On Sat, Nov 14, 2009 at 11:40, kirby urner <kirby.ur...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> My impression is there's a huge amount of free content if (a) you have
> access to the Internet and (b) you have enough education to know how
> to read and study the materials, find your peer groups, organize a
> learning experience resulting in credentials and opportunities.
>
> Both (a) and (b) cannot be taken for granted.

Indeed. This is part of the Earth Treasury mission, which adds to the
One Laptop Per Child (hardware), Sugar Labs (software), and various
Free content projects, including Creative Commons and others. Part of
the aim is to network up to a billion children together in a
collaborative education enterprise, creating the conditions in which
they can create Free Software and Free content to suit their needs,
and breaking free of the current barriers to education, collaboration,
and sharing. It will take a while to make the scope of the plan clear,
and longer to make it all happen.

> Even with the copyright problem removed completely, we still have few
> safe environments for concerted study.  Many schools and libraries
> curtail access, as much out of necessity and a need to share scarce
> bandwidth as out of a lust for censorship, although in the case of
> schools, many do practice various kinds of filtering, some more
> insidious than others.

Bandwidth is rapidly becoming less scarce, even in Africa, which has
lagged farthest behind in the past. Multiple fiber optic cables are
being laid along both East and West coasts of Africa, and joined to
the landlocked countries of the continent, starting with Rwanda and
soon continuing with all of the others.

I and others at FLOSS Manuals wrote How to Bypass Internet Censorship,
with methods to access blocked and filtered content, and to evade
surveillance. http://en.flossmanuals.net/bin/view/CircumventionTools/WebHome

> In many cultures, young people have the best access through Wifi
> Cafes, either over the shoulder (under tutelage), renting time on a
> shop machine, or lucky enough to have their own laptop.  Some cafes
> also rent time on larger screens where more meetings and collaboration
> might occur.
>
> The second most frequent access site is from work, where performance
> may be monitored, but where furthering one's education, including
> through social networking sites, is increasingly seen as job-relevant
> in some lines of work.  Studying accounting in a slow moving hair
> salon, waiting for customers, can't be all bad, especially if the
> bandwidth is being paid for regardless, true of many service provider
> contracts.

Another need is prepaid e-commerce cards to be sold in cybercafes, so
that students can buy books online, and for other purposes. This is
because credit cards issued by banks in Africa cannot be used online,
since the banks are not integrated into the global banking network. As
fiber optic connections become available, this will change, but there
remains a great need in the meantime.

> In sum, whereas I see a need for more copylefted and license-free
> materials, I think the more pointed shortages revolve not around
> content, but around access and a shortage of study time except in
> formal school settings, to which many are unable to afford access.

The essential lacks are electricity, bandwidth, microfinance, and Free
replacements for printed textbooks. These support each other, so that
all can be expanded together, at a profit overall for all concerned.

> The rise of co-working studios, sometimes in working partnerships with
> the Wifi Cafes, is probably suggestive of how the younger generation
> is self-organizing to overcome these insidious barriers to its future
> productivity.
>
> Once on-line, contributing to Wikis is a great way to start
> establishing a track record as a free content provider, building a
> portfolio.  People need to see what it is that you contribute.  This
> is what social networking is all about and the evidence suggests
> intelligent use of these skills aids in finding collaborators and
> staffing companies.  Musicians tend to use Myspace.  Management
> consultants use LinkedIn, Plaxo and so on.  More teachers are starting
> to use Wikieducator.  These are promising signs.
>
> Kirby
>
>
> On Sat, Nov 14, 2009 at 10:47 AM, Minhaaj ur Rehman <minh...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> I am pretty sure when Bob Dylan said 'mountain', he didnt only refer
>> to copyrighted material, he used it for all 'licensed' material be it
>> creative commons or FSF licenses. Freedom is freedom, it doesn't come
>> with CC-BY-SA. I would be interested to see how long that mountain
>> stands.
>>
>> On 14 Nov, 00:38, Wayne Mackintosh <mackintosh.wa...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> Hi Everyone,
>>>
>>> A brief moment to reflect. Education is an act of sharing knowledge freely.
>>>
>>> So where are all the free education materials that we can adapt, modify and
>>> reuse without restriction? Why has humanity taken so long in achieving a
>>> free knowledge base for us to share for the common good of education and
>>> society? Why are the majority of our global population under served when it
>>> comes to education?
>>>
>>> To paraphrase Bob Dylan:
>>>
>>> " How many years [can the closed copyright] mountain exist
>>> Before it's washed to the sea?
>>> Yes, 'n' how many years can some [educators] exist
>>> Before they're allowed to be free?
>>> Yes, 'n' how many times can [we] turn our [heads],
>>> Pretending [we] just don't see?
>>> The answer, my friend, is blowin' in the wind,
>>> The answer is blowin' in the wind."
>>>
>>> The value proposition of sharing digital teaching materials is a
>>> "no-brainer".  Getting back to Dylan's refrain  "The answer, my friend, is
>>> blowin' in the wind" has been described as "impenetrably ambiguous: either
>>> the answer is so obvious it is right in your face, or the answer is as
>>> intangible as the wind" 
>>> (see:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blowin%27_in_the_Wind)
>>>
>>> I started WikiEducator as a project to collaborate with the free culture
>>> movement to develop digital teaching materials in support of every national
>>> curriculum by 2015. (If we're a little late, 2017 will be just fine :-) ).
>>>
>>>    - Yesterday, WE were a top 59K site (Alexa).
>>>    - During October, WE generated more than 10.5 million hits on our site
>>>    with a full-time staff of two people.
>>>    - WE train and build wiki skills for thousands of teachers in more than
>>>    110 countries -- thanks to a dedicated team of facilitators who share
>>>    knowledge freely.
>>>    - WE have developed more content pages than Wikiversity (with only 6% of
>>>    the number of the registered users compared to WV)
>>>    - WE can now work internationally, freed from the geographical
>>>    constraints of the Commonwealth.
>>>
>>> WE should take a moment and reflect on what WE have achieved -- this is an
>>> amazing story and you are making it happen!
>>>
>>> However, we shouldn't gloat for too long. 2015 is a little more than 5 years
>>> away, but I sense an energy that WE have a fighting chance in achieving our
>>> goal of free digital resources in support of all national curricula.
>>>
>>>    - WE need to become more effective supporting new WikiEducators in
>>>    becoming active contributors to our common goal
>>>    - WE need our technology to become transparent (i.e. significantly easier
>>>    to use)
>>>    - WE need to continue our commitment to provide free training to any
>>>    warm-blooded (as in mammal) educator in the world who wants to learn wiki
>>>    skills
>>>    - WE need to connect educators across international boundaries and
>>>    - WE need to have fun while contributing to the social good of education.
>>>    - What else do WE need to do?
>>>
>>> Is the answer so obvious or as intangible as the wind?
>>>
>>> Let's continue making OER futures happen for the world -- the wiki way.
>>>
>>> Cheers
>>> Wayne
>>>
>>> --
>>> Wayne Mackintosh, Ph.D.
>>> Director,
>>> International Centre for Open Education,
>>> Otago Polytechnic, New Zealand.
>>> Board of Directors, OER Foundation.
>>> Founder and Community Council Member, Wikieducator,www.wikieducator.org
>>> Mobile +64 21 2436 380
>>> Skype: WGMNZ1
>>> Twitter: OERFoundation, Mackiwg
>> >
>>
>
> >
>



-- 
Edward Mokurai (默雷/धर्ममेघशब्दगर्ज/دھرممیگھشبدگر ج) Cherlin
Silent Thunder is my name, and Children are my nation.
The Cosmos is my dwelling place, the Truth my destination.
http://www.earthtreasury.org/

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