OSS, Presented at SAC Conferences

Clair Maple Memorial Address: OpenCourseWare and the Emerging Global Meta University

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Clair Maple Memorial Address: OpenCourseWare and the Emerging Global Meta University (ID: SAC0501)
Author(s):Charles M. Vest (MIT)
Origin:Presented at SAC Conferences (08/08/2005)
Type:Presentations/Speeches
Abstract:Global connectivity via the Internet presents many challenges and opportunities for higher education. One major opportunity is the democratizing and empowering force of openly shared educational materials. Reflecting on MIT's experience to date with its OpenCourseWare initiative and related activities, this presentation envisions the rise of a global meta university.

The Clair Maple Memorial Address is the opening plenary session for the Directors Seminar, given in memory of Clair George Maple (1916-1985), one of the founding fathers of SAC. In 1963, Maple became director of the Iowa State Computation Center and served in that position until his death at SAC in 1985. He was a respected and well-loved member of the academic community, both on the Iowa State campus and nationally. Maple served on the EDUCOM board, was elected board chair in 1984, and received its Distinguished Service Award posthumously in 1985. One of his contributions-and perhaps his greatest pleasure-was to serve as a consultant and sounding board to his large circle of computing friends. He loved meeting with us, his many friends and colleagues, at professional meetings. We fondly remember him and carry his advice, counsel, and spirit with us as we continue developing information technologies for higher education.

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To Open Source or Not to Open Source: Strategic Planning

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:To Open Source or Not to Open Source: Strategic Planning (ID: SAC0511)
Author(s):Robert S. Stephenson (Wayne State University)
Origin:Presented at SAC Conferences (08/08/2005)
Type:Presentations/Speeches
Abstract:With open source options for most of the academic enterprise stack (e.g. Moodle, Sakai, Kuali, OSPI, uPortal) and many "open course" online resources, what are the issues? What are the risks, trade-offs, and returns on investment? Discussion will focus on how to decide whether to adopt open source and how to "sell" the idea on your campus.
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