With more than 8 million users from nearly 200 different countries, Curriki has been a vibrant place to create, share, and
find open educational resources (OERs) since 2006.
Not exact matches
Today's «day in the life» post is one of my current job, which focuses heavily on supporting my fellow faculty
find and use
open educational resources (an
educational movement to help bring down student costs by using or creating free and high - quality texts and
resources instead of expensive textbooks).
But the growing reliance on
open educational resources raises questions — who will produce them, how will they be compensated, how will educators be able to
find the best ones, and how will all this affect the market for textbooks?
At the Over 1000 Free eLearning
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Happily, our teachers, librarians, and teaching and learning specialists have
found a wealth of excellent materials through
open educational resources, also known as OER (Marcinek, 2013).
In our district, school librarians are the experts in
finding and evaluating
open educational resources — and helping teachers learn to do so as well.
So much of the «
open educational resources» movement and the drive to aggregate and mash up these
resources is being driven by a «print on demand» philosophy that to
find a textbook creator sensitive to the future of mobile reading, its cost efficiencies, and its convenience, is a real pleasure.