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gsiemens

Pearson Project Blue Sky - 7 views

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    Much that I cringe at big business, I have to hand it to Pearson for their smart marketing. I think a lot of this project's appeal is in making OER easily searchable and accesible from one central location. I know there are ways to do that for free out there, such as OpenDOAR, but Pearson's looks a lot slicker. Of course Pearson's own content is readily visible in searches, at least according to the screenshots. This does not seem to be an unbiased OER search engine.
Dana West

Book Sprints and Booki: Re-Imagining How Textbooks are Produced - 0 views

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    Background on collaborative authoring using booki.
Dana West

OpenScout - 0 views

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    OpenScout provides free online management education
Peter Lythgoe

Crackdown on Coursera - Fountains of Fontaine - 5 views

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    Strange goings on in Minnesota.
David Brooks

Creative Commons Search for Images and Other Media - 0 views

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    I like this site because it links to a few different repositories.
Peter Lythgoe

Times Higher Education - Teaching intelligence - This game is wide open - 4 views

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    A Review of MOOC initiatives in the UK
Nagwa Abou El-Nga

Gates foundation solicits remedial MOOCs | Inside Higher Ed - 1 views

  • Gates, MOOCs and Remediation September 14, 2012 - 3:00am By Paul Fain Early returns show that massive open online courses (MOOCs) work best for motivated and academically prepared students. But could high-quality MOOCs benefit a broader range of learners, like those who get tripped up by remedial classes? That’s the question the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation wants to answer with a newly announced round of 10 grants for the creation of MOOCs for remedial coursework. “We’re trying to seed the conversation and seed the experimentation,” said Josh Jarrett, the foundation's deputy director for education and postsecondary education. MOOCs tend to provoke strong feelings in the academy, and in the wake of Gates's announcement this week, some observers questioned whether free, widely available online courses could be tailored to students with remedial needs. But others, including experts on developmental learning, welcomed the attempt to tackle one of higher education’s most vexing problems. “This has the potential for raising the quality of instruction in developmental education, if used properly,” said Hunter R. Boylan, director of the National Center for Developmental Education.
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    Application for low-level courses - $5,000
Helena Capela

National Symposium on Open Education - WikiEducator - 0 views

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    From the Antipodes
Leonardo Pena

English 2.0 - 3 views

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    the benefits of technology for educators [Page 1]
Nagwa Abou El-Nga

TLT-SWG: Real Revolution Not MOOCs. Real Revolution Big Open Mostly-Online Things with Unavoidable Minimum Impact. Good/Bad? Not a Rant? - 2 views

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    summery: MOOCs have bad and good impact discribed well. As faculty I agree that iMOOCs is revelaing knowledge from best universities in the world but initially a loss in tuition fees.
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