Open-Source Early Literacy Materials Gaining Some Attention 73
phooky writes "Although open teaching materials have been available at the university level for a while now, there have been very few materials for younger learners. That's beginning to change now with the advent of Free-Reading, a free, wiki-based resource for early literacy instruction. The availability of free materials could free up millions of dollars from school budgets for more teachers and training. From the USA Today article: 'Last fall, a Florida textbook adoption committee approved Free-Reading, a remediation program for primary-school children that's believed to be the first free, open-source reading program for K-12 public schools. It's awaiting approval by Eric Smith, the state's incoming education commissioner, who could approve it by mid-December. Florida is one of the top five textbook markets in the USA, so its move could lead to the development of other free materials that might someday challenge the dominance of a handful of big educational publishers.'"
My Highschool did something similar (Score:5, Informative)
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We'll soon have a law preventing free learning materials.
I initially misinterpreted your comment by jumping to an idea - what if learning materials were not just free as in beer but free as in speech? If it meant that nobody needs a publisher to produce learning materials, then people with expertise everywhere would be able to publish their works with target audiences being children and teenagers, particularly in the field of history I could well see that being made illegal. No government wants its taxpayers to think any more than absolutely necessary.
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You think most taxpayers don't have access to learning materials already? Most taxpayers don't want to think more than absolutely necessary, that's why we
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What utte
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Who decides what books are read in your school, what history texts are approved for use in classrooms and so forth? It's usually all regulated by the Education Board or equivalent, for the state or country, with their panel of experts and so forth. Call me a tinfoil all you like, but it is evident in English speaking countries that education standards have fallen by various measures (eg: literacy rates) over years, partly, no doubt, due to poor remuneration of teachers. I argue that the drop in standards ha
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After all, the publishers make boat-loads of money getting schools to buy "new" math and reading every few years when elementary education hasn't changed much in a hundred years for those subjects. It also provides a way to put the correct "philosophy" in to the book as it becomes politically appropriate... believe me, the deciding factor for most book purchases is the politics a book with ideas to "radical" or not "politically correct" will get axed no matter how good it's educational value.
Boo
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Right now I attend a community college taking 2 clas
on that subject (Score:2)
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Start a wiki! (Score:2, Redundant)
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Re:Start a wiki! (Score:4, Interesting)
The downloadable flash-cards (Score:3, Funny)
Convert Them and Repost (Score:1, Interesting)
If you share anything do it in ODF, it will help it spread.
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If there is stuff in Word format there, I guess someone is welcome to contribute by converting them to PDF.
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Upload warning
".odt" is not a recommended image file format. Bummer.
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There are free tools to view and print.
Would linux no longer be open source if you found out linus was using Word to edit his code?
It's free. Quit your fucking whining, you ungrateful little bitch.
Idiotic comparison. If you needed Word just to compose the document, then it would be valid. As it is, you need Word to compose and view said document. A better one: suppose Linus used Microsoft's Visual Studio to compile, and required the VS runtimes to run. Would it still be free?
And no, the "free" tools don't cut it. As far as I know, the official viewers are for one platform only, and that's Windows.
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Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Starfall (Score:4, Funny)
Funny - I don't remember being able to use a touchpad when I was five.
Wait - they didn't have touchpads on PC's when I was five.
Wait - they didn't have PC's when I was five...
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Parental involvement is the key and I hope that you continue with your efforts.
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My 19 month old is in the habit of using a stick to transcribe slabs of Homer's Iliad onto the surface of his sandpit. I'm a bit worried about his development though as he keeps on getting the 'a' backwards in Iliad.
Seriously though my 19 month old just enjoys being outside and experiencing the world. My task is to not inhibit his sense of discovery by trying to shoehorn him into my completely corrupted view of what constitutes success and education in this world. The priority isn't to teach him to rea
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I'll be fixing my daughter's PC this morning, just to crank this site up. It seems to be excellent!
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it's about time (Score:2, Insightful)
Yay (Score:2, Interesting)
Florida is one of the top five textbook markets in the USA, so its move could lead to the development of other free materials that might someday challenge the dominance of a handful of big educational publishers.
While I'm not in Florida, I am both a college student and a fan of free learning materials. Having to pay for text books every semester (even if I buy the international editions) hurts. I agree with #21302639 [slashdot.org]; there should be a place somewhere (dmoz, "List of..." article on Wikipedia, a completely separate wiki) to list, maybe even host, all of these resources. Everything from learning to read through higher level, just an all-encompassing (as near as can be attained, of course) collection of these materi
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Ultimately it's up to your professor who often wrote the book, collaborated with the author, or gets a kickback from the publisher.
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Literacy Council (Score:5, Interesting)
Please, please, PLEASE consider volunteering with the Literacy Council. You have enjoyed being able to read for (likely) some time now, and many people lack this ability. LC is a wonderful group. They will pair you with a student that meets your specifications. Young, old, male, female, disability, ESL, you name it. You can truly help people here, and it's such an easy thing to do.
My wife volunteers and is currently assisting an ESL mother-of-two learn to read english. I am in the process of learning to teach younger children. You do not need any prior experience, and LC will provide you with help and instruction to get you and your student started. Location is not an issue. Whether your in downtown San Francisco, or Fairbanks, Alaska, you can help.
Again, PLEASE consider volunteering. You could literally change someone's life.
Literacy Council
http://www.literacycouncil.org/ [literacycouncil.org]
Disclaimer: I am not a Literacy Council representative in any way, I just think you should offer your time and expertise to those who lack the latter.
-G
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-G
ok further offtopic (Score:2)
http://www.freerice.com/ [freerice.com]
Anyone can increase their vocabulary here, at the same time helping to feed some of the worlds poorest people.
so far it's snowballing quite nicely
makes a change from freecell.
it's about time. (Score:2, Interesting)
Next thing they can get rid of (or at least cut back on) is the hideously expensive standardized testing program.
I work for a large textbook company & its a sc (Score:5, Informative)
Most books are on two or three year revision cycles - THIS IS GUARANTEED INCOME. Every three years time to buy another book. Wake up, its a scam to bleed our education system dry. You want to make use of a used book? Fuck you, buddy. You know how we prevent that? We make websites that you HAVE to purchase a code to get into. Professors use the sites to distribute homework and take tests and if you don't subscribe, then you are SOL. The result is everyone needs to buy the damn book every damn semester.
These publishers will do anything and everything to keep the turnover high and used book market dead.
Colleges and university really need to make their intranets more effective and make the textbook publishers work with them. Refuse to pay more than $30 for books and we'll have a much more affordable education system!!
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You didn't say, but I'm assuming you're talking about the college level (TFA was about elementary school), and when you refer to the online homework thing, I assume you're referring to math and science courses. There are tons of free online homework systems out there. I wrote this one [lightandmatter.com], which is open-source, and free for students t
any copyleft teaching aid books in PDF? (Score:3, Interesting)
Open-Source Textbooks (Score:5, Insightful)
The project linked seems to go a different way. My vision was such:
You would have a central company, not a charity, but not for-profit. It would do the things that textbook companies regularly do (or I hope they do), hire experts to write the text books, editors to check everything, a small publishing house, etc.
The difference is that it's all put online. It can be peer-reviewed by thousands, if not millions, and used by anyone. In order to make the company non-reliant on donations, it would be released under a custom license, one that allows reproduction of x pages at a time and unlimited but unedited online disbursal, while the company still sells the textbooks at cost.
The idea is that you would get a textbook that can be referenced by anyone, checked by anyone, and teachers can download updates and corrections without having to buy a whole new damn book. I don't know how well it would work in the long run, but I'd say it's a sight better than the current set up for text books in school.
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This could actually be detrimental, the potential signal-to-noise could result in a large amount of resources to try and maintain the textbook. Somebody submits a correction, it would re
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Of course, it introduces a new problem: Education by popularity, which goes back to your point on contentious material.
I can dig your PhD idea.
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I don't think you need to make up a hypothetical, complicated, national system for writing free textbooks. Lots of free textbooks already exist; see my sig for a catalog with hundreds of examples. Here [lightandmatter.com] is a series of articles I've written about free books, with an emphasis on free textbooks.
The issue of peer review and quality control is a paper tiger, at least at the college level. College professors decide what books to adopt for their courses, and they do it by looking at the book and making a judgment
Holy Shit - I want to be a Superintendent (Score:4, Interesting)
Half the teachers at my high school in Missouri are on food stamps.
Lies My Teacher Told Me (Score:3, Insightful)
RTFM! (Score:1, Funny)
The one time a particular open-source response would be appropriate.
Free == Open Source (Score:1, Insightful)
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Homeschoolers need this (Score:3, Interesting)
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http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Main_Page [wikibooks.org]
The need for Open Source in Education (Score:2)