The Teaching Online Research and Content page will provide you links and descriptions of anywhere a faculty member or student can obtain original sources, information, books and instruction, classroom content, etc.


There are several types of sources that provide the kind of content that students and teachers would need to properly conduct their scholarly activities within the rigid framework of standards we must comply with.

Published/Public Works

The most obvious are libraries, repositories, and private collections and so they will also be listed first.


Articles/Media

Then there are the research organizations, subject communities, teacher and student associations, and peer contributed collections.


Standards/Support

Sometimes government agencies and/or other regulatory entities will publish information relative more to faculty than student such as Standards publications, Organizational Policies, Processes and Support documentation, and so on, so they will have a section here.


Reference/Journals

Then there are commercial firms, Journals, Reference Indeces, or other lists.


Other categories and materials will be added when possible. If you have material related to teaching adults online you are encouraged to contribute. Your reference information will be included with all contributions you submit to protect your intellectual property rights. If I get enough regular contributors, I plan on adding a recognition page outlining your contributions, link exchanged, and recommendations will be displayed for free. Interested?