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Dale Pike

Saylor.org - Free Online Courses Built by Professors - 0 views

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    Saylor provides free online courses - although not in the manner of MOOCs. Unlike massive, open online courses, these are asynchronous; you don't have to show up at a specific time. Its "bookshelf" features dozens of e-textbooks created to work with its classes. Some are available only in PDF format; others are available in multiple file types, including doc, ePub, HTML, iBooks, and TEX/LaTeX. What's unique about Saylor is that it runs continuous "open textbook challenges" to encourage people to create textbooks for use with its courses. The first challenge was won by Kenneth Kuttler, a professor at Brigham Young University, who teaches using the digital books he submitted. He informed Saylor that he wanted his $20,000 challenge award to be given to an organization that encourages development of openly licensed textbooks. (from http://campustechnology.com/Articles/2013/08/14/The-Price-is-Right-11-Excellent-Sites-for-Free-Digital-Textbooks.aspx)
Dale Pike

University of Minnesota - 0 views

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    Although the books in this catalog aren't necessarily published by U Minnesota, we include it because it explicitly brings together digital textbooks appropriate to post-secondary education from multiple sources and in an easily searchable format. Every book is written by a faculty member somewhere. Subjects cover accounting and finance, business and management, computer science, economics, general ed, humanities, law, math and statistics, natural and physical sciences, and social sciences. The 143 offerings currently available are openly licensed, complete, and suitable for adoption outside of the institution where they were written. The books also come with a paid option to get a print edition too. (from http://campustechnology.com/Articles/2013/08/14/The-Price-is-Right-11-Excellent-Sites-for-Free-Digital-Textbooks.aspx)
Dale Pike

Free ebooks - Project Gutenberg - 0 views

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    If you're a faculty member in the humanities who prefers to use source material in your courses, here's the jackpot. Project Gutenberg, the "first producer of free e-books," probably offers any classic you might need for your students. The books come in multiple versions - ePub with or without images, HTML, Kindle, plain text, and some we've never heard of. Plus, don't miss out on the "Similar Books" feature at the bottom of the "Bibrec" view, which provides links to files that readers of your title also downloaded - just like Amazon. Downloading William Strunk's The Elements of Style will lead you right to Joseph Devlin's How to Speak and Write Correctly, which will take you to The Prince, and onto Nietzsche's Beyond Good and Evil, and - well, you get the idea. (from http://campustechnology.com/Articles/2013/08/14/The-Price-is-Right-11-Excellent-Sites-for-Free-Digital-Textbooks.aspx)
Dale Pike

Open Education Group - Socially responsive research that concretely improves society - 0 views

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    This research group at Brigham Young University has compiled six freely downloadable science texts intended for middle and high schools, but useful for community colleges too. Available as PDF files, the pertinent ones include: Biology; Earth Science; Physics; and Chemistry. Compared to the competition, these textbooks are modestly sized; Biology runs 142 pages and 27 Mb currently. Because they were initially developed as part of a larger research project on the use of OER, there's been academic scrutiny of the Utah classes where they're used. Results - once they're made public - could be impressive. As the researchers state, "We're still analyzing last year's outcomes data, but here's a preview: students using open textbooks outperformed their peers using traditional textbooks..." (from http://campustechnology.com/Articles/2013/08/14/The-Price-is-Right-11-Excellent-Sites-for-Free-Digital-Textbooks.aspx)
Dale Pike

OpenStax College - 0 views

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    This organization offers 13 books on these topics: Anatomy and physiology; Biology; Chemistry; Economics, as well as micro- and macro-economics; Psychology; Physics; Pre-calculus; Sociology; Statistics; and U.S. history. The digital textbooks are intended to be customized by the instructors who use them in class. Sections can be rearranged, modified, and enhanced with examples. The offerings are available in PDF and ePub format, or they can simply be read online in a browser (which, because each section is given its own page, can call for a bit of tedious clicking). Best, OpenStax also provides links to other resources that the instructor might want to use for specific assignments. For example, you can download a set of PowerPoint slides (unavailable to students) to use with the biology book. (from http://campustechnology.com/Articles/2013/08/14/The-Price-is-Right-11-Excellent-Sites-for-Free-Digital-Textbooks.aspx)
Dale Pike

Welcome to the Global Text Project | Global Text Project - 0 views

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    This source for digital texts makes them available in Chinese, English, and Spanish - though not all titles are available in every one of those languages. Subjects encompass business, computing, education, health, science, and social science. The books are divided between those available in HTML format and those available as PDFs. (from http://campustechnology.com/Articles/2013/08/14/The-Price-is-Right-11-Excellent-Sites-for-Free-Digital-Textbooks.aspx)
Dale Pike

Connexions - Sharing Knowledge and Building Communities - 0 views

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    This site features Collaborative Statistics, one of the classics of the free digital textbook world. Written "over several years" by two faculty members at De Anza College in Cupertino, CA, this 726-page, 5.9 Mb volume focuses not on theory but on applications of statistical knowledge. A cool feature of this resource is the use of "lenses," which is a selection of content. An "endorsement" lens references reviewed material, and an "affiliation" lens allows organizations to pull together the content their members have created. Rice University, for example, has 83 collections in its affiliated content. (from http://campustechnology.com/Articles/2013/08/14/The-Price-is-Right-11-Excellent-Sites-for-Free-Digital-Textbooks.aspx)
Dale Pike

College Open Textbooks - College Open Textbooks - 0 views

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    This consortium of 29 education organizations uses the site to promote the adoption of open textbooks by community and two-year colleges. The textbooks are listed by subject, but just as important, the site provides a self-reported list of faculty members and what they've adopted out of the collection (organized, oddly enough, in alphabetic order by instructor first name) and reviews of the books when they exist. Open textbooks are listed by subject at collegeopentextbooks.org. Be forewarned, some of these entries are less e-textbook and more online courses, lessons, and other assorted digital resources. (from http://campustechnology.com/Articles/2013/08/14/The-Price-is-Right-11-Excellent-Sites-for-Free-Digital-Textbooks.aspx)
Dale Pike

California Learning Resource Network (CLRN) - 0 views

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    The current compilation of open educational resources (OERs) on CLRN stands at 6,063. If you're teaching math, science, and history and social science, what you want to pay attention to under "Learning Resources" is the "free textbooks" link, where you'll find 30 books listed. This collection is intended for both K-12 and higher ed, and the book descriptions tell what kind of student each is intended for. (from http://campustechnology.com/Articles/2013/08/14/The-Price-is-Right-11-Excellent-Sites-for-Free-Digital-Textbooks.aspx)
Dale Pike

Boundless - Textbooks - 0 views

shared by Dale Pike on 26 Aug 13 - No Cached
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    This startup follows an interesting publishing model. It pulls out material from public sites, such as Wikipedia or government Web sites, performs a "human curation and vetting," aligns the resulting content with big-selling college textbooks, and delivers the package in digital textbook format. The full book includes just key points, terms, and examples. The content can be highlighted and searched. The home page includes this testimonial from student "Sarah H" at Indiana University: "It is so simple and saved me tons of money. This site rocks and helped save my entire biology class from purchasing a new edition when one we had was very similar." Registered users gain access to digital volumes on accounting, algebra, art history, biology, business, chemistry, communications, economics, finance, United States history, management, marketing, microbiology, physiology, political science, psychology, sociology, and writing. (from http://campustechnology.com/Articles/2013/08/14/The-Price-is-Right-11-Excellent-Sites-for-Free-Digital-Textbooks.aspx)
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