You may be thinking about launching an open education project at your own university, and wondering how you build local expertise in open education issues. The answer: Open courses, of course.
A longtime collaborator with MIT OpenCourseWare through the OCW Consortium, P2PU is now offering a wide range of courses on open content issues through its new School of Open.
The School of Open is a community of volunteers developing and running online courses on the meaning and impact of “openness” in the digital age and its benefit to creative endeavors, education, research, and beyond. To be notified when courses launch, sign up for School of Open announcements.
Facilitated courses
Facilitated courses run for a set period of weeks after sign-up. Four courses are open for sign-up as of March 11. They are:
- Copyright 4 Educators (Aus) – A course for educators in Australia who want to learn about copyright, open content and licensing.
- Copyright 4 Educators (US) – A course for educators in the US who want to learn about copyright law.
- Creative Commons for K-12 Educators – A course for elementary educators who want to find and adapt free resources for their classes, and incorporate activities that teach their students digital world skills.
- Writing Wikipedia Articles: The Basics and Beyond – A course on how to edit Wikipedia articles, focusing on articles covering the open educational resources (OER) movement.
Stand-alone courses
Ten new courses are ready to be taken at any time independently after March 11. They are:
- A Look at Open Video – An overview of open video for students interested in developing software, video journalists, editors and all users of video who want to take their knowledge further.
- Open up your institution’s data – A course for GLAM (Galleries, Libraries, Archives, Museums) professionals interested in opening up their institution’s data.
- Contributing to Wikimedia Commons – A course to get you acquainted with uploading your works to the commons – a repository of openly licensed images from all over the world.
- dScribe: Peer-produced Open Educational Resources – A course where you can learn the ins and outs of building OER together with your peers.
- Open Science: An Introduction – A course for both seasoned and new researchers who want to learn what makes science “open”, how they can find/use/build on open scientific works, and share their contributions back to the commons.
- Open Detective – This course will explore the scale of open to non-open content and how to tell the difference.
- How to run an “open” workshop – A course to prepare people for the delivery of workshops on Free Culture, Openness and related topics in informal spaces.
- Get a CC license. Put it on your website – A simple break-down of how to apply the CC license of your choice to your website so that it aligns with marking and metadata best practices.
- Open habits: making with the DS106 Daily Create – An hour-long challenge about building openness into your daily routine.
- Teachingcopyright.org (in Spanish) – A Spanish language course based on EFF’s http://teachingcopyright.org.