Open Source Teaching

 

Helping learners empower themselves

 
 
 

Participating Leaders

Linda Adler-Kassner

Sam Bartholomew

Adrian Bejan

Allen Barra

John Barton

Jeff Bluestone

T.B. Boyd

Marshall Brain

Alex Braubach

Amby Burfoot

Tom Burton

Brad Bushman

Robert Calderbank

Carolyn Cannuscio

Mariana Chilton

Kevin Churchwell

Agenia Clark

Mark Cloutier

Elsa Cole

Colleen Conway-Welch

Peter Cooper

Julie Corcoran

Karl Dean

Jeff Diamond

Peter Doherty

Sally Donahue

Nicole Dunigan

Nathan Ensmenger

Mark Ezell

William Ferris

Steve Flatt

Darrell Freeman

Philip Gura

Jacquelyn Hall

Neil Heatherly

Edward Hirsch

Ken Holden

Ryan Isaac

Randall John

Ahmad Kamal

Barbara King

Irwin Kra

Scott Kretchmar

Lisa Krieger

Kevin Kubarych

Steven Larson

Susan Lindee

Elizabeth Lindenmayer

Sharon R. Long

Marvin Malecha

Chris McKee

Lee Molette

Ferid Murad

Jim Murrow

Charlie Nelms

Catalina Nieto

Roger Noll

Douglas Osheroff

Lars Osterberg

Sandy Ostrau

Robert Owen

Sarah Paoletti

Heather Patisaul

Ed Penhoet

Ray Peterson

Alexia Poe

Kavita Ramdas

Paul Rozin

Ron Samuels

Ralph Schulz

Richard Shaw

Amy Sims

Lora Stevenson-Obrohta

Pat Stith

Patricia Stokes

Charles Strobel

Charles Sueing

Mary Summers

Michael Watts

Jeff Whetstone

David Williams

Bob Young

Table of Contents

The OST Blog

About Us

What We Do

Beliefs

Organization Charter

Blogs By Students

Student Classroom Survey

Teacher Classroom Survey

Interview Questions

Contact Us

LipscombFall2010

 
 

The Open Source Teaching Project (OST) introduces a new market for public service among highly successful leaders, professionals, and students. OST recruits leaders to share their career passion while introducing real-world connections to academic content.


Review the following articles to gain an overview of our work.

1. Technology Horizons in Education Journal (June 2009)

2. Converge Magazine (Winter 2008)


 

These leaders share their knowledge in hopes of motivating students to identify fields of their own to pursue, explore, and become engaged in deliberate practice.


"...our only course is to provide all of our children with ample opportunity to pursue their passions and their dreams. Our level of understanding of human development is too meager to allow us to forsee which of the children in our midst will be the next Beethoven, Modigliani, or Martin Luther King (1996 Kyoto Prize)." - 2007 Nobel Laureate Mario Capecchi.


© 2006-2011. All rights reserved.
Sage Leadership Partners, Inc. is a tax deductible 501 (c) 3 designated public charity.
EIN 20-4912512, DLN 17053151097036, Public Charity 170 (b) (1) (A) (vi).

Sage Leadership Partners, Inc., P.O. Box 330951, Murfreesboro, TN 37133