MIT to Make Nearly All Course Materials Available Free on the World Wide Web
MIT [corporate]
Published | April 2001 |
Periodical | Volume 2011 |
Publisher | MIT |
Language | eng |
Other number | 2011-11-03 |
URL | http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2001/ocw.html |
Access date | 2011-11-03 |
Export options | BibTex · EndNote · Tagged XML · Google Scholar |
AVAILABLE FILES
Viewed by 105 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
Our history
MIT
In 1999, MIT Faculty considered how to use the Internet in pursuit of MIT's mission—to advance knowledge and educate students—and in 2000 proposed OCW. MIT published the first proof-of-concept site in 2002, ...
Match: MIT
MIT OpenCourseWare 2009 Program Evaluation Findings Summary
MIT
Match: MIT
The unwalled garden: Growth of the OpenCourseWare consortium, 2001–2008
Carson, Stephen
This article traces the development of the OpenCourseWare movement, including the origin of the concept at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), the implementation of the MIT OpenCourseWare project, and the ...
Match: MIT
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health OpenCourseWare
Kanchanaraksa, Sukon; Gooding, Ira; Klaas, Brian; Yager, James
The need for public health knowledge is ever increasing, but the educational options have been limited to coursework delivered by academics to individuals who can afford the cost of tuition at public health ...
Match: MIT
Strategy on Open Course and Teaching Material of Graduate Students of MIT
Chen, Sisi; Qiu, Fazong; Ye, C Q.
MIT became the first school to publish its resources shared to the public, then many schools joined to have resources shared and set open educational resources organization, which provides the effective means for ...
Match: MIT
Opening up education: The collective advancement of education through open technology, open content, and open knowledge
Casserly, Cathy; Smith, Marshall S.; Iiyoshi, Toru; Kumar, M. S. V.
Match: MIT
OOPS, Turning MIT Opencourseware into Chinese: An analysis of a community of practice of global translators
Lee, Mimi Miyoung; Lin, Meng Fen Grace; Bonk, Curtis J.
An all-volunteer organization called the Opensource Opencourseware Prototype System (OOPS), headquartered in Taiwan, was initially designed to translate open source materials from MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW) site into ...
Match: MIT
From open resources to educational opportunity
Kumar, Vijay M.
Since MIT’s bold announcement of the OpenCourseWare initiative in 2001, the content of over 700 of its courses have been published on the Web and made available for free to the world. Important infrastructure ...
Match: MIT
A review of the Open Educational Resources (OER) movement: Achievements, challenges, and new opportunities
Atkins, Daniel E.; Brown, John Seely; Hammond, Allen L.
Section one, OER history, structure and definition.
Section two, we will review the portfolio of OER grants to date in the context of the overall Technology/Open Educational Resources Logic Model and the description ...
Match: MIT
Understanding open source for open education
Klein, Lindy; Abas, Zoraini Wati; Jung, Insung; Luca, JosephEditors
Open Education is a phrase used to refer to various types of education offerings. This paper examines the history of the New Age Open Education, providing information for individuals to learn more about, and become ...
Match: MIT