Thursday, September 21, 2017

http://oedb.org/library/features/236-open-courseware-collections

If you're interested in specific open courses, you can find a variety on the Web (or through this list of 100 courses). Usually, those single courses will contain all the materials you need to learn one subject for free. But, if you're after more than a single focus or if you need a deeper perspective on a subject, this list of open courseware collections may be just what you need. Each resource listed below contains a collection or collections of educational materials. You'll find digital archives, a variety of courses, Podcasts, videos and sometimes a mix of everything you can imagine so you can learn any given subject in depth.
Before you get started with any course in depth, you might need a few items from the top 25 Web 2.0 apps to help you learn or something that will improve your productivity. While the courses, videos, and audio files below won't help you achieve a degree because they're not credited, you can still practice completing online assignments appropriately. Once you gain significant skills in any given subject, you might be able to translate those skills into credits for an undergraduate degree.



Take Any College Class for Free: 236 Open Courseware Collections, Podcasts, and Videos


If you're interested in specific open courses, you can find a variety on the Web (or through this list of 100 courses). Usually, those single courses will contain all the materials you need to learn one subject for free. But, if you're after more than a single focus or if you need a deeper perspective on a subject, this list of open courseware collections may be just what you need. Each resource listed below contains a collection or collections of educational materials. You'll find digital archives, a variety of courses, Podcasts, videos and sometimes a mix of everything you can imagine so you can learn any given subject in depth.
Before you get started with any course in depth, you might need a few items from the top 25 Web 2.0 apps to help you learn or something that will improve your productivity. While the courses, videos, and audio files below won't help you achieve a degree because they're not credited, you can still practice completing online assignments appropriately. Once you gain significant skills in any given subject, you might be able to translate those skills into credits for an undergraduate degree.
Archives | Broadcast Learning | Directories & Searches | eBooks & eTexts | Encyclopedias | Open Courseware - University | Open Courseware | Podcasts - University | Podcasts - Other | Research | Videos - Universities | Videos - Other | Video Directories & Searches

Archives

Archival materials are easier than ever to access now that most institutions have begun to digitize their materials. The University of Virginia Library, for example, has compiled the Jefferson Digital Archive based upon their internal collections and other resources. The following is a "short list" of archival materials, but you can find several search engines and directories that will lead you to hundreds of regional and international archives and their online materials.
  1. American Memory — The Library of Congress provides extensive multimedia offerings on various topics through their American Memory Collection, including their outstanding Built in America project that showcases historical buildings through photographs.
  2. Fathom — This archive, provided by Columbia University, offers access to the complete range of free content developed for Fathom by its member institutions. The archives include online learning resources including lectures, articles, interviews, exhibits and seminars.
  3. Internet Archive — A digital library of Internet sites and other cultural artifacts in digital form.
  4. National Archives — Provides primary source materials from NARA along with lesson plans for teaching with those sources.
  5. National Climatic Data Center — The NCDC, a division of NOAA, maintains climatic archives, including lists of storms in given counties, and records about global extremes, etc.
  6. North American Computing and Philosophy — Archival material from 2001, 2002, 2003, and 2005 conferences.
  7. Open Society Archives — These archives and collections relate to the period after the second World War, mainly The Cold War, the history of the formerly communist countries, human rights, and war crimes.
  8. The Rosetta Project — A global collaboration of language specialists and native speakers building a publicly accessible online archive of all documented human languages.
  9. September 11 Digital Archive — This site uses electronic media to collect, preserve, and present the history of the 9/11 attacks.
  10. U.S. Census Bureau — If you think the Census Bureau is all about numbers, you might be surprised to learn about their archived photographs, daily radio features, and more available through their Newsroom.
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Broadcast Learning

Turning off the television has become a mantra. But, when it comes to educational TV, maybe too much isn't enough. The following broadcasting companies maintain Web sites that carry Podcasts, videos, and articles. Some sites maintain special sections expressly for students and teachers.
  1. ABC Australia — This site offers various educational categories, including archives and the Big Ideas Wisdom Interview Podcasts.
  2. BBC Learning — Online learning, support, and advice. This site offers internal and offsite links to a vast amount of materials.
  3. BBC Video Nation — Current news in many categories.
  4. Biography — The site holds videos to past interviews and biographies on people in topics that range from Black history to women's history.
  5. Book TV — This is the companion site to Book TV on C-Span2. The site holds some current interviews with authors, many past interviews, opinions, reviews, and featured programs through online video.
  6. CBC Archives — Relive Canadian history through thousands of available radio and television clips.
  7. Discovery — This channel is home to several different networks that focus on the military, animals, travel, etc. The Discovery site offers a "Video of the Day" from its home page, a separate online video section, and a Discover Education center where teachers can accumulate materials for K-12 teaching. It's impossible to list all their offerings here, so go discover!
  8. History Channel — Visit the Video Gallery for a selection on historical topics. Like the Discovery Channel, this network provides many opportunities for you to gain access to information and reference materials.
  9. NOVA — Watch current science shows or browse by category. PBS sponsors this channel.
  10. PBS — The Public Broadcasting Service brings great shows to television (other than Nova, listed above), and they also offer research capabilities, information, and Podcasts to their viewers online.
  11. Research Channel — Speakers, researchers and professors present revolutionary thoughts and discoveries. Use their Webstreams and an extensive video-on-demand library for research.
  12. TVO — Canada's largest educational broadcaster brings Podcasts, video, educational television, and a special program entitled, Learn with TVO for parents and teachers of K-12 students. For older learners, TVO offers "course connections" listed at bottom left on the home page.
  13. Weather Channel — You can learn about weather all over the world, but the Weather Channel also offers dynamic content based upon seasons and special conditions and a special multimedia and education section.
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Directories & Searches

Some of the items below, like Google, are fairly familiar to most Web enthusiasts. Others, such as "Archives Made Easy" might come as a surprise. You can find just about anything you need for your research and learning through the following directories and search engines. You can also learn more about how to search the "invisible Web" to find resources for your projects. Plus, you can use our list of 119 resources beyond Google to find more authoritative guides. Each resource below leads to educational materials:
  1. A World of Ideas — This site catalogues video and audio lectures on academic topics according to discipline, theoretician and topic.
  2. Academic Blog Portal — This wiki serves as a portal of the "Invisible College" - the academic blogosphere full of serious scholarship and quirky, erudite commentary. Blogs are organized by discipline and by university.
  3. Archive Grid — Search through thousands of libraries, museums, and archives that have contributed nearly a million collection descriptions to ArchiveGrid.
  4. Archives Made Easy — An on-line guide to archives around the globe that includes tips on how to navigate various repositories. Hosted by the International History department at the London School of Economics and Political Science
  5. British Academy Portal — The British Academy's directory of online resources in the humanities and social sciences.
  6. DMOZ — The Open Directory Project is the largest, most comprehensive human-edited directory for the Web.
  7. DOAJ — Directory of Open Access Journals covers free, full text, quality controlled scientific and scholarly journals.
  8. Economics Network — Economics Network of the UK's Higher Education Academy provides a range of services that support university teachers of economics in the UK. Their resources section carries many online directories to materials, notes, lectures, etc.
  9. Google Scholar — Search for peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, abstracts and articles, from academic publishers, professional societies, preprint repositories, universities and other scholarly organizations.
  10. Infomine — Search for databases, electronic journals, electronic books, bulletin boards, mailing lists, online library card catalogs, articles, directories of researchers, and many other types of information.
  11. Lecture Webcasts — A swicki (cross between a search and a wiki) for lecture Webcasts at the Internet TV Search Engine.
  12. Intute — A network of UK universities and partners created this free online search service with access to education and research resources.
  13. Librarian's Internet Index — Categorized index to Web sites.
  14. Merlot — Find peer reviewed online teaching and learning materials.
  15. NetSerf — Links to all things Medieval.
  16. Open Courseware Finder — Find a course online through a search or with tags.
  17. Repositories of Primary Sources — The University of Idaho has compiled primary sources by international area. Dig deeper to discover the repository, where you can gain access to primary sources online.
  18. World Lecture Hall — Find a lecture - written, video, audio, or course notes. Search by topic or by area. Brought to you by the University of Texas at Austin.
  19. Voice of the Shuttle — A database that serves content dynamically on the Web for the arts and humanities.
  20. Windows Live Academic Search — Search for scholarly journal articles, conference proceedings, dissertations and academic books.
  21. Yahoo! Humanities Collection — Search for anything on the Web under the humanities heading.
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eBooks & eTexts

You don't need to shell out big bucks for textbooks when most ancient texts and other public domain materials have been digitized. The following sources can help you save dollars while you learn. Some resources listed below may contain audio files rather than readable text and some sites may contain both text and audio files.
  1. Audio Books for Free — Free files when you choose MP3 files at tolerable quality. Higher quality audio available at inexpensive prices.
  2. Authorama — Completely free books from a variety of different authors in the public domain.
  3. Bartleby — Bartleby contains many classic American and English texts searchable by author, title, and genre.
  4. Economics Textbooks — A categorized list maintained by John Kane.
  5. Electronic Text Center — This University of Virginia collection features 70,000 electronic texts that range across many topics and languages.
  6. eMedicine — The original open access comprehensive medical textbook for all clinical fields with 10,000 contributors and 6,500 articles.
  7. European Literature — Electronic text collections in western European literature. Compiled by the University of Virginia Library.
  8. FreeTechBooks.com — Free online computer science and programming books, textbooks, and lecture notes.
  9. Internet History Sourcebooks Project — This project was designed to provide easy access to primary sources and other teaching materials in a non-commercial environment. It was developed and is edited by Paul Halsall at Fordham University and is divided into Ancient, Medieval, and Modern history along with several "sourcebook" selections.
  10. Learn Out Loud — While many choices are free by membership only, Learn Out Loud also offers free audio and video.
  11. LibriVox — LibriVox volunteers record chapters of books in the public domain and release the audio files back onto the net.
  12. Literal Systems — A small but growing classic audio book collection.
  13. Making of America Books — A digital library of primary sources in American social history primarily from the antebellum period through reconstruction.
  14. Many Books — Free eBooks for your PDA, iPod, or eBook reader.
  15. Manuscript Reading Room — The Library of Congress's Manuscript Division's current holdings, nearly forty million items contained in ten thousand separate collections, include some of the greatest manuscript treasures of American history and culture.
  16. Online Books Page — This project indexes online free books rather than hosts them, but it's an easy resource to use.
  17. Online Mathematics Textbooks — A list created by George Cain, School of Mathematics at Georgia Institute of Technology. You might also try the more comprehensive Textbooks in Mathematics compiled by Alex Stef.
  18. Oxford Text Archive — This site hosts arts and humanities literature, languages and linguistics texts that you can download in various formats.
  19. Perseus Digital Library — Tufts University's evolving digital library.
  20. Philosophy — Canonical texts necessary for basic philosophy.
  21. Project Gutenberg — The first producer of free electronic books, there are over 20,000 free books in the Project Gutenberg Online Book Catalog.
  22. Religion Online — More than 6,000 articles and chapters. Topics include Old and New Testament, Theology, Ethics, History and Sociology of Religion, Communication and Cultural Studies, Pastoral Care, Counseling, Homiletics, Worship, Missions and Religious Education.
  23. Text Archive — Internet Archive's open source text directory.
  24. WikiBooks — Since their founding in 2003, volunteers have written about 25,292 modules in a multitude of textbooks.
  25. World Public Library — This repository maintains a public access eBook and eDocument collection.
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Encyclopedias

While most colleges won't allow citations from encyclopedias in your research papers, these resources can lead you in the right direction to find more information.
  1. Columbia Encyclopedia — Offered by Bartleby.
  2. Counterbalance Interactive Library — Offers new views on complex issues from science, ethics, philosophy, and religion.
  3. e-Podunk — Want to know information about a certain state, county, or city? e-Podunk maintains a site for this information and it's growing to include cemeteries, libraries, museums, and newspapers.
  4. Encyclopaedia Britannica — Free trial offer for full version, free access to concise version.
  5. Encyclopedia Smithsonian — Each entry contains materials within the online Smithsonian and through other resources.
  6. Highbeam™ Encyclopedia — Search through more than 57,000 frequently updated articles from the Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition.
  7. InfoPlease — Information Please is part of Pearson Education, the largest educational publisher in the world.
  8. LoveToKnow 1911 — Based upon the eleventh edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, first published in 1911. While many of the science and health articles are obviously outdated, many of the biographical and historical articles and more complete and in-depth compared to materials available elsewhere.
  9. Microsoft Encarta — Gain access to 16,000 articles and more than 2,200 photos, illustrations, maps, charts, and tables for free, with ability to upgrade.
  10. Open-Site — Open-Site is edited by volunteer editors and accepts content submissions from the public to provide accurate information.
  11. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy — Each entry is maintained and kept up to date by an expert or group of experts in the field.
  12. Wikipedia — A multilingual, Web-based, free content encyclopedia project.
  13. World FactBook — Part of the Bartleby collection, this project provides the U.S. government’s complete geographical handbook, featuring 268 full-color maps and flags of all nations and geographical entities.
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Open Courseware Collections - University

The list below contains courseware offered by various . This list is by no means all-inclusive, so you might want to try a search for a specific college to see what you can find. The colleges below offer more than one course or, like "Berklee Shares", a broad perspective on one topic. Columbia University Interactive
  1. — A gateway to selected electronic learning resources developed at Columbia University.
  2. Berklee Shares — Free music lessons that you can download, share and trade with your friends and fellow musicians.
  3. Carnegie Mellon Open Learning Initiative — OLI courses are designed to support you to learn a subject at the introductory college level.
  4. Duke Law Center for the Public Domain — News, lectures, links to various other resources within the site and on the Web. Projects range from the arts to international law issues.
  5. Fulbright Economics Teaching Program — FETP is a resource for people who work or study in policy-related fields to increase their knowledge and explore new approaches to learning and curriculum development.
  6. Harvard Extension School — Course-related materials are supported by videotaped lectures.
  7. Gresham College — Find lectures in various topics that are also available as audio and video files.
  8. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health — This project provides access to content of the School's most popular courses, from adolescent to refugee health.
  9. MIT — Massachusetts Institute of Technology offers a wide variety of open courses from aeronautics and astronautics to writing and humanistic studies.
  10. Open University — Originating from the U.K., this collection ranges from arts and history to technology.
  11. Tufts University — Six separate schools, from dentistry to the School of Arts and Sciences.
  12. United Nations University — UNU promotes the idea of a Global Learning Space for science and technology.
  13. University of California, Irvine — This college offers the California Subject Examination for Teachers (CSET) and a few other courses.
  14. University of Notre Dame — From Africana studies to theology, students can take advantage of options within numerous Notre Dame departments.
  15. University of Washington — This one is a bit tricky, as they offer free online courses through this link, but you can also find free materials through various departments outside this official online learning program.
  16. Utah State University — Available departments online range from anthropology to wildland resources.
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Open Courseware Collections

The following courseware isn't always labeled as "open courseware," but they qualify because each site contains collections filled with lectures, visuals, audio, video and other educational materials. This list contains sites that aren't hosted or generated by universities.
  1. BBC Training & Development — The British Broadcasting Corporation brings training and online broadcast and new media courses online for anyone interested in media courses.
  2. Connexions — A place to view and share educational material made of small knowledge chunks called modules that can be organized as courses, books, reports, etc. You can find 3993 reusable modules woven into 219 collections at Connexions.
  3. Digital History — An interactive, multimedia history of the United States from the Revolution to the present.
  4. Exploratorium — View Webcasts and visit the digital library. You'll find lectures, lessons, and more.
  5. Music Theory — This site is a compact set of lessons, trainers, and utilities compiled by Ricci Adams.
  6. NASA — The National Aeronautics and Space Administration maintains updated and archived materials and several modules. They also maintain the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), where a researcher can find many materials including university lectures.
  7. National Geographic — While not as generous with online free videos as some sites, the work they offer is always stunning. They also offer an educational resource for K-12.
  8. Nature — This international weekly journal's online resource provides Podcasts, streaming video, gateways and databases for all things in nature.
  9. Open Educational Resources — Internet Archives' collection of educational content including coursework, study guides, exercises, and recorded lectures.
  10. Smithsonian — Learn through online museum exhibits, recordings, research, and Journeys.
  11. Sofia — Content for eight courses is now available online for free through the Sofia open content initiative.
  12. W3Schools — Web-building tutorials, from basic HTML and XHTML to advanced XML, SQL, Database, Multimedia and WAP.
  13. Wikiversity — This project comprises a community for the creation and use of free learning materials and activities.
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Podcasts - University

Georgia College & State University (see # below) was among the first of many campuses to put together an academic program using iPods when it launched a few pilot programs in 2002. Today, there are active iPod programs on many other campuses around the country. Therefore, the list below is limited when compared to how many campuses will take on this technology by this upcoming fall quarter/semester.
  1. Alleghany College — News and events, conferences, etc.
  2. American University — Podcast collections from this university's Washington College of Law.
  3. http://ipod.gcsu.edu/ — Georgia College & State University provides a virtual learning community, courseware, and technology advances through this site.
  4. Arizona State University — Lectures and speakers.
  5. Berkeley on iTunes — Listen to events about the arts, education, politics, science and technology - extensive collection..
  6. Buffalo State College — Lectures, forums, events, and more.
  7. Cambridge University — Popular science broadcasts, including Science Festival Podcasts presented by Carol Vorderman.
  8. Center for International Studies — University of Chicago's Chiasmos, a source for international events.
  9. Chicago GSB — Chicago University's Graduate School of Business thought leadership on current topics affecting companies and organizations around the globe.
  10. Classics Podcasts — Ever want to hear the news in Latin? Visit more links to readings of Latin and (ancient) Greek texts, brought to you by Bryn Mawr's Haverford College.
  11. College of DuPage Codcasts — Classes, lectures, arts & leisure, and special topics.
  12. College of St. Scholastica Podcasts — Visit the links on this page to find numerous course-specific lectures and speakers.
  13. Distance Learning Podcast — Western Kentucky University's Podcasts for students and teachers.
  14. Drexel CoAS Talks — Podcasts, Screencasts and Vodcasts(for video iPod) of talks or seminars in the College of Arts and Sciences at Drexel University.
  15. Educator's Corner — The Entrepreneurial Thought Leaders lecture series takes place every Wednesday during the academic quarters at Stanford University. Listen to archived materials.
  16. Front Row — Boston College offers free access through streaming media to tapes of cultural and scholarly events.
  17. Georgetown University Forum — A weekly radio program that highlights Georgetown University faculty's research and expertise.
  18. Harvard Business Online — A free Podcast featuring breakthrough ideas and commentary from leading thinkers in business and management.
  19. Havens Center — The University of Wisconsin-Madison's audios that are focused on the study of social structure and social change.
  20. Insead Podcasts — Knowledgecasts and Leadercasts from one of Europe's elite business programs.
  21. Johns Hopkins — Audio recordings from Johns Hopkins' faculty and alumni.
  22. http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/podcast_archive.cfm;jsessionid=a830395ee425b1f6c714?CFID=16084202&CFTOKEN=67288983&jsessionid=a830395ee425b1f6c714 — Podcast archive for news and lectures at the University of Pennsylvania.
  23. Lewis & Clark Law School — Events and speakers on law.
  24. London School of Economics — Podcasts of public lectures and events.
  25. Montclair State University — Interesting list from English department - mostly Noam Chomsky, but other lectures on Medieval literature to Vietnam War here as well. Some video.
  26. NOVA — Nova currently offers four different Podcasts.
  27. Perdue Boilercast — List of various Podcasts.
  28. Princeton University Channel — A collection of public affairs lectures, panels and events from academic institutions all over the world.
  29. Princeton University's Event Streaming Media — Special events, lectures, sports, etc.
  30. SAIS — The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) in Washington, D.C., part of Johns Hopkins University, offers news and events.
  31. Southwest Tech's CourseCasts — Various course topics.
  32. Stanford on iTunes — Download faculty lectures, interviews, music and sports. 
  33. Swarthmore College University Lectures — Lectures on various topics.
  34. Times-Online MBA Broadcasts — Ten of the world's leading business thinkers provide the latest thinking in economics, management, finance, strategy, and marketing.
  35. UCLA Bruincast — Course topic Podcasts.
  36. University of Arizona College of Law — Lectures and Seminars.
  37. University of Bath — "BathPods" from a public lecture series where leading names from the worlds of science, humanities, and engineering talk about the latest research in their field.
  38. University of British Columbia — UBC offers a wide variety of UBC-related digital content, from public lectures and talks to student-created music and more.
  39. University of Connecticut — Podcasts about general psychology.
  40. University of New South Wales — Podcast lectures that relate to health and fetal development.
  41. University of Nottingham — Browse through current issues, latest research and events.
  42. University of Oregon UO Channel — Interviews, documentaries, lectures.
  43. University of Virginia — Podcasts and Webcasts for news, events, and lectures.
  44. University of Warwick — Hear university experts comment on important issues, their research and events.
  45. University of Washington TV — This university project offers their "premiers" as Podcasts. You can also watch these shows as video.
  46. Vanderbilt University — Interviews, lectures, news, and events.
  47. Weber University — Lectures and speakers.
  48. Yale University — A diverse collection from Yale's many schools.
  49. York College Podcast Lectures — Current focus on philosophy and psychology from City University, New York (CUNY).
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Podcasts - Other

This list of Podcasts are not hosted or generated by any school of higher learning. But, they contain collections that can turn your brain on to the world around you.
  1. Evolution 101 — Dr. Zachary Moore offers Podcasts along with other resources on this topic.
  2. Global Voices — Global Voices is an international, volunteer-led project that collects, summarizes, and gives context to some of the best self-published content found on blogs, Podcasts, photo sharing sites, and videoblogs from around the world, with a particular emphasis on countries outside of Europe and North America.
  3. Listening to Words — Find, listen to, and discuss free lectures from around the Web.
  4. Logically Critical — Don't be afraid to think. Visit this site, listen to the Podcasts, and agree to agree or disagree.
  5. Ludwig Von Mises Institute — Use the links on this page to gain access to Podcasts and video.
  6. Maria Lectrix — Six days a week of audiobooks - mystery, history, adventure, devotion - for people with Catholic tastes.
  7. NPR — National Public Radio offers several venues to learn about various topics through articles and Podcasts.
  8. Open Source — Christopher Lydon brings hot topics to online listening through Public Radio International (PRI).
  9. Neo-Latin Colloquia — Graduate students and faculty associated with the UK Institute for Latin Studies are creating a variety of materials for the renewed study and enjoyment of neo-Latin colloquia scholastica, texts that date primarily from the 16th century. This is housed at STOA, the Consortium for Electronic Publication in the Humanities.
  10. Point of Inquiry — Point of Inquiry is the premiere Podcast from the Center for Inquiry, drawing on CFI’s relationship with the leading minds of the day including Nobel Prize-winning scientists, public intellectuals, social critics and thinkers, and renowned entertainers.
  11. Scientific American — Enjoy 60-second science Podcasts or longer interviews with leading scientists and journalists.
  12. The Skeptic's Guide to the Universe — A weekly Podcast talkshow produced by the New England Skeptical Society (NESS) in association with the James Randi Educational Foundation (JREF) discussing the latest news and topics from the world of the paranormal, fringe science, and controversial claims from a scientific point of view.
  13. Shakespeare by Another Name — MP3 audio files that discuss some of the stories, themes and characters in the book, Shakespeare By Another Name.
  14. Sound of Young America — Public radio's "funniest, most fascinating interview program," available free on the air, on the Web or by Podcast.
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Research

Whether it's at the library, through videos, Podcasts, or online, research is easier when it's free. Plus, you can ease some headaches if you know how to take copious notes. Check out Fifty Ways to Take Notes to pave your way, and use the following list to forge ahead.
  1. Elements of Style — Visit Strunk & White at Bartleby.
  2. Episteme Links — Search for over 19,000 categorized links to philosophy resources on the Internet.
  3. HighWire Press — HighWire Press is a division of the Stanford University Libraries, which produces the online versions of high-impact, peer-reviewed journals and other scholarly content. Some sites are free to peruse through trial periods or through archived materials.
  4. In Other Words — A lexicon for the humanities. Learn the terminology of a new discipline and come to understand the generally accepted reference of terms.
  5. Internet Public Library — Search through online collections in numerous categories.
  6. LitSum — Free literature summaries and study guides.
  7. Mayo Clinic — This site contains databases for diseases and conditions, drugs and supplements, and treatment decisions.
  8. SparkNotes — Free online study guides.
  9. U.S. Government Manual — The official handbook of the Federal Government.
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Videos - University

The list of video collections below are either hosted or generated by a school of higher learning. Some resources also include Podcasts or other educational materials, so look around when you head to a specific site.
  1. Berkeley Multimedia Research Center — Six videos that mainly focus on the university's multimedia presentation capabilities. You'll also find a chemistry lecture.
  2. Butte College — Televised courses and events such as workshops, meetings, and conferences. All sent to you via streaming video.
  3. CalTech Today — "Streaming Theater" for science and technology, society and culture, and campus life.
  4. Carleton University Television (CUTV) — Two courses only: Introductory Chemistry, CHEM 1000 taught by 3M teaching award winner Robert Burk, and Natural History, BIOL 1902, taught by highly respect naturalist and wildlife photographer Michael Runtz.
  5. Case School of Law — Lecture series dating from 2001 to current year.
  6. Dartmouth Chance — Chance is a quantitative literacy course, and Dartmouth offers video lectures and more to help conduct your own Chance course.
  7. Duke University Multimedia — Classroom video archives produced in the Duke University Mathematics Department Multimedia Classroom.
  8. Georgetown University Webcasts — Current critical intellectual and social issues debated and discussed.
  9. http://athome.harvard.edu/archive/archive.asp — The mission of Harvard@Home is to provide the Harvard community and the broader public with opportunities for rich in-depth exploration of a wealth of topics through Web-based video programs of the highest caliber.
  10. Harvard Law School — Events and lectures online.
  11. Homeric Odyssey and the Cultivation of Justice — If you want to get to know this classic in depth, this is where you need to go. Online text, video lectures, the works. Brought to you by Professor Gregory Nagy is the Francis Jones Professor of Greek Literature and Professor of Comparative Literature at Harvard University.
  12. Kennedy School of Government Video Archive — From Harvard University.
  13. Landon Lecture Series — Gain live access on day of lecture or view archived lectures on public issues, thanks to Kansas State University.
  14. Mathematical Sciences Research Institute — MSRI streaming video lectures.
  15. MIT World Video Index — Search, or sort by title, date, or MIT host for videos on the sciences and arts.
  16. Oxford Internet University Webcasts — Live and on-demand Webcasts of prominent speakers from events and conferences organized or recorded by the Oxford Internet Institute.
  17. Princeton University's New Media Center — Student and faculty projects, including lectures, speakers, interviews, etc.
  18. Princeton University WebMedia — Includes events, lectures and a small selection of Podcasts.
  19. Rice University Webcasts — Live and archived events, speakers, and lectures at Rice.
  20. Rockefeller University — A small collection of Flash videos.
  21. St. Edward's University — Philosophy audio and video lectures.
  22. Stanford University Audio and Video — Selections from the Graduate School of Business.
  23. UC Berkeley Resources — Links to many resources online and at Berkeley. Some resources for students only, others open to the public.
  24. UCLA Webcasts — UCLA Instructional Media Production (IMP) provides live Webcasts of important and interesting campus events, archives them, and makes them available for on-demand viewing.
  25. University of California TV Video on Demand — Lectures, seminars, and talks on a variety of topics.
  26. University of Connecticut — A video lecture series from this university's School of Medicine.
  27. University of Texas at Dallas — UTDallas brings a list of online neuroscience lectures to the table.
  28. Webcast Berkeley — Courses and events offered by the University of California (UC) Berkeley. Also offered as Podcasts.
Back to Index

Video - Other

The following list contains collections that are not maintained by a school of higher learning. But many of these resources offer great opportunities to learn through videos that range from short-shorts to entire movies.
  1. 2007 Exploring Space Lectures — Brought to you via Smithsonian Institute.
  2. Atom Film Documentaries — Short film genre.
  3. Center for Economic Studies (CES) — Lecture series from 2001 forward.
  4. Cern Webcast Service — CERN lectures and seminars to universities, schools and to the general public.
  5. Exploratorium — This is a Webcast archive filled with selected videos that date back to 1996.
  6. Free Documentaries — Mostly political films.
  7. Free Movies and Documentaries — Videos embedded from other sites, but worth a look for various categories under documentaries, news items, etc.
  8. Free to Choose — TV series by economist Milton Friedman along with interviews.
  9. Google Video — Educational lecture options from Google. Search for other genres, like documentaries.
  10. Howard Hughes Medical Center Lectures — Gain access to information on everything from evolution to RNA.
  11. Indymedia — The San Francisco Bay Area Independent Media Center is a non-commercial, democratic collective of bay area independent media makers and media outlets. This site also serves as the local hub for the global Indymedia network, and offers archival materials as well.
  12. Lifesign — A short list of medical genre videos. It appears that this site, funded and maintained by the Department of Creative Technologies, University of Portsmouth, intends to grow.
  13. Link TV — Current perspectives on international news, current events, and diverse cultures, presenting issues not often covered in the U.S. media.
  14. Moving Image Archive — Internet Archive's collection of classic full-length movies, daily alternative news broadcasts, and user-uploaded videos of every genre. This is a mega-source.
  15. National Archive — Over 250 titles collected by the NASA Office of Public Affairs between 1962 and 1981.
  16. Nobel Prize Lectures — Provide a wealth of background to every Nobel Prize since 1901. You can find biographies, interviews, photos, articles, video clips, press releases, educational games and a great deal more information about the Nobel Laureates and their work.
  17. ScienceLive — Free popular science videos.
  18. The Royal Society — Video lectures on topics from biology and climate science to physics. They also maintain a short list of Podcasts.
  19. Vega Science Trust — The Vega Science Trust aims to create a broadcast platform for the science, engineering and technology (SET) communities. Learn from seminars, lectures, and more (they have four priceless archival recordings delivered by Nobel prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman at the University of Auckland, New Zealand).
  20. Webcasts — From the Library of Congress.
  21. WGBH Forum Network — The WGBH Forum Network is an audio and video streaming Website dedicated to curating and serving live and on-demand lectures given by some of the world's foremost scholars, authors, artists, scientists, policy makers and community leaders.
Back to Index

Video Directories & Searches

Finally, this is a short list of directories and search engines dedicated to free online videos.
  1. Ethics Videos on the Web — Compiled by Lawrence M. Hinman from the University of San Diego.
  2. Mathematics Videos — A list of online lectures and videos compiled by Jean-Marc Gulliet and hosted at New York University.
  3. Open Video Project — This repository provides video clips from a variety of sources, especially various video programs obtained from U.S. government agencies such as the National Records and Archives Administration and NASA.
  4. Web Lecture Archive Project (WLAP) — Browse through lectures by category, or conduct an advanced search.
Open courseware projects provide a head rush for many autodidactics because those projects often offer lecture notes, chapters or entire textbooks online, illustrations, charts, and other tools that help the reader learn a given subject. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) gained notoriety for its online open courseware (OCW) offerings and many other colleges have followed this example; however, the self-learner probably knows that many college professors have offered their course outlines and materials online for years before MIT laid claim to this effort.
Whether you're taking a break from tuition courses, need supplementary materials for college courses, require materials to help out on the job, or want to gain life experience, online open courseware can help you reach your goals. The 100 open courseware sources listed below are freely available for anyone to use, whether you're a student, an instructor, or a self-learner. The courses are categorized by subject and listed alphabetically within that subject.
While you cannot earn credits for working through these "courses," in some cases you can obtain credits if you're a registered university student. Carnegie Mellon's Open Learning Initiative (OLI), for instance, provides credits to Carnegie Mellon and to other university students when their instructors provide a "course admit code" for registration. Otherwise, individuals who aren't students can work through the modules — which range from biology to statistics — at no cost.
Finally, this list is not all-inclusive, as college-level courseware projects number in the thousands, perhaps more if you count professor home pages that are "open courseware" but have never been labeled as such. With this list and some search capabilities you can spread your wings and find more subjects to your liking.




Education Arcade

MIT researchers are creating academically driven computer games that rival commercial products and make learning fun.

It's early afternoon on a Sunday at Boston's Museum of Science. Brittle winter light floods the lower lobby of the Green Wing, where about a dozen young students are huddled in teams, peering at Pocket PCs, their parents listening nearby. There's a palpable sense of urgency among the team members; everyone's shouting at once. Eleven-year-old Katie Long, a self-assured fifth grader from Wellesley, MA, steps in and takes charge of her group-two girls, one boy, a father, and two mothers-by fiat. She's figured out what to do with the technology and begins organizing her troop into attack formation.
The boisterous students are playing Hi-Tech Who Done It!, a crime-solving game created for the museum by MIT faculty and students. It incorporates handheld computers connected to the museum's wireless network, which the students are using to catch a thief. First, they use the Wi-Fi network to locate information stations that contain clues, and then they download the clues to their handhelds. Each team member has an assigned role, such as biologist, detective, or technologist; some of the clues are available only to certain characters. But all of the teammates can beam data they gather into each other's computers through the wireless network. The idea is to collect clues and objects, conduct interviews, and glean relevant facts from museum exhibits, sharing the accumulated information and using it to solve the case of a mysterious theft from the museum's collection. As it works its way through 11 exhibit rooms, the team becomes more comfortable with the technology and quickly establishes a modus operandi: gather information fast and worry about its meaning later. The students on Katie's team are exuberant, running from room to room, so enthused that their parents and a videographer taping the event can barely keep up. In the end, Katie's team solves the crime, arresting a security guard who has stolen the museum's mummy. But more, the students have learned how to work as a team.
Hi-Tech Who Done It! is part of a research project called the Education Arcade that aims to make computer and video games a valuable component of teaching. The undertaking is a collaboration between MIT and the University of Wisconsin-Madison and will ultimately bring together a consortium of educators, game designers, publishers, and policymakers to develop sophisticated games that range from quick demonstrations that illustrate points made in lectures to semester-long projects that support the content of courses. The educational games will be aimed at motivating high-school students or helping advanced-high-school or first-year college students learn complex concepts. Teachers will also benefit, as the Education Arcade is developing a website that will serve as a clearinghouse for lesson plans coordinated with existing commercial games, projects and programs to help students learn to create games, and online forums where teachers can share best practices with their peers.


Open Courseware Collections - University

The list below contains courseware offered by various . This list is by no means all-inclusive, so you might want to try a search for a specific college to see what you can find. The colleges below offer more than one course or, like "Berklee Shares", a broad perspective on one topic. Columbia University Interactive
  1. — A gateway to selected electronic learning resources developed at Columbia University.
  2. Berklee Shares — Free music lessons that you can download, share and trade with your friends and fellow musicians.
  3. Carnegie Mellon Open Learning Initiative — OLI courses are designed to support you to learn a subject at the introductory college level.
  4. Duke Law Center for the Public Domain — News, lectures, links to various other resources within the site and on the Web. Projects range from the arts to international law issues.
  5. Fulbright Economics Teaching Program — FETP is a resource for people who work or study in policy-related fields to increase their knowledge and explore new approaches to learning and curriculum development.
  6. Harvard Extension School — Course-related materials are supported by videotaped lectures.
  7. Gresham College — Find lectures in various topics that are also available as audio and video files.
  8. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health — This project provides access to content of the School's most popular courses, from adolescent to refugee health.
  9. MIT — Massachusetts Institute of Technology offers a wide variety of open courses from aeronautics and astronautics to writing and humanistic studies.
  10. Open University — Originating from the U.K., this collection ranges from arts and history to technology.
  11. Tufts University — Six separate schools, from dentistry to the School of Arts and Sciences.
  12. United Nations University — UNU promotes the idea of a Global Learning Space for science and technology.
  13. University of California, Irvine — This college offers the California Subject Examination for Teachers (CSET) and a few other courses.
  14. University of Notre Dame — From Africana studies to theology, students can take advantage of options within numerous Notre Dame departments.
  15. University of Washington — This one is a bit tricky, as they offer free online courses through this link, but you can also find free materials through various departments outside this official online learning program.
  16. Utah State University — Available departments online range from anthropology to wildland resources.

Podcasts - University

Georgia College & State University (see # below) was among the first of many campuses to put together an academic program using iPods when it launched a few pilot programs in 2002. Today, there are active iPod programs on many other campuses around the country. Therefore, the list below is limited when compared to how many campuses will take on this technology by this upcoming fall quarter/semester.
  1. Alleghany College — News and events, conferences, etc.
  2. American University — Podcast collections from this university's Washington College of Law.
  3. http://ipod.gcsu.edu/ — Georgia College & State University provides a virtual learning community, courseware, and technology advances through this site.
  4. Arizona State University — Lectures and speakers.
  5. Berkeley on iTunes — Listen to events about the arts, education, politics, science and technology - extensive collection..
  6. Buffalo State College — Lectures, forums, events, and more.
  7. Cambridge University — Popular science broadcasts, including Science Festival Podcasts presented by Carol Vorderman.
  8. Center for International Studies — University of Chicago's Chiasmos, a source for international events.
  9. Chicago GSB — Chicago University's Graduate School of Business thought leadership on current topics affecting companies and organizations around the globe.
  10. Classics Podcasts — Ever want to hear the news in Latin? Visit more links to readings of Latin and (ancient) Greek texts, brought to you by Bryn Mawr's Haverford College.
  11. College of DuPage Codcasts — Classes, lectures, arts & leisure, and special topics.
  12. College of St. Scholastica Podcasts — Visit the links on this page to find numerous course-specific lectures and speakers.
  13. Distance Learning Podcast — Western Kentucky University's Podcasts for students and teachers.
  14. Drexel CoAS Talks — Podcasts, Screencasts and Vodcasts(for video iPod) of talks or seminars in the College of Arts and Sciences at Drexel University.
  15. Educator's Corner — The Entrepreneurial Thought Leaders lecture series takes place every Wednesday during the academic quarters at Stanford University. Listen to archived materials.
  16. Front Row — Boston College offers free access through streaming media to tapes of cultural and scholarly events.
  17. Georgetown University Forum — A weekly radio program that highlights Georgetown University faculty's research and expertise.
  18. Harvard Business Online — A free Podcast featuring breakthrough ideas and commentary from leading thinkers in business and management.
  19. Havens Center — The University of Wisconsin-Madison's audios that are focused on the study of social structure and social change.
  20. Insead Podcasts — Knowledgecasts and Leadercasts from one of Europe's elite business programs.
  21. Johns Hopkins — Audio recordings from Johns Hopkins' faculty and alumni.
  22. http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/podcast_archive.cfm;jsessionid=a830395ee425b1f6c714?CFID=16084202&CFTOKEN=67288983&jsessionid=a830395ee425b1f6c714 — Podcast archive for news and lectures at the University of Pennsylvania.
  23. Lewis & Clark Law School — Events and speakers on law.
  24. London School of Economics — Podcasts of public lectures and events.
  25. Montclair State University — Interesting list from English department - mostly Noam Chomsky, but other lectures on Medieval literature to Vietnam War here as well. Some video.
  26. NOVA — Nova currently offers four different Podcasts.
  27. Perdue Boilercast — List of various Podcasts.
  28. Princeton University Channel — A collection of public affairs lectures, panels and events from academic institutions all over the world.
  29. Princeton University's Event Streaming Media — Special events, lectures, sports, etc.
  30. SAIS — The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) in Washington, D.C., part of Johns Hopkins University, offers news and events.
  31. Southwest Tech's CourseCasts — Various course topics.
  32. Stanford on iTunes — Download faculty lectures, interviews, music and sports. 
  33. Swarthmore College University Lectures — Lectures on various topics.
  34. Times-Online MBA Broadcasts — Ten of the world's leading business thinkers provide the latest thinking in economics, management, finance, strategy, and marketing.
  35. UCLA Bruincast — Course topic Podcasts.
  36. University of Arizona College of Law — Lectures and Seminars.
  37. University of Bath — "BathPods" from a public lecture series where leading names from the worlds of science, humanities, and engineering talk about the latest research in their field.
  38. University of British Columbia — UBC offers a wide variety of UBC-related digital content, from public lectures and talks to student-created music and more.
  39. University of Connecticut — Podcasts about general psychology.
  40. University of New South Wales — Podcast lectures that relate to health and fetal development.
  41. University of Nottingham — Browse through current issues, latest research and events.
  42. University of Oregon UO Channel — Interviews, documentaries, lectures.
  43. University of Virginia — Podcasts and Webcasts for news, events, and lectures.
  44. University of Warwick — Hear university experts comment on important issues, their research and events.
  45. University of Washington TV — This university project offers their "premiers" as Podcasts. You can also watch these shows as video.
  46. Vanderbilt University — Interviews, lectures, news, and events.
  47. Weber University — Lectures and speakers.
  48. Yale University — A diverse collection from Yale's many schools.
  49. York College Podcast Lectures — Current focus on philosophy and psychology from City University, New York (CUNY).
Back to Index

Podcasts - Other

This list of Podcasts are not hosted or generated by any school of higher learning. But, they contain collections that can turn your brain on to the world around you.
  1. Evolution 101 — Dr. Zachary Moore offers Podcasts along with other resources on this topic.
  2. Global Voices — Global Voices is an international, volunteer-led project that collects, summarizes, and gives context to some of the best self-published content found on blogs, Podcasts, photo sharing sites, and videoblogs from around the world, with a particular emphasis on countries outside of Europe and North America.
  3. Listening to Words — Find, listen to, and discuss free lectures from around the Web.
  4. Logically Critical — Don't be afraid to think. Visit this site, listen to the Podcasts, and agree to agree or disagree.
  5. Ludwig Von Mises Institute — Use the links on this page to gain access to Podcasts and video.
  6. Maria Lectrix — Six days a week of audiobooks - mystery, history, adventure, devotion - for people with Catholic tastes.
  7. NPR — National Public Radio offers several venues to learn about various topics through articles and Podcasts.
  8. Open Source — Christopher Lydon brings hot topics to online listening through Public Radio International (PRI).
  9. Neo-Latin Colloquia — Graduate students and faculty associated with the UK Institute for Latin Studies are creating a variety of materials for the renewed study and enjoyment of neo-Latin colloquia scholastica, texts that date primarily from the 16th century. This is housed at STOA, the Consortium for Electronic Publication in the Humanities.
  10. Point of Inquiry — Point of Inquiry is the premiere Podcast from the Center for Inquiry, drawing on CFI’s relationship with the leading minds of the day including Nobel Prize-winning scientists, public intellectuals, social critics and thinkers, and renowned entertainers.
  11. Scientific American — Enjoy 60-second science Podcasts or longer interviews with leading scientists and journalists.
  12. The Skeptic's Guide to the Universe — A weekly Podcast talkshow produced by the New England Skeptical Society (NESS) in association with the James Randi Educational Foundation (JREF) discussing the latest news and topics from the world of the paranormal, fringe science, and controversial claims from a scientific point of view.
  13. Shakespeare by Another Name — MP3 audio files that discuss some of the stories, themes and characters in the book, Shakespeare By Another Name.
  14. Sound of Young America — Public radio's "funniest, most fascinating interview program," available free on the air, on the Web or by Podcast.

Wednesday, September 13, 2017

Indiana Does not have a cyberbullying statute but does have intimidation, harassment, and computer trespass laws that can be used to prosecute cyberbullying: IND. Code Ann. § 35-45-2-1, 35-45-2-2, 35-43-2-3. State Senator Tom Wyss is trying to expand current bullying laws to include cyberbullying.

http://www.ncsl.org/research/civil-and-criminal-justice/cyberbullying-and-the-states.aspx

Florida FS 1006.147- The “Jeffery Johnston Stand Up for All Students Act” was enacted in April 2008. This law provides a legal definition for bullying which includes bullying that occurs over the computer using school networks on or off school property. The law mandates each school district to promptly develop a code of conduct against all bullying and harassment. The code of conduct must include procedures for identifying incidents of bullying, determining if the incident occurred within the school district, parental notification and when appropriate notification of law enforcement authorities, and counseling services to victims of bullying. The law also contains a monitoring system to report bullying.

http://www.ncsl.org/research/civil-and-criminal-justice/cyberbullying-and-the-states.aspx

Transfer credit. "...Like the regional accrediting agencies, the DETC Accrediting Commission is reviewed periodically by the U.S. Department of Education to make certain it meets the criteria for federal recognition as published in Title 34 of the Code of Federal Regulations. These recognition criteria are the same for national as for regional accrediting agencies...."

Don’t Take “No” for an Answer When Trying to Transfer Your Credits or Degree
November 2008 1
Don’t Take “No” for an Answer
When Trying to Transfer Your Credits or Degree
If you are trying to transfer your academic credits or degree to another college or university, and they
refuse to accept them, don’t take “no” for an answer. Knowing how to state your case and presenting
the right information may help you get positive results.
Acceptance of degrees or credits from DETC-accredited institutions is largely determined by the
policy of the “receiving organization,” e.g., an employer, a college registrar, etc. Each institution has
its own unique set of requirements. Accreditation is important, but no school can guarantee their
credits will transfer to another institution on the basis of the accreditation they hold. You should
always check with the college or university you wish to transfer your credits or degree to before you
invest time and money completing a course/degree program. And, it’s always a good idea to get the
transfer approval in writing from the receiving institution before you enroll.
There are several reasons a college or university may refuse to accept your transfer credits. None of
these have anything to do with accreditation:
• Course content doesn’t fit into the curriculum;
• Poor grades (grades of “D” or “F” don’t transfer);
• You already filled all of your elective credits; and
• You already reached the limit of transfer credits allowed by the college.
Institutions should analyze credit accepted for transfer in terms of level, content, quality,
comparability, and degree program relevance. They should not, however, reject credits or refuse to
evaluate a transcript based solely on the source of accreditation of the sending institution.
How to Transfer Credits
You’ve completed several courses at a DETC-accredited institution and now you want to transfer the
credits to another college or university to complete your degree. You’ve checked to see what the
transfer policies are and you’ve gotten a copy of your official transcript and looked it over to make
certain all the grades are accurate and up-to-date. Here are your next steps:
1. Follow the correct transfer procedures. Fill out the correct college application. Be specific
where the transcript needs to go when providing the receiving institution’s address.
2. Know the requirements. You should know: 1) what the core or general requirements are; 2)
what the major departmental requirements are; and 3) if there are any residency requirements.
3. Complete the application on time. Neatness of any application does count. Double check
deadlines, especially departmental deadlines.
4. Get in touch with the Registrar directly. Ask for a personal interview if possible. There may
also be a transfer counselor you can contact.

Don’t Take “No” for an Answer When Trying to Transfer Your Credits or Degree
November 2008 2
5. Follow-up with the admissions office. You should not be shy about appealing a credit
evaluation if credits are rejected. You might have to negotiate credit for each course you have
taken. Get the e-mail address of the appropriate people and state your case forcefully.
Information Packet
In addition, sending an Information Packet with your application is very helpful. The Information
Packet should include the following:
1. A cover letter explaining what you are sending (see example 1).
2. The “course syllabi” from the courses you have completed. If you don’t have copies, contact
the institution where you completed the courses and they may be able to send them to you.
3. A copy of the school’s catalog with the courses you have taken clearly marked. Normally you
can print this from the school’s web site.
4. Course Equivalency Chart (see example 2).
5. A “Projected Academic Program” chart. Compile this to demonstrate you are familiar with the
receiving institution’s educational system (see example 3).
6. A recommendation letter from a former professor and/or instructor (see example 4)
7. A letter from the accrediting agency (DETC) (see example 5).
Degree Transferability
You’ve worked hard and earned a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from a DETC-
accredited university. You’re ready to earn an advanced degree and have applied for admission into a
Masters of Business Administration (MBA) program with a regionally-accredited university. The
registrar at the university denies your application because you didn’t earn your degree from a
regionally-accredited university. Now what do you do?
Usually you have several options:
1. Ask the admitting university if they have an appeal process and how to submit a formal appeal.
2. Ask the registrar for admission on provisional or probationary status. Often if you earn a certain
GPA in the admitting university’s courses, you may be accepted into the program.
3. Contact the Department Dean to ask for an interview and be prepared to submit a portfolio of
your work before a final decision is made.
4. If an institution gives credit for unaccredited course work, such as life or work experience, ask
for the same review process for your accredited course work.
Explain to the registrar that the institution you received your degree from is accredited by the Distance
Education and Training Council (DETC). See the information below concerning DETC’s recognition.

Don’t Take “No” for an Answer When Trying to Transfer Your Credits or Degree
November 2008 3
Many times, registrars are not aware that DETC and regional accrediting agencies both meet the same
standards required by the U.S. Department of Education and the Council for Higher Education
Accreditation
Other Facts
There may be times when the receiving institution is hesitant to accept your credits strictly because the
credits are not from a “regionally” accredited institution. Here are some facts you need to make them
aware of:
DETC’s National Recognitions: The DETC Accrediting Commission is listed (and has been since
1959) by the U.S. Department of Education as a “nationally recognized accrediting agency.” It is also a
recognized member of the Council for Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA). There are six regional
accrediting agencies that are also recognized by the U.S. Department of Education and the Council for
Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA). Along with the DETC, these agencies are “institutional
accreditors,” which accredit degree-granting institutions through distance education.
Like the regional accrediting agencies, the DETC Accrediting Commission is reviewed periodically by
the U.S. Department of Education to make certain it meets the criteria for federal recognition as
published in Title 34 of the Code of Federal Regulations. These recognition criteria are the same for
national as for regional accrediting agencies.
DETC and its accredited institutions are listed in the U.S. Department of Education’s database:
The U.S. Department of Education also maintains a database that lists recognized accrediting agencies
and the institutions they accredit. For the database of accrediting agencies and institutions, visit
http://ope.ed.gov/accreditation/.
DETC and its accredited institutions are listed in CHEA’s Database: You may want to check
CHEA’s Web site at www.chea.org to see which accrediting agencies CHEA recognizes and the
institutions they accredit.
Higher Education Transfer Alliance (HETA): CHEA also maintains the Higher Education Transfer
Alliance (HETA), a voluntary group of more than 400 accredited institutions concerned with the
importance of student mobility, enhancing success in transfer of credit, and affirming the responsibility
and prerogative of individual institutions with respect to acceptance of transfer credits. HETA is a
Web-based directory of colleges and universities open to all institutions accredited by an organization
recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA) or the United States
Department of Education (USDE). Membership in HETA is entirely voluntary. HETA is not intended
to, and will not constrain, institutional freedom or prerogatives with respect to acceptance of transfer
credit. You may access the HETA directory at http://www.chea.org/heta/default.asp.

Don’t Take “No” for an Answer When Trying to Transfer Your Credits or Degree
November 2008 4
If All Else Fails
Should all of your efforts fail to transfer your credits or get your degree accepted at the institution of
your choice, you have other options:
• Select another academic institution that will meet your needs and goals and apply to them.
Going to an institution that participates in the Higher Education Transfer Alliance sponsored by
CHEA increases the chances of credit acceptance.
• Apply to another DETC-accredited distance institution that offers programs which meet your
needs. You will have your credits or degree accepted at any of them.
• Apply to another institution recognized by a “national” institutional accredited association.
Visit www.crnaa.org for a listing of the six “national” accrediting groups. Institutions
accredited by any of these six associations are committed to the principle that they will not
reject credits or degrees based solely on the source of accreditation of the sending institution.
Most graduates of DETC-accredited institutions who attempt to transfer their credits or get their
degrees accepted at another educational institution are successful. At least seven out of ten are
reporting success in their quest for credit transfer.
The most common reason DETC credit is not accepted is the credit that is being transferred does not
meet the prerequisites for the receiving institution’s program, i.e., the courses completed are not in the
required fields of study or are not at the desired level of senior division study, etc.
You should always let someone at the granting institution know if you are having problems
transferring your credits or degree. DETC and its institutions are more than happy to help you solve
this problem.
In today’s world, distance learning institutions—like those accredited by DETC—are able to follow
their students wherever they go in the world, so when a student relocates to another city or country, the
DETC institution follows them. This takes one common reason for needing to transfer off the table.
And in recent years, many DETC institutions have been offering advanced degrees at the Masters, First
Professional and Professional Doctoral degree levels. If earning an advanced degree is your goal, you
have dozens of accredited DETC institutions from which to choose, and your degree and credits will
be accepted without question at any of them!