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Randolph Hollingsworth

HowOpenIsIt? Guide - 0 views

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    Comment by Tim Vollmer, Manager of Policy and Data for Creative Commons: "...a handy, human-readable reference guide for academic authors, publishers looking into supporting Open Access, and policy makers and funders adopting open policies that require Open Access to research that is funded through the public purse... focuses primarily on describing the spectrum of Open Access policies for journals. An increasingly important and related area is the sharing of data associated with the research process. Open data have the potential to facilitate enhanced scientific collaboration and reproducibility, but it is not yet settled, from both a legal and technical perspective, how this wealth of data that leads to the creation of scholarly work will be shared. And current research suggests an approach whereby articles are licensed under an open license (preferably CC-BY), while data associated with the article are dedicated to the public domain using a tool such as the CC0 Public Domain Dedication. In this way, researchers clearly communicate-in a comprehensive manner-the rights and permissions available to users for both the text and the data." Read more at http://blogs.plos.org/blog/2012/10/01/tim-vollmer-of-creative-commons-on-howopenisit/
Randolph Hollingsworth

OERu - opening speech by S Queensland Jim Taylor - from logic model to action plan - 0 views

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    Professor Jim Taylor, from the University of Southern Queensland, points out that the OER university will create a parallel learning universe to augment and add value to traditional models of delivery through open collaboration networks. "This is not theoretical speculation, it is entirely viable." said Jim Taylor. In this keynote address, Jim: Refers to the "gales of creative destruction" associated with technological change where old industry can be swept away and replaced by new ones. However, the OER university concept provides opportunities for "creative construction" for universities in a digital age. Demonstrates that conventional supply of education using traditional delivery methods will not the meet the demands for access to higher education. Consider, for example: the need for 18 million new teachers the doubling of post-secondary students in the next decade the need to build roughly one new university per week in India alone to meet the future demand for learning. Points out that we already have a critical mass of open access materials, but we don't have open curriculum, open student support, open assessment and open accreditation. Indicates that the OER university concept will provide a stairway to credible credentials based soley on OER.
Randolph Hollingsworth

Highlights from the SOAP project survey. What Scientists Think about Open Access Publis... - 0 views

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    Contradicts the Fitch Report (http://www.researchinfonet.org/publish/finch/) and AHA response (http://blog.historians.org/publications/1734/aha-statement-on-scholarly-journal-publishing) re inequities for the pay-for-publishing strategies now trending: "According to the 2011 Study of Open Access Publishing (SOAP), the APC is usually paid by the author's funding agency (59%) or employer (24%), not by authors out of pocket (12%)"
Randolph Hollingsworth

A Scalable and Sustainable Approach to Open Access Publishing and Archiving for Humanit... - 0 views

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    "a model for open access (OA) publishing"
Randolph Hollingsworth

UC Berkeley Webcasts | Video and Podcasts: Spring 2010 Courses - 0 views

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    Open access to video or audio multimedia versions of lectures at UC Berkeley.
Randolph Hollingsworth

MERLOT - Multimedia Educational Resource for Learning and Online Teaching - 0 views

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    Community of scholars offering access to their originally created learning materials, creating their own personal collection of materials from the database, serving as peer reviewers of submitted materials and working together to improve the culture of sharing good materials for learning and teaching.
Randolph Hollingsworth

Univ S Florida's Mechanical Engineering Open Content -- Campus Technology - 0 views

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    Emphasizing lecture capture tool as a cheaper way to gather presentational materials for students to access anytime/anywhere; touches on issue of intellectual property but no analysis; mentions in passing that most of the open material comes from one or two profs from University of South Florida; reminds us that foundational grants are crucial to large initiatives' success
Randolph Hollingsworth

Study of Impact of Open Educational Resources - JISC funded - Brits - 0 views

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    This study will investigate the impact of Open Educational Resources (OER) use on teaching and learning. To achieve this, the project team will review current research in the area; survey, interview and run workshops with suitable participants to collect data; and will produce an accessible report on the study findings. The report will consider the use of OER from both an individual and institutional perspective looking at the benefits OER can offer each and identifying the pedagogic, attitudinal, logistical and strategic factors conducive to uptake and sustained use of OER, as well as the associated issues and challenges.
Randolph Hollingsworth

Forms of Assessment - 0 views

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    Great article (published online 2010) with easy access to various components of each method: description, indications when to use it, contra-indications, special precautions, notes
Randolph Hollingsworth

CourseSmart: Online & downloadable textbooks. Half the price of printed books - 0 views

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    Largest source for etextbooks; best way for materials to be accessible for ADA
Christopher Rice

Stephen Downes: ebook on openness - 1 views

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    A response, in many ways, to Anya Kamenetz's critique of the readability/accessibility of Downes' work.
Randolph Hollingsworth

Affordable Learning Solutions, California State University - 0 views

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    The CSU's Affordable Learning Solutions Campaign is designed to enable faculty to choose and provide quality educational content that is more affordable for their students. CSU students typically pay over $800 per year for their books. By reducing their expenses, we believe we can provide better access to a quality CSU learning experience. We are launching this campaign in 2010 and will be continuously improving the services to CSU faculty and students each semester. The Affordable Learning Solutions website is designed to: - Make it easy for faculty, staff, and students to find no/low cost course content that can substitute for more costly textbooks Enable faculty to be recognized for their efforts in reducing costs for students - Share practices for using no/low cost digital content in CSU courses - Support campuses in customizing their strategies to enable affordable learning solutions For example: As part of a three-year partnership with Nature Publishing Group (NPG), publisher of the world's leading scientific journal Nature, CSU faculty guided and advised the development of NPG's Principles of Biology - the first in a series of interactive "born digital" textbooks. The text will be incorporated into courses for students at the Los Angeles, Northridge and Chico campuses starting in the 2011/2012 academic year.
Randolph Hollingsworth

Peter Suber, "Tectonic Movements toward OA in the UK and Europe," SPARC Open Access New... - 0 views

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    a table of contents: 1. Three major OA announcements from the UK on the same day 2. Some recent history as context for these announcements 3. Basics of the new RCUK policy 4. Basics of the Finch recommendations 5. General agreement between the RCUK policy and Finch recommendations 6. Appreciation of the large-scale shift to OA in the UK 7. Some consequences for journals and authors 8. Responding to publisher fears of green OA 9. Objections and recommendations 10. Announcements from Europe the day after the UK announcements
Randolph Hollingsworth

The Quality of Massive Open Online Courses by Stephen Downes | MOOC Quality Project - 0 views

  • When we are evaluating a tool, we evaluate it against its design specifications; mathematics and deduction tell us from there that it will produce its intended outcome. It is only when we evaluate the use of a tool that we evaluate against the actual outcome. So measuring drop-out rates, counting test scores, and adding up student satisfaction scores will not tell us whether a MOOC was successful, only whether this particular application of this particular MOOC was successful in this particular instance.
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    Read the full text - download available. Issue is MOOC as a "tool" for educators and learners, not as an end in itself - so assessment strategies must be above and beyond test scores, satisfaction and completion rates.
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    Don't get seduced by retention/persistence rates - it's about the design principles, stupid!
Randolph Hollingsworth

Open Access Textbooks - 0 views

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    Collection of free textbooks created for the Florida schools and universities.
Randolph Hollingsworth

ProProfs Quiz Maker - 0 views

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    $3 per month allows anyone to get a site for educational use (no ads) - can get score data and user attempt data as well as keeping quizzes public - If free version, no user stats but quizzes are never deleted and you can continue to have unlimited quiz takers
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    I can't tell if this version uses Flash or any other programming that might interfere with accessibility... can you find the info on this aspect?
Randolph Hollingsworth

CAST: Center for Applied Special Technology - 0 views

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    Universal design principles are critical to raising standards in faculty-designed learning experiences. When/how do we get awareness and then exploring best types of faculty (and grad students) development learning experiences?
Randolph Hollingsworth

Dartmouth Copyright Statement & Guidelines - 0 views

    • Randolph Hollingsworth
       
      Univ of KY likes this page and thinks it is a good summary, easily accessible for faculty use... but there probably should be some mention of limitations on copies up front.
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