How valuable are Federally funded educational resources? - World leading higher education information and services

abernard102@gmail.com 2015-08-08

Summary:

"How valuable are IT job training materials developed by a community college in Texas? Or lesson plans developed by the National Audubon Society in New York, designed to integrate computer-based mapping skills with traditional learning objectives? What about English language learning programs administered through American Consulates abroad? Individually, each of these investments provide tremendous value for the principal populations they are serving: those future IT professionals in Texas, the next generation of mapping experts growing up in New York, or prospective English language speakers around the globe. And these examples capture only a small fraction of the billions spent each year by the federal government—primarily through grants, contracts, and other cooperative agreements—to create educational resources spanning myriad grade levels, disciplines, and languages. But while public dollars have been expended to develop these resources, their value is often limited to those primary populations they were developed to serve. In today’s digitally connected world, where educational resources can be made easily available online, public investments in these materials can, and should, have a much wider impact. Today, a few initiatives and programs funded by individual government agencies have taken steps in this direction. Take, for instance, those IT job training materials developed in Texas. They are presently in development by a consortium led by Collin County Community College District in Frisco, Texas, being developed to decrease the cost of specialized textbooks, lab exercises, and other resources students need for their coursework. The funding, made available through a recent grant program administered by the U.S. Departments of Labor and Education, was accompanied by a requirement that any new educational materials produced were made freely available online. With this new requirement, these training materials—including curriculum, courses, and online virtual labs—benefit more than just those students in Frisco. Community college students studying IT across the country (and learners across the globe, for that matter) can benefit as well. While this particular grant program—which just wrapped up its last round of funding—required materials with educational value to be made publicly available, that kind of requirement is nowhere near universal ..."

Link:

http://world.edu/how-valuable-are-federally-funded-educational-resources/

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.comment oa.usa oa.funders oa.education oa.oer oa.mandates oa.universities oa.colleges oa.hei oa.policies

Date tagged:

08/08/2015, 15:45

Date published:

08/08/2015, 11:45