U.S. Department of Education proposed OER policy

There are a couple of blog announcements about the forward movement of a open licensing policy for projects funded by the U.S. Department of Education. See the Creative Commons post by Cable Green at http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/46345 and the post by the Association of Research Libraries Open Education Director, Nicole Allen, at http://www.sparc.arl.org/blog/us-education-department-proposes-open-licensing-policy-part-goopen-campaign .  The policy discussion has centered around K-12 education but should also affect grant funding in higher education.  Creative Commons will lead training workshops on licensing material for re-use thus increasing the overall awareness of CC licensing.

 

Posted by Sara Rutter in OER

Article highlighting U Minnesota’s Open Textbook Library

An article in the Minneapolis based Star Tribune http://strib.mn/1WcKQH9 provides a description of the Open Textbook Library, which provides peer reviewed textbooks for introductory university courses, hosted and curated by the University of Minnesota Library. One of the big changes in textbook publishing according to a source from the American Association of Publishers is the move to reformat textbook material into computer interactive course management packages that students purchase. This is creating a major challenge to OER initiatives in that it may not be sufficient to replace a print textbook with a free text; OER also needs to address the learning tools that provide students and instructors with immediate feedback in problem solving.

Posted by Sara Rutter in OER

Open Access Week presentations about OA journals

Kathleen Luschek, a technical writer with a great deal of knowledge and experience working with the Public Library of Science journals teamed with Pam Wilson, journals manager for the University of Hawaii Press to talk about Open Access and journal publishing on Wednesday Oct. 21.  Their slides are available together at http://go.hawaii.edu/KH .

Posted by Sara Rutter in OER

Leeward CC students speak out about OER

survey

This past May, Leeward CC students were surveyed on textbook costs. 987 students took the survey.

  • 55% of students said they decided not to buy a required textbook for a course.
  • 58% of students reported the cost of textbooks determined whether they took a course.

One of the primary reasons instructors adopt OER is to benefit their students. The videos below feature Christina Kaleiwahea and Rhonda Craig, both Leeward CC students who share the student perspective on how the high cost of textbooks affect them.

Rhonda

OER by Rhonda Craig” of Leeward CC is licensed under CC BY 4.0

Christina

OER by Christina Kaleiwahea” of Leeward CC is licensed under CC BY 4.0

Posted by Leanne in OER, Student

Cal State Fullerton textbook controversy

The Chronicle of Higher Education picked up an article in the Orange County Register  http://www.ocregister.com/articles/bourget-688288-math-book.html describing the trouble a faculty member ran into when he decided to assign  less expensive ($76 and free) textbooks for a mathematics class that traditionally used a text co-authored by the department chair ($180).  Conflict of interest, tradition, and lack of awareness of the financial impact on students , are all presented in this story.  The faculty member is grieving the reprimand he received.  It is hoped that this will be a win for putting the student first when making textbook choices.

 

Posted by Sara Rutter in OER

New study on the impact of Open Textbook adoption on student success in higher ed

Lane Fischer, John Hilton, Jared Robinson, and David Wiley,  have a recently published and much anticipated paper that reports on the impact of OER on student success in higher education courses.  See the open access article at:

Fischer, Lane, et al. “A Multi-Institutional Study of the Impact of Open Textbook Adoption on the Learning Outcomes of Post-Secondary Students.” Journal of Computing in Higher Education (2015): 1-14. http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12528-015-9101-x .

The study compares student success in courses that used no-cost open digital textbooks with student success in courses with traditional textbooks based on three criteria, 1) student completion of courses, 2) grades, and 3) number of classes taken during and after semesters in which OER were used. The results indicate favorable outcomes for  students who had OER assigned.  Students in courses that used OER  performed as well as students in courses with traditional textbooks on comparable exams.

Posted by Sara Rutter in OER

Open Access events at UH Manoa Oct 19-23

The UHM Library and the Office of Faculty Development and Academic Support present Open Access Week at UHM from October 19-23, 2015.Screen Shot 2015-10-09 at 9.49.46 AM

Learn about and share your experiences with open access — the free,
immediate, online access to the results of scholarly research, and the right to use and reuse those results as you need. Join us for presentations on Creative Commons licensing, open government resources, author rights and more.

Sara Lee, manager of UH Manoa’s ScholarSpace, has created an exciting schedule of events that highlights the range of scholarly endeavors that flourish in an  Open Access environment.

Register for events at
http://www.fmp.hawaii.edu/summary/OpenAccessF2015.html.

 Check out the open access news and events in our Scholarly Communications LibGuide.


Creative Commons Licensing | Monday, October 19, 12:30-1:45pm – Kuykendall 106 | Register now >

Join our panel to get an overview of Creative Commons, using CC licenses in OER, and walk through an example of a CC licensed product that incorporates other CC licensed materials.
With: Billy Meinke (College of Education), Sara Rutter (Outreach College), Richard Rath (English and Digital Arts and Humanities Initiative)


Make Your Work Open in ScholarSpace | Tuesday, October 20, 11:00am-12:00pm – Hamilton Library 306 | Register now >

Learn how to submit your work to ScholarSpace. Participants are encouraged to bring in digital copies of author manuscripts, accepted for publication, that have been peer-reviewed and are ready for final submission to the publisher.
With: Daniel Ishimitsu (University of Hawaii at Manoa Library)


Open Government Resources and Government Funded Open Mandates | Tuesday, October 20, 1:30-2:45pm – Hamilton Library 301 | Register now >

Learn about open access government created resources and efforts requiring the results of government funded research to be made open access.
With: Gwen Sinclair (University of Hawaii at Manoa Library)


Launching an Open Access Journal | Wednesday, October 21, 9:30-10:45am – Kuykendall 106 | Register now >

Hear perspectives on developing and distributing an open access journal.
With: Pam Wilson (University of Hawaii Press), Kathleen Luschek (former Senior Production Coordinator, PLoS)


Open Collaboration with GitHub | Wednesday, October 21, 12:30-1:45pm – Kuykendall 106 | Register now >

Learn how the Digital Arts & Humanities Initiative at UH is using GitHub as a tool for collaboration.
With: Richard Rath (English and Digital Arts and Humanities Initiative)


Intellectual Property, Copyright, and Author Rights | Thursday, October 22, 9:30-10:45am – Kuykendall 106 | Register now >

Learn about managing author and co-author rights, reusing copyrighted materials, reading and negotiating publishing agreements, and reusing your own content.
With: Debora Halbert (Associate Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs)


Learn How to Contribute to Wikipedia | Thursday, October 22, drop-in 12:00-4:00pm, Hamilton Library, Room 306

Join us for a workshop on contributing to Wikipedia–getting an account, adding pages, and editing pages.
With: Thumy Webb (Library and Information Science)

Learn more about open access at
http://guides.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/scholarly_communications.

Posted by Sara Rutter in Creative Commons, Faculty Leaders, Humanities, OER, Open Access, Open Access Week, UH Manoa

Andrew Marcinek appointed as open education advisor in the U.S. Dept of Ed Office of Education Technology

The position as first OER advisor for the U.S. Department of Education will be filled by Andrew Marcinek, a founder of EducatorU  and a blogger on educational matters  at http://andrewmarcinek.com/ . Check out the article in Campus Technology at http://campustechnology.com/articles/2015/09/21/department-of-ed-names-first-oer-advisor.aspx

Our previous post on this position from SPARC is here, http://oer.hawaii.edu/u-s-department-of-education-to-hire-open-education-advisor-for-k-12/.

Posted by Sara Rutter in OER

Redesigning a course in electronics for physics–a case study

There is an interesting paper posted in the famous Arxiv hosted by Cornell University Library, “Redesigning a junior-level electronics course to support engagement in scientific practices,” by H.J. Lewandowski and Noah Finkelstein of the University of Colorado Boulder.  See http://arxiv.org/abs/1507.03925.

The course syllabus is at http://www.colorado.edu/physics/phys3330/phys3330_sp14/phys3330_syllabus_sp14.pdf and demonstrates a successful course in measurable outcomes of student engagement and retention of the concepts.  The course  does not require a textbook.

This is another example of a course redesigned to be more effective and became more affordable for students because of faculty who wanted to give their students hands-on practice in doing science.

 

Posted by Sara Rutter in OER

U.S. Department of Education to hire Open Education Advisor for K-12

Check out the post at http://www.sparc.arl.org/blog/education-department-hires-first-ever-open-education-advisor about OER getting major support from the U.S. Department of Education.

Open Educational Resources also have an important role to play in higher education.  Open resources used  with a more integrative use of online library resources, the Zero Textbook courses  can transform classes taught at UH.

Posted by Sara Rutter in OER

“Why You Ought to Think Twice Before Assigning a Pricey Textbook” Chronicle of Higher Education commentary

Doug Ward of the University of Kansas in a commentary in today’s CHE [Sept 8, 2015]  argues that open source or library sources not only save students money  but can offer a better way to teach.  Ward  suggests alternatives to going with a pricey textbook, such as,

“Scour the web and enlist your college’s librarians to find articles and posts that provide the same — or even better — information as in the textbook.” [bolding is mine]

See the article at http://m.chronicle.com/article/Why-You-Ought-to-Think-Twice-/232877/?cid=cr&utm_source=cr&utm_medium=en

 

 

 

Posted by Sara Rutter in OER

Zero-textbook cost classes and OER at Leeward Community College

freetextbook

For Fall 2015, Leeward CC is offering 53 classes that have Textbook Cost: $0 designation* in the online course list. This designation applies to any class that does not require students to purchase textbooks.  These classes include 7 sections of ENG 22, 2 sections of ENG 24, 17 sections of ENG 100, and 8 sections of ENG 200. Other classes include ENG 207 and 209, POLS 110, SOC 100, 151, and 250H, and WS 151. In addition, Leeward CC is offering its first open educational resources (OER) ENG 100 online course. Susan Wood, Professor CC of English, was the first at Leeward CC and in the UHCC system to create an open, online course for English 100.

As part of the UH system initiative, the Leeward Library and Educational Media Center (EMC) have promoted the use of OER, no-cost, and affordable solutions to support student success and make higher education more affordable. A May 2015 survey of Leeward CC students found that, of the 987 students responding, 55% did not purchase a required textbook for a course and 65% said that textbook costs influence their decision to enroll in a course.

This summer, the EMC and Library collaborated to offer a track in the Pacific Region Learning Summit entitled “Go Open, Go Free Using OER.” Participants included teaching faculty, librarians, and instructional designers from Leeward CC, Kapiolani CC, Hawaii CC, and UH Maui College.  Leeward is the first campus in the UH system to design and deliver a professional development series to help faculty find and incorporate no-cost, low-cost, and creative commons licensed resources into their courses as replacements to costly commercial course materials.

The Library and EMC continues its partnership to promote OER as a viable alternative to expensive commercial textbooks and work with faculty members to identify and adapt OER materials for their courses. For more information, please see Leeward’s Open Educational Resources website.

*Textbook Cost: $0 classes are self-designated by the instructor.  An instructor teaching classes that do not require students to purchase any textbooks may request to have this designation added to their classes in the online course list.  Contact your Leeward CC Division Secretary to add Textbook Cost: $0 to the Banner SSA Text field for your classes.

Posted by Junie Hayashi in Leeward, OER

Open educational materials replace all undergraduate textbooks at the University of Maryland University College

UMUC announces that they have replaced all undergraduate textbooks with OER and other no-cost (to students) digital resources for this Fall semester.  By Fall 2016, graduate materials will also be cost-free to students.  This move was to save students money but also to change teaching to avoid relying on materials locked away in static textbooks.  Read, http://www.umuc.edu/globalmedia/embedded-digital-resources.cfm .

We can do this at the University of Hawaii–contact oer@hawaii.edu to discuss further.

Posted by Sara Rutter in OER, UH Manoa