Here's the Swahili, wiki page at World University and School ... http://worlduniversity.wikia.com/wiki/Swahili ... which WUaS would like to become a MIT OpenCourseWare-centric University and School in Swahili, for open, people-to-people teaching and learning, and eventually with free, Creative Commons' licensed university degrees.
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Abishag:
what kind of courses do you teach? and is online lessons?
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Hi Abishag (who speaks Swahili, has lived in the U.S., and lives in Tanzania),
The courses will partly emerge from MIT OCW's video courses - http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/audio-video-courses/ - as well as all of MIT OCW's 2,150 courses - http://ocw.mit.edu/. Here are MIT OCW's 'translated courses' - http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/translated-courses/ - but none yet in Swahili.
As a wiki (editable web pages), like Wikipedia with its 285 languages which we all wrote (here's Wikipedia in Swahili - http://sw.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mwanzo), WUaS makes it possible for any of us to teach a course and add it, or learn - http://worlduniversity.wikia.com/wiki/Courses. WUaS is open, online and free. Please teach a course if you like. Here's Google course builder, for example - https://code.google.com/p/course-builder/ - or simply start teaching to youtube.
Scott
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African languages at WUaS:
http://worlduniversity.wikia.com/wiki/African_languages
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Happy July 4th, Independence Day, here in the U.S., which I hope WUaS will help to further the spirit of through free, online, MIT OCW-centric, wiki education!
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