Blog — ...are not free to create. This is true! There is a lot of work and money that goes into the editing, designing, and marketing of a quality open access product....
Blog — ...saying these things can live harmoniously together. Consider trust. Scott notes that she has been thinking a lot about trust recently. “There are a lot of discussions about online proctoring,...
Contributor — ...dedicated to understanding the practices and experiences of learners, educators, and scholars in emerging online settings. His presentations, publications, and most recent thoughts on education can be found at www.veletsianos.com....
Blog — ...and authentically evaluates education. The authors argue that moving to new learning environments, specifically those online and at a distance, afford educators opportunities to embrace only the most effective face-to-face...
Blog — ...rather than the learning. I don’t think Farish’s approach is anywhere close to the best system we could build, but it is regrettably a system that has locked in. That...
Book — ...of the penitentiary, and the first federal prison, Kingston Penitentiary, opened in 1835. It was not long, however, before the government of Upper Canada was compelled to acknowledge that the...
— ...on their manuscripts before and after peer review to ensure that ideas are presented not only with clarity, but with refinement, that documentation is accurate, and that authorial voice is...
Blog — ...important to democratic structures and the contributors to Alberta Oil and the Decline of Democracy in Canada argue that oil has weakened the structures that govern this country. Here, we...
Blog — ...first open access press. Spoiler alert: we have learned a lot. We presented “The Truth about Open Access Publishing” to our colleagues here at Athabasca University and you can watch...
Blog — Welcome to the November edition of the Newsletter! Media The Teacher and the Superintendent was reviewed in History of Education! “The letters and diary entries of these missionaries are stark...