Here’s a short presentation on some of the best sources for open-licensed clip art, photos, sound effects, music, and video that I did for our P2PU course on OER in the classroom. [iframe: src=”http://player.vimeo.com/video/31256209?title=0&byline=0&portrait=0″ width=”400″ height=”265″ frameborder=”0″ webkitAllowFullScreen allowFullScreen]
Free, open early literacy passages
FreeReading is a great site for all kinds of early literacy resources. One of my favorite parts is the decodable reading passages. Unfortunately, to date, these have only been available as pdf files. Pdfs are good for printing, but not
Part 1-Participation, course length, and readings (or “Don’t people read anymore?”)
We are approaching the mid-point of the first few P2PU School of Ed courses, and I’ve been reflecting a lot on the experience so far, but not writing much so here goes. A lot of good things are happening. We
Letter to the OER community
Dear open educational resources (OER) community and anyone who cares about “open”: The term “open” is losing all meaning. It is becoming an empty marketing term like “green” or “natural.” In the last week, I have seen all manner of
P2PU webinars
Here are streaming versions of the last two P2PU School of Ed webinars (using BigBlueButton — free, open source webinar software). Great stuff! Stay tuned for more Tuesday webinars on online learning and OER. Teaching in Blended and Online Classrooms