# Working With Other MIT OCW Courses This is the recommended pattern for bringing more MIT OpenCourseWare courses into Didactopus. ## Goal Use MIT OCW as a structured source for learning, while preserving: - attribution - license references - adaptation status - noncommercial/share-alike flags - a place to record excluded third-party content when it appears ## Minimal workflow 1. Pick a course and collect the specific pages you are actually using. 2. Create a local derived source file for reproducible ingestion. 3. Create a `sources.yaml` inventory beside that source file. 4. Run the ingestion/demo pipeline and emit a `pack_compliance_manifest.json`. 5. Review the generated pack before treating it as reusable teaching material. ## Recommended directory shape For a new MIT OCW-derived example, mirror the existing pattern: ```text examples// course-source.md sources.yaml ``` The corresponding generated outputs should include: ```text domain-packs// license_attribution.json pack_compliance_manifest.json source_inventory.yaml ``` ## What goes in `sources.yaml` Record each course page or resource page that materially informed the generated pack. At minimum include: - `source_id` - `title` - `url` - `publisher` - `creator` - `license_id` - `license_url` - `retrieved_at` - `adapted` - `attribution_text` - `excluded_from_upstream_license` - `exclusion_notes` Use `examples/ocw-information-entropy/sources.yaml` as the concrete model. ## When to add excluded-source records Add explicit excluded records when: - the course page points to third-party figures or readings - the page itself warns that a particular asset is excluded from the main course license - you want the record preserved even though you do not reuse the asset That is the route for acknowledging future sources that require special handling. ## Practical advice for course selection Good first OCW candidates: - courses with a strong week-by-week or unit-by-unit structure - courses with stable textual descriptions, readings, or assignments - courses where you can summarize the progression into a single local source file Harder candidates: - courses whose value is mostly in embedded media - courses with many third-party handouts or linked readings - courses with weak textual structure ## Current repo reference The MIT OCW Information and Entropy demo is the reference implementation of this pattern: - source file: `examples/ocw-information-entropy/6-050j-information-and-entropy.md` - source inventory: `examples/ocw-information-entropy/sources.yaml` - generated pack: `domain-packs/mit-ocw-information-entropy/`