Practice, Outcomes, and Applications

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Presentation transcript:

Practice, Outcomes, and Applications OERs at UMass Amherst Practice, Outcomes, and Applications Charlotte Roh Based on Marilyn Billings’ OER Summit Presentation (October 2013)

What’s the Difference? Open Education Traditional Textbooks are generally not new knowledge, and are therefore easily substituted for each other (unlike articles and new book publications).

OEI Grant: Faculty Proposals The Provost’s Office and the University Libraries of the University of Massachusetts Amherst launched the Open Education Initiative (OEI) in the Spring of 2011. The OEI is a faculty incentive program (a small grant) that encourages: the creation of new teaching materials the use of existing open (free) information resources to support our students’ learning the use of library subscription materials The Provost sends out the call for proposals, and we use a simple Google form. We ask the faculty to submit Basic course information Number of students Current textbook(s) and cost Anticipated OER implementation date Brief narratives explaining the Outcomes Sustainability Challenges Assessment The faculty proposal is very straightforward. It addresses quite simply the cost of the textbook per student and what the course is trying to accomplish with these resources. Really, these are things that any professor considers when thinking of course materials. Photo credit: Derek Jensen aka FireChickenTA99

UMass Amherst at Work Libraries Workshops for OER, copyright, & Creative Commons licensing Liaison consultations to find resources and create new content Circulation & electronic reserves to find subscription materials Information Technology Classroom technologies & hosting Instructional technologies and experimentation Center for Teaching & Faculty Development Flipping classrooms for interactive learning w/ne materials Creating new curriculum materials and scaffolding

Success Stories Carlos Gradil Miliann Kang Hossein Pishro-Nik Animal Sciences 421: Fundamentals of Reproduction Initial Cost Savings: $2,400 Carlos Gradil Women's Studies 187: Gender, Sexuality and Culture Initial Cost Savings: $22,500 Miliann Kang Electrical and Computer Engineering 314: Introduction to Probability and Random Processes Initial Cost Savings: $14,630 Hossein Pishro-Nik Uses video to teach 3 different classes, a far superior teaching tool than text/static images OERs downloaded over 3,600 times, far over initial class of 300 students Used his book in 6 courses, representing 6 times projected savings ($87,700); other professors are using it as well

SCAFFOLDING & SUPPORT “I had such a difficult time finding a textbook that covers all relevant topics that are included in this course. I used a textbook that cost approximately $170, and I noticed that many students did not buy the book, which meant that they did not read and study the information; thus, they were not ready for class discussion…. At the first session of the class, I made sure that each student had access to computers, and took time to show students how they could access those course readings. I noticed that many students read the course materials before classes and sometimes I asked students to bring their laptops or tablets to class so we could open up the articles during our class discussions. I believe that the OEI grant was really helpful for students to easily find weekly course readings free of charge, read and study them, and engage in class discussions. I appreciate the opportunity to work on this grant. Thank you!” SeonYeong Yu, Assistant Professor, Department of Teacher Education and Curriculum Studies

ASSESSMENT & Outcomes Intended Outcomes 50 faculty + over 85 classes taught = over $1 million saved for students Course evaluations show the same quality of student satisfaction, if not better Service points on campus are partnering for student success Unexpected Outcomes Instructors are using new teaching styles and flipping their classrooms Increased awareness on campus and queries from instructors about OERs Professors report students are better prepared for class and more engaged The open education community Created resources add to available open education resources for everyone Relationships between service point partners are stronger Student involvement and passion

Student involvement Workshop for CPE faculty on OER during Open Access Week.

From the 2015 Horizon report A response to the Student PIRGs Report Open Textbooks: The Billion-Dollar Solution

Open Educational Resources: The 4R Framework Reuse Revise Remix Redistribute Educational resources that are freely available for any of these things that you do online anyway.

OER includes Curriculum Syllabi Content modules Course materials Textbooks Assignments Simulations Learning objects Labs Collections Journal articles E-books Art galleries Video libraries Tools Software Calculators Analytics So where can these be found? You can look online or… And more!

http://guides.library.umass.edu/oer Open Educational Resources Guide at UMass Amherst

Example: Courses with Open Courseware Consortium

Let’s see what they have for the environment (51 courses).

Faculty copyright concerns Questions How do I keep my rights? How do I make sure I’m not infringing on the rights of other creators? Answer The same as you would anything else you produce – put your name on it and make sure you’re citing things appropriately.

Sharing your work http://creativecommons.org Attribution You let others copy, distribute, display, and perform your copyrighted work — and derivative works based upon it — but only if they give credit the way you request. Share Alike You allow others to distribute derivative works only under a license identical to the license that governs your work. Noncommercial You let others copy, distribute, display, and perform your work — and derivative works based upon it — but for noncommercial purposes only. No Derivative Works You let others copy, distribute, display, and perform only verbatim copies of your work, not derivative works based upon it. If you have questions about whether something is possible to use, I’m happy to chat with you. There are special exemptions for teachers and guidelines for fair use.

Licensing your work Helpful Links OER LibGuide: http://guides.library.umass.edu/oer Creative Commons: http://creativecommons.org UMass Scholarworks http://scholarworks.umass.edu/