Open Education News
WikiEducator Remix Experiments
WikiEducator has begun a page discuss remixing experiments on its site. Thanks to Wayne Mackintosh for the link.
Where are the Good Moodle Courses?
Joseph Thibault has a new post addressing the question: “Where are the Good Moodle Courses?” From the post:
Certainly the quality of all courses is not based solely on the quality of the content (as made available through a Moodle backup file).
Free and Open in Education
Toward Open Science
Michael Nielson has a new post about moving towards “open science.” From the post:
The most critical issue however is rapid deployment of expertise to specific problems. To apply a distributed rapid innovation model we need the means to rapidly identify the very limited number of people with appropriate expertise to solve the problem at hand.
Edupunk Confusion
Keith Hampson has a new post responding to Brian Lamb and Jim Groom’s recent EDUCAUSE Review article on edupunk. From the post:
Open education has taken on a overly simplistic and highly political quality during the past year.
Open Source Summer Reading List
Though summer is mostly done, Jonathan Opp gives a list of books relating to openness. From the post:
Some books are new. Some are recent favorites. All offer examples of how the open source way is being employed in areas beyond technology.
A Suggested Business Model for Creative Commons
Felipe Ortega has a new post pondering a business model for Creative Commons. From the post:
What does Creative Commons offer? Legal assessment? No. Added-value services to track free content? No. They just offer legal tools to share knowledge adequately. In other words: the licenses. That’s it. Is it valuable? Well, yes of course! Could they do it better? I really think so.
Running Courses Openly
Jan Philipp Schmidt has a new post on running open courses. From the post:
More students sound like more work, less opportunity to engage with each individual student, and the practicalities of facilitating a diverse group of participants using online technologies seems daunting as well. It turns out that those who try it are often surprised that it’s much more rewarding and easier than they thought.
World Heritage Application
Jane Park has a new post noting that UNESCO’s recently released World Heritage application uses Creative Commons. From the post:
UNESCO World Heritage “seeks to encourage the identification, protection and preservation of cultural and natural heritage around the world considered to be of outstanding value to humanity.”
Origin of Interlibrary Loan and Openness
Mike Caulfield has a thoughtful post on the origin of interlibrary loans and relates it to openness. From the post:
It’s sometimes funny to me how networked learning and open education people are treated as blue-sky techno-utopians.
Omeka
Julie Meloni has a new post discussing Omeka, a publishing and archive service designed for museums. Omeka allows for Creative Commons licensing. From the post:
As I mentioned above, Omeka is for more than museums; if you are a scholar, museum professional, librarian, archivist, educator, or even an unaffiliated individual who wants to share collections and exhibits with a wide range of users, Omeka could work for you.
The Need for Open Access Medicine Journals
“Josh”, a med student at the University of Kansas, has written a post on the need for open access medicine journals. From the post:
Do you know what happens when I come up against a login screen that wants to charge me $30 for a single article? I find another article (from another journal) to use in its place. And smaller journals, this is where you are really losing–most medical institutions buy subscriptions to the major journals.
Response to Open Course Article Critique
Last week OEN reported on a recent issue of EDUCAUSE Review that directly addressed open education and related concepts. One article in that issue was written by Dave Cormier and George Siemens regarding open courses. Cormier has a new post responding to a critique of the article. From the post:
I freely contribute my time to some courses, and am paid to teach others. I ‘believe’ that working in the open makes my own work better, gives me broader access to other people’s idea and, well, i find it fun.
Shareable Media Sets
Karen Fasimpaur has a new post listing “shareable media sets.” From the post:
Awhile back, I was thinking about the idea of shareable media sets — collections of open-licensed photos, diagrams, maps, audio, video, etc. that could be used by teachers or students…
U.S. Gov Looking for OER Grant Reviewers
The OER Consortium notes that the U.S. Labor Department is looking for grant reviewers with OER expertise.
List of Moodle Courses
Joseph Thibault has a new post announcing that they have found over 855 Moodle courses openly available.
70% of OU Students Study Part-Time
BBC News has posted a short report stating that 70% of Open University students study part-time. The article also notes an significant increase in the number of young adults interested in distance learning. Thanks to Craig Josephsen for the link.
CCCOER Reaches 100,000+ Hits
Changing the Textbook Industry
Eric Gorski has a new article on the changing textbook industry. Open textbooks and Flatworld Knowledge are discussed.
Public Domain Mark
Diane Peters is announcing Public Domain Mark, a method of labeling and tagging items in the public domain. Peters is asking for “public” comment via the cc-licenses mailing list. From the announcement:
The PDM is not a legal instrument like CC0 or our licenses — it can only be used to label a work with information about its public domain copyright status, not change a work’s current status under copyright.