Most of the information is available freely in the deep web. Unfortunately, retrieving it is slow and unproductive since there is no repository of the collaboration of thousands of profs compiling lists of top material for use in class.
Established wikis might be a good way to compile links of training material, anyone on the planet can edit, templates can be developed and improved.
- Wikipedia and related groups could be used to store links to training
- Wikiversity this one seems directly related to our needs.
- Wikicommons feels like wishfull thinking in many ways
- Meta, a Wikimedia project coordination wiki has a nice sandbox for practicing.
Meta:Sandbox - Meta
Wiki is not paper - Meta - Learning object - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
... rather than the traditional "several hour chunk", they provide smaller, self-contained, re-usable units of learning.[1] - Topic Maps - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- ITS_using_AI_to_improve_training_performance_and_ROI.pdf
slide show: What Is a Wiki? - Learning Activity
what is a blog, wiki, ... Wisc-Online - Online learning Object Repository
Information Technology Modules
Open University stuff
- 6 hour intro to the Internet from MIT Web guide - OpenLearn - The Open University
- Using Learning tools - OpenLearn - The Open University
Teaching online
- Bloom's Taxonomy For Cognitive Learning and Teaching - Learning Activity
- The Good, the Bad, and What Is a Competency? - Learning Activity
- Wisc-Online - Online learning Object Repository
- My Online Experience: Case Study - Dana - Learning Activity
- Teaching online Wisc-Online - Online learning Object Repository
Photoshop tutorial:11-310JMedia-Technology.pdf
- Scary research project eRIB - eduSource Repository-In-A-Box
- CanCore: Guidelines
Pretty material from Wisconsin
FREE HIGH SCHOOL BOOKS