U.S. Department of Labor and Department of Education commit $2 billion to create open educational resources for community colleges and career training; CC BY required for grant outputs http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/26100
grande vitoria dos REA nos EUA!
Carol
Vitória para o mundo!
Pelo menos poderemos traduzir. Já não fazemos muito mais que isso em alguns campos, mesmo. rs
Abraço!
Tom
Em 20 de janeiro de 2011 21:00, Carolina Rossini carolrossiniatwiki@gmail.com escreveu:
U.S. Department of Labor and Department of Education commit $2 billion to create open educational resources for community colleges and career training; CC BY required for grant outputs http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/26100
grande vitoria dos REA nos EUA! Carol _______________________________________________ WikimediaBR-l mailing list WikimediaBR-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimediabr-l
Parece que as notícias não são tão positivas assim. Um programa de 12 bi para community colleges virou 2 bi (em 4 anos). Destes 500 mi por ano, não se sabe quanto vai ser gasto em material didático.
Sim, é relevante que o governo demanda CC-BY, mas é relevante sobretudo do ponto de vista simbólico.
Ewout
http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/2-billion-federal-program-could-be-wi...
"How dramatically is unclear. Creative Commons fanned excitement online with a blog post headlined, “U.S. Department of Labor and Department of Education commit $2-billion to create open educational resources for community colleges and career training.” And Dave Cormier, a proponent of open education based at the University of Prince Edward Island, seized on that story to argue that the money “could end the textbook industry as we know it.”
But when The Chronicle forwarded the Creative Commons story to Sara Gast, a spokeswoman for the Education Department, she doused a little cold water on all the excitement. “The headline is inaccurate,” she said in an e-mail. “But at this point, as the solicitation phase is just beginning, we don’t know how much of the $2B (or even $500-million in the first year) will be spent on open educational resources.”
2011/1/20 Carolina Rossini carolrossiniatwiki@gmail.com:
U.S. Department of Labor and Department of Education commit $2 billion to create open educational resources for community colleges and career training; CC BY required for grant outputs http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/26100
grande vitoria dos REA nos EUA! Carol _______________________________________________ WikimediaBR-l mailing list WikimediaBR-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimediabr-l
Ewout....
essas noticias sao otimas!
os EUA estao tao em crise, que isso eh uma vitoria. Tem estado aqui, como California e Texas, que estao estudando a legislacao de "falencias" para saber se o estado pode pedir falencia.
O Texas esta pensando em cortar a 12a serie das escolas, e a CA grande parte do sistema de transporte publico.
Entao se entendermos o tamanho da crise que occorre neste pais, isso eh MUITO bom!
bjs
2011/1/23 Ewout ter Haar ewout@usp.br
Parece que as notícias não são tão positivas assim. Um programa de 12 bi para community colleges virou 2 bi (em 4 anos). Destes 500 mi por ano, não se sabe quanto vai ser gasto em material didático.
Sim, é relevante que o governo demanda CC-BY, mas é relevante sobretudo do ponto de vista simbólico.
Ewout
http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/2-billion-federal-program-could-be-wi...
"How dramatically is unclear. Creative Commons fanned excitement online with a blog post headlined, “U.S. Department of Labor and Department of Education commit $2-billion to create open educational resources for community colleges and career training.” And Dave Cormier, a proponent of open education based at the University of Prince Edward Island, seized on that story to argue that the money “could end the textbook industry as we know it.”
But when The Chronicle forwarded the Creative Commons story to Sara Gast, a spokeswoman for the Education Department, she doused a little cold water on all the excitement. “The headline is inaccurate,” she said in an e-mail. “But at this point, as the solicitation phase is just beginning, we don’t know how much of the $2B (or even $500-million in the first year) will be spent on open educational resources.”
2011/1/20 Carolina Rossini carolrossiniatwiki@gmail.com:
U.S. Department of Labor and Department of Education commit $2 billion to create open educational resources for community colleges and career training; CC BY required for grant outputs http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/26100
grande vitoria dos REA nos EUA! Carol _______________________________________________ WikimediaBR-l mailing list WikimediaBR-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimediabr-l
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