The OSP was formed by a group of
data scientists,
sociologists, and
digital-humanities researchers at the
American Assembly, a public-policy institute based at
Columbia University. The OSP was partly funded by the
Sloan Foundation and the
Arcadia Fund. Joe Karaganis, former vice-president of the American Assembly, serves as the project director of the OSP. The project builds on prior attempts to archive syllabi, such as
H-Net,
MIT OpenCourseWare, and historian
Dan Cohen's defunct
Syllabus Finder website (Cohen now sits on the OSP's advisory board). The OSP became a
non-profit and independent of the American Assembly in November 2019. In January 2016, the OSP launched a
beta version of their "Syllabus Explorer," which they had collected data for since 2013. The Syllabus Explorer allows users to browse and search texts from over one million college course syllabi. The OSP launched a more comprehensive version 2.0 of the Syllabus Explorer in July 2019. The newer version includes an interactive visualization that displays texts as dots on a
knowledge map. , the OSP has collected over 7 million course syllabi. The Syllabus Explorer represents the "largest collection of searchable syllabi ever amassed." == Methodology ==