This course will become read-only in the near future. Tell us at community.p2pu.org if that is a problem.

Gather your stuff [March 8, 2013, 3:25 p.m.]


Getting your stuff

Pulling together resources can take a little time and thought. It's all about context. We recommend going through another challenge at P2PU on how to Teach Someone Something with Open Content. This challenge gets you thinking about the process of helping someone learn while using open materials from the start.

As you're gathering the resources that you would like to share, seperate them into two piles:

  1. Stuff that you created

  2. Stuff that others created

See task 4 for licensing the stuff that you created
See task 5 for assessing the stuff that others created.
 
And don't forget: when you're grabbing all these resources from the web (or books), don't forget to bring along the attribution and source information! You'll want it later. Questions? Post 'em in the discussion.
 
 

* Tool tips

Ensure that all materials are in their native file formats, e.g. MS PowerPoint (.ppt), MS Word (.doc), OpenOffice.org Writer (.odt). This means you and others you’re working with can easily make any necessary edits (removing copyrighted content you don't have permission to share) and additions (attribution info) to the content.
 
When you're ready to publish your OER, you’ll also want to convert .pdf documents and uncommon file types into formats you and others can easily edit (remix).
 
Online collaborative working spaces like Google Docs and EtherPads are great for building documents or presentations as a group. These can then be exported in a variety of editable formats or even shared directly online with the public.