Difference between revisions of "Case Studies/BetterLesson"

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(Created page with "{{Case Study |Description=BetterLesson is a website for K-12 teachers to share curriculum. All of the curricular content shared on BetterLesson (courses, units, lessons, files...")
 
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== Motivations ==
 
== Motivations ==
  
Creative Commons is used in the Open Educational Resources (OER) movement and was the natural choice for BetterLesson.
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Creative Commons is the most commonly used license framework in the Open Educational Resources (OER) movement and so was the natural choice for BetterLesson.
  
 
== Impact ==
 
== Impact ==

Revision as of 18:58, 19 November 2012



[www.betterlesson.com Go to URL]
License Used
unspecified
Media
Image, Text, MovingImage, InteractiveResource, Other
2009
Tags
education
Translations

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Evaluation Information.png
Page Importance:
Page Quality:
BetterLesson is a website for K-12 teachers to share curriculum. All of the curricular content shared on BetterLesson (courses, units, lessons, files) are user-generated. The default sharing license for content is CC BY-SA, and 99.99% of the content shared by teachers on BetterLesson is shared with a Creative Commons license.

Overview

BetterLesson was founded by a group of teachers from Atlanta and Boston public schools to connect educators and help them create, organize, and share their curricula. BetterLesson is focused on aggregating and scaling the most innovative content and practices from high-performing teachers across the country.

License Usage

All of the curricular content on BetterLesson (courses, units, lessons, files) are user-generated. The default sharing license for content is CC BY-SA, and 99.99% of the content shared by teachers on BetterLesson is shared with a Creative Commons license.

Motivations

Creative Commons is the most commonly used license framework in the Open Educational Resources (OER) movement and so was the natural choice for BetterLesson.

Impact

Creative Commons licenses harmonize well with the general sharing culture amongst teachers. Many teachers feel comfortable sharing curriculum with other teachers with the knowledge that it will be used to help teach students in another classroom. Attribution, or "shouting out" other teachers, is another key piece of the sharing culture amongst teachers.

Media

https://vimeo.com/48262241