This story suggests to me that there needs to be further conversations between the world of OER and the open access world. Rather than creating a separate political movement to change the culture within educational publishing, can we find a way to leverage the good work that groups like SPARC are doing with intiatives like Create Change (http://createchange.org )? In the end, the world of scholarship and the world of teaching converge.
– mike
]]>One model for this–and far from the only one–is a project Intelligent Television and BioMed Central launched at the Wellcome Trust last year to assemble a digital archive of documentary material (featuring video content produced especially for the project) that highlights the importance of the open access movement for the future of science and medicine. The Soros/Open Society Institute has just agreed to support this project with a grant this year. Have a look at the film clips on the project wiki:
http:/openaccessproject.jot.com
user name: openaccessproject
password: oaproj
The directness and integrity of no-frills video can be exciting.
]]>Quoting John St Clair, of the Regents Online Degree Program in Tennessee: “A colleague and I created MATH1410: Number Concepts for Elementary Education, and MATH1420: Geometry for Elementary Education exclusively with learning objects gleaned from MERLOT. (We also made assignments from a typical textbook.)”
The Tennessee Board of Regents Online Degree Program had included in its criteria for quality that instructors were required to demonstrate that they had sought our exemplary learning resources from OER sources.
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