YouTube Goes to College
In the past couple of days the media have been buzzing about YouTube and its use in the academy. The Wired Campus recent post is about how many campuses are using YouTube for a variety of purposes, including marketing, course casting and other presentations. According to a recent Chronicle of Higher Education article, several colleges and universities have signed agreements with YouTube to set up official channels. At SUNY Cortland we have posted technology training videos on YouTube to make them more accessible to our own students and to reach out to a wider audience.
Both the New York Times and The Chonicle of Higher Education have featured articles about Big Think, a website about ideas and intellectual discourse that hopes to be a “YouTube for ideas.” Big Think features interviews with scholars from many disciplines and provides opportunities for users to participate in discussions. According to the NYT article Big Think was developed by Peter Hopkins, a former student of Harvard Ex-President Larry Summers, and his partner Victoria Brown. Dr. Summers and others provided seed money to develop the website.
Colleges and Universities, including SUNY Cortland, have been posting videos on iTunesU for several years now, and YouTube is another venue to reach today’s students who frequent social networking sites to socialize and learn. The impact of this electronic medium on higher education remains to be seen.

Hi Paula
Comment by Tony Hirst — January 10, 2008 @ 3:28 pmI’ve been experimenting for some time with making open courseware available in a portable widget format. Quite fortuitously, I was tinkering with the USB youtube feeds today and saw your post.
Maybe it’ll be of interest?
http://blogs.open.ac.uk/Maths/ajh59/012375.html
regards
tony
Download Youtube videos to your computer:
Comment by Tadas — January 19, 2008 @ 9:05 amhttp://www.FreeYoutubeGrabber.com