Welcome to p2pnet.net - The original daily p2p and digital news site. Always First!
REGISTER | LOGIN
Cool Stuff
MPAA News
Games / Consoles
News
Music
Movies
Reviews
Open Source
Mobiles
Advertising
Products
P2P
Off Topic
Freedom
Politics
Interviews
Security
DRM
Links
Kids and Kartels
Scroogle Search: 
Search
 
Web p2pnet   
Search: 
Search
Torrent Site Tracker
    Sponsored by
Frostwire
 
p2pnet
 


mp3rocket
 
Add real-time p2pnet headlines to YOUR site ! Click here to download our newsfeed code

Canada needs an MIT

p2pnet news | Politics:- In 1999, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) faculty gathered to consider how they could use the Internet to advance knowledge and educate students around the world in science and technology. The result was an ambitious plan – make the Institute’s course materials, including syllabi, lecture notes, and exams, freely available online for a global audience.

Two years later, a pilot project called the MIT Open Courseware debuted with 50 courses. A year later, the project formally launched with 500 courses. Today, MIT Open Courseware features nearly every course offered by the Institute – about 1800 in all. While students must still attend MIT to obtain a degree, accessing its courses requires little more than a computer with an Internet connection.

More than 90 percent of MIT’s faculty voluntarily participates in the program, offering not only their course materials, but also hundreds of audio and video podcasts. The courses are published under open licences that encourage users to reuse, redistribute, and modify the materials for noncommercial purposes. The user base includes educators planning their own courses, students using the MIT materials to complement courses at their own institutions, and millions of self-learners who use the materials to enhance their personal knowledge.

MIT Open Courseware attracts over two million visits each month, with more than half of the visitors coming from outside the United States. Videos of science and math lectures have proven particularly popular. For example, the video lectures of Professor Gilbert Strang, who teaches linear algebra, are viewed 200,000 times per month.

What started with just MIT has grown into a consortium of dozens of universities from around the world that has published 5,000 courses in many different languages. China leads the way with 30 universities. In all, 160 universities and colleges from 20 countries, including Japan, Colombia, Vietnam, South Africa, and Saudi Arabia, have committed to publish at least ten courses in open courseware format so that the materials are freely available on a non-commercial basis.

The Open Courseware initiative, which recently branched out to high school materials, is an exciting story of the potential of the Internet, of universities fulfilling their missions as educational leaders, and of the desire of educators around the globe to share their knowledge.

Yet it is also a story in which Canada is largely absent. The sole Canadian participant in the Open Courseware consortium is Capilano College, a relatively small school with 6,700 students located in North Vancouver, British Columbia. The rest of Canadian higher education – Toronto, York, UBC, Western, Alberta, Queen’s, Ottawa, McGill, Dalhousie, Waterloo, and dozens more – are inexplicably missing in action.

While collective agreements may restrict the ability to mandate participation, every Canadian university should be able to identify a handful of professors willing to freely post their course materials so that the ten-course minimum can be met. Indeed, it is an initiative in which everyone benefits – enhanced reputation for the participating professors, name recognition and student recruitment for the institutions, and new access to knowledge for Canadians from coast to coast.

Canadians pride themselves in being one of the world’s most connected countries; however, the failure to lead on issues such the Open Courseware consortium and open access to the results of Canadian research suggests that we are still struggling to identify how to fully leverage the benefits to education of new technology and the Internet. Many of Canada’s top universities may liken themselves to MIT, but the near-total absence of Canada from the Open Courseware consortium suggests that there is still much to learn.

Michael Geist
[Geist is the Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law at the University of Ottawa. He can be reached by email at mgeist[at]uottawa.ca and is on-line at www.michaelgeist.ca.]

SlashdotSlashdot it! Add to Technorati Favorites

Also See:-

Sir Mark Zuckerberg of Beacon – Facebook’s Zuckerberg on 60 Minutes, January 11, 2008
Valleywag – Mark Zuckerberg gets off scot free in "60 Minutes" interview, January 11, 2008


Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. It’s really easy!

Subscribe to p2pnet.net | | rss feed: http://p2pnet.net/p2p.rss | | Mobile – http://p2pnet.net/index-wml.php


Net access blocked by government restrictions? Use Psiphon from the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto. Go here for details. Download here.

HOME

2 Responses to “Canada needs an MIT”

  1. Reader's Write Says:

    We don’t need an MIT
    We need a CIT (Canadian Institute of Technology)

    Lets have some Canadian Pride here guys

  2. Andrey Says:

    MIT principle not MIT itself, AC

Leave a Reply

ONLY items referencing the post at hand, please. No links to personal sites, no personal attacks, trolling, freebie advertising, or off-topic posts. Thanks. And Cheers!

    Sponsored by
tek savvy