Monthly Archive for July, 2007

The Quest for Sustainability in OpenCourseWare

The quest for sustainability in open courseware

Created by Paul Trafford (University of Oxford) on July 15, 2007

I’ve been reflecting recently on the subject of open courseware and, more specifically, OpenCourseWare following the keynote for the Sakai conference in Amsterdam delivered confidently and enthusiastically by Hal Abelson (a podcast is available). In this post I’ll briefly recap some of the core aspects as I understand them and then go on to explore this area, based on personal experiences and ideas I’ve been formulating at Oxford.

Abelson took a broad view, inviting the audience to go back 25 years and defined programming as a “novel formal medium for expressing ideas.” Against that, he got us to consider the aspirations and expectations that we might have had then, encapsulating this in 3 predictions for 25 years thence (i.e. today):

  • a global encyclopaedia
  • TCP/IP global
  • collaborative educational resources

It’s the third that has yet to be properly delivered. Starting from consideration of why not, he then developed the rationale leading to the MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW) initiative and the more recent Creative Commons Learn (ccLearn). Continue reading ‘The Quest for Sustainability in OpenCourseWare’

University of Southern Queensland OpenCourseWare

The University of Southern Queensland in Australia has recently published a new OpenCourseWare site.

The content is quite remarkable. In addition — the entire OCW site is Moodle-based, which is encouraging as well.

Check it out if you get the chance!