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38 Community Colleges Launch Entire Degree Programs With Open Educational Resources (washingtonpost.com)

Danielle Douglas-Gabriel, writing for The Washington Post: A community college reform group has selected a handful of schools in Virginia and Maryland to develop degree programs using open-source materials in place of textbooks, an initiative that could save students as much as $1,300 a year (could be paywalled; alternate source). Such open educational resources -- created using open licenses that let students download or print materials for free -- have gained popularity as the price of print textbooks have skyrocketed, but courses that use the materials remain a novelty in higher education. Achieving the Dream, an education advocacy groups based in Silver Spring, Md., aims to change that by offering $9.8 million in grants to support the development of open-source degree programs at 38 colleges in 13 states.

3 of 48 comments (clear)

  1. Use better textbooks by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm trying to sort out books that cover all the material in fewer pages, lower book cost, and appreciable organization. I'm finding that some books for things like programming language design or computer science cost $20 or $50 and have clearer, more concise explanations than 1,000-page McGraw Hill tomes that cost $348.

    ...I don't care to study compsci in college; I dropped out. I'm looking at my local college's curriculum and syllabus for each class, snagging my own books, and self-studying. This may be more or less efficient (I can *certainly* learn 4 years of material in 6 months's time; however some of these courses have a discussion format, which I can only approximate by myself, and so some insights will grind in a lot less smoothly). Mathematics is also a lot harder to self-teach in a high-quality manner; most material is college text and, as mentioned above, most college textbooks are hunks of shit.

    Education incurs cognitive load. Bad education curriculum and bad materials increase cognitive load. Good study strategies decrease cognitive load. Approaching material using strong study methods--Cornell notes, SQW4R/OK4R study methods, self-testing, group discussion--increases the rate of learning and memorization while reducing cognitive load. Using better material decreases the cognitive load incurred by using those study methods (or not using any study methods). With better study strategies, better material, or both, education is faster and more successful.

  2. Re:Fat pigs by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 2

    Why should we shovel loads of cash into the pockets of greedy publishers!

    FTFY - College bookstores don't make that much in textbook profits, which is why half the floor space is for sweaters, knickknacks and other items that have better profit margins.

  3. Since you're learning it anyway and don't have by raymorris · · Score: 2

    Since you are learning the material anyway, and don't have a college degree, have a look at Western Governors' University. For most courses, you only need to pass a test to complete the class, and where applicable they are industry certification tests. For example, I'm currently doing a networking course which consists of passing the Cisco CCNA .

    You can study as much as you want before enrolling and paying the (low) tuition. It's a really good setup for people who like self-study. They ALSO include study materials included with the tuition, such as Cisco ebooks and the Cisco simulator for the networking class. You end up knowing the material, having a degree, AND having a stack of industry certifications.