- Improving on the Collection of PLE Diagrams
- What I learned at WordCamp Victoria
- Sharing, not just planning to share - Crowdsourcing OER Search for Africa
- How to participate in the Open Ed conference even if you can’t get to Vancouver
- My Comment to CNIE on the Canadian Copyright Consultation process
- 3 Travel Scholarships Available for Open Ed & Other Various Conf News
- Sharing your PLE just got a little bit easier
- The Open Educator as DJ / TTIX reflections
- xtimeline - Explore and Create Free Timelines
- August in Vancouver? Hmmm… Open Education 2009 Call for Papers
- The Post That Never Was - Things I learned at Northern Voice 2009
- LMS Usage Transparency
- Delicious Subject Guides: Maintaining Subject Guides Using a Social Bookmarking Site
- Sni.ps Attribution Tool
- All Major Canadian ISPs Slow Down P2P Traffic (and why you should care)
- Video Hosting Solutions and The Challenges of Being Not-American
- 3 week SCoPE Seminar on OER
- Using Google Maps Image Viewer to Post Large Images without Resizing
- Wordpress for Education Camp - Vancouver version
- Introducing…The Nessie Awards!
- Creating a Distributed Network Learning FAQ
- Translating “Networked student” - dotSUB, OER Localization and Language Learning Opportunities
- educamp Colombia & Becoming a Network Learner
- Looking for best practices on password recovery
- Planning to Share versus Just Sharing
Sharing, not just planning to share - Crowdsourcing OER Search for Africa
Friday, August 14, 2009http://twitter.com/findanoerafrica/
I am hoping that Dave Cormier will write this up fully, as it was his idea for which he deserves full credit, but the eleganceand simplicity of it, coupled with the real need it hopes to serve, compelled me to post something right away in hopes of helping it get going.
As I understand it, after Catherine Ngugi’s powerful opening keynote at Open Education ‘09, Dave spent some time chatting with Catherine, in which he came to learn that there was a person tasked with locating useful open resources for faculty but that this was an overwhelming task. Dave, being Dave, immediately saw the potential for our existing networks to pitch in, sharing as we already do, and set about creating a twitter account, findanoerafrica to send out requests to the community for help finding appropriate resources. The idea was hatched on Wednesday and announced this Friday morning.
Only time will tell if it works and how effect it is. You can help, really easily. If you use twitter, then follow findanoerafrica and basically respond in the helpful way you already do. The difference being you’ll be helping someone who is in turn supporting hundreds of educators. The beauty - it isn’t asking you to do anything you’re not already doing, and the cost was essentially zero. Obviously, this is not going to solve all the worlds ills, but it’s one of those little steps to maybe make it better than it was. Dave - your energy and enthusiasm are both infectious and inspiring. Getting to hang with you this week in Vancouver has definitely been one of the highlights for me. - SWL
...Original article from http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Edtechpost/~3/Xy6QaH_3v-k/