Doris Kraus

Doris Kraus

Biography

Dr. Kraus received her Ph.D. in zoology from Rutgers University.  For over 20 years she has been a freelance science and medical writer and editor, for both technical and lay audiences.  Dr. Kraus has contributed to several books, has written for a variety of media including educational publishing, newspapers and radio, and has consulted for public television.  She received an American Medical Writers Association award for a newspaper series on Alzheimers Disease.

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Other Invertebrates
Fishes, Amphibians, and Reptiles
Birds and Mammals
From Populations to the Biosphere
Environmental Problems
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cover_chapterChemistry - Kinetic Molecular Theory
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Doris Kraus

Dr. Kraus received her Ph.D. in zoology from Rutgers University.  For over 20 years she has been a freelance science and medical writer and editor, for both technical and lay audiences.  Dr. Kraus has contributed to several books, has written for a variety of media including educational publishing, newspapers and radio, and has consulted for public television.

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What's in a back pack?
Written by Neeru Khosla   
Tuesday, 02 September 2008 02:28

It is that time of year where our nations school children are preparing their back packs ready to head back to start their new academic year. The contents of these bags has definitely evolved over years, considering now the average student's back pack will contain more technology than NASA had to take Apollo to the moon.

But one thing that has stayed constant is the good old fashioned text book. While it requires no batteries or boot up time, it still is the heaviest and most inflexible item in there.

Take for example, the current academic debate going on in the astromony world regarding the number of planets our solar system has. Is it 9, or is it 8?

preparation

"People in the know" decided that we actually have only 8 planets, based on the assumption that Pluto is too small to be a planet. Oh dear. Now we have all these text books that has the wrong information, and to make matters worse, depending on the State, it could take anywhere from 1 year to 6 to get it corrected. So not only are our children carrying around these heavy tombs, it turns out, the information inside of them is out of date!

The problem doesn't end there, the same "people in the know" are being challenged by other "people in the know" and the Pluto debate is far from over.

But thats life. We live in an ever evolving world, where new discoveries are being made, old thinking rechallenged, as we increase our awareness and knowledge of the world and universe we inhabit. How is the humble back pack meant to cope?

The problem with our textbooks is that their granularity is simply too large. It only takes one paragraph to be wrong, for the whole book to have to be reprinted. So imagine when a whole discipline changes, in our Pluto example. They simply can't take this level of change.

But here we are, asking our new students to carry around these tombs of outdated information in and out of school every day.

There has to be a better way no?

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Interview with CK-12 Founder, Neeru Khosla
Written by Emily Wenner   
Friday, 08 August 2008 12:24

We managed to pull CK-12's founder and leader, Neeru Khosla, away from her work to pick her brain on her vision for the modern day education system and where she is steering the CK-12 Foundation towards.

 

Can you tell us in a single sentence what CK12.org is?

CK-12 is a "collaborative enabler" that provides access to information to all, while empowering teachers to treat each student within the requirements, but treating each one as an individual with their own particular needs, pace of learning, and curriculum standards.

What form does this take?

This enabler is an online tool that makes production and customization of content possible.

Obviously you felt there was a problem in the current education book system. Which problem in particular are you looking to solve?

While everyone believes that there are problems in education that can be solved by their own solutions, and that each solution works in their own context, at CK-12 we believe that we are providing a very fundamental need for every student – content that is customizable and collaboratively produced.

Against Banned Books (Please Spread This Pic & The Text)

If we believe in the notion that every person has an inalienable right to learn, then we have to insure that they have access to information and educational resources. For younger students that access should be free or at the very least that access should be at a nominal cost. Targeting both access to content as well as cost should help in leveling the playing field for learning.

Speaking of cost, what will be the cost for using the CK-12 system?

These tools are completely free and open to all. The only cost incurred by the users will be for print production from independent, print-on-demand publishers.

Why have US educational books become so expensive?

Part of the reason that books have become expensive is that developing and publishing books is a business. As a result, publishing companies have to account for themselves, particularly in terms of profits, expenses, growth rates etc. While this is the case for books, education by itself cannot be and is not a business. It is a social cost that needs to be carried by society for all that cannot afford to pay.

Printing Press 2

Publishing has become a very large industry, and due to the historical business model, it is very difficult to drastically change the path it is on.

There is no way that you can change the physical nature of a book, thus making it impossible to adapt and optimize the changes that are occurring in this dynamic age of information, communication, and customization. Publishing has become a dinosaur and needs to make a course correction.

It is projects like CK-12 that we think will be the catalyst for change to occur.

In the course of founding and developing CK-12, you have had the opportunity to meet many teachers from many different levels. Is there anything you are hearing over and over again?

GPS Workshop for Teachers

We have talked to many teachers and what they say depends upon where they are in terms of their career and where they work. If you compare teachers – teaching in private school versus public school, you will hear different things.

Private school teachers have much more freedom to do what they believe is in the best interest of the student.

Public school teachers are more restricted as to what they can teach. They are required to teach to their local bureaucratic requirements. Often these requirements have no bearing to what the reality is in the classroom.

Teachers are also asking for less expensive material that allows ALL to learn and benefit from educational resources. In keeping with this thinking, we would like to enable and encourage teachers in different parts of the world to take this content and convert it into different languages and not have only English language material.

For this reason we are also providing the tools necessary to compose and create content from scratch, or even using an existing WikiPedia page.

This editor makes it possible to easily modify existing content. So, for example, if the chapter is in English, then nothing stops the user from inserting Spanish paragraphs throughout to help students better understand the material.

This is the real power of CK-12, the ability to Tweak/Edit/Add or "TEA" a chapter to their own requirements.

Will CK-12 enable teachers to be able to translate and reproduce content into different languages to aid with this learning process?

In many of the classrooms, content and information that is provided does not meet the need and often does not fit the requirements. Many teachers tell us "just give us the materials that will help our students do well on the standardized testing" or "help us make a concept understandable to many different kinds of learners".

For example, look at some of the low performing school districts, say in some areas in Southern California, where the population is primarily Hispanic and the students are not fluent in English, yet the teachers are provided with textbooks that are high level English language content. How are they going to learn?

In addition, teachers are asking for a platform where they can share information, lesson plans, and experience in what works for different kinds of students, etc.

The teacher as a lonely figure is a well documented fact, but we hope to provide connections that will help in their everyday work.

You are a mother of teenagers and young adults, what differences in the education system have you witnessed?

I do see some changes. There is more competition from fierce, academically focused students from other countries. As a result, there is a sense of panic from parents who are asking for more and more focus on getting academic skills that will make students more eligible for admission into colleges.

More and more people are trying to make their children do what makes the students appear to be more "rounded," missing the point that learning is also about fulfilling your passions, learning how to learn and not just trying to be the best candidate for a job. Young kids are no longer spending their time daydreaming or having the time to explore the world around them.

Is there the possibility of 'information overload?' How does CK-12 help manage all this information?

CK-12 has introduced the concept of flexbooks. These flexbooks allow for us to provide only the amount of content that each student needs. I have yet to meet a teacher who says that he or she used the whole book in a given year. So why do we need information overload? CK-12’s flexbooks will allow for 100% relevant chapters.

How are you ensuring that the content scholars and teachers collate is worthy of the curriculum?

How can we make sure that the content is usable, given that there are so many ways to look at this issue, and it happens to be one of the most contentious parts of the education system, and given the fact that people are often singularly minded in their ideas that their perspective on this issue is the best one?

We at CK-12 believe that we have to provide content that can be contextualized and quality controlled to each case; hence the ability to customize the content becomes very important. While we provide for this customization we also have to make sure that we are providing content that is following requirements for the K-12 age group.

The way that we do this today is through aligning the seeded content to standards.

We are modeling checks and balances for quality control in a collaborative fashion (as in "Many Eyes Shallow Bugs"). Part of that process is to have domain experts (DE) who are either teacher practitioners or college professors who have developed K-12 content. These domain experts work with the authors, who again have had prior experience with developing curriculum. After the DE and the authors have reached a certain level of quality we send the content to teacher practitioners for review.

El Toro Grammar School

In addition, over the summer we have had 17 high school interns go through the content and give us feedback. The idea is that these students will help us make the content readable and usable for them and their peers.

Having all these checks and balances will help us avoid many of the contentious creditability issues that are hindering and surrounding other online content providers such as Wikipedia and Google’s Knol.

We believe that the CK-12 user community will develop a collaborative methodology for developing good quality for their own unique needs. This is where we are hoping that our tools will allow teachers to use this concept in a very productive and useful manner.

CK-12 sounds American. Is your system designed exclusively for the American education system?

Initially, as a proof of concept, yes, it is for the American education system. However, we will be allowing people to use the system in their own contexts. We are hoping that we will become a Wikipedia kind of model, where different entities will develop content according to their own needs and regional requirements.

How can people get involved?

Get in touch with us. We would love to have you contribute to and use our system. We are coming out of private beta and moving into a public release very soon. We want teachers and students alike.

Let us thank Neeru for taking the time to let us into her world. Visit http://about.ck12.org/ for more information on how CK-12 can help you.

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@Google Presents: CK12 Founders
Written by Neeru Khosla   
Friday, 08 August 2008 05:25

CK12 founders Neeru and Vinod Khosla and CK12's President, Murugan Pal speak as part of the @Google series. CK12 is a non-profit organization, launched in 2006, that aims to reduce the cost of textbook materials for the K-12 market both in the US and worldwide.

Many of you know Vinod as a co-founder of Sun Microsystems and a partner at Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield & Byers before founding Khosla Ventures. His wife, Neeru, is an accomplished philanthropist, while Murugan is a serial entrepreneur who most recently found SpikeSource after a stint as an Entrepreneur-in-Residence at KPCB. Together, they will discuss their vision for CK12 as well as take questions from the audience.

This event took place January 17, 2008 at Google Headquarters in Mountain View, CA.

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Wikipedia Founder Proposes Support for Open Textbooks
Written by Neeru Khosla   
Friday, 08 August 2008 04:09

Esther Wojcicki over at the Huffinton Post wrote a good article on the overall state of the free online materials and how it is going to be moving towards a more colloborative approach.

To read the full piece visit here

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Remix and Share Your Own Text Books as FlexBooks
Written by Neeru Khosla   
Friday, 08 August 2008 04:05

Brady Forrest over at Radar Blog went through the Flexbook system and wrote down his thoughts on how powerful a colloborative educational system could be.

To read the full piece visit here

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