Use Open Educational Resources? A Cross-Sectoral Case Study on OER for AI Education",
abstract = "Artificial Intelligence (AI) literacy is essential for society as a whole. While general frameworks and resources to support self-directed learning on AI are widely available, research on how to support AI educators, particularly those without AI expertise (non-experts), using external materials and resources is relatively scarce. This article explores the potential of open educational resources (OER) to enhance AI education, with a specific focus on the requirements and practices of AI educators. Through a case study of the AI Campus learning platform, the article examines how educators from diverse sectors such as school education, higher education and professional education utilise OER for AI education. The study aimed to identify patterns of OER usage, AI educator motivations and the sector-specific integration of OER into teaching practices. A survey study of 260 educators from Germany, Austria, and Switzerland using AI Campus content revealed that educators prefer smaller, modular OER formats and value suitable, high-quality and accessible content. The reputation of the person or institution that created the OER content does not seem to play a major role. Sector-specific differences could be observed in particular with regard to full online courses, face-to-face learning scenarios and the AI learning objectives of an educator. By focusing on educators{\textquoteright} perspectives, the study provides insight into how AI education can be strengthened across sectors through the use of OER materials and ultimately benefit learners through suitable, high-quality content and adequate AI learning scenarios.",
keywords = "Educational science, AI education, AI Literacy, OER, MOOCs, online course, K-12, school education, higher education, tertiary education, professional education",
author = "Florian Rampelt and Raphael Ruppert and Johannes Schleiss and Dana-Kristin Mah and Katharina Bata and Marc Egloffstein",
year = "2025",
month = apr,
day = "15",
doi = "10.55982/openpraxis.17.1.766",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "46--63",
journal = "Open Praxis",
issn = "1369-9997",
publisher = "International Council for Open and Distance Education",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - How Do AI Educators Use Open Educational Resources? A Cross-Sectoral Case Study on OER for AI Education

AU - Rampelt, Florian

AU - Ruppert, Raphael

AU - Schleiss, Johannes

AU - Mah, Dana-Kristin

AU - Bata, Katharina

AU - Egloffstein, Marc

PY - 2025/4/15

Y1 - 2025/4/15

N2 - Artificial Intelligence (AI) literacy is essential for society as a whole. While general frameworks and resources to support self-directed learning on AI are widely available, research on how to support AI educators, particularly those without AI expertise (non-experts), using external materials and resources is relatively scarce. This article explores the potential of open educational resources (OER) to enhance AI education, with a specific focus on the requirements and practices of AI educators. Through a case study of the AI Campus learning platform, the article examines how educators from diverse sectors such as school education, higher education and professional education utilise OER for AI education. The study aimed to identify patterns of OER usage, AI educator motivations and the sector-specific integration of OER into teaching practices. A survey study of 260 educators from Germany, Austria, and Switzerland using AI Campus content revealed that educators prefer smaller, modular OER formats and value suitable, high-quality and accessible content. The reputation of the person or institution that created the OER content does not seem to play a major role. Sector-specific differences could be observed in particular with regard to full online courses, face-to-face learning scenarios and the AI learning objectives of an educator. By focusing on educators’ perspectives, the study provides insight into how AI education can be strengthened across sectors through the use of OER materials and ultimately benefit learners through suitable, high-quality content and adequate AI learning scenarios.

AB - Artificial Intelligence (AI) literacy is essential for society as a whole. While general frameworks and resources to support self-directed learning on AI are widely available, research on how to support AI educators, particularly those without AI expertise (non-experts), using external materials and resources is relatively scarce. This article explores the potential of open educational resources (OER) to enhance AI education, with a specific focus on the requirements and practices of AI educators. Through a case study of the AI Campus learning platform, the article examines how educators from diverse sectors such as school education, higher education and professional education utilise OER for AI education. The study aimed to identify patterns of OER usage, AI educator motivations and the sector-specific integration of OER into teaching practices. A survey study of 260 educators from Germany, Austria, and Switzerland using AI Campus content revealed that educators prefer smaller, modular OER formats and value suitable, high-quality and accessible content. The reputation of the person or institution that created the OER content does not seem to play a major role. Sector-specific differences could be observed in particular with regard to full online courses, face-to-face learning scenarios and the AI learning objectives of an educator. By focusing on educators’ perspectives, the study provides insight into how AI education can be strengthened across sectors through the use of OER materials and ultimately benefit learners through suitable, high-quality content and adequate AI learning scenarios.

KW - Educational science

KW - AI education

KW - AI Literacy

KW - OER

KW - MOOCs

KW - online course

KW - K-12

KW - school education

KW - higher education

KW - tertiary education

KW - professional education

U2 - 10.55982/openpraxis.17.1.766

DO - 10.55982/openpraxis.17.1.766

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 17

SP - 46

EP - 63

JO - Open Praxis

JF - Open Praxis

SN - 1369-9997

IS - 1

ER -

DOI