Open Educational Resources

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A community focused on sharing and talking about free/libre/copyleft/public domain resources for educational use. Resources may include things like textbooks, audiobooks, web apps, apps and more.

Rules:

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
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Welcome to c/open_e_resources,

This community, which is not affiliated with UNESCO's OER btw, was created so that anyone may share educational resources that are open, libre and free by nature.

Quality education shouldn't need to be expensive, locked behind paywalls and proprietary licenses, so let's unlock those gates together.

The 5R principles below are used as our metric for the resources we search for:

  • Retain - make, own, and control a copy of the resource (e.g., download and keep your own copy)
  • Revise - edit, adapt, and modify your copy of the resource (e.g., translate into another language)
  • Remix - combine your original or revised copy of the resource with other existing material to create something new (e.g., make a mashup)
  • Reuse - use your original, revised, or remixed copy of the resource publicly (e.g., on a website, in a presentation, in a class)
  • Redistribute - share copies of your original, revised, or remixed copy of the resource with others (e.g., post a copy online or give one to a friend)

(excerpt taken from opencontent.org)

When finding a resource, make sure to list the license/nature of the resource and anti-features, similar to how F-Droid does it.

If there's any question or anything you'd like to see improved/changed, let me know. I'm also looking for mods (no criteria).

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LibGuide page from William Paterson University provides information on reliable web resources for the course COMM2240 International Media. The page focuses on websites but also mentions that the Statista database contains information on social media usage worldwide, providing charts and data.

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Some resources: The best practice resource is the practice tests released by the college board and Khan Academy material here: https://www.khanacademy.org/test-prep/digital-sat But the number of those questions is limited and some of them are not really on par with official ones.

The practice tests at: https://www.digitalsatexam.com/ are closer to official test questions.

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I highly recommend this site for Math & Science homework for Middle School - University. The source code can be found on GitHub: https://github.com/drlippman/IMathAS. MyOpenMath has over 1.1 million questions written for it by teachers and professors and you can contribute as well.

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by the_tech_beast@lemmy.ml to c/open_e_resources@lemmy.ml
 
 

This course teaches students how to think algorithmically and solve problems efficiently. Topics include abstraction, algorithms, data structures, encapsulation, resource management, security, software engineering, and web programming. Languages include C, Python, and SQL plus HTML, CSS, and JavaScript.

License: This course is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) license. This is a human-readable summary of (and not a substitute for) the license. Official translations of this license are available in other languages.

  • You can download the videos, notes, slides easily as well.

For more information on the license: https://cs50.harvard.edu/x/2021/license/

Teachers: David J. Malan & Brian Yu

Anti-Features

  • I think the only anti feature is that the university uses Zoom for their live seminars and Q & A. For more information.

  • Yes, anyone on the internet can participate in these seminars. For more information: https://cs50.harvard.edu/x/2021/zoom/#seminars . If you can't participate, the videos will be available on their youtube channel.

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PeerLibrary is an open source project for researchers and academic knowledge-seekers to read and discuss scholarly literature.

Source code: https://github.com/peerlibrary/peerlibrary

License(s): CC0 (Public Domain)

Anti-features:

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A collection of online calculus textbooks written for and by UBC students, includes differential integral, multivariable and vector calculus (or in standard terms, Calculus 1 to 4). Very useful even for non-UBC students.

The resource was originally posted in the Math Humor community by @AgreeableLandscape@lemmy.ml . Ty for the post!

License(s): CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

Anti-features:

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Lumi is a desktop app that allows you to create, edit, view and share interactive content with dozens of different content types. It's free and open source.

Easy to use

You don't need any programming knowledge to create engaging interactive content with Lumi!

Quick preview

Check your changes without saving by switching to the preview.

Runs standalone

Lumi runs as a desktop program on your computer. No need for a LMS like Moodle or a CMS like WordPress.

Free and Open Source

Lumi is licensed under the GNU Affero General Public License 3.0 and completely free. You can use content created with it in any way you like.

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Today when talking on discord someone mentioned their approval for Khan Academy, stating that it was what allowed them to pass their class. I have too consulted Khan Academy on a few occasions, and I thought the teaching was well done. I believe education is a human right, and I thought I would see what I could do to contribute. I was alarmed to discover the lack of ways to do so.

I voiced my thoughts in a brief way in discord, and was quickly attacked by nearly everyone there. People seem to all love khan, holding it as the savior of education, and in some way's, it is. Khan was the first platform I could find to offer easily accessible k-12-beyond learning for anyone, for free. It provides a central place with "trusted" content, but ultimately khan academy solves no issues in our education system, while getting all the support of the internet.

I write this "rant" to be the first person on the internet to say khan is not so great.

A dictatorship

There is no public information on khan academies power structure, aside from the fact that it has executives. There is no way to vote in leaders, and no real way to hold them accountable other than abstaining from donation. This leads to near unlimited power. Sal has networth in the millions alone, and due to its dictatorship structure a hostile takeover to broadcast information on a "trusted" site like khan is possible - as we saw in freenode. This power structure ultimately leaves not only the people but the teachers powerless, leaving for issues like the traditional school board.

Closed source

I don't give a shit about the website source code, but the curriculum is pretty close to closed source. This means if misinformation is spread on the site, we are unable to easily maintain a "correct" mirror. If the site goes down, so does the learning. For similar issues, offline users in low income countries especially are barred.

While khan material is under CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 US, it's near impossible to effectively copy without using web crawlers.

Closed doors

Finally, Khan contributors are always employees. This means we are relient on bug reports to fix issues, and who knows when or if it will be fixed. Additionally, raised issues are viewable only to khan staff removing even more accountability.

Want to write more new content for khan for free because you love learning? You can't without giving up your job for a paid position.

Uncited

I struggled to find citations for anything asserted on their site. This is especially needed in the sciences and social studies, where misinformation is rampant.

We can do better

I dream of a curriculum where we are free. Free to and easy to clone, redistribute, and to modify. Where there is democratic government, so a hostile takeover is near impossible. Where changes are made in the open so that we hold those that make them more accountable. A curriculum that is modern and interactive, with a smaller focus on lectures.

I don't think this exists today, but for a true radicle education platform something must change, to avoid all the issues we face today with the world's education in an online platform.

At the very least, the world must rid of the "Khan will change the world" mentality.


PS: Sorry if my thoughts are slightly raw, wrote this in a hurry

PPS: These are flaws in khan, but they apply to many other "free" learning platforms. Hell, khan under it's license is "free", but in reality it's far from it. I am yet to find a alternative that really does what needs to be done, although I am hopeful this community is a step in the right direction

This post and all past material written by me that is hosted on lemmy is UNLICENSED. Do as you wish.

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Really nice, interactive illustrations to provide a really nice introduction to linear algebra.

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MIT OpenCourseWare is an online publication of materials from over 2,500 MIT courses, freely sharing knowledge with learners and educators around the world.

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A non-profit, open-source, wiki-style educational platform that incorporates student notes into the currently offered subjects of Computer Science, Math, Physics and Business.

License(s): CC BY-SA 3.0 and GNU FDL 1.2

Anti-features:

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A language-learning platform that includes themed, bite-sized and unlockable lessons, quizzes and a dictionary. Currently offers Bengali, Croatian, Dutch, French, Hawaiian, Japanese, Pandunia and Thai.

License: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

Anti-features:

  • Google Analytics
  • Requires signing-up with an email address (Any throwaway email services will work thankfully).