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Comparing OER Repositories Part 3 - Writing Diagnostics
Our previous Comparing OER Repositories post explored how to find basic economic video lectures. There was a clear best option: Khan Academy, whose focus on video lectures made it the easy winner. With this post, we are going to run a similar series of tests, looking for thorough and extensive libraries, finding resources at college level (not just K-12), making sure that resources are reviewed. To get a sense of what’s available and where to find it, we will write a series of posts combing through four different OER repositories – OER Commons, Khan Academy, Connexions, and FREE – looking for three very different sets of material and evaluate the results as well as ease of use.
1) Interactive materials for chemistry students reviewing volume-related concepts
2) Video lectures on introductory economic concepts
3) English grammar and style exercises that faculty can use to evaluate and target students’ specific writing issues

after decades of research, henrietta lacks family is asked for consent
strong feeling that this news needs to be entered into our course archive:
A Family Consents to a Medical Gift, 62 Years Later

Working with Economic Data: Valuing the Environment
5/2: Added link to Moodle for the Final Memorandum
ECON 136: Working with Economic Data: Valuing the Environment
I change my office hours each week (I try to post Friday afternoon), if none of those hours work for you, please email with all the times that might work for you.

More Trees
4.
Here is a tree that is her horse away
from home; it carries her a way from her
home pain,this roaning out gelding, bay.
Sitting at sixteen two hands; she is higher,
safer from ants and students alike. She
is resting with her horse before the course.
She must be quiet and still for the tree
like a horse can sleep standing up, an old horse
can turn into one of the trees dotting the field.
She doesn’t stand on the second branch, it is sway
-backed, so she won’t pain the animal that way.
She is tender towards the tree, and he still yields
in a rustling of leaves and legs, he comes
to love; he wants to be her treehouse, horse, home.

Re-return field trip to Center for Environmental Transformation, Camden, NJ

Sharing Your Content
Many of our recent posts have focused on how to find and curate resources available in OER repositories that have been created by other users and institutions. However, sometimes you already have the material you need -- either you’ve created born-digital or digital-ready content, or you have traditional content you want to turn into a blended resource. In either case, your content needs a host, particularly if you want that material to be shared with other potential users. This post will compare the options to create and host content from various repositories and suggest which sites are best suited to various types of material. While there are any number of ways to create and share your educational content online, we will tackle them a few at a time. This post will start by comparing three - Connexions, MERLOT, and Molecular Workbench.

Creating Your Own Collections: HippoCampus
The wealth of available educational resources can be overwhelming and difficult to navigate. Sites which currate these resources all have some built-in mechanism for sorting -- by subject matter, level of difficulty, source, etc. However, these pre-packaged collections are no replacement for currating your own prefered resources and materials into sets that correspond to your interests and courses. This series of posts will provide tutorials on how to create your own collections from sites which offer currated resource lists. Collections in HippoCampus are called "Playlists," which reflects the extremely multi-media focus of HippoCampus's materials.
Creating a collection of resources on HippoCampus, as on most sites, requires you to create an account. Because HippoCampus is, in part, targeting individual learners, the sign-up process is quick and not very demanding. As soon as your account is saved, you’re ready to start creating a collection, which HippoCampus refers to as a “Playlist.” Once you create an account, you will find yourself as your own HippoCampus homepage. This page doesn’t look much different from the public homepage, though it does provide you with a link you can use to link directly to your account page from, for example, a course page. For our test playlist, we will make a playlist for an introductory level creative writing class.