Difference between revisions of "Open Educational Resources"

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Here you can access free materials contributed by thousands of educators world-wide. You're free to use, modify, and distribute content you find here (as long as you give credit to the original source).  Or you can upload and share your own creations.
 
Here you can access free materials contributed by thousands of educators world-wide. You're free to use, modify, and distribute content you find here (as long as you give credit to the original source).  Or you can upload and share your own creations.

Revision as of 16:14, 8 September 2010

What are open educational resources?

Open Educational Resources (OER) are instructional materials that are made available for instructors and/or learners to use for free.

  • See a few examples of OER materials and what you can do with them
  • This article provides in-depth information on the open educational resources movement:

Hafner, Katie. "An Open Mind." New York Times 16 April 2010.

Who pays for this?

The open educational resource movement has been funded in large part by The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, which has given more than $100 million over the last 8 years to MIT, Yale, and others "to increase access to knowledge for all and improve the practices of teaching and learning" (Hafner). The Gates Foundation, numerous colleges and universities, and others are also involved in developing and providing access to open educational resources.

Who uses open educational resources?

MIT reports that of those who use their OpenCourseWare resources...

  • 9% are instructors
  • 43% are intellectually-curious types with free time
  • 42% are students seeking extra help on their coursework

What about copyright law?

Open educational resources are made available in order to be shared. However, the creator or owner may opt for "some rights reserved." Many open educational resources have a public license (such as a Creative Commons license) that specifies how the materials may be used, adapted, and shared. Typically, you are asked to give credit to the creator or owner of the materials.

Where can I find open educational resources?

Below are links to just a few of the many sites that provide access to open educational resources. Some of these sites showcase the products of elite universities, while others are repositories to which anyone can contribute content.

MIT OpenCourseWare

MIT launched the open educational resources movement in 2002 when it began making course materials publicly available. Today, their OpenCourseWare initiative includes 2,000 courses available for self-study or instructor use.

Academic Earth

A curated collection of video lectures and associated course materials from 20 top universities. This site is well-designed and easy-to-use, and features a "grading" system for rating lectures. Embed codes are provided, making it easy to "drop" these videos into Blackboard sites (as you would a You Tube video). See: Embedding YouTube Videos in Blackboard

Open Culture

"The best free cultural & educational media on the web." This curated collection includes extensive lists of free educational videos, online courses, textbooks, audio books, etc. The person who created and runs this site is also Director of Stanford University's Continuing Education program.

OER Commons

This site features educational materials from its 65 partner organizations. Using "Advanced Search" you can specific a subject area, grade level (primary, secondary, post-secondary), material type and format, etc.

Connexions

Here you can access free materials contributed by thousands of educators world-wide. You're free to use, modify, and distribute content you find here (as long as you give credit to the original source). Or you can upload and share your own creations.

NCLOR

The North Carolina Learning Object Repository (NCLOR) is a collaborative effort of NC community colleges, UNC system, Department of Public Instruction, and others. The NCLOR collects documents, web links, audio/video clips, simulations, learning modules, assessments, and more. Instructors from around the state can "explore the LOR" and to locate materials to use (or modify), and they can share content for others to use.