Karl wrote:
...I realized that we could put up the works of
William Shakespeare and allow people to add
comments and explanations on the margin. That
would be so cool !! There is no site out there
that I know of that does this. Little by little
we could amass a huge volume of knowledge on these
works in one place that is currently only available
dispersed throughout various printed texts as well
as the minds of teachers and professors at large.
Shakespeare seems like the place to start, along
with maybe a public domain translation of the
Bible, or parts of both of those works.
Exactly. Our focus should be on creating book-based
resources for the student; think of all the books a
student is required to have for any given class
(other than encyclopedias or dictionaries). Those are
the books we should focus on creating (textbooks and
other related works of nonfiction) or annotating (out
of copyright versions of many books that are studied
in the classroom). We could also summarize books in
booklet form (akin to CliffsNotes) for at least books
that are still under copyright and maybe for the
public domain ones as well.
--mav
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