An Open Education Reader
An Open Education Reader
Cover
I. Intellectual Property
1. James Boyle, “The Why of Intellectual Property”
2. James Boyle, “Thomas Jefferson Writes a Letter”
II. Free Software
3. Richard Stallman, “What is Free Software?”
4. Richard Stallman, “The GNU Project”
III. Open Source
5. Eric Raymond, “The Cathedral and the Bazaar”
6. Eric Raymond, “Homesteading the Noosphere”
IV. Open Content
7. David Wiley, “About the Open Publication License”
8. David Wiley, “Open Content: The First Decade”
V. Defining Free
9. Franklin D. Roosevelt, “The Four Freedoms Speech”
10. Richard Stallman, “Four Freedoms”
11. Erik Moller, “Freedom Defined”
12. Bruce Perens, “Debian Free Software Guidelines”
VI. Defining Open
13. Bruce Perens, “The Open Source Definition”
14. David Wiley, “Open Content”
15. OKFN, “Open Definition”
16. David Wiley, “The Access Compromise and the 5th R”
17. David Wiley, “Open Definitions, Specificity, and Avoiding Bright Lines”
VII. Open Source Software Licenses
18. GNU General Public License
19. BSD License
20. MIT License
21. Apache License
22. Comparison of Open Source Licenses
VIII. Open Content Licenses
23. Creative Commons Licenses
24. GNU Free Documentation License
25. Open Publication License
IX. Open CourseWare
26. Charles Vest, “Disturbing the Educational Universe: Universities in the Digital Age — Dinosaurs or Prometheans?”
27. History of MIT OCW
28. MIT OCW Evaluation Report (2005)
29. MIT Reaches OCW Milestone
30. David Wiley, “OpenCourseWars”
X. Open Educational Resources
31. UNESCO Forum on the Impact of Open Courseware for Higher Education in Developing
32. Cape Town Open Education Declaration
33. UNESCO, “2012 Paris OER Declaration”
34. Wiley, Bliss, and McEwen, “Open Educational Resources: OER Literature Review”
35. Boston Consulting Group, “Open Educational Resources: The OER Ecosystem”
XI. Open Textbooks
36. Nicole Allen, “Open Textbooks: A Cover to Cover Solution: How Open Textbooks are the Path to Affordability”
37. Frydenberg and Matkin, “Open Textbooks: Why? What? How? When?”
XII. Research in Open Education
38. OER Research Hub
39. Open Education Group
40. Marshall Smith, “Ruminations on Research on OER”
XIII. The Economics of Open
41. Yochai Benkler, “Coases Penguin, or Linux and The Nature of the Firm”
42. Yochai Benkler, “Common Wisdom: Peer Production of Educational Materials”
43. Yochai Benkler, “‘Sharing Nicely’: On shareable goods and the emergence of sharing as a modality of economic production”
XIV. Open Business Models
44. Eric Raymond, “The Magic Cauldron”
45. OSI, “Open Source Case for Business”
46. Various, “A Summer 2014 Conversation on Business Models in Open Education”
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Abstracts
Intellectual Property
James Boyle, “The Why of Intellectual Property”
James Boyle, “Thomas Jefferson Writes a Letter”
Free Software
Richard Stallman, “What is Free Software?”
Richard Stallman, “The GNU Project”
Open Source
Eric Raymond, “The Cathedral and the Bazaar”
Eric Raymond, “Homesteading the Noosphere”
Open Content
David Wiley, “About the Open Publication License”
David Wiley, “Open Content: The First Decade”
Defining Free
Franklin D. Roosevelt, “The Four Freedoms Speech”
Richard Stallman, “Four Freedoms”
Erik Moller, “Freedom Defined”
Bruce Perens, “Debian Free Software Guidelines”
Defining Open
Bruce Perens, “The Open Source Definition”
David Wiley, “Open Content”
OKFN, “Open Definition”
David Wiley, “The Access Compromise and the 5th R”
David Wiley, “Open Definitions, Specificity, and Avoiding Bright Lines”
Open Source Software Licenses
GNU General Public License
BSD License
MIT License
Apache License
Comparison of Open Source Licenses
Open Content Licenses
Creative Commons Licenses
GNU Free Documentation License
Open Publication License
Open CourseWare
Charles Vest, “Disturbing the Educational Universe: Universities in the Digital Age — Dinosaurs or Prometheans?”
History of MIT OCW
MIT OCW Evaluation Report (2005)
MIT Reaches OCW Milestone
David Wiley, “OpenCourseWars”
Open Educational Resources
UNESCO Forum on the Impact of Open Courseware for Higher Education in Developing
Cape Town Open Education Declaration
UNESCO, “2012 Paris OER Declaration”
Wiley, Bliss, and McEwen, “Open Educational Resources: OER Literature Review”
Boston Consulting Group, “Open Educational Resources: The OER Ecosystem”
Open Textbooks
Nicole Allen, “Open Textbooks: A Cover to Cover Solution: How Open Textbooks are the Path to Affordability”
Frydenberg and Matkin, “Open Textbooks: Why? What? How? When?”
Research in Open Education
OER Research Hub
Open Education Group
Marshall Smith, “Ruminations on Research on OER”
The Economics of Open
Yochai Benkler, “Coases Penguin, or Linux and The Nature of the Firm”
Yochai Benkler, “Common Wisdom: Peer Production of Educational Materials”
Yochai Benkler, “‘Sharing Nicely’: On shareable goods and the emergence of sharing as a modality of economic production”
Open Business Models
Eric Raymond, “The Magic Cauldron”
OSI, “Open Source Case for Business”
Various, “A Summer 2014 Conversation on Business Models in Open Education”