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Difference between revisions of "OpenCourseWare"

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m (Stanford: not all free)
(Stanford: +1 and more info)
 
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===Stanford===
 
===Stanford===
 
*[http://online.stanford.edu/programs A complete list of Stanford's online programs] (not all of these are free)
 
*[http://online.stanford.edu/programs A complete list of Stanford's online programs] (not all of these are free)
*[http://online.stanford.edu/ Stanford Online]
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*[http://online.stanford.edu/ Stanford Online] - an aggregator of Stanford MOOCs and other online courses, as above, it may include links to some programs that are not free
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*[http://class2go.stanford.edu/ Class2Go] - Home of the famous Introduction to Databases course
 
*[http://venture-lab.org/ Venture-lab]
 
*[http://venture-lab.org/ Venture-lab]
  

Latest revision as of 16:00, 3 March 2013

OpenCourseWare, or OCW, are courses, generally college courses, published on the internet for free. The concept has existed since the late 90's when a German university published some of its lectures online. In 2002, MIT followed suit. Many of these, particularly MIT's current offerings are simply lecture notes or recordings of lectures, sometimes augmented with handouts, exercises (sometimes without solutions), quizzes/exams (usually without solutions), etc. Others involve a set of lectures designed for the web, known as massive open online course, or MOOCs. MOOCs are generally more synchronous, students sign up (though they can do so fairly anonymously), and instructors are more directly involved, though the number of students may be in the tens of thousands. Technically, MOOCs and OCW are overlapping sets. Many OCW courses are neither designed for the web nor do they involve any support, at the same time, a MOOC need not be freely available for reuse (openly licensed/copyleft) and need not be free (gratis). Together they form a major group of open educational resource.

A list of some of these resources follows, this list will be updated from time-to-time:

Aggregators

Individual schools

Stanford

MIT


OpenCollege Programs

These are similar programs but not provided under the auspices of an accredited institution (caveat emptor)

Non-University Programs

mostly web dev courses