The OER Knowledge Cloud makes use of cookies. By continuing, you consent to this use. More information.
OER math curriculum from Open Up Resources aces a big test
Wait, Patience

Published25 January 2018
Publisheredscoop, Scoop News Group
CountryUnited States, North America

ABSTRACT
The Illustrative Mathematics curriculum for grades 6-8 has been so well-received that one district switched to it midyear.

Keywords Assessments · Digital Equity · EdReports · Education IT News · Illustrative Mathematics · K-12 · OER · Open Up Resources · policy

Published atWashington, D.C
RefereedDoes not apply
RightsCopyright 2018 Edscoop. All rights reserved.
URLhttps://edscoop.com/open-up-resources-oer-aces-edreports-review
Access date2018
Export optionsBibTex · EndNote · Tagged XML · Google Scholar


Viewed by 121 distinct readers




CLOUD COMMUNITY REVIEWS

The evaluations below represent the judgements of our readers and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Cloud editors.

Click a star to be the first to rate this document


POST A COMMENT
SIMILAR RECORDS

Privacy policies can conflict with personalized learning, but they don't have to, NASBE finds
Wait, Patience
As schools sort out privacy issues, they also must be aware of inequality among schools, the new report says.
Match: Wait, Patience; Digital Equity; Education IT News; OER; United States; North America

College students in Rhode Island have saved nearly $900K on textbooks in a year
Roddy, Kate
Through the same initiative, over 40 professors in the state have adopted openly licensed textbooks.
Match: Digital Equity; Education IT News; K-12; OER; policy; United States; North America

OER reaches ‘inflection point,’ and states are leading the charge
Tate, Emily
Special report: Changes in policy, perception and technology are propelling Indiana, Michigan, Utah, Washington and other states to build digital libraries for open educational resources.
Match: Digital Equity; Education IT News; K-12; OER; policy; United States; North America

Blackboard now offering over half a million open educational resources to K-12 students
Tate, Emily
Blackboard and ACT's OpenEd are collaborating to deliver free, openly licensed materials to school districts.
Match: Assessments; Digital Equity; Education IT News; OER; United States; North America

Textbook savings add momentum to Oregon higher ed OER program
An initiative worked so well in the state's community colleges that Oregon plans to expand it to public universities.
Match: Digital Equity; Education IT News; OER; policy; United States; North America

Amazon relaunches Inspire after a year of re-tooling
Tate, Emily
The content repository offers tens of thousands of downloadable educational resources. The "upload and share" feature is expected to follow soon.
Match: Digital Equity; Education IT News; K-12; OER; United States; North America

Exclusive: Education officials to announce access to openly licensed content for educators
Lestch, Corinne
The Department of Education, along with major technology companies, are slated to announce that federally funded educational materials will be openly licensed to the public.
Match: Digital Equity; Education IT News; OER; policy; United States; North America

What We Teach: K-12 Educators’ Perceptions of Curriculum Quality
Seaman, Julia E.; Seaman, Jeff
A Bay View Analytics’ survey of 2,137 teachers, school-level administrators, and district administrator shows that they view the quality of curricula based on open educational resources (OER) as equal to offerings ...
Match: curriculum; K-12; OER; United States; North America

Federal leaders push for open license educational resources
Lestch, Corinne
Obama administration officials pushed for more online educational content to be licensed for free and made available to the public at an event Wednesday at the New America Foundation.
Match: Education IT News; K-12; policy; United States; North America

School districts to use openly licensed online content over textbooks — officials
Lestch, Corinne
The agency announced Thursday that 10 school districts will replace at least one textbook with openly licensed educational content. Copyrighted materials created with federal money will also be open.
Match: Education IT News; K-12; OER; United States; North America