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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

Death to the Digital Dropbox: Rethinking Student Privacy and Public Performance (EDUCAU... - 0 views

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    Patrick R. Lowenthal and David Thomas take a strong stance in decrying the use of student-teacher electronic dropboxes for submission of student work. We all know that in the performance arts, students benefit from public critique - and as scholars we insist on this practice for ourselves, making sure we present "papers" at prestigious conferences. So, why expect our students to perform in the "real world" and be subject regularly to critique by the very public that should be supporting the funding of their education?
Randolph Hollingsworth

Center for Democracy & Technology | Keeping the Internet Open, Innovative and Free - 0 views

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    "The Center for Democracy and Technology is a non-profit public interest organization working to keep the Internet open, innovative, and free. As a civil liberties group with expertise in law, technology, and policy, CDT works to enhance free expression and privacy in communications technologies by finding practical and innovative solutions to public policy challenges while protecting civil liberties. CDT is dedicated to building consensus among all parties interested in the future of the Internet and other new communications media."
Randolph Hollingsworth

Wikipedia:GLAM/NARA/Ansel Adams donation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    U.S. National Archives now making high-resolution images of Ansel Adams' public-domain National Park Service photos public via Wikimedia Commons
Randolph Hollingsworth

Google Public Policy Blog: Promoting civic innovation through technology - 0 views

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    Internet redefining citizenship in 21st century - Civic Information API, e.g., Kenya Elections Hub - Sunlight Foundation programs for open govt data - MySociety collaboration among developers esp open source code
Randolph Hollingsworth

Fayette County Public Schools | NextGen Learning - 0 views

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    STEAM Academy with UK's KY P20 Labs
Randolph Hollingsworth

FERPA and Social Media | Faculty Focus - 0 views

  • FERPA was never intended to place students into the box of a physical or online classroom to prevent them from learning from the public.
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    Great approach to helping instructors understand some basic issues of student privacy and the role of social media. This kind of argument might encourage people to assign the use of (and contribution to) open educational resources. "FERPA was never intended to place students into the box of a physical or online classroom to prevent them from learning from the public."
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

From Abelard to Apple: The Fate of American Colleges and Universities - 0 views

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    While higher ed is a "platform" and not a business, DeMillo posits that we can see the marketplace finding a bypass around universities that have not truly focused on differentiation or embraced openness, states 3 "economic realities" that shows the middle tier of universities (vast majority) waste money and has completely misjudged its value - Rich A. DeMillo is a Distinguished Professor of Computing at the Georgia Institute of Technology, the seventh ranked public university in the U.S. and one of the premier institutions internationally. He currently serves as the Director of the Center for 21st Century Universities (C21U). This presentation was given as part of CFHE12 on Monday, October 15, 2012
Randolph Hollingsworth

Diigo - How-to video - 0 views

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    Overview of Diigo as bookmark/notetaking app and community connections through sharing bookmarks publically and recommending ideas/knowledge to others.
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?
Christopher Rice

Should Class Blogs Be Private or Public? | HASTAC - 1 views

  • (2)  Intellectual property.  In the documentary I mention above and in just about all of the other work in my class, we discuss IP issues--and then claim fair use for the materials we borrow from within the class.  We talk about Creative Commons and other forms of share-alike licensing.   But then we often disregard those rules in the creation of the class student-produced materials.  By that I mean, there are images and audio that are attributed, of course, to those who created them but nonetheless used in the production intended for our class and for pedagogical purposes only that would require fees and legal agreements were they distributed beyond the walled off class project.   We are at such a strange moment in the history of intellectual property, with everything changing and no one quite knowing what they want or why since the business model of so much online property remains in flux.  I want my students to understand the IP issues--but I don't want their intellect and imagination fettered by it.  
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    Interesting look at using private class blogging as a means for learning about IP and copyright.
Randolph Hollingsworth

Milton Reading Room - goals and support - 0 views

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    Started in 1997 by Thomas Luxon, English Prof at Darmouth College, supported by the college and the special collections archivists but also by State Farm Companies Foundation as well as Milton publications' editors. Currently all of Milton's poetry (in 4 languages) and selections of his prose - almost all are fully annotated and with introductions by his students.
Randolph Hollingsworth

Digital Media Project - Berkman Ctr for Internet and Society, Harvard U - 0 views

  • Lawyers, copyright officers for universities, book publishers, and even educators tend to defer to a conservative picture of copyright law and refrain from contributing to and participating in a robust commons. The TEACH Act indirectly encourages such caution by requiring institutions to prevent retention and unauthorized dissemination of copyrighted works that are shown in the classroom; the result is that schools may decide not to take advantage of the Act's provisions out of fear of sanctions for noncompliance.
  • erring on the side of caution may in turn negatively serve the future of the fair use defense; if educators and others are unwilling to engage in new and creative uses of copyrighted materials, then legislators may respond by limiting fair use
  • Noncommercial educational initiatives must struggle against the rise of a "clearance culture" that requires licenses for educational uses of content that are minimal or highly transformative
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    Mellon Fndtn $ to study educational uses of content in the digital age, including "(i) student use, collection, and creation of diverse content (e.g. web pages, images, video, and audio); (ii) digital activity by other types of established institutions (e.g. public broadcasting; museums); (iii) educational content assembled and presented outside of any traditional institution, particularly on the internet (e.g. the Red Hot Jazz Archive; the Victorian Web); and (iv) grass-roots open source educational projects (e.g. Wikipedia; the online Samuel Pepys Diary)." Also addressing legal obstacles for good practices and effective use of digital media.
Randolph Hollingsworth

Calculator for estimating how much money a school district can save using Open Educatio... - 0 views

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    This calculator is based on research conducted in the Department of Instructional Psychology and Technology and the Center for the Improvement of Teacher Education and Schooling at Brigham Young University in conjunction with schools in the BYU Public School Partnership using open textbooks originally provided by CK12.org. This research was funded in part by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. Cost information in the Calculator is based on pricing from Lulu, who we found to be the best option for printing open textbooks. For additional information about the Utah Open Textbooks Project, visit http://utahopentextbooks.org/.
Randolph Hollingsworth

mySociety | Usability with Purpose - 1 views

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    collaborative platform for developers working with civic innovation as a goal
Randolph Hollingsworth

The Copyright Website - 0 views

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    Providing services and resources on copyright - by Benedict O'Mahoney, a lawyer.
Randolph Hollingsworth

Podcasting Legal Guide: Rules for the Revolution | Berkman Center - 0 views

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    A general roadmap of legal issues specific to podcasting (vs. EFF's Blogger's Rights) - orig published 2006, last updated Jan 26, 2010
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