CK-12 Foundation

CK12 Foundation
Founded 2007
Founders Neeru Khosla and Murugan Pal
Focus Education
Location
Area served
Global
Method Donations and Grants
Key people
Neeru Khosla, Executive Director
Murugan Pal, President
Jay Chakrapani, President
Website www.ck12.org
Headquarters location[1]

The CK-12 Foundation is a California-based non-profit organization whose stated mission is to reduce the cost of, and increase access to, K-12 education in the United States and worldwide.[2] CK-12 provides free and fully customizable K-12 open educational resources aligned to state curriculum standards and tailored to meet student and teacher needs. The foundation's tools are used by 38,000 schools in the US, and additional international schools.[2]

CK-12 was established in 2007 by Neeru Khosla and Murugan Pal to support K-12 Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) education. The organization first generated and distributed educational content via a web-based platform called the "FlexBook."[3] CK-12 has updated its FlexBook platform and has begun to focus on concept-based, multi-modality learning. CK-12 is being funded by the Amar Foundation and by Vinod and Neeru Khosla.[4]

Founders

Neeru Khosla, Executive Director and Co-Founder of CK-12 Foundation, holds a bachelor's degree from Delhi University/San José State and a master's degree in Molecular Biology from San José State. She received her second master's degree from Stanford University.[5] Murugan Pal, Co-Founder, & President of CK-12 Foundation until his passing in 2012, was a serial entrepreneur based in the Silicon Valley.[6]

History

Neeru Khosla teamed with her husband, Vinod Khosla, to think about how to make a positive impact in the educational sphere. Together, they decided to try to revolutionize the way students interface with textbooks, which can be burdensome, expensive, and slow to update. Neeru chose to focus in particular on high school and middle school students and teachers, most notably in the areas of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. Neeru found an enabling partner in Murugan Pal, whose strong technical and entrepreneurial skills helped the CK-12 idea manifest into a not-for-profit educational organization.[7] She then recruited teachers from all across America to author CK-12 textbooks, to be published under Creative Commons licenses.[8] Explaining why she chose to provide open-source and collaborative content, Neeru says, “We can’t make all kids get an education, but we can make it simpler, easier, and more affordable. That’s the philosophy behind the openness as far as I’m concerned."[9]

The "C" in CK-12 originally stood for "connect", indicating that the material was the missing connection in K-12 education. The company's website now states that the C has an open meaning, and can stand for "content, classroom, customizable, connections, collaboration—the idea is that our content can be used by anyone, anywhere for free."[10]

In March 2013, Microsoft announced a partnership with CK-12 to provide content to Microsoft's Windows 8 customers.[11]

FlexBook System

The FlexBook System is an online platform for assembling, authoring, and distributing interactive, multi-modal educational content. Content is searchable by subject, grade-level, and state and national education standards. FlexBooks can be downloaded and used as-is, or can be customized by teachers to match their students’ learning styles and their schools’ curricula. Inside each book, entire chapters or bite-sized concepts can be rearranged, added, removed, and edited. Any user can input text, photos, videos, exercises, study guides, assessments, notes, or highlights to their FlexBook. FlexBooks can be shared, for free, with user-created groups in print, online, by email, or on social media platforms including Facebook and Twitter. Some Flexbooks are even available in Spanish and Hindi.

All FlexBooks conform to national and state curriculum guidelines, Common Core Standards, and can be re-aligned to International standards. Flexbooks are offered under the Creative Commons by Attribution, Share-alike, and Non-commercial license, removing many of the restrictions that limit distribution of traditional textbooks.[12] Most CK-12 FlexBooks are created internally by authors with teaching and domain expertise. Additional FlexBooks are acquired through university donations and licensing partnerships. CK-12’s current library of 88 downloadable Flexbooks can be accessed in PDF, ePub, and Amazon Kindle optimized format.[13]

The technologies used in creation of CK-12 FlexBooks are:[14]

Concept-based and multi-modal learning

CK-12 organizes its educational content into roughly 5000 concepts (e.g., "Two digit multiplication" or "Photosynthesis" or "Newton’s law"). CK-12 believes that these “Byte-Sized” units of content and modalities of learning (as well as varied styles of learning) are more important tools for facilitating learning than traditional educational materials like textbooks. These concepts are further organized into "Learning Paths."[15]

Ck-12 content is available in a number of formats, which the organization describes as multiple “modalities of the concept.” Each modality is defined as “a different way to learn or explore” a specific concept and its relationship to other concepts. Examples include, but are not limited to:[15]

  1. Textual descriptions
  2. Video lectures
  3. Supplementary videos
  4. Multimedia simulations
  5. Interactive exploration models
  6. Quizzes/exams and question banks
  7. Examples of the concept in real-life use
  8. Maps of related concepts
  9. Web resources related to the concept
  10. Galleries of photographs
  11. Peer learning
  12. Labs or other experiments
  13. Flash cards
  14. Lesson plans

Other products

In addition to its 88 FlexBooks, the CK-12 Foundation also offers the following resources to K-12 students:

In the future, CK-12 intends to expand its offerings by continuing to produce its own content, but also by asking for contributions from its active, engaged community. CK-12 will continue to match its content to an expanding base of learning standards like McREL Compendium.[20]

Recognition

References

  1. Headquarters address from organization website; 3430 W. Bayshore Rd, Suite 101, Palo Alto, CA 94303, USA. 37°26′6.11″N 122°6′34.59″W / 37.4350306°N 122.1096083°WCoordinates: 37°26′6.11″N 122°6′34.59″W / 37.4350306°N 122.1096083°W
  2. 1 2 "The reinvention of Neeru Khosla". Silicon Valley Business Journal. 2014-03-28. Retrieved 2014-04-22.
  3. Park, Jane (28 April 2009). "CK-12 Foundation’s Neeru Khosla on Open Textbooks". Creative Commons. Retrieved October 18, 2012.
  4. All about FlexBooks
  5. "Advisory Board". wikimediafoundation.org.
  6. Nat Torkington. "Burn In 3: Murugan Pal". oreilly.com.
  7. Murgan Pal- Kamla Bhatt show
  8. "About The Licenses". creativecommons.org.
  9. "The "Living Book" Movement: Free Education For All". MindShift.
  10. "What Does The "C" in CK-12 Stand For?". Help Center.
  11. "Microsoft emphasizes Student Privacy, partners with Knewton, Pearson". EDUKWEST.
  12. "FlexBooks challenge textbooks". schoolingtoday.com.
  13. Electronic books
  14. "Technology". ck12.org.
  15. 1 2 http://www.ck12.org/about/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/ck12-vision-document.pdf
  16. "Braingenie". ck12.org.
  17. Flexmath
  18. I Need A Pencil
  19. "America's Coolest College Start-ups 2010: Jason Shah - Harvard University - Inc.com". Inc.com.
  20. "McREL: Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning, Content Knowledge Standards and Benchmark Database". mcrel.org.
  21. "Best Websites for Teaching & Learning 2013". ala.org.
  22. "Search Results - ED.gov:flexbook". ed.gov.
  23. NASA (21 September 2010). "NASA Teams With 'CK-12' Foundation on Physics FlexBook". prnewswire.com.
  24. "Tech Awards 2010: 15 Innovations That Could Save The World (PHOTOS)". The Huffington Post.
  25. "cable green". creativecommons.org.
  26. "Startups are about to blow up the textbook". Fortune.
  27. "Temple Run Meets Algebra: CK12’s New Approach". MindShift.
  28. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/09/education/09textbook.html?pagewanted=all&_r=1&
  29. Bill Gates. "Technology's Promise to Education: Reimagining Textbooks". thegatesnotes.com.
  30. "Cassidy: Don't bet against Neeru Khosla's idea to save our schools". mercurynews.com.
  31. "Will We Need Teachers Or Algorithms?". TechCrunch. AOL.
  32. "Education Week: Common Core Drives Interest in Open Education Resources". Education Week Digital Directions.
  33. "6 Reasons to Love the Textbooks from CK12". EduKindle.
  34. "Capital Area Intermediate Unit wants to test digital textbooks in midstate schools". PennLive.com.
  35. "Q&A: CK-12 Says OER & Tech Can Unlock Cheaper, Better Learning". Getting Smart.
  36. "Digital Textbooks: Has Their Time Come?". teachinghistory.org.

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, April 21, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.