OpenEd

"Opened" redirects here. For variations of the verb "open", as well as related articles, see Open (disambiguation).
OpenEd
Private
Industry E-learning, Open Educational Resources and Educational Software
Founded Los Gatos, California, United States (August, 2012)
Founders Adam Blum, Lisa Blum
Headquarters Los Gatos, California
Area served
United States
Key people
Adam Blum, Vladimir Tarasov, Ron Drabkin, Lisa Blum
Website www.opened.com

OpenEd is an online catalog of educational assessments, homework assignments, videos, games and lesson plans aligned to every Common Core standard and several other standards, and includes the only open source formative item bank. The site offers the ability for teachers to assign resources to their students online, letting students take assessments, do homework etc on their own computers or tablets. Assignments done online are graded automatically and presented to the teacher in a mastery chart. OpenEd's slogan mentions "assessment to instruction" meaning, formative assessments given on OpenEd can access OpenEd's large catalog on a per student basis to recommend the right resource to each student individually. The company has stated that functionality of searching the site and most of its resources are free and will continue to be free going forward. [1] However, the company is also distributing premium content from publishers such as Pearson and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt to teachers for $9.95 per month.[2]

Currently 175,000 teachers or about 6% of all USA teachers are registered users. Recently, the company has been providing its resources with alignments to other tech companies. The API for finding standard and skill-aligned resources is used by ed tech leaders such as Renaissance Learning, Promethean, Pacific Metrics and many more.[3]

History

OpenEd was founded in August 2012, with the purpose of providing a catalog of educational resources and aligning them to Common Core and other standards. The OpenEd cataloging process is not consistent with the current industry standard of crowdsourcing and curating individually, rather OpenEd has implemented the use of algorithms for automated alignment of resources combined with professional educator curators to validate those alignments. The process allows for a bigger scale of aligned content. At present moment the site contains over 750,000 resources, most of them aligned to the Common Core.[4]

The site also initially launched with the goal of providing materials cataloged to Common Core and later expanded to include other standards, such as Next Generation Science Standards. OpenEd is continuing to add other standards such as UK and Singapore Standards.[5]

In May 2015, the company changed its domain name from www.opened.io to www.opened.com.

Technology

The OpenEd site consists of several components, working together to help teachers find resources for their class and the standards they might be teaching.[6]

OpenEd Catalog

The OpenEd Catalog is built by deep semantic crawling of Internet-based educational resources and hosting sites; it imports extensive metadata on each resource (videos, games, exercises and other content) determining their creator, subject area, duration, quality, and grade level. The resulting catalog of resources is then aligned to standards probabilistically via machine learning. The results are then curated and validated through professional educators and then posted live on OpenEd.

OpenEd Search

The catalog on OpenEd is searchable by keyword and by standard: Common Core Math, Common Core Language Arts, Next Gen Science Standards, California History and New York Common Core Social Studies. The search provides multiple asessments, homework assignments videos, games and exercises for each of the individual standards that OpenEd tracks. Users can also search the OpenEd catalog by keyword.

Funding

In 2014, the company raised a $2m seed round, said to be the largest seed round ever in educational technology.[7]

Management Team

See also

External links

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, September 23, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.