Post Tagged with: "open access"

Why Is There No Canadian MIT?

My weekly technology law column (Toronto Star version, homepage version) highlights the remarkable accomplishments on the MIT Open Courseware initiative, which today features nearly every course offered by the Institute – about 1800 in all.  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.

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.  I argue that the Open Courseware initiative 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. 

Read more ›

January 14, 2008 19 comments Columns

Why Is There No Canadian MIT?

Appeared in the Toronto Star on January 14, 2008 as Our Universities Could Learn Plenty from MIT 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 […]

Read more ›

January 14, 2008 2 comments Columns Archive

Cellphone Spectrum Set-Aside Simply Step One

Appeared in the Toronto Star on December 3, 2007 as Cellphone Spectrum Auction Only First Step Following months of intense telecom lobbying, Industry Minister Jim Prentice took to the podium last week at a Toronto hotel and unveiled the government's policy on the forthcoming spectrum auction.  Dismissing misleading claims of […]

Read more ›

December 3, 2007 3 comments Columns Archive

Public.Resource.Org Makes Available 1.8 Million Legal Decisions

Public.Resource.Org and Fastcase have announced that they will release a large and free archive of U.S. federal case law, including all Courts of Appeals decisions from 1950 to the present and all Supreme Court decisions since 1754. The archive will be public domain and usable by anyone for any purpose.

Read more ›

November 15, 2007 Comments are Disabled News

Canada’s Digital Info Strategy Stuck in an Analog World

Appeared in the Toronto Star on November 12, 2007 as Digitization Strategy Stuck in a Time Warp Appeared in the Ottawa Citizen on November 13, 2007 as Canada Has To Move Its Digital Strategy out of the Analog World Appeared in the Thyee on November 13, 2007 as Digitize Our […]

Read more ›

November 13, 2007 Comments are Disabled Columns Archive