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Session Resources
www.k12opened.com/necc2009
All resources are linked here, as well as step-by-step instructions
and other options for hands on activities.
This is a wiki. Feel free to add your own links, comments,
thoughts, etc.
Why Open Education?
Content is central to education and learning.
Differentiating instruction requires the ability to modify and remix content.
Textbooks and proprietary software make it difficult, expensive, and even illegal to do this.
Open content that permits and encourages remixing and sharing is a solution to this.
Sharing is good.
Open Educational Resources (OER) are:
Digital
Free and open
Tools, content, and implementation resources
For teachers, students, and lifelong learners
Traditional copyright - all rights reserved
Public domain - unrestricteduse
Traditional copyright - all rights reserved
Public domain - unrestricteduse
Copyright with open licenses - some rights reserved
Attribution (BY) Non-commercial (NC) No derivatives (ND) Copyleft - Share-Alike (SA)
Recommended for education:CC BY
Creative Commons:CC BY You can use however you want; just cite
the source.
CC BY SA You can use however you want, but you must cite the
source AND license your work under a sharing license.
CC BY NC You can use only if it is noncommercial (you cant
charge $); cite the source.
CC BY ND You can use the work but you cant change it or put it into a bigger work; also cite the source.
Others:GFDL Share-alike license used by Wikipedia and
others.
Public domain not copyrighted; you can use however you
like.
Custom licenses (e.g. morguefile and Stock.XCHNG)
1 - Sharing open-licensed content building blocks
Share a photo under an open license.
If you don't have one of your own, you can upload one of ours. Get
a slip of paper and find the link for your number.Easy: Upload to
K12 Open CD.
Medium: Upload to Flickr.
Advanced: Upload to Wikimedia Commons (for inclusion in Wikipedia).
2 Contributing to an OER
Edit or add to an OER.Easy: Write a definition for the open dictionary.
Medium: Edit or add to a Wikibook (open-licensed textbooks).
Advanced: Edit or add to a Wikipedia article.
Don't be shy!
3 Open licensing
your own work
If you are willing to share your original lesson plans, presentations, handouts, or web-based materials, open license them.Easy: Write "licensed under Creative Commons Attribution" (or the license of your choice) on your work or web site.
Medium: Use the CC license wizard.
Sharing is good!
Spreading the word
If you like what you learned today,
tell three people you know about OER.
Q&A
I'll be in the Open Source playground today and tomorrow from 2-4. Hope you see you there!
Thank you.
Licensed under CC BYKaren [email protected]
First screen image credits:
Linux computer lab Michael SurranLinux penguin - Larry Ewing with the GIMPBooks - TizzieGlobe NASACloud background - Anca Mosoiu
Click to edit the title text format