Join the mailing list to receive announcements of upcoming courses, or get involved as a course organizer and create a new course. All contact details are on the contact page.
Not right now, but we are working on options to make that possible in the future. Have a look at the accreditation page for more information.
Studying is free. After the pilot phase, the community will decide if it makes sense to charge a very small sign-up fee. We would like participants to be committed and willing to invest the time needed, and a small fee may help to solidify that commitment. In addition, there are some course organizers who can't afford to volunteer their time, but would like to be involved - a small part of the fee could be used to offset their time. However, our primary motivation for P2PU is unrestricted access to high-quality, peer-learning experiences on topics of interest, so we will never restrict access to the educational resources themselves.
Sign up has closed for the first cycle, and the response was overwhelming. Some of the courses might be run again, and we will offer many more courses in the future.
P2PU is largely run by volunteers, however we have also gotten seed funding to cover some basic costs from both the Hewlett Foundation, and the Shuttleworth Foundation. The project is also being incubated at the University of California at Irvine. Thanks to ever cheaper web-hosting there are few direct costs involved in setting up an online learning community. Of course it also takes a lot of time and effort to make this happen, which we have put in as volunteers.
Our first site was a Google Site. We switched to a pbworks.com wiki for the pilot phase, but the final site is a custom-made open source solution built on Drupal. We wanted to get the pilot underway as quickly as possible, and technology development takes a long time, especially for a small project like ours.
Some people are already getting accreditation - for example, a group of students taking our Land Restoration Course have already been given the green light for credit! The P2PU course will be their "reforestation 101" for a 3 year leadership program they are beginning in a reforestation project in India. Their 3 year leadership program does count for credit at some western universities.
Other individuals are trying to organise accreditation on a case-by-case basis from the institutions they are affiliated with.
We at P2PU are interested in a community reputation that could also offer a viable alternative to the traditional accreditation systems.
For the first round we worked quite carefully with a small group of people we trusted. In the future there will be a process of bringing new people and courses into the community. We will also offer an orientation process for people who want to run a course.
We are all passionate about learning, and this seemed like a fun way to build something that brings together like-minded people and increase access to education. We saw that there were more and more OERs, but for many individuals that wasn't enough. Without the social component and a bit of structure and support, it was too hard to work through the materials on one's own. And, of course, it's a whole lot of fun!
Exciting news: Mozilla, Hacks/Hackers, Medill School at Northwestern University, and The Media Consortium are collaborating to run “Open Journalism & the Open Web,” a...
Can adopting open educational resources make education more accessible to learners and empower educators to share?
This is the question that informs the Adopting Open Textbooks course at P2PU. The course is a 3-step process to adopting open textbooks for educators facilitated by the College Open Textbook Collaborative. The 3 major steps...
The Peer 2 Peer University announced its third round of free and open online courses today, opening sign-ups for a growing list of courses dealing in su bject areas ranging from Collaborative Lesson Planning to Manifestations of Human Trafficking.
P2PU is also excited to announce the launch of the...
