Monthly Archives: January 2009

A new collection of OA video lectures launched

Academic Earth announced launching a new collection of open access video lectures. (Thanks to Open Access News) Excerpt:

Academic Earth is an organization founded with the goal of giving everyone on earth access to a world-class education.

As more and more high quality educational content becomes available online for free, we ask ourselves, what are the real barriers to achieving a world class education?  At Academic Earth, we are working to identify these barriers and find innovative ways to use technology to increase the ease of learning.

We are building a user-friendly educational ecosystem that will give internet users around the world the ability to easily find, interact with, and learn from full video courses and lectures from the world’s leading scholars.  Our goal is to bring the best content together in one place and create an environment that in which that content is remarkably easy to use and in which user contributions make existing content increasingly valuable….

Photographing public domain works – Wikipedia Loves Art launches on Feb 1

Open Knowledge Foundation draws attention to the day of Wikipedia Loves Art to be launched on February 1st. The event extends for the rest of the month whereby the public will have the chance to take pictures of its esteemed public domain works. Excerpt:

The event will see cultural heritage institutions around the world open up their doors for the public to take pictures of items in their collections that have passed into the public domain. All photographs will be made available under an open license (most likely either CC-BY or CC-BY-SA) – and hence will be free to be added to relevant Wikipedia articles, to be used as illustrations, to be cut up with other images, to be used in films and animations, and so on! …

Many of the participating institutions are running competitions to see who (or which team) can snap as many items from a list as possible. Prizes include books, exhibition catalogues, tickets, memberships, subscriptions, t-shirts, MP3 players, and private after-dark tours. All images will be added to the Flickr group.

Its great to see public cultural heritage collections opening up their collections! We look forward to the photos being re-used in interesting ways. (For other collections of open images, see the images tag on CKAN.)

Flat World Knowledge goes Public Beta!

David Wiley, via iterating toward openness, emphasizes the significance of Flat World Knowledge (FWK) going Public Beta, and outlined the common and distinctive features of FKW textbooks in light of traditional ones. Excerpt:

FWK textbooks are much like traditional textbooks in that they are:

  • beautiful looking printed books,
  • written by world-class authors,
  • supported with all the supplementals and teaching aids (like an instructor manual, slides, and assessments) teachers expect, and
  • available as review copies (for teachers),

FWK textbooks are UNLIKE traditional textbooks in that they are:

  • licensed CC BY-NC-SA,
  • always available in full-text online for free,
  • offered in a variety of additional, affordable formats (paperback black-and-white ($30), full-color ($60), audio book ($30), individual book chapters as audio ($3), etc.),
  • supported by a variety of study aids available at the student’s option (NOT forcibly bundled with the book)

I’m SO excited about FWK because we’re going to show the world that extremely high quality open educational resources can be produced and disseminated in a way that is sustainable over the long term. Jump over to the Catalog page, choose a book with a Feb 2009 publication date, and click “Start Reading” to see what I’m talking about.

wikiHow Reaches 50,000 Articles

Cameron Parkins, via Creative Commons, highlighted wikiHow’s landmark accomplishment of 50000 articles. Excerpt:

wikiHow, a community site that aims to be the world’s largest how-to manual, just reached the incredible milestone of 50,000 articles with the publication of How to Obtain a Copy of Your Birth Certificate in New Mexico. All of the content on wikiHow is released under a CC BY-NC-SA license, keeping the content therein open for sharing and reuse according as long as the reuse is noncommercial in intent, the author(s) is properly attributed, and any derivative works are shared under the same license….

India Announces Prototype of $10 Laptop for Education

India’s Secretary of Higher Education made an announcement to make accessible low-power laptops for a minimal fee of $10 each in a bid to step up the number of students joining college. (Thanks to Chronicle: The Wired Campus) Excerpt:

R. P. Agrawal, India’s secretary of higher education, told the newspaper that online courses are the only way to bring quality education to remote areas of the country. He added that the ministry is working out ways to beam lectures from the Indian Institute of Technology across the country. “We will be providing free e-content to students,” Mr. Agrawal said.

A prototype of the computer is expected to be unveiled next week. It will come with wireless Internet capability, expandable memory, and a variety of other features. The government has approached manufacturers like Intel about producing the devices, the ministry said. The prototype has been developed with the help of students from the Indian Institute of Technology, Bangalore’s Indian Institute of Science, and the Vellore Institute of Technology, among others….

In 2006 the ministry decided not to buy the so-called “$100-laptop” developed by researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The ministry’s technical experts questioned the design of those low-cost laptops and said the machines had high hidden costs that would bring the total price to $200 apiece.

Free Ubuntu Pocket Guide released

A free Ubuntu Pocket Guide authored by Keir Thomas has been launched recently. (Thanks to Tectonic) Excerpt:

Keir Thomas, author of numerous Linux how-to books as well as Ubuntu-specific guides, has released a new book called Ubuntu Pocket Guide. The compact 166-page guide to using Linux is available in both printed form as well as a free PDF download.

Thomas says that “people are encouraged to share the PDF Edition file with friends, and even upload it to file-sharing networks. The PDF edition is exactly the same as the print edition.”

OpenSA! launched

OpenSA! – a pilot project striving to increase accessibility of South African heritage for remixing and re-publishing – was launched recently. (Thanks to Open Access News) Excerpt from the announcement in the African Commons Project website.

In collaboration with SA Rocks and the African Commons Project, OpenSA! is collecting, tagging and managing donations from people who are willing to make their material freely available online. OpenSA! will also be helping to coordinate outreach to South Africa’s young creators to enable them to learn more about how to find open content that they are free to remix and share.

As access to the Internet grows in South Africa, so too does the range of creative activity by a new generation of active online citizens. Internet publishing in the form of blogging and citizen journalism, online publishing of photographic, video and music publishing are all part of a wide range of democratic speech that we as a young nation are trying to encourage and nurture. …

OpenSA! is a pilot project dedicated to the growing number of young South Africans who are finding their voice online. The project was started in order to nurture this creativity by making it easier for young creators to find and share media about our heritage safely and legally.

Research reveals economic case for open access publishing

A new research project commissioned by JISC illuminates the economic significance of open access publishing, and affirms in its main finding that open access publishing model cuts the cost of higher education sector significantly. Excerpt:

The research centred on three models which include:

  • Subscription or toll access publishing which involves reader charges and use restrictions;
  • Open access publishing where access is free and publication is funded from the authors’ side; and
  • Open access self-archiving where academic authors post their work in online repositories, making it freely available to all Internet users.

In their report, Houghton et al. [the researchers] looked beyond the actual costs and savings of different models and examined the additional cost-benefits that might arise from enhanced access to research findings.

The research and findings reveal that core scholarly publishing system activities cost the UK higher education sector around £5 billion in 2007. Using the different models, the report shows, what the estimated cost would have been:

  • £230 million to publish using the subscription model,
  • £150 million to publish under the open access model and
  • £110 million to publish with the self-archiving with peer review services plus some £20 million in operating costs if using the different models.

When considering costs per journal article, Houghton et al. believe that the UK higher education sector could have saved around £80 million a year by shifting from toll access to open access publishing. They also claim that £115 million could be saved by moving from toll access to open access self-archiving.

In addition to that, the financial return to UK plc from greater accessibility to research might result in an additional £172 million per annum worth of benefits from government and higher education sector research alone.

JISC’s Chair Professor Sir Tim O’Shea said, “The argument for moving from more traditional subscription or toll-based publishing to a model that allows for greater accessibility and makes full use of the advances in technology cannot be ignored. This report shows there are significant savings to be made and benefits to be had.

“JISC will work with publishers, authors and the science community to identify and help to remove the barriers to moving to these more cost-effective models,” he added.

Wikipedia: The Missing Manual Posted on Wikipedia

The Missing Manuals series, published by O’Reilly Media, announced the migration of its book about Wikipedia to Wikipedia. (Thanks to ResourceShelf) Excerpt:

….the entire contents of Wikipedia: The Missing Manual (O’Reilly, $29.99) by John Broughton is [now] available for free online for editing and updating just like any other Wikipedia entry.

“What makes this project different than any of the other zillion books online today is the format we’ve chosen–a wiki,” explains Peter Meyers, Missing Manuals’ managing editor. “Book viewers will be able to do all the same things they do on any other wiki: view the document, edit it, add to it–in short, whatever they want. The book is going to reside in the site’s Help area, naturally, since the book is all about helping people edit and navigate their way around Wikipedia.”

“The Wikimedia Foundation is thrilled that John Broughton and O’Reilly have decided to release John’s book under a free license,” says Sue Gardner, executive director of the Wikimedia Foundation. “For years, John has done great work creating instructional materials that offer guidance for new Wikipedia editors. Now that the Missing Manual is being released under a free license, people will be able to reuse, update, translate and customize the material in it for different purposes and different audiences, which will make it even more useful for everyone.”

The Legal Education Commons offers Open Access to 700,000 Federal Court Decisions

Jane Park, via Creative Commons, draws attention to the recent move by the Legal Education Commons to offer open access to over 700,000 federal court decisions. Excerpt:

The LEC is an “open, searchable collection of resources designed specifically for use in legal education.” It is made possible by a collaboration between the Center for Computer-Assisted Legal Instruction (CALI) and Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society. [Snippet from the press release reads]

While the LEC opens with an extensive collection of court cases and images, it can expand its collection of resources only through contributions and donations from the legal education community.

“All teachers of law have materials and notes they use in teaching,” says John Mayer, CALI Executive Director. “Many freely share their materials with colleagues, but there has never been a singular searchable, taggable space to serve that function for the entire legal academy,” he explains, “until now.”

CALI implores faculty and staff at CALI member schools to share any files from personal collections that may facilitate learning amongst the legal education community. “Especially as we increasingly garner more participation and sharing from legal educators,” says Mr. Mayer, “the Legal Education Commons will be a great, non-commercial tool for those who are both teaching and learning the law.”

All material in the Legal Education Commons is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-alike license (CC BY-SA), making it interoperable with a great deal of other open educational resources.