Showing posts with label Open Learning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Open Learning. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

ONLINE EDUCATION AND OPEN LEARNING: OCW's Next Decade: Reaching One Billion Minds




 

 

 

 

 

 

OCW's Next Decade: Reaching One Billion Minds

MIT's goal for the next decade is to increase our reach ten-fold: to reach a billion minds. We aspire by 2021 to make open educational resources like MIT OpenCourseWare the tools to bridge the global gap between human potential and opportunity, so that motivated people everywhere can improve their lives and change the world.

Human potential is universal; opportunity is not. MIT OpenCourseWare began with the vision that the teaching tools of the world's top learning institutions should be freely available to all humanity: to study, to share, to build upon.
In our first 10 years, MIT has been delivering on that vision. We've reached 100 million individuals to date, people with the ideas, talents and motivation to have enormous impact on their communities, given the opportunity to do so.
MIT's goal for the next decade is to increase our reach ten-fold: to reach a billion minds. We aspire by 2021 to make open educational resources like MIT OpenCourseWare the tools to bridge the global gap between human potential and opportunity, so that motivated people everywhere can improve their lives and change the world.

The Plan

How will we do this? First and foremost, we’ll continue to improve the depth and quality of our core publication, and to improve our site. In addition, we’ve identified four focus areas with the potential to help us reach our goal:
Placing OCW everywhere - We'll make OCW content easy to find, adapt OCW materials to distribution methods such as mobile phones, and develop new approaches to reaching underserved populations.
Reaching key audiences - For more people to get the most out of OCW, we have to put more in. We'll customize OCW to meet the needs of people across a wide range of cultures and backgrounds.
Creating communities of open learning - We'll create an ecosystem for open learning that goes beyond content. Over the next decade, we'll take advantage of new technologies to ensure people can interact around OCW, increasing their understanding of the material.
Empowering educators worldwide - Educators are a key multiplier for us. By bringing OCW materials into their classrooms, they share our content with millions. We will strive to provide educators everywhere with the tools they need to serve these students.

Next Decade Alliance

OCW's Next Decade Initiatives are supported by our Next Decade Alliance sponsors.




Next Decade Alliance 

 

 

 

 

An Alliance for Innovation
In our first ten years, OCW has provided resources to 100 million people worldwide. By the end of our next decade, we aspire to reach one billion people with our materials. We are seeking a select group of elite corporate underwriters to join OCW in reaching this goal.
Next Decade Alliance members receive tangible benefits from their role in helping to shape the future of education on the Web, while providing the resources OCW needs to continue innovating in our next ten years. Members of the Next Decade Alliance enjoy the following benefits:
  • Branding on the OCW home page and Next Decade page
  • Membership in the Next Decade Alliance advisory council, meeting twice a year with MIT thought leaders to help shape the future of OCW
  • OCW Next Decade Alliance logo for your site and marketing materials
  • Underwriting messaging across the OCW site
  • Underwriting message in the OCW newsletter (145,000 self-subscribed)
  • Recognition at events celebrating OCW’s 10th anniversary
Next Decade Alliance members may complete their underwriting benefits portfolio with additional opportunities, including:
  • Custom course list on our site, with your branding, highlighting the courses most relevant to your customers or workforce
  • Recruiting messaging on the OCW site
  • Recognition at the 2011 OpenCourseWare Consortium annual meeting
Become a member of the Next Decade Alliance. To develop your custom underwriting benefits portfolio, please contact the underwriting team at ocw-underwriting@mit.edu.








MIT OpenCourseWare's First 10 Years: 100 Million Served

On April 4, 2001, MIT announced it would publish educational materials from all of its courses freely and openly on the Internet. Ten years later, OCW has shared materials from more than 2000 courses with an estimated 100 million individuals worldwide. Join us in celebrating the 10th anniversary of this groundbreaking effort.

Auditing Classes at M.I.T., on the Web and Free

By CAREY GOLDBERG
Published: April 04, 2001
Other universities may be striving to market their courses to the Internet masses in hopes of dot-com wealth. But the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has chosen the opposite path: to post virtually all its course materials on the Web, free to everybody.
M.I.T. plans on Wednesday to announce a 10-year initiative, apparently the biggest of its kind, that intends to create public Web sites for almost all of its 2,000 courses and to post materials like lecture notes, problem sets, syllabuses, exams, simulations, even video lectures. Professors' participation will be voluntary, but the university is committing itself to post sites for all its courses, at a cost of up to $100 million.
Visitors will not earn college credits.
The giveaway idea, President Charles M. Vest of M.I.T. said, came in a ''traditional Eureka moment'' as the institute -- like nearly every other university -- brainstormed and soul-searched about how best to take advantage of the Internet.
Called OpenCourseWare, the initiative found broad resonance among the faculty members, said Steven Lerman, the faculty chairman.

''Selling content for profit, or trying in some ways to commercialize one of the core intellectual activities of the university,'' Professor Lerman said, ''seemed less attractive to people at a deep level than finding ways to disseminate it as broadly as possible.''
Universities have been flocking into ''distance learning'' -- offering courses online to off-campus paying students -- and commercial ventures have been investingtens of millions of dollars in the idea. But those ventures tend to pick and choose among courses and professors, rather than trying to offer a whole university in one swoop.
At the same time, on campus, universities have begun creating a great many course Web sites. The University of California at Los Angeles creates a site for every undergraduate course. But those are generally only for internal use, and the M.I.T. initiative appears to dwarf even those internal programs.
''I think everybody else besides M.I.T. is in the position of being more cautious,'' and watching to see what Internet strategy works best, said David Brady, vice provost for learning technologies at Stanford University.






Tuesday, September 6, 2011

OPEN LEARNING: MIT Joins Leading Global Universities to Support OpenCourseWare's Future

Universities pledge funds to support OpenCourseWare Consortium




CAMBRIDGE, Mass., USA- MIT joins a core group of leaders in the OpenCourseWare community to collectively pledge US $350,000 over the next five years to support the OpenCourseWare Consortium, the non-profit association of global OpenCourseWare publishers. Other members will pay annual dues of US $50 to $500 dollars to ensure the Consortium has the funding necessary to catalyze the development and use of OpenCourseWare content worldwide.
This furthers MIT's substantial commitment to open education and is an investment in the effort to create a shared body of open educational resources that spans cultures and regions. "MIT joins other leading OCW publishers in making a strong statement about the value of OpenCourseWare and the Consortium," said Consortium President Stephen Carson. "Through MIT's contribution, the Consortium will continue to support universities worldwide in publishing their educational materials."
MIT is a recognized leader in the OpenCourseWare community. Launched in 2003, MIT OpenCourseWare shares educational materials from 1,970 of MIT's courses. In total, these materials have received more than 91 million visits from an estimated 65 million visitors. MIT has been a member of the OpenCourseWare Consortium since 2005, and Stephen Carson of the MIT OpenCourseWare staff currently serves of the Consortium's Board of Directors and as the Consortium's first president. MIT OpenCourseWare Executive Director Cecilia d'Oliveira described MIT's reason for supporting the Consortium in this way: "From the start of MIT's OpenCourseWare program, we've not only worked to share MIT's course materials but also helped other schools launch and maintain their own OCW sites. By making this contribution, we are furthering that longstanding commitment."
In addition to MIT, the following universities and organizations have each pledged US $25,000 over the next five years in support of the OpenCourseWare Consortium: China Open Resources for Education (China), Delft University of Technology (the Netherlands), Japan OpenCourseWare Consortium (Japan), Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health (United States), Korea OpenCourseWare Consortium (Korea), Open Universiteit (the Netherlands), Tecnológico de Monterrey (Mexico), Tufts University (United States), Universia.net (Spain), Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (Spain), University of California, Irvine (United States), University of Michigan (United States), and University of the Western Cape (South Africa).
To date the approximately 200 universities of the Consortium have published materials from more than 13,000 courses, available through the Consortium's web site. These materials are freely available on the web as resources to support informal and formal teaching and learning, and have received an estimated 100 million visits from virtually every country and region in the world.

OCW CONSORTIUM PARTNERS WITH LEADING EUROPEAN UNIVERSITIES TO EXPAND THE IMPACT OF OPENCOURSEWARE ON VIRTUAL MOBILITY IN EUROPE

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., (August 22, 2011) – A consortium of leaders in the open education movement has been awarded a grant from the European Union’s Lifelong Learning program. The consortium partners include the OpenCourseWare Consortium, Delft University of Technology (the Netherlands), Universidad Politécnica Madrid (Spain), Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (Belgium), Universitat de Barcelona (Spain), Université de Lyon, VetAgro Sup (France), Creative Commons, and the European Association of Distance Education Universities. The project, entitled “OpenCourseWare (OCW) in the European Higher Education Context: How to make use of its full potential for virtual mobility” will focus on virtual student mobility through the increased use of OCW and the positive role that OCW plays for lifelong learners.

The project will support closer ties between universities through the use and production of OpenCourseWare, encouraging mutual use of materials among institutions. It will also create a European OCW network that will support open exchange of educational materials, quality assurance and sharing best practices. Increased availability of high-quality online materials with support for their use from the network should result in higher usage of online courses, and support greater virtual student mobility. This network of institutions across Europe can lay the groundwork for other types of collaboration in line with the aims of the European Union’s Erasmus programme.
“OpenCourseWare provides free access to many high quality courses from different European universities, accessible to enrolled students as well as lifelong learners”, said Drs. Anka Mulder, secretary general of Delft University of Technology and president of the OpenCourseWare Consortium’s board of directors. “Having free and open access to such rich educational material provides insight not only into the subject matter, but also the pedagogy and cultural underpinnings that inform it. Promotion of the benefits of OpenCourseWare in European higher education can stimulate cross-cultural understanding through virtual means. These efforts will be greatly enhanced by the expertise brought by the OpenCourseWare Consortium.”
Goals for the project include improving the infrastructure that will make the OCW network possible, including quality control, legal considerations, promotion, and joint development of OCW. Partners will also develop models for sustainable cooperation between institutions to ensure the ongoing benefits of the project. “The European OCW network has the potential to raise the importance of OCW in higher education very quickly”, said Mary Lou Forward, executive director of the OCW Consortium. “We are thrilled that the European Union has provided grant funding to support these efforts.”

OpenCourseWare Websites

Group by: Language  |  Institution Name  |  Country

Sites Grouped by Language

    Arabic

    Institutions of Higher Education

    Catalan

      Institutions of Higher Education

      Chinese - Simplified

        Associate Consortia

        Chinese - Traditional

          Institutions of Higher Education

          Dutch

            Institutions of Higher Education

            English

              Institutions of Higher Education

              Associate Consortia

              Organizational Members

              French

                Institutions of Higher Education

                Associate Consortia

                Galician

                  Institutions of Higher Education

                  German

                    Institutions of Higher Education

                    Hebrew

                      Institutions of Higher Education

                      Indonesian

                        Institutions of Higher Education

                        Japanese

                          Institutions of Higher Education

                          Organizational Members

                          Korean

                            Institutions of Higher Education

                            Organizational Members

                            Persian

                              Organizational Members

                              Polish

                                Institutions of Higher Education

                                Portuguese

                                  Institutions of Higher Education

                                  Associate Consortia

                                  Russian

                                    Institutions of Higher Education

                                    Organizational Members

                                    Spanish

                                      Institutions of Higher Education

                                      Organizational Members

                                      Turkish

                                        Institutions of Higher Education