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Background[]

Digital badges are a validated indicator of accomplishment, skill, disposition, quality or interest that can be earned in various learning environments.[1]

Also see LRNG/resources, Playlists, XPs.

Details[]

LRNG reports[]

A digital badge is a shareable, digital credential that provides evidence of a substantive learning achievement. Learners earn a badge after completing a playlist. Badges become part of the learner’s lifelong portfolio. Badges may also unlock real-world opportunities for youth, such as showcases of work, job shadowing, or internships.

Unlocking Opportunities[]

The Digital Badges at LRNG should unlock a new future opportunity for youth. What might you offer youth that have earned your badge? Will they have access to additional prospects?

Successful completion of a playlist might unlock opportunities to publish work, display it in show or spend time shadowing a profession. This could also lead to an opportunity to take more advanced courses or to earn a free ticket to a related event. Some organizations have even worked with local universities to offer college credit or scholarships for their highest-level badges. Consider the range of possible things that could be unlocked in your setting.

Creation Tips[]

  • Image
    • Create a simple, attractive image that is engaging for youth and meaningful to potential consumers of the badge as a credential (e.g., employers or admissions officers). Image must be in .png format, 400x400 pixels, up to 1 MB in size.
  • Description
    • Describe what the learner (or consumer) of the badge should expect this credential to represent. Don’t try to fit everything in here, but instead focus on the primary concepts that the badge covers. Use the description to get at the meaning and value behind the badge. Use the next section to define learning criteria.
  • Title
    • Choose a concise name that is appealing to youth and meaningful to potential consumers of the badge credential. Limit of 70 characters.
  • Passion
    • Choose the one interest category that best reflects the badge you are creating. Note that these are not intended to be academic subject areas, but are intended to align learning with the interests of youth. If there isn’t a perfect option, choose the one that is closest. The list is intended to be a high-level view of interest areas, not a comprehensive tagging and sorting mechanism. In the near future, tags and/or sub-categories will provide the option to more discretely sort your content.
  • Age Appropriateness
    • Choose between the 13+ or All Ages options to concisely describe your content and align it with COPPA and other common age regulations OR choose a custom age range to specify your target audience. We recommend publishing XPs and resources with as broad an audience as possible.
  • LRNG LvLS
    • Choose the level that best fits your badge. If the badge contains XPs with different LVLS, choose the highest as the LVL for this badge.
  1. Meet Up: Based in friendship practices; little to no production
  2. Play Up: Exploring new tools; production likely, but not polished
  3. Level Up: High demands for learner production and feedback from mentors
  • Criteria (Learning Goals)
    • For learners, describe the specific things they have to do in order to earn the badge. If you have any specific media requirements for their badge submission, list them here. Bullet points are recommended. What specific things does the learner have to prove in order to earn this badge?
  • Competencies & Standards
    • Use this field to map your Badge to any existing competencies or standards frameworks (e.g., NextGen Science Standards or Remake Learning Competencies). Hyperlinking to the external definition of that framework is recommended.
  • Opportunity
    • Use this field to describe any opportunities that are unlocked for the learner when they earn the badge. This can include a broad range of options, from small rewards to access to internship or job opportunities.

Be concise and engaging to showcase the opportunity for youth and link to a longer description if available. In the future, you will be able to deliver notifications to youth who earn your badge so that they can claim the opportunity.

Insights[]

Design[]

Suggestions for background colors for Digital Badges:[]

Black #000000

  • Navy #334d6f
  • Blue #418fcb
  • Teal #2fb6ab
  • Green #3da842
  • Yellow #ecc22f
  • Orange #e98b26
  • Red #a43434
  • Purple #91559a
  • Pink #cf8484

Origin and history[]

Traditional physical badges have been used for many years by various organizations such as the Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, and Russian Army, to give members a physical emblem to display the accomplishment of various achievements.

Competitive swimmers have used chevrons, medals, ribbons, high-point awards and patches in many instances throughout the years. Some are tied to standards and a detailed set of digital badges are part of the offerings of services with USA Swimming for young athletes.

While physical badges have been in use for hundreds of years, the idea of digital badges is a relatively recent development. In 2005, Microsoft introduced the Xbox 360 Gamerscore system, which is considered to be the original implementation of an achievement system for playing video games.

In 2007, Eva Baker, the President of the American Educational Research Association (AERA), gave the Presidential Address at their annual conference on the need to develop merit-badge-like “Qualifications” that certify accomplishments, not through standardized tests, but as “an integrated experience with performance requirements.” Such a system would apply to learning both in and out of school and support youth to develop and pursue passionate interests. Baker envisioned youth assembling "their unique Qualifications to show to their families, to adults in university and workforce, and to themselves." Ultimately, Baker believed “the path of Qualifications shifts attention from schoolwork to usable and compelling skills, from school life to real life."[2]

The use of digital badges as credentials remained largely under the radar until 2011, following the release of “An Open Badge System Framework,” a white paper authored by Peer 2 Peer University and The Mozilla Foundation. In the paper, badges are explained as “a symbol or indicator of an accomplishment, skill, quality or interest,” with examples of badge systems used by the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts, PADI diving instruction, and the more recently popular geo-locative games, like Foursquare.[3]

The report asserts that badges “have been successfully used to set goals, motivate behaviors, represent achievements and communicate success in many contexts” and proposes that when learning happens across various contexts and experiences, “badges can have a significant impact, and can be used to motivate learning, signify community and signal achievement.” The report also makes clear that the value of badges comes less from its visual representation than from the context around how and why it was conferred. The stronger the connection between the two, the more effective the badging system will be. “Badges are conversation starters,” the report explains, “and the information linked to or 'behind' each badge serves as justification and even validation of the badge.” For example, a badge should include information about how it was earned, who issued it, the date of issue, and, ideally, a link back to some form of artifact relating to the work behind the badge.

In early 2010, the digital badge service provider Basno launched a platform that allowed users to create and collect badges that represent real-world accomplishments like running the 2011 ING New York City Marathon.[4]

The effort marked a strong shift from viewing badges as game-like elements to creating badges to certify learning. Many instructional sites such as P2PU and Khan Academy make use of a digital badging system.

Later in 2011, the Mozilla Foundation announced their intention to develop the Mozilla Open Badges so as to provide a common system for the issuance, collection, and display of digital badges on multiple instructional sites.[3]

In September 2011, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, announced the launch of the HASTAC/MacArthur Foundation Badges for Lifelong Learning Competition.[5]

According to Arne Duncan, badges “can help engage students in learning and broaden the avenues for all learners or all ages, to acquire and to demonstrate as well as document and display their skills. Badges can help speed the shift from credentials that simply measure seat time to ones that more accurately measure competency, and we must do everything we can to accelerate that transition.

It can also help to account for both formal and informal learning and in a variety of different settings.”[6] Funded by the MacArthur Foundation, with additional support from the Gates Foundation, HASTAC administers the Badges for Lifelong Learning Competition, which awarded funds to thirty organizations in March 2012.[7]

Functions of badges[]

Just as badges in the physical world serve many functions, digital badges are employed in a variety of ways. Badges can serve different functions depending on the activities with which they are associated. Commonly, badges are thought of as rewards but have been found to be most effective when they also contribute to goal setting, reputation, status affirmation, instruction and group identification. Badges also promote lifelong learning that extends beyond the classroom and brings to light accomplishments that otherwise might have been hidden.[8] Digital badges are an example of the gamification of learning, whereby game design and game mechanics are used in non-game contexts to encourage learning.[9]

Benefits associated with digital badges include the ability to capture the complete learning path, so it “travels” with the user wherever they decide to display the badge. The digital badge carries with it information about assessment, evidence and other metadata required by the badge. Digital badges can signal achievement to potential employers; motivate engagement and collaboration; improve retention and leveling up in learning; support innovation and flexibility in the skills that matter; and build and formalize identity and reputation within learning communities.[10]

Some digital badge platforms allow organizations to create, issue, earn and display digital badges on members’ websites, social media pages, and resumes.

Badges as motivation to participate[]

One of the ways in which badges are often used is to encourage participation by recognizing the participants. Motivation is often one of the major reasons designers decide to employ badges. Participation is encouraged because badges offer a new pathway of lifelong learning separate from the traditional, formalized academic pathway. Badges highlight and recognize skills and knowledge that come from personal initiative and investigation.[11]

When TripAdvisor started showing badges on user pages, they explicitly indicated that this was to recognize the most frequent contributors.[12] Systems that have been successful at motivating people with badges cite their ability to intrinsically motivate participants by showcasing challenges overcome, displaying pathways for learning, and improving social connections.[13]

Badges as motivation to collaborate[]

Unlike most online media, open badge programs are collaborative ones that promote active, engaged involvement. While there are several modes of online collective action, all of the systems are largely run by a very small number of people; “for example, just two percent of Wikipedia users account for 75% of participation”.[8] Given more collaboration by an increased number of people, even more solutions, ideas and theories could be presented and analyzed. Badges have the potential to work for any company or online collaborative action system in order to engage more people and motivate those people to participate in online data sharing and social media.

Badges “enhance identity and reputation, raising profiles within learning communities and among peers by aggregating identities across other communities... [and] build community and social capital by helping learners find peers and mentors with similar interests. Community badges help formalize camaraderie, team synthesis, and communities of practice".[14] Badges quantify the soft skills of teamwork that are pivotal to success in many professions today.

Badges as recognition and assessment[]

Sometimes digital badges are used to recognize quality or provide for community approval. The "Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval" provides this in non-digital formats, but there are similar indicators of trust, for example, that indicate best practices in e-commerce.[15] Sometimes such badges are indicator of awards, like the Webbies or Edublog Awards. Open Badges allows you to represent, verify and communicate your skills, interests and achievements, and because the system is based on an open standard, you can combine multiple badges from different issuers to tell the complete story of your achievements.[16]

In learning environments, badges have been used to encourage alternative, peer-based assessment.[17] Badges can be associated with summative assessments of prior learning as well as formative assessment that provide guidance and feedback. They can also function as transformative assessment that shape existing learning or allow new ones to be created.[18][19] Digital badges might be particularly useful as part of a formative assessment process, providing constant feedback and tracking of what has been learned and what the next step might be. Massive online open courses (MOOCs) and e-assessments,[20] can be used to deliver content at scale, while providing structured points for formative assessment, connections to learning communities, and new possibilities for strengthening individual agency in the learning process.[21] Such environments might leverage self- and peer-assessment, again as part of formative processes.

A drawback is that these types of assessment take time.[22] However, strategies like peer review, interactive games or simulations, and self-administered tests might help in fragmenting assessment processes, while still providing essential feedback to the learner along the way. Also, as markers or benchmarks of learning, it is possible that digital badges might work particularly well for individuals who are stressed by testing, and for educators looking for mechanisms to accommodate differentiated learning pathways.[23]

Badges as alternative credentials[]

Digital badges have been seen as a potential challenger to the dominant paradigm of diplomas in higher education.[24] The Chronicle of Higher Education notes that more and more online educational websites are adopting badges to mark achievement.[25]

One website adopting badges is Badges for Vets. It is a free website funded by the HASTAC initiative and MacArthur Foundation that provides U.S. military veterans with a means to indicate relevant military training and experience to prospective employers. Examples of available badges include translator, engineering construction, law enforcement and finance, and employers are able to browse the Badges for Vets database to match specific qualifications or find qualified veterans in their local community.

Another badge-based system, Smarterer tests users on a specific skill via multiple choice questions and award a badge displaying how much they know. The more than five hundred subjects available include topics like Photoshop, PowerPoint, Java, corporate finance and accounting, and after you've completed a test, the site lets you know what you still need to learn so you can improve.[26]

Additionally, digital badges can be used as competency-based signifier of achievement, which is in contrast to traditional educational models that stress time-based quantification of education goals.[27] Digital badges also have the ability to be more nimble than school curriculum that take time to create, change, and evolve.

Badge aggregation and exchange[]

Several attempts have been made to aggregate digital badges found on multiple sites.[28] More recently, Basno and the Mozilla Open Badge Infrastructure seeks to create an open set of standards for representing and exchanging badges across the web.

Criticism[]

There have been criticisms of the use of badges, suggesting that the functions described above come with significant risks. Some claim that the long history of physical badges in military and quasi-military settings might encourage similar hierarchical relationships when employed online.[29] Badges have been criticized for rewarding tasks that are not inherently interesting to badge recipients because they are created to promote behavior that aligns with the goals of the badge issuer and not necessarily the badge recipient.[30] Some critics have also observed that badges are a type of extrinsic motivator that could compete with an individual's intrinsic motivation for accomplishment and mastery.[30] In other words, it is like giving out rewards for things that individuals or students should already be doing. Like with any system of rewards, it overall reduces students motivation when the reward no longer becomes desirable.[31]

One of the biggest criticisms of badges is its validity, and whether it can be viewed as "trusted credentials." Another criticism of digital badges is that the badge earner's performance is not directly observed so there could be some difficulty in making sure that the badge is awarded to the person who completed the assignment or met the specific criteria.[32] The "gamification" of education is also something that skeptics fear because they feel that students would only be concerned with earning the most badges rather than focusing on the material presented. Additionally, there could be a slew of badges that do not mean anything at all, for example, like earning a badge because your name starts with the letter A. The creation of these "meaningless" badges reinforces the issue of validity because now the badge earner needs to decipher which badges are valuable, and various institutions need to do the same.[33]

See also[]

Articles[]

References[]

  1. "A Future Full of Badges," The Chronicle of Higher Education, http://chronicle.com/article/A-Future-Full-of-Badges/131455/
  2. 2007 AERA Presidential Address, http://edr.sagepub.com/content/36/6/309.abstract, accessed on 3/15/2013
  3. 3.0 3.1 Template:Cite web
  4. Template:Cite web
  5. "Credentials, the Next Generation" New York Times, http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/06/education/edlife/credentials-the-next-generation.html?_r=4&
  6. DML Competition event transcript, http://dmlcompetition.net/Competition/4/opening-event-transcript.php, accessed 3/15/2013
  7. http://dmlcompetition.net/media/4/BadgesforLifelongLearningAnnouncement.pdf
  8. 8.0 8.1 Template:Cite journal.
  9. Template:Cite book
  10. Template:Cite web
  11. Template:Cite web
  12. Template:Cite web
  13. Template:Cite web
  14. Template:Cite web
  15. Template:Cite web
  16. Template:Cite web
  17. Template:Cite web
  18. Template:Cite web
  19. Template:Cite web
  20. Mora, M.C. et al. (2012), p. 734
  21. Hickey, D. (2012)
  22. Kelly-Riley, D. (2007), p. 30
  23. Template:Cite web
  24. Template:Cite web
  25. https://www.educational-digital-badges.com/index.html
  26. Template:Cite web
  27. Template:Cite web
  28. Template:Cite web
  29. Template:Cite journal (draft version).
  30. 30.0 30.1 http://hastac.org/blogs/mres/2012/02/27/still-badge-skeptic
  31. http://spotlight.macfound.org/blog/entry/digital-badges-for-learning/
  32. http://net.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/eli7085.pdf
  33. http://www.edweek.org/dd/articles/2012/06/13/03badges.h05.html

History[]

Play-logo

Play.CLOH.org

  • LRNG opened in the May of 2016.

Links[]

Steps for getting involved with Digital Badges include:[]

1. Explore the options. Decide for yourself.[]

Not much in life is mandatory. You can rise up to the challenge and strive to get a grip on the Digital Badges, or you can ignore them. Some individuals are going to want to learn and grow by wrestling with these challenges and opportunities. Care, engage, show initiative and try hard.

Some are going to be easy for you to get. Others are going to be out of reach for you this summer.

2. Sign in.[]

The youth of Pittsburgh are getting their Digital Badges with the Pgh City of Learning and adults are able to log into http://Play.CLOH.org.

3. Learn the details of what to do.[]

All digital badges have criteria. Some are built for skills while others are for knowledge and dispositions. Badges are earned. Take the test, be it physical, mental or of one's character.

    • Read, study, and ask questions when confused or stuck. Seek assistance.
    • Take it all in by surfing around at category:Digital Badges.
    • Work it. Have fun. Discover. Write. Be independent too.

4. Prove it.[]

    • You can do it. You did it. Make sure a camera is close.
    • Prove it to others. Show off your efforts. Be a positive social force.
    • Add to the collection. Put yourself into the outcomes.
    • Improve the ebooks, the exercise collections and teach others the routines.
    • Get into the details of the documentation and share with your witnesses on this wiki.

5. Ask for your badge by posting the code snip, "Please Bestow."[]

      • When the time is right, ask for your badges.
    • See /Bestowing

6. Delivery of the Digital Badges[]

    • Expect an email from the badge platform that delivers the badge to you.
    • Do a dance of accomplishment.

7. After arrival:[]

Housekeeping: Bits of digital dust need to be scrubbed so that different staff members don't re-send you the same badges. Wipe that badge off of the to-do list.

    • Remove the Category: Please Bestow from the wiki page.
    • Remove the Template: Please Bestow from the wiki page.

8. The network can fuel your growth.[]

Being socially responsible, connected, and friendly includes outreach.

    • Tell your friends.
    • Thanks those that helped you along the way.
    • Update your resume.
    • Ping social media sites.
    • Attack again on another accomplishment.
    • Plan the next steps and sharing with others.

9. Celebrate, rinse and repeat.[]

    • Be involved for the long-haul.
    • Don't change. Grow. Be mighty.

Insights[]

Various topic areas of Digital Badges in 2015:[]

Badge Champions[]

  • The badge champion for the summer of 2015 is Adam Majewski. Adam was hired to facilitate the Digital Badges project in the summer of 2015 Mark Rauterkus, executive head coach.

Overall concept map of CLOH.org Digital Badges[]

Flow Chart[]

Plans[]

Details[]

File:Digital Badges Admin manual.pdf

Tips for Descriptions[]

  • In order to earn this badge, the learner had to demonstrate ...
  • Consider describing how the assessment of this criterion is conducted (observation, rubric, written test, checklist, audience selection, count, etc.)
  • Consider describing who does the assessment to determine of the criterion has been earned (mentor, peers, instructor, automatic, judges, etc.)

Videos[]

What_Is_A_Badge?

What Is A Badge?

Mozilla_Open_Badges_101_Digging_into_Badges_(a_webinar)

Mozilla Open Badges 101 Digging into Badges (a webinar)

Outreach[]

Tage[]

  • @OpenBadges (on Twitter)
  1. OpenBadges (hastag)

Handouts[]

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