Dr. Barbara Kurshan
GET UPDATES FROM Dr. Barbara Kurshan
 
Dr. Barbara Kurshan is the President of Educorp Consultants Corporation. ECC is dedicated to improving learning and teaching with a focus on innovation in education. For the past 4 years, she was the Executive Director of the non-profit organization Curriki and continues to support the mission of Curriki.

Dr. Kurshan has honed her vision of “what can be” using technology while supporting the growth of new education companies and also developing innovative software products. In her role at Curriki, she helped to build a community that provides the best open source curricula globally. Curriki is a social entrepreneurship organization that supports the development and free distribution of open source educational materials to improve education worldwide. Dr. Kurshan also founded WorldSage in 2004 with the vision to create a for-profit higher education system to address education for the 21st Century and currently serves on the board and as the EVP.

Dr. Kurshan has been involved with education and technology for over 30 years. She developed the first children’s software products for Microsoft—Creative Writer and Fine Artist—and also created award-winning products for McGraw-Hill, Apple, CCC (Pearson) and others. As a professor Virginia Tech and Hollins College, she helped students research the impact of technology on learning. Dr. Kurshan also publishes articles based on personal research exploring women’s attitudes toward technology, how kids learn using computers, and new ways of learning through understanding. She has authored several books on educational technology including one of the most used textbooks on computer literacy for middle school and high school, Computer Literacy through Applications. She has been quoted in many influential journals and serves as a reviewer and advisor to research projects for the National Science Foundation, the US Department of Education, UNESCO and other government and business groups.

Through her venture fund Core Learning she invested in companies and entrepreneurs who are impacting education. Currently she serves on the board of several education technology companies, including Interschola and Fablevision. Among numerous honors, Dr. Kurshan received the Education Academic Society’s Making It Happen Award and the Highest Leaf Award from the Women’s Venture Fund. She is listed in Who’s Who in Technology Today.

Dr. Kurshan received her Doctorate in Curriculum and Instruction and her M.S. in Computer Science from Virginia Tech University and her B.S. from Newcomb College, Tulane University.

Blog Entries by Dr. Barbara Kurshan

Are Open Educational Resources at the Tipping Point or the Tripping Point?

Posted March 7, 2010 | 23:06:25 (EST)

There are so many crises in education today, that to explore the tipping point for OER (Open Educational Resources) might seem to have little relevance in light of the re-authorization of No Child Left Behind and the $4.3 billion being awarded to States in the Race to the Top. However,...

Read Post

The Wisdom Within the Crowd

Posted November 6, 2009 | 10:56:05 (EST)

This past summer, former Google executive Paul Buchheit announced that he wanted to give away “a bunch of money” and that he wanted a social networking community to make suggestions as to what organization he should give to. As the Executive Director of Curriki, a non-profit that helps educators around the world eliminate the cost...

Read Post

What Chocolate Can Teach Us About Curriculum

Posted October 16, 2009 | 15:04:18 (EST)

Imagine you are at your son or daughter’s play with a distracting hankering for a piece of chocolate. After much internal debate, you decide to satisfy your sweet tooth by allowing yourself exactly one piece of chocolate. In the lobby, students are offering two options—a Lindt Truffle for $0.14 or...

Read Post

What Chocolate Can Teach Us about Curriculum

Posted October 15, 2009 | 21:58:45 (EST)

Imagine you are at your son or daughter's play with a distracting hankering for a piece of chocolate. After much internal debate, you decide to satisfy your sweet tooth by allowing yourself exactly one piece of chocolate. In the lobby, students are offering two options--a Lindt Truffle for $0.14 or...

Read Post

Free Education -- Sustaining Open-Source Curriculum?

Posted October 9, 2009 | 09:45:00 (EST)

In the digital marketplace, the most effective price is no price at all, argues Anderson (The Long Tail). He illustrates how savvy businesses are raking it in with indirect routes from product to revenue with such models as cross-subsidies (giving away a DVR to sell cable service) and freemiums (offering...

Read Post

Come in, We're Open

Posted September 29, 2009 | 13:41:44 (EST)

Dear Mr. President, honorable federal and state Legislators, and Parents:

As schools put their open signs back on and millions of children return to the classroom for more science experiments, mock trials, literature circles and other endeavors that will foster their development as young contributing members of society, this is...

Read Post

The Disruptive Innovation of Curriculum 2.0

Posted September 20, 2009 | 11:00:00 (EST)

In this age of rampant information sharing, why aren’t educational materials as ‘open’ as some other things – like some computer code? This is the question that Scott McNealy, who revolutionized software development with Sun Microsystems, asked himself about instructional materials while he was trying to find a way to...

Read Post