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Daryl Beres

Peer 2 Peer University - 0 views

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    The Peer 2 Peer University is an online community of open study groups for short university-level courses. Think of it as online book clubs for open educational resources. The P2PU helps you navigate the wealth of open education materials that are out there, creates small groups of motivated learners, and supports the design and facilitation of courses. Students and tutors get recognition for their work, and we are building pathways to formal credit as well.
LRC MHC

iKnow! - The Social Learning Platform. - iKnow! - 0 views

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    Social learning platform focusing on vocabulary and dictation. Learners can sign up for free, does spaced review and tracks progress. Can use "courses" already created by the company or create your own.
Daryl Beres

Wiki becomes textbook in Boston College classroom - 0 views

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    Describes how a professor at Boston College used a wiki as the core of his course, suggesting it is a better tool than a textbook.
LRC MHC

Yale University Press Books Unbound - 0 views

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    Welcome to Yale Books Unbound 1 This project is part of the Institute for the Future of the Book's CommentPress experiment. 2 It's a way of sharing books and the ideas within them, as well as facilitating some of our works in progress. 3 Yale University Press is pleased to participate in this initiative since we see it as a very promising way of fulfilling our main objective of disseminating art and knowledge to the widest possible audience and facilitating on-going and all-important dialogues about ideas and issues that shape our world. 4 Up until now, very few book publishers have leveraged new technologies to add any additional value beyond basic Search functionality to their content. We agree with the Institute for the Future of the Book that a broad rethinking of books-and particularly scholarly monographs-needs to take place.
LRC MHC

Illuminations | Stuff we like: The Golden Notebook Project - 0 views

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    I have seen the future, and it works. Sort of. This particular version of things to come is the future of the book. And the future of reading, too, as we move from consuming books on paper to contributing to them on screens. Maybe. Perhaps. As I suggest below, it might even be a future for 'watching' films. Whatever. In any case, The Golden Notebook Project, which went live at the start of this week, is an entirely engrossing cultural experiment.
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