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Where to look for information around Open Badges and digital credentials (July 2024 edition)

Hexagons looking a bit like badges (or a  beehive)

Someone got in touch with me recently to ask for some advice after listening to the episode on Open Badges I recorded with Matt Linaker for the Totara Talks Talent podcast. It’s been a few years since they were up to speed around badges and digital credentials, and so wanted some recommendations on some resources to get them up to speed.

Instead of keeping such recommendations in the silo of an email inbox, I thought I’d share them here. I’m sure I’ve missed something, but the context of the advice is a 12-month badges pilot at a higher education institution in North America.


WAO resources

It would be remiss of me not to point first of all towards the resources that we are WAO have produced over the years. These are many and varied, but I’d first direct people’s attention towards the following.

Blog posts

Other stuff

  • Badges.community — information about a Community of Practice called ORE (Open Recognition is for Everybody) which meets monthly and discusses all things badge- and recognition-related.
  • Badge Wiki — a knowledge repository for the Open Badges community, including badge platforms, a glossary, the Open Recognition Toolkit, and a lot more.
  • Reframing Recognition — a free email-based course to think about going beyond microcredentials towards a more holistic notion of open recognition.

We’re also working on a free online resource that puts together a lot of the fantastic images that Bryan Mathers has created around Open Badges over the years. It’s not finished yet, but you can have a sneak peek here.

WAO Partners

We’ve worked with Participate a lot over the past few years, and more recently the Digital Credentials Consortium (DCC) based at MIT. Something to bear in mind is that version 3 of the Open Badges specification introduces some interesting new features, as it uses the Verifiable Credentials data model. One of these is ‘decentralised identifiers’ meaning that badges are issued to wallets rather than email addresses. For example:

We helped the DCC set up a new knowledge base which has a lot of interesting and useful information about everything related to this. The DCC creates Open Source software to help higher education institutions, vendors, and anyone else be able to issue Verifiable Credentials at scale.

People to follow

This is where I get into trouble by accidentally leaving people out, but with that risk in mind here are some people to follow who are active on LinkedIn, posting mainly in English and mostly about things somehow related to badges and digital credentials:

Events to attend

Other things

Although the best thing to do is to “get into the water” by following a bunch of people and keeping up to date with what they share, it might be specifically worth following what’s going on around skills-based hiring at the moment. Walmart is funding a bunch of things in this area, including work by Jobs for the Future (JFF). For example, we’ve just kicked off a project with them around evaluating a credential for job readiness.

There’s a lot going on! This post could have have been five times longer, and it makes me think that perhaps we should resurrect Badge News 🤔


Image CC BY-ND Visual Thinkery for WAO

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