Happy Friday to everyone.
The OER Program has made an open pedagogy project, Canada and Speeches from the Throne available in its catalogue (https://opentextbooks.uregina.ca/primeministers2020/)
Canada and Speeches from the Throne: Narrating a Nation, 1935 - 2015 (December 2020)
Canada and Speeches from the Throne: narrating a Nation (December 2020) edited by Raymond Blake with contributions by Alexander Washkowsky, Braden Sapara, Brady Dean, Sarah Hoag, Rebecca Morris-Hurl, Dayle Steffen, Joshua Switzer and Deklen Wolbaum is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Isaac Mulolani (he/him)
OER Publishing Program
University of Regina
3737 Wascana Parkway
Regina SK S4S 0A2
OER website: https://www.uregina.ca/oer-publishing/index.html
Pressbooks: https://opentextbooks.uregina.ca/
Hello Ms. Brin,
I am a Library Technology Student at SAIT currently enjoying a practicum with Jessica Norman at the SAIT Reg Erhardt Library. I am helping Jessica plan for OE Week at SAIT and I have registered for the Coffee Chat next week. Attending your Coffee Chat as an observer will help me learn more about the Canadaoer community and OE Week.
I thought as I've never appeared on a Canadaoer attendee list in the past that an introduction may be in order.
I'm looking forward to the event next week!
Best regards,
Joanne McKenzie-Hicks
Student, Library Information Technology
Southern Alberta Institute of Technology
Pronouns - She/Her
This message is sent on behalf of Lauri Aesoph.
Dear colleagues:
It's been more than a year since Toronto-based Vretta agreed to be the Canadian distributor for OpenStax hardcover textbooks<https://bccampus.ca/2020/04/28/hard-back-openstax-books-come-to-canada/>, two years after BCcampus approached OpenStax about providing this service as an option. Since then, BCcampus and Campus Manitoba have met with Vretta regularly to gauge response to this opportunity and discuss service finetuning that best fit need.
Adjustments were made throughout the pandemic to ensure that printed OpenStax textbooks continued to be available. With the January term around the corner, Vretta is ready to receive textbook orders and answer questions as it and its collaborators—BCcampus and Campus Manitoba—look to improve access to their OpenStax inventory of hardback books.
Details regarding service improvements will be shared in 2021. In the meantime, questions regarding this service can be directed to Vretta Account Manager, Shoeb Mozammel, at shoeb.mozammel(a)vretta.com.
Regards,
Lauri Aesoph
Manager, Open Education, BCcampus
Dear colleagues,
The call for proposals for Cascadia 2021 — an online open education conference hosted by BCcampus from April 27 to 29, 2021 — is now open.
We invite you to submit a session proposal that pertains to one of our six conference focus areas, which are:
1. Equity and access
2. Scalability
3. Fostering growth in the OER ecosystem
4. Adaptability in trades, vocational, and career training
5. Orientation to open education
6. Collaborative practices
Please see the Cascadia 2021 Call for Proposals<https://cascadia.bccampus.ca/call-for-proposals/> for further information. The deadline for submissions is January 15, 2021.
We look forward to receiving your submissions.
Best,
Arianna Cheveldave
Coordinator, Open Education, BCcampus
Email: acheveldave(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acheveldave@bccampus.ca> • LinkedIn: ariannacheveldave<https://ca.linkedin.com/in/arianna-cheveldave> • Pronouns: She/her
________________________________
I acknowledge that the land I live, work, and play on is the unceded territory of the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) peoples. I thank them for their hospitality.
Hello everyone,
I’m hoping to connect with individuals in Canada who hold a role that is
specifically dedicated to open education.
My role at my institution is dedicated to OE from within our Centre for
Teaching and Learning. I would love to get insight on how other
institutions are positioning OE roles and what is working well/not well,
barriers, etc.
I hope you are all winding down for the holiday season soon!
Thank you so much.
Krysta
--
Krysta McNutt, PMP
Open Education Lead
Centre for Teaching and Learning
University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
krystam(a)ualberta.ca | 780-710-5674
Subscribe to CTL's Monthly Newsletter
<https://www.ualberta.ca/centre-for-teaching-and-learning/events/newsletter.…>
The University of Alberta is located on Treaty 6 territory, the territory
of the Papaschase, and the homeland of the Métis Nation
--
--
Krysta McNutt, PMP
Open Education Lead
Centre for Teaching and Learning
University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
krystam(a)ualberta.ca | 780-710-5674
Subscribe to CTL's Monthly Newsletter
<https://ualberta.us4.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=e41612c074c272daa0649aeff&…>
*The University of Alberta is located **o**n Treaty 6 territory, the
territory of the Papaschase, and the homeland of the **Métis Nation.*
Dear colleagues,
As publishers provide students and faculty with temporary free access to learning materials during the COVID-19 crisis, concerns have been raised about access and time limitations associated with the offers. Working with members of the library community, SPARC has developed the following template that can be used to communicate with publishers about the restrictions<https://sparcopen.org/sparc-crafts-language-in-response-to-covid-19-publish…>.
Please share with anyone who may find this helpful.
Best,
Arianna Cheveldave
Coordinator, Open Education, BCcampus
Email: acheveldave(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acheveldave@bccampus.ca> • LinkedIn: ariannacheveldave<https://ca.linkedin.com/in/arianna-cheveldave> • Pronouns: She/her
________________________________
I acknowledge that the land I live, work, and play on is the unceded territory of the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) peoples. I thank them for their hospitality.
Hi All,
I am looking for Psychology, 2nd edition, from OpenStax in a format that can be imported into Pressbooks. I didn't see a compatible file type on the OpenStax page, and the BCcampus page states that only the 1st edition is available in Pressbooks format. I was wondering if:
1. Someone has already imported the 2nd edition OR
2. Someone can give me some pointers on what I would need to do to import the 2nd edition content.
Cheers,
Jessica
[cid:image001.png@01D6C732.38C5D5F0]
Jessica Norman, MLS
Open Educational Resources Librarian
Reg Erhardt Library
Liaison to: Construction, Manufacturing & Automation
SAFA Table Officer, Division IV
(She/Her)
Book an appointment<https://sait.libcal.com/appointment/16446>
Southern Alberta Institute of Technology
Stand Grad Building, MC113
(Office) 403.210.4073
jessica.norman(a)sait.ca<mailto:jessica.norman@sait.ca>
The Southern Alberta Institute of Technology (SAIT) acknowledges it is situated on
the traditional territories of the Blackfoot Confederacy, which today encompasses
the Indigenous people of the Treaty 7 region: the Siksika, the Piikani, the Kainai,
the Tsuut'ina, the Stoney Nakoda, and the homeland of the Northwest Métis.
SAIT also recognizes all Peoples who make their homes in the Treaty 7 region of southern Alberta.
Dear colleagues,
Open Education for a Better World<https://oe4bw.org/> (OE4BW) is a tuition-free international online mentoring program, designed to help unlock the potential of open education in achieving the UN's Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The program facilitates mentorships in which a recognized mentor guides a mentee through the process of creating their own OER.
Today is the last day to submit an application to be either a mentor or an OER developer in the 2021 program, which will run from January to July 2021. According to the application form, "The program is open to all candidates with a concrete idea, clear motivation and strong commitment to develop and deliver an open online course or other large-scale open resource (e.g., an open textbook) aligned with the SDGs."
Submit an application for OE4BW<https://oe4bw.org/application/> by November 30, 2020.
Best,
Arianna Cheveldave
Coordinator, Open Education, BCcampus
Email: acheveldave(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acheveldave@bccampus.ca> • LinkedIn: ariannacheveldave<https://ca.linkedin.com/in/arianna-cheveldave> • Pronouns: She/her
________________________________
I acknowledge that the land I live, work, and play on is the unceded territory of the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) peoples. I thank them for their hospitality.
Our guidance at eCampusOntario would be to include the following statement:
“This resource is licensed XXX unless otherwise noted”
We would then have the author include a copyright statement with the material used under fair dealing “(Title) by (Author). Copyright (Copyright Holder) (Year). All Rights Reserved”
We would also encourage the creation of an appendix with a list of materials that are exceptions to the CC license.
Meredith Jacob and a team of colleagues at Creative Commons USA are currently working on a best practices for Fair Use/Dealing in OER. We invited her to give a talk third party materials in OER over the spring… the recording is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?list=PLZbPHTwqAgUqbalbV-v55eASl1ec0vsra&v=sT9…
Lillian
// Lillian Hogendoorn, M.I. (she/her)
Acting Manager, Digital Access and OER
eCampusOntario
647-202-8553
[eCampusOntario]
372 Bay St. 14th Floor
Toronto, ON, M5H 2W9
ecampusontario.ca<http://ecampusontario.ca/>
From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)lists.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Nick Baker <nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca>
Date: Thursday, November 26, 2020 at 2:10 PM
To: Jessica Norman <jessica.norman(a)sait.ca>, "Alberta OER Community of Practice (albertaoer(a)googlegroups.com)" <albertaoer(a)googlegroups.com>, "BCcampus OER Listserv (canadaoer(a)lists.bccampus.ca)" <canadaoer(a)lists.bccampus.ca>, "SPARC Libraries & OER Forum (liboer(a)sparcopen.org)" <liboer(a)sparcopen.org>
Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] Fair use statement in OER example?
EXTERNAL EMAIL ALERT: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe.
Hi all,
I was literally just having this conversation with 200 education students this morning who are learning how to create OERs...this is not something I've broached yet (simpler to get them to mix like with like so far!) but if anyone has an example of a statement like this, I'd love to see it, too!
Cheers
Nick
Prof. Nick Baker
Director
Office of Open Learning
Room CEI-2241
Ed Lumley Centre for Engineering Innovation (entrance at 700 California Ave)
University of Windsor, 401 Sunset Ave.
Windsor, Ontario, N9B 3P4
Message me on Teams<https://teams.microsoft.com/l/chat/0/0?users=nbaker@uwindsor.ca>
(519) 253-3000 ext. 4925
www.uwindsor.ca/openlearning
Twitter: @nbaker
The University of Windsor is built on the traditional territory of the Three Fires Confederacy of First Nations, which includes the Ojibwa, the Odawa, and the Potawatomie. As a settler here, I acknowledge and thank the traditional custodians of the land for their wisdom and connection to this place.
________________________________
From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)lists.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Jessica Norman <jessica.norman(a)sait.ca>
Sent: November 26, 2020 1:51 PM
To: Alberta OER Community of Practice (albertaoer(a)googlegroups.com) <albertaoer(a)googlegroups.com>; BCcampus OER Listserv (canadaoer(a)lists.bccampus.ca) <canadaoer(a)lists.bccampus.ca>; SPARC Libraries & OER Forum (liboer(a)sparcopen.org) <liboer(a)sparcopen.org>
Subject: [Canadaoer] Fair use statement in OER example?
<This message has been cross-posted. Apologies for any duplicate messages.>
Hi All,
I’m looking for a real-world example of an OER that includes material under Fair Use or Fair Dealing and has a well-written statement to express that the material is open licensed with the exception of the copyrighted portion. I know I’ve seen them in the past but I didn’t save the links and can’t find them now. Suggestions are greatly appreciated!
Cheers,
Jessica
[cid:image002.png@01D6C401.12610D50]
Jessica Norman, MLS
Open Educational Resources Librarian
Reg Erhardt Library
Liaison to: Construction, Manufacturing & Automation
SAFA Table Office, Division IV
(She/Her)
Book an appointment<https://sait.libcal.com/appointment/16446>
Southern Alberta Institute of Technology
Stand Grad Building, MC113
(Office) 403.210.4073
jessica.norman(a)sait.ca<mailto:jessica.norman@sait.ca>
The Southern Alberta Institute of Technology (SAIT) acknowledges it is situated on
the traditional territories of the Blackfoot Confederacy, which today encompasses
the Indigenous people of the Treaty 7 region: the Siksika, the Piikani, the Kainai,
the Tsuut’ina, the Stoney Nakoda, and the homeland of the Northwest Métis.
SAIT also recognizes all Peoples who make their homes in the Treaty 7 region of southern Alberta.
Hello Everyone,
As our OER repository is relatively new, we’re still nailing down all of the service components and best practices. One topic that arose recently is the question of applying for ISBNs and or minting DOIs for books created/adapted on our Pressbooks network. One thought, although not the only one in the discussion, is that ISBNs add a legitimacy to an open textbook in the eyes of some faculty members that might encourage creation/adaptation.
Do any of you have apply for ISBNs and/or mint DOIs for the books in your repositories? Or have you had discussions in your own communities about this, and would be willing to share your rationales for why you do or do not do one or either? Thanks!
Sincerely,
Cynthia
Cynthia Holt
Executive Director / Directrice générale
Council of Atlantic University Libraries / Conseil des bibliothèques universitaires de l’Atlantique (CAUL-CBUA)
120 Western Parkway, Suite 202, Bedford, NS B4B 0V2 | W: caul-cbua.ca<https://caul-cbua.ca/> | T: 902-830-6467 | E: execdir(a)caul-cbua.ca<mailto:execdir@caul-cbua.ca>
CAUL-CBUA represents member libraries across the region, all of whom sit on the unceded and traditional territories of First Peoples. In Newfoundland and Labrador, our libraries sit on the homelands of the Inuit of Nunatsiavut and NunatuKavut, the Innu of Nitassinan, the Beothuk and the Mi’kmaq peoples. In Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia, we find our friends and colleagues situated on the territory of the Mi’kmaq. In New Brunswick, libraries are found on the land of the Wəlastəkwiyik, Mi’kmaq, and Passamaquoddy Peoples. We at CAUL-CBUA wish to express our sincerest gratitude to the First Peoples who share their ancestral homelands with us all.
CAUL-CBUA représente les bibliothèques membres de la région, qui sont toutes situées sur les territoires non cédés et traditionnels des Premiers Peuples. À Terre-Neuve-et-Labrador, nos bibliothèques sont situées sur les terres des Inuits du Nunatsiavut et du NunatuKavut, des Innus de Nitassinan, des Béothuks et des Mi’kmaq. À l’Île-du-Prince-Édouard et en Nouvelle-Écosse, nous retrouvons nos amis et collègues situés sur le territoire des Mi’kmaq. Au Nouveau-Brunswick, on trouve des bibliothèques sur les terres des peuples Wəlastəkwiyik, Mi’kmaq, et Passamaquoddy. Nous souhaitons exprimer notre plus sincère gratitude aux peuples autochtones qui partagent avec nous leurs terres ancestrales.
<This message has been cross-posted. Apologies for any duplicate messages.>
Hi All,
I'm looking for a real-world example of an OER that includes material under Fair Use or Fair Dealing and has a well-written statement to express that the material is open licensed with the exception of the copyrighted portion. I know I've seen them in the past but I didn't save the links and can't find them now. Suggestions are greatly appreciated!
Cheers,
Jessica
[cid:image001.png@01D6C3D8.2C592400]
Jessica Norman, MLS
Open Educational Resources Librarian
Reg Erhardt Library
Liaison to: Construction, Manufacturing & Automation
SAFA Table Office, Division IV
(She/Her)
Book an appointment<https://sait.libcal.com/appointment/16446>
Southern Alberta Institute of Technology
Stand Grad Building, MC113
(Office) 403.210.4073
jessica.norman(a)sait.ca<mailto:jessica.norman@sait.ca>
The Southern Alberta Institute of Technology (SAIT) acknowledges it is situated on
the traditional territories of the Blackfoot Confederacy, which today encompasses
the Indigenous people of the Treaty 7 region: the Siksika, the Piikani, the Kainai,
the Tsuut'ina, the Stoney Nakoda, and the homeland of the Northwest Métis.
SAIT also recognizes all Peoples who make their homes in the Treaty 7 region of southern Alberta.
Good Morning,
I am hoping that someone can point me to a brief guide on using open textbooks from an instructional designer perspective. Covering information such as adding sections of the text to the course and referencing considerations when modifications are made to the work. We have a situation where the instructor does not want to disrupt the flow of the text but needs to distinguish between their words and the sections of the text that they are using. Any advice here would be very helpful.
Thank you kindly,
Tasha Maddison
Saskatchewan Polytechnic
Good morning everyone.
This is to let you know that the U of S has updated our open site to put more focus on the broader open educational practices. This brings it in line with our shift to funding not only OER, but supporting the integration of open pedagogy across the institution. The new site can still be found at http://open.usask.ca<http://open.usask.ca/>.
Heather M. Ross, BA BEd MEd
Educational Development Specialist
University of Saskatchewan
Gwenna Moss Centre for Teaching and Learning
Ph: 306-966-5327<tel:306-966-5327>
Find open textbooks and other open educational resources on:
http://open.usask.ca<http://open.usask.ca/>
Hi All,
I have an instructor developing an exam for our school's EMT program. He is asking if there are any open licensed test banks for
1) classic "logic puzzle" questions (so not necessary health-related)
2) dosage/ unit conversion/ fraction & decimal questions using health scenarios (EMT, ultrasound, nursing fields, etc.)
I've checked my usual locations (eCampus Ontario, BCcampus, OpenOregon, Merlot, OERCommons) with little success, so any leads would be greatly appreciated!
[1515697169940_PastedImage]
Jessica Norman, MLS
Open Educational Resources Librarian
Reg Erhardt Library
Liaison to: Construction, Manufacturing & Automation
SAFA Table of Officers, Division IV
Book an appointment<https://sait.libcal.com/appointment/16446>
(Office) 403.210.4073
jessica.norman(a)sait.ca<mailto:jessica.norman@sait.ca>
She/Hers/Her
[Open Scholarship in Practice]<https://open.ubc.ca/osip2020/>
Open Scholarship in Practice 2020
Join us November 2–6 for a week of free webinars and workshops exploring the practice of open scholarship — from new tools that can increase the reproducibility of research, to new pedagogies that become possible when students and faculty members become co-creators engaged in meaningful, generative knowledge creation. Hear from UBC colleagues who are incorporating “openness” in innovative ways to enhance teaching, research, and public impact.
Explore the full event calendar <https://open.ubc.ca/osip2020/> here<https://libcal.library.ubc.ca/calendar?cid=7544&t=g&d=0000-00-00&cal=7544&c…>, or browse the sessions below.
Here is a highlight of a few of the sessions!
Working in Public: Generosity and the Knowledge Commons
Date: Tuesday, November 3, 2020
Time: 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm
Location: A Zoom video conferencing link will be provided prior to the event to all who are confirmed to participate.
Featured Keynote: Kathleen Fitzpatrick, Director of Digital Humanities and Professor of English Michigan State University
Working in public, and with the public, can enable scholars to build vital, sustainable research communities, both within their fields, with other scholars in different fields, and with folks off-campus who care about the kinds of work that we do. By finding ways to connect with a broad range of publics, in a range of different registers, and in ways that allow for meaningful response, we can create the possibilities for far more substantial public participation in and engagement with the humanities, and with the academy more broadly. This talk explores the ideas in Professor Fitzpatrick’s influential book, Generous Thinking, and will focus on the challenges posed by working in public and the skills required to develop more publicly engaged scholarship.
Co-sponsored by the UBC Library and the UBC Public Humanities Hub.
Register Here<https://libcal.library.ubc.ca/event/3585287>
Emerging Perspectives in Open Access Book Publishing
Date: Wednesday, November 4, 2020
Time: 10:00 am – 11:00 am
Location: A Zoom video conferencing link will be provided prior to the event to all who are confirmed to participate.
Open Access monograph publishing is a rapidly expanding and evolving strategy for making scholarly work globally accessible. Universities, academic publishers, libraries, and scholarly organizations are developing new initiatives, partnerships, services, and business models to support open access options for authors of scholarly monographs, textbooks, and academic books. This event will explore the opportunities, challenges, and experiences of OA book publishing from the perspective of authors, series editors and publishers. You are invited to join a panel discussion of UBC faculty and publishers that will address their motivations for “going open”, as well as the processes, impacts, and changes that OA is bringing to academic book publishing.
Panellists
* Katherine Bowers, Katherine Bowers, Associate Professor of Slavic Studies, UBC Department of Central, Eastern, and Northern European Studies
* Megan Brand, Production Editor, UBC Press
* Rupert Gatti, Co-founder and Director of Open Book Publishers; Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, Director of Studies in Economics
* Mark Turin, Associate Professor, UBC Institute for Critical Indigenous Studies & Department of Anthropology
Register Here<https://libcal.library.ubc.ca/event/3584443>
Publishing As Open Pedagogy: OJS & Pressbooks
Date: Wednesday, November 4, 2020
Time: 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Location: A Zoom video conferencing link will be provided prior to the event to all who are confirmed to participate.
As open education continues to gain traction in higher education, many are looking for ways to expand their integration of open approaches beyond merely the inclusion of open materials. Open publishing is beginning to emerge as one pathway towards greater engagement in openness in the classroom. This panel will introduce participants to five people working in various capacities to support student publishing through Open Journal Systems and PressBooks, two open source publishing platforms that allow for open dissemination of student-created, instructor-supported content.
Register Here<https://libcal.library.ubc.ca/event/3585292>
<https://libcal.library.ubc.ca/event/3585292>
<https://libcal.library.ubc.ca/event/3585292>
<https://libcal.library.ubc.ca/event/3580860>
Erin M.E. Fields BA, BEd, MLIS (She, Her, Hers<https://equity.ubc.ca/resources/gender-diversity/pronouns/>)
Open Education and Scholarly Communications Librarian
UBC Library | Scholarly Communications and Copyright Office
The University of British Columbia | Walter C. Koerner Library | Musqueam Traditional Territory
1958 Main Mall | Vancouver BC | V6T 1Z2 Canada
Phone 604 822 0977
erin.fields(a)ubc.ca<mailto:erin.fields@ubc.ca> | Emefie<http://twitter.com/Emefie>
https://www.library.ubc.ca/ | https://scholcomm.ubc.ca/
[UBC E-mail Signature]
This message is sent on behalf of Lauri Aesoph.
Dear colleagues,
At a recent CanadaOER meeting, and during other discussions, many have expressed the need for a list of in-progress OER projects that can be checked before committing to the creation or revision of an open educational resource.
That need has now fulfilled with the new OER in Development by Discipline<https://opentextbc.ca/oerdiscipline/back-matter/appendix-b/> page in the OER by Discipline Directory<https://opentextbc.ca/oerdiscipline/>. This list as well as links to in-progress projects, posted on each subject page through this directory, will be updated regularly.
If you have a project that you'd like added to this list or an update or correction about a current listing, please email laesoph(a)bccampus.ca.
Regards,
Lauri Aesoph
Manager Open Education Operations
Arianna Cheveldave
Coordinator, Open Education, BCcampus
Email: acheveldave(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acheveldave@bccampus.ca> • LinkedIn: ariannacheveldave<https://ca.linkedin.com/in/arianna-cheveldave> • Pronouns: She/her
________________________________
I acknowledge that the land I live, work, and play on is the unceded territory of the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) peoples. I thank them for their hospitality.
Dear colleagues,
On the first four Mondays in November, BCcampus is hosting the Trades and Vocational Education Summit Series<https://bccampus.ca/event/trades-and-vocational-education-summit-series/?in…>. The event description is as follows:
This summit series is designed to provide vocational education faculty opportunities to explore different avenues for their course design and delivery.
Session topics will include the following:
* Design Thinking for TVET
* Backwards Design Your Next Course
* Authentic Assessments for TVET
* Synchronous and Asynchronous Teaching in TVET.
Each week will have a different keynote speaker followed by an interactive workshop session. Tim Carson, Sally Vinden, Nicki Rehn, and Lucy Griffiths will lead the sessions. On November 23, there will be a social from 4:00 PM to 5:00 PM PT.
The summit events are from 1:00 to 3:30 p.m. PST on November 2, November 9, November 16, and November 23. There is no cost to attend.
Please share widely within your networks.
Best,
Arianna Cheveldave
Coordinator, Open Education, BCcampus
Email: acheveldave(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acheveldave@bccampus.ca> • LinkedIn: ariannacheveldave<https://ca.linkedin.com/in/arianna-cheveldave> • Pronouns: She/her
________________________________
I acknowledge that the land I live, work, and play on is the unceded territory of the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) peoples. I thank them for their hospitality.
The University of Alberta’s *Opening Up Copyright (OUC)* instructional
modules team is pleased to share another update on the series.
With news that the Supreme Court of Canada has granted leave to appeal in
the Access Copyright / York University case, these four new modules are a
timely way to learn more about post-secondary copyright issues:
- *Access Copyright v. York*
<https://sites.library.ualberta.ca/copyright/modules/access-copyright-v-york/>
- Collective Licensing Institutions and the Copyright Board
<https://sites.library.ualberta.ca/copyright/modules/collective-licensing-ag…>
- Educational Institutions' Policies and Practices
<https://sites.library.ualberta.ca/copyright/educational-institutions-polici…>
- Sections 29.4 - 30.03: Educational Institution Exceptions
<https://sites.library.ualberta.ca/copyright/educational-institution-excepti…>
Special thanks to the University of Alberta's OER Awards program for
funding these modules, and to long-time OUC contributor Julia Guy, who
finished up her work on the project last month.
Through the fall of this year and into 2021 we will be working on the
following introductory modules for the series:
- Creating and Sharing Materials
- Using Materials
- Introduction to the Opening Up Copyright Module Series.
In addition, and with support from the University of Alberta's Support for
Advancement of Scholarship (SAS) fund, a set of modules dealing with
copyright in the K-12 context are being developed in collaboration with Dr.
Cathy Adams (University of Alberta, Faculty of Education).
All of these modules, including slides and scripts, are published under a
Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) licence. This means they can be
adopted and adapted by anyone. If you are linking to, adopting, or adapting
the modules we would love to hear about it! Please add this information to
our OUC ModuleUse Community Page
<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1JrSd5PWShvyExN8NEZOgFpuTaF8DhKrkkgkmWSC…>
.
As a reminder, the Opening Up Copyright CommunityPages
<https://docs.google.com/document/d/17Ul4YeOovdLOEaczPK7RipG_OgOd7etOcJI8ppT…>
provide
an overview of the entire suite of modules to be developed as part of the
series. We encourage you to contribute to the individual module pages,
where we hope to collect your ideas, feedback or suggestions. Consider
sharing suggestions for Learning Objectives, ideas for Narratives or
Contextual Stories, Test Questions, Links to Useful Resources, or Other
Suggestions for modules that interest you. You also have the option of
including your name on these pages, so that we can provide attribution for
your contributions at the end of the module. Feedback can also be sent
directly to copyright(a)ualberta.ca with the subject line “OER Copyright
Module.”
And finally, don't forget to register for the ABC Fall Speakers' Series
<https://abccopyright.com/fall-speakers-series-2020/>. On November 25
contributors
from *both* the Opening Up Copyright *and* the Canadian Association of
Research Libraries' (CARL) Copyright Open Educational Resource for
University Instructors and Staff project teams will be presenting on how
these two initiatives are working together to broaden copyright literacy.
Hello Everyone,
We have received email permission from an author to use his commercial textbook (he owns the copyright to his book) under a CC licence, but we need to have something more formal signed by him to facilitate this process. Do any of you have an example of an agreement for a situation like this that you might be open to sharing with me? Thanks!
Sincerely,
Cynthia
Cynthia Holt
Executive Director / Directrice générale
Council of Atlantic University Libraries / Conseil des bibliothèques universitaires de l’Atlantique (CAUL-CBUA)
120 Western Parkway, Suite 202, Bedford, NS B4B 0V2 | W: caul-cbua.ca<https://caul-cbua.ca/> | T: 902-830-6467 | E: execdir(a)caul-cbua.ca<mailto:execdir@caul-cbua.ca>
CAUL-CBUA represents member libraries across the region, all of whom sit on the unceded and traditional territories of First Peoples. In Newfoundland and Labrador, our libraries sit on the homelands of the Inuit of Nunatsiavut and NunatuKavut, the Innu of Nitassinan, the Beothuk and the Mi’kmaq peoples. In Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia, we find our friends and colleagues situated on the territory of the Mi’kmaq. In New Brunswick, libraries are found on the land of the Wəlastəkwiyik, Mi’kmaq, and Passamaquoddy Peoples. We at CAUL-CBUA wish to express our sincerest gratitude to the First Peoples who share their ancestral homelands with us all.
CAUL-CBUA représente les bibliothèques membres de la région, qui sont toutes situées sur les territoires non cédés et traditionnels des Premiers Peuples. À Terre-Neuve-et-Labrador, nos bibliothèques sont situées sur les terres des Inuits du Nunatsiavut et du NunatuKavut, des Innus de Nitassinan, des Béothuks et des Mi’kmaq. À l’Île-du-Prince-Édouard et en Nouvelle-Écosse, nous retrouvons nos amis et collègues situés sur le territoire des Mi’kmaq. Au Nouveau-Brunswick, on trouve des bibliothèques sur les terres des peuples Wəlastəkwiyik, Mi’kmaq, et Passamaquoddy. Nous souhaitons exprimer notre plus sincère gratitude aux peuples autochtones qui partagent avec nous leurs terres ancestrales.
Dear colleagues,
I hope you can join us for the following webinar on Tuesday, October 6, from 1:00 to 2:00 p.m. PDT: Publishing Indigenous Perspectives Online: How RavenSpace Editors Approach Collaboration<https://bccampus.ca/event/publishing-indigenous-perspectives-online-how-rav…>.
RavenSpace, developed by UBC Press, is a digital platform for publications that aims to support Indigenous community-based research and authorship. It functions as a place where, with community permission, Indigenous knowledge can be shared, but also protected—where knowledge holders may maintain and assert their cultural protocols that govern how certain materials should be accessed, and by whom. In this session, we will show how RavenSpace has integrated publishing and web design workflows with the needs and rights of Indigenous community members and authors. We will share some of RavenSpace’s collaborative approaches, and, more broadly, will discuss additional ways to build cultural considerations into editorial and design choices. Attendees are welcome to share their own examples of approaching culturally sensitive materials in a collaborative environment, as we will allow time for discussion.
More information on how to register can be found here:
https://bccampus.ca/event/publishing-indigenous-perspectives-online-how-rav…
Best,
Arianna Cheveldave
Coordinator, Open Education, BCcampus
Email: acheveldave(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acheveldave@bccampus.ca> • LinkedIn: ariannacheveldave<https://ca.linkedin.com/in/arianna-cheveldave> • Pronouns: She/her
________________________________
I acknowledge that the land I live, work, and play on is the unceded territory of the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) peoples. I thank them for their hospitality.
I received this request from an instructor. Any assistance would be appreciated.
"Open source question banks: since creating questions is time consuming, I have been looking for some open source Calculus canvas question banks that I could just import into my course and modify as needed. I have looked at OpenStax and in the Canvas Commons but I haven’t found anything particularly useful yet nor a way to import a canvas quiz question bank from any of these sources. Do you have any suggestions for me regarding this?"
Heather M. Ross, BA BEd MEd
Educational Development Specialist
University of Saskatchewan
Gwenna Moss Centre for Teaching and Learning
Ph: 306-966-5327<tel:306-966-5327>
Find open textbooks and other open educational resources on:
http://open.usask.ca<http://open.usask.ca/>
Hello all!
Would anyone care to take the lead on facilitating and organizing our next Canada OER meeting? What does this mean?
1. Sending out a doodle poll to find a suitable time
2. Update the agenda and ask others to add to the agenda: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1KuWFCekNe2iKjS4mY5DGzy2KsgMdXidfWtkkSIi…
Thank you!
Amanda
Amanda Coolidge, MEd [she/her]
Director of Open Education, BCcampus
Cell: 250 818 4592 • Email: acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge@bccampus.ca>
Twitter: @acoolidge <http://www.twitter.com/acoolidge> • LinkedIn: amandacoolidge<https://www.linkedin.com/in/amandacoolidge/>
Learning. Doing. Leading.
BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus> • #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash>
For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality.
Hi folks,
Each month the Ontario Open Library Network hosts a webinar on a topic related to Open Education. While these generally feature topics of interest to Ontario educators or Ontario-based OER projects, we welcome attendees from anywhere, so long as they are interested in learning more about open. This month’s webinar is quite special because we’re featuring the students who run the Ontario Tech U OER Lab. The OER Lab is a student-run, staff-managed service point for faculty interested in OER work. These students get a great job, some experiential learning, and the chance to make change around curricular resources on campus.
Supporting Open Work: The OER Lab at Ontario Tech University
Across Ontario, colleges and universities are finding unique ways to support the creation of high quality open resources. Join us this month to take a closer look at Ontario Tech's OER Lab- a student-run, staff-managed group that brings content and technological expertise to the timely creation of high quality OER that will be used directly in an Ontario Tech undergraduate course by Ontario Tech students. Hear from Sarah Stokes, Faculty Development Officer in the Teaching and Learning Centre and OER Lab co-manager, and from the students who work in the lab.
Sep 8, 2020 12:00 PM ET
Register: https://ecampusontario.zoom.us/webinar/register/8515971796482/WN_mDU2V2OoSH…
Hope to see some of you there!
Lillian
// Lillian Hogendoorn, M.I.
Acting Manager, Digital Access and OER
eCampusOntario
647-202-8553
[eCampusOntario]
372 Bay St. 14th Floor
Toronto, ON, M5H 2W9
ecampusontario.ca<http://ecampusontario.ca/>
Hello!
For those able to join us tomorrow for the Canada OER meeting, I have started an agenda on the google doc (https://docs.google.com/document/d/1KuWFCekNe2iKjS4mY5DGzy2KsgMdXidfWtkkSIi… ) – as you can see I have some larger questions I would like to ask the group to identify what our future goals should be and how we move things forward.
In addition, if you feel comfortable, I thought we could assist each other in “open”-related challenges we are facing. At the end of meeting, for those who want to stay on, I will divide us into small groups and you can present your challenge to you small group. The small group will then make suggestions, ask coaching questions, and help you identify how to handle the next steps in your challenge.
Looking forward to chatting with you all!
Amanda
Amanda Coolidge, MEd [she/her]
Director of Open Education, BCcampus
Cell: 250 818 4592 • Email: acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge@bccampus.ca>
Twitter: @acoolidge <http://www.twitter.com/acoolidge> • LinkedIn: amandacoolidge<https://www.linkedin.com/in/amandacoolidge/>
Learning. Doing. Leading.
BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus> • #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash>
For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality.
Hello Everyone!
It has been quite some time since we met and Heather Ross from USASK nudged me to suggest we have a meeting so here we are!
Here is the doodle poll link:
https://doodle.com/poll/tuttea5ybu8fxb46
In terms of agenda items- please put agenda items on this google doc under the heading “september 2020”
Thanks
Amanda
Amanda Coolidge, MEd [she/her]
Director of Open Education, BCcampus
Cell: 250 818 4592 • Email: acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge@bccampus.ca>
Twitter: @acoolidge <http://www.twitter.com/acoolidge> • LinkedIn: amandacoolidge<https://www.linkedin.com/in/amandacoolidge/>
Learning. Doing. Leading.
BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus> • #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash>
For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality.
FYI
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Gong, Regina <gongregi(a)msu.edu>
Date: Tue, Aug 25, 2020 at 3:17 PM
Subject: [LibOER] Call for Proposals: #OpenEd20 - One Week Left!
To: community(a)openeducationconference.org <
community(a)openeducationconference.org>, liboer(a)sparcopen.org <
liboer(a)sparcopen.org>, cccoer-advisory(a)googlegroups.com <
cccoer-advisory(a)googlegroups.com>, open-textbook-network(a)googlegroups.com <
open-textbook-network(a)googlegroups.com>, cc-openedu(a)googlegroups.com <
cc-openedu(a)googlegroups.com>
*** This message is intentionally cross-posted ***
Hello Everyone,
There is one week left to submit session proposals
<https://openeducationconference.org/2020/call-for-proposals> for the 2020
Open Education Conference!
The Open Education Conference <https://openeducationconference.org/> is an
annual convening for sharing and learning about open educational resources,
open pedagogy, and open education initiatives. #OpenEd20 will be held as a
virtual event on November 9-13, 2020. Proposals are enthusiastically
welcomed from all who are interested in sharing about open education,
including from all countries, education contexts, and roles.
*Submit your proposal*
<https://www.cvent.com/c/abstracts/eb556bc2-0114-4678-beb0-3488d2927036/>*
by September 1, 2020, at 11:59 pm HST*
This year’s theme of “Reimagining Open Education” seeks to inspire
participants to reimagine open education as a solution to urgent challenges
facing education in 2020, from the rapid pivot online in response to a
global pandemic, the effects of longstanding structural inequities
including systemic racism, and barriers to the access and full
participation in the exchange of knowledge. Conference topics span the
intersections of open education with COVID-19, social justice,
sustainability, effective practices, how to get started, and more.
The Call for Proposals
<https://openeducationconference.org/2020/call-for-proposals> outlines
synchronous and asynchronous virtual session types, which include
interactive workshops, presentations, and a multi-format content showcase.
Proposal resources
<https://openeducationconference.org/news/tips-and-resources-for-great-opene…>
are available on the conference website, and you can start your proposal
here
<https://www.cvent.com/c/abstracts/eb556bc2-0114-4678-beb0-3488d2927036/>.
Registration for the five-day virtual conference will open in early
September. The standard rate is $75 USD, with discounts and scholarships
available. Sign up here <https://form.openeducationconference.org/sign-up>
to receive notifications.
For more information, visit the FAQ
<https://openeducationconference.org/2020/faq> or email
contact(a)openeducationconference.org.
Thanks,
Regina, Open Education Conference Steering Committee
<https://openeducationconference.org/about#steering-committee> member
*Regina Gong*
Open Educational Resources (OER) & Student Success Librarian
Michigan State University Libraries
366 W. Circle Drive, W225 (DB9)
East Lansing, MI 48824
Phone: 517-884-6396
gongregi(a)msu.edu
she / her / hers
* Michigan State University occupies the ancestral, traditional, and
contemporary Lands of the Anishinaabeg–Three Fires Confederacy of Ojibwe,
Odawa, and Potawatomi peoples. The University resides on Land ceded in the
1819 Treaty of Saginaw. – Land Acknowledgement development by AIIS
<http://aisp.msu.edu/about/land/>.
--
SPARC Libraries & OER Forum
https://sparcopen.org/open-education/#getinvolvedhttps://groups.google.com/a/sparcopen.org/d/forum/liboer
---
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an
email to liboer+unsubscribe(a)sparcopen.org.
--
Ann Ludbrook
Copyright and Scholarly Engagement Librarian
Ryerson University
T: 416-979-5000 ext 6910
Email: aludbrook(a)ryerson.ca
She/Her
Ryerson University Copyright and Teaching Guidelines
<http://library.ryerson.ca/copyright/faculty/teaching/>
We are online to support you! Get information on Library resources and
services for: Students
<https://library.ryerson.ca/blog/2020/05/library-resources-and-services-for-…>
| Instructors
<https://library.ryerson.ca/blog/2020/05/library-resources-and-services-for-…>
| Researchers
<https://library.ryerson.ca/blog/2020/05/library-resources-and-services-for-…>
.
For Ryerson campus information, visit: Ryerson COVID-19 Information and
Updates <https://www.ryerson.ca/covid-19/>
This e-mail may contain confidential information specific to Ryerson
University. Do not forward.
It may also contain information about copyright. This does not constitute
legal advice.
Faculty and staff at Ryerson University need to abide by the Ryerson Fair
Dealing Guideline
<https://library.ryerson.ca/copyright/policies-guidelines/fair-dealing-guide…>,
which allows for 10% of a work or one chapter to be posted in a
password-protected environment for educational use.
Toronto is in the 'Dish With One Spoon Territory’. The Dish With One Spoon
is a treaty between the Anishinaabe, Mississaugas and Haudenosaunee that
bound them to share the territory and protect the land. Subsequent
Indigenous Nations and peoples, Europeans and all newcomers have been
invited into this treaty in the spirit of peace, friendship and respect.
*** This message is intentionally cross-posted ***
Hello everyone,
There is one week left to submit session proposals
<https://openeducationconference.org/2020/call-for-proposals> for the 2020
Open Education Conference!
The Open Education Conference <https://openeducationconference.org/> is an
annual convening for sharing and learning about open educational resources,
open pedagogy, and open education initiatives. #OpenEd20 will be held as a
virtual event on November 9-13, 2020. Proposals are enthusiastically
welcomed from all who are interested in sharing about open education,
including from all countries, education contexts, and roles.
Submit your proposal
<https://www.cvent.com/c/abstracts/eb556bc2-0114-4678-beb0-3488d2927036/>
by September 1, 2020 at 11:59pm HST
This year’s theme of “Reimagining Open Education” seeks to inspire
participants to reimagine open education as a solution to urgent challenges
facing education in 2020, from the rapid pivot online in response to a
global pandemic, the effects of longstanding structural inequities
including systemic racism, and barriers to the access and full
participation in the exchange of knowledge. Conference topics span the
intersections of open education with COVID-19, social justice,
sustainability, effective practices, how to get started, and more.
The Call for Proposals
<https://openeducationconference.org/2020/call-for-proposals> outlines
synchronous and asynchronous virtual session types, which include
interactive workshops, presentations, and a multi-format content showcase.
Proposal resources
<https://openeducationconference.org/news/tips-and-resources-for-great-opene…>
are available on the conference website, and you can start your proposal
here
<https://www.cvent.com/c/abstracts/eb556bc2-0114-4678-beb0-3488d2927036/>.
Registration for the five-day virtual conference will open in early
September. The standard rate is $75 USD, with discounts and scholarships
available. Sign up here <https://form.openeducationconference.org/sign-up>
to receive notifications.
For more information visit the FAQ
<https://openeducationconference.org/2020/faq> or email
contact(a)openeducationconference.org.
Thanks,
Hailey Babb, on behalf of the Open Education Conference Steering Committee
<https://openeducationconference.org/about#steering-committee>
--
*Hailey Babb*
Open Education Coordinator
SPARC <http://sparcopen.org>
Dear friends and colleagues,
We are overjoyed to announce the publication today of Open at the Margins: Critical Perspectives on Open Education<https://press.rebus.community/openatthemargins/>. This curated collection, published by the Rebus Community, includes 38 chapters contributed by 43 diverse authors. The book represents a starting point towards curating and centering marginal voices and non-dominant epistemic stances in open education, an attempt at critical pluriversalism. We hope that the global open education community will find this volume to be a helpful resource and encourage you to share it within your networks.
You are invited to join us in celebrating the launch of the new book/collection via a Virtually Connecting Missed Conversation. We hope that many of you will join us in this session, and feel free to share the registration information with anyone else - it is open to all!
The session will take place via Zoom on Friday August 21st, at 6pm UTC (see the Virtually Connecting announcement page to see the conversion to your timezone<http://virtuallyconnecting.org/blog/2020/08/17/missed-conversation-launchin…>).
All are welcome to join the session and participate. Here is the link to register: https://aucegypt.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJUrfuirrT4jGtBvmUsQjEV3Zwah66W00…
The session will be livestreamed and recorded via Virtually Connecting’s YouTube channel, and later embedded in the Virtually Connecting site.
Warmest regards,
Maha, Catherine, Laura, Robin, and Rajiv
[logo gif]
Rajiv Jhangiani, Ph.D. (pronouns: he/him)
Acting Vice Provost, Teaching & Learning & Associate Vice Provost, Open Education
Kwantlen Polytechnic University
t 604.599.3253 e rajiv.jhangiani(a)kpu.ca<mailto:rajiv.jhangiani@kpu.ca>
www.kpu.ca/tlcommons<http://www.kpu.ca/tlcommons> | www.kpu.ca/cps<http://www.kpu.ca/cps> | www.kpu.ca/open<http://www.kpu.ca/open>
Administrative Coordinator: Janice Webster t 604.598.6215 e janice.webster(a)kpu.ca<mailto:janice.webster@kpu.ca>
This e-mail and any attachments may be confidential or legally privileged. If you received this message in error or are not the intended recipient, please destroy the e-mail message and any attachments or copies.
At KPU, we work, study, and live in a region south of the Fraser River which overlaps with the unceded traditional and ancestral lands of the Kwantlen, Musqueam, Katzie, Semihamoo, Tsawwassen, Qayqayt, and Kwikwetlen peoples.
Dear members of the Canadian OER community,
Membres de la communauté canadienne des REL,
CARL has just released the following statement (and accompanying set of resources) in support of OER as a key solution for equitable online learning. We would like to thank the CARL Open Education Working Group for their work on these documents, especially Erin Fields, Laurie Morrison, and Ann Ludbrook. Please feel free to share any or all of these documents with colleagues and faculty at your institutions. Feedback is also most welcome!
L’ABRC vient de publier la déclaration suivante (et l'ensemble des ressources qui l'accompagne) afin d’appuyer la promotion des REL comme solution clé pour un apprentissage en ligne équitable. Nous tenons à remercier le Groupe de travail sur l'éducation ouverte de l’ABRC pour son travail sur ces documents, tout particulièrement Erin Fields, Laurie Morrison et Ann Ludbrook. N'hésitez pas à partager ces documents avec des collègues et des professeurs de vos établissements. Nous apprécions d’ailleurs vos commentaires et suggestions.
******
Message bilingue – bilingual message:
------
The Time is Now for Open Educational Resources
https://www.carl-abrc.ca/news/the-time-is-now-for-oer/
July 16, 2020. – As higher education continues to prioritize remote online instruction in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, university libraries are working with others to advance, innovate and collaborate on the creation and use of high-quality open education resources. In recognition and support of the work of academic libraries, centres for teaching and learning, and faculty members leading the development of OER on campuses across the country and around the world, CARL’s Open Education Working Group is pleased to share the following resources: an FAQ on Open Education<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/advancing-research/scholarly-communication/open-ed…>, guidance for instructors on Getting Started with OER<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/advancing-research/scholarly-communication/open-ed…>, and an Environmental Scan of Open Education Service and Support in Canada<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/OEWG_environmental_scan…>.
Open Educational Resources (OER) are free to use, openly licensed educational materials that have been produced by experts and educators in the field. Such resources carry no financial costs to the user, and are released under a Creative Commons license, enabling a full spectrum of uses. These permissions are often referred to as the “5Rs<https://opencontent.org/definition/>”: Retain, Reuse, Revise, Remix and Redistribute.
The availability of OER has grown tremendously over the past five years, in terms of the number and variety of formats (e.g. images, text, video, etc.), and the range of subject areas covered. Whether instructors are seeking open “textbooks” for their first- or second-year courses or looking for ancillary content to expand their students’ understanding of an area of study, OER can provide resources developed by experts in a wide range of disciplines.
For students, finances can be a challenge at the best of times, but for those who now find themselves without a part-time job, summer employment, or are suffering other new <https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/11-627-m/11-627-m2020032-eng.htm> financial stresses<https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/11-627-m/11-627-m2020032-eng.htm>, buying commercial textbooks, whether digital or print, may not be possible. OER are one way in which instructors can help students<https://nationalpost.com/opinion/kyle-hiebert-in-the-covid-19-world-open-so…> fully and successfully engage in their learning.
Unlike commercial options that are currently available – for example, the temporary free access to textbook collections provided by some publishers in response to COVID-19, and the expanding textbook rental model – OER provide students with free access to texts and materials not merely while they are enrolled in a course, but long after the course has ended.
In addition to free access, OER enables flexible course design and delivery, including the ability to build tailored resources that can be altered as events and information change. Instructors can incorporate new relevant content in real time to contextualize important social, economic, and political developments.
Instructors can also increase student engagement by incorporating elements of open pedagogy into their course design, providing students with experiential learning opportunities where they may contribute to the design and development of an OER as part of their course assignments. As instructors respond to the challenge of offering courses online, they may consider whether their course resources (e.g. quizzes, exercises, guides, etc.) could be opened for use and adaptation.
For those interested in knowing more, or in learning how to participate in OER, CARL invites you to consult the following:
> FAQ on Open Education<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/advancing-research/scholarly-communication/open-ed…>
> Getting Started with OER<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/advancing-research/scholarly-communication/open-ed…>
> Environmental Scan of Open Education Service and Support in Canada<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/OEWG_environmental_scan…>
> Open Education page<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/advancing-research/scholarly-communication/open-ed…> on CARL website
> CARL Open Education Working Group<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/advancing-research/scholarly-communication/open-ed…>
These new resources add to the excellent corpus of offerings from other organizations active in this area and in which librarians are participating. Notable among these are BCcampus<https://bccampus.ca/> and eCampusOntario<https://www.ecampusontario.ca/> here in Canada, and SPARC<https://sparcopen.org/> on the North American level. (Most recently, the Quebec government has supported the launch of La Fabrique REL<https://fabriquerel.org/> as part of its Digital Action Plan for Education and Higher Education<http://www.education.gouv.qc.ca/en/current-initiatives/digital-action-plan/…>.)
The global events of 2020 have provided an opportunity to re-imagine many aspects of our world, including our approach to higher education. High quality, current, and barrier-free resources should be central to a student-focused, digitally innovative higher education system in Canada and globally.
-----
Place aux ressources éducatives libres
https://www.carl-abrc.ca/fr/nouvelles/place-aux-rel/
16 juillet 2020. – Alors que l’enseignement supérieur accentue l’enseignement en ligne dans le contexte de la pandémie de COVID-19, les bibliothèques universitaires travaillent avec divers intervenants pour l’avancement, l’innovation et la collaboration en matière de création et d’utilisation des ressources éducatives libres de grande qualité. En reconnaissance du travail des bibliothèques universitaires, des centres d’enseignement et d’apprentissage ainsi que des membres des facultés menant la création de REL dans les établissements partout au pays et au monde, le Groupe de travail sur l’éducation ouverte de l’ABRC a le plaisir de partager les ressources suivantes : une FAQ sur l’éducation ouverte<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/fr/faire-avancer-la-recherche/communication-savant…>, des conseils pour les instructeurs pour commencer à utiliser les REL<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/fr/faire-avancer-la-recherche/communication-savant…>, ainsi que son Analyse de l’environnement des services et du soutien à l’éducation ouverte au Canada<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/GTDO_analyse_du_context…>.
Les ressources éducatives libres (REL) peuvent être utilisées gratuitement et ont un contenu pédagogique à licence ouverte produit par des experts et des enseignants dans le domaine. Ces ressources ne comportent aucun coût financier pour les utilisateurs et elles sont publiées sous une licence Creative Commons permettant un éventail complet d’utilisation. Ces permissions sont souvent désignées comme les « 5 R » : retenir, réutiliser, réviser, réorganiser et redistribuer.
Au cours des cinq dernières années, les REL ont connu une forte croissance en nombre, en variété de formats (image, texte, vidéo, etc.) et en sujets couverts. Pour les enseignants cherchant des manuels pour leurs cours de première ou de deuxième année ou du matériel didactique pour approfondir les connaissances des étudiants par rapport à un champ d’études, les REL peuvent offrir du contenu créé par des experts dans une multitude de disciplines.
Même en temps normal certains étudiants ont des difficultés financières ; s’ajoutent maintenant les étudiants sans travail à temps partiel, sans emploi d’été ou subissant un nouveau stress financier<https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/11-627-m/11-627-m2020032-fra.htm>. Par conséquent, l’achat de manuels commerciaux, que ce soit en format numérique ou physique, est peut-être impossible. Les REL sont un moyen permettant aux enseignants d’aider les étudiants<https://nationalpost.com/opinion/kyle-hiebert-in-the-covid-19-world-open-so…> à participer pleinement à leur apprentissage.
Contrairement aux options commerciales actuelles — comme l’accès gratuit temporaire à des collections qu’offrent certains éditeurs en réponse à la COVID-19 et le modèle grandissant de location de manuels — les REL donnent aux étudiants un accès gratuit au contenu et au matériel didactique pour la durée de leur inscription à un cours et longtemps après la fin de celui-ci.
En plus de leur accès gratuit, les REL offrent une liberté de conception et de prestation de cours, y compris la possibilité de créer des ressources sur mesure pouvant être modifiées selon l’évolution de l’actualité et de l’information. Les enseignants peuvent intégrer du nouveau contenu pertinent en temps réel pour contextualiser les évènements sociaux, économiques et politiques importants.
Les enseignants peuvent aussi renforcer l’engagement des étudiants en intégrant certains éléments de pédagogie ouverte dans leur format de cours, offrant ainsi aux étudiants des occasions d’apprentissage expérientiel par lesquelles ils peuvent contribuer à la conception et à l’élaboration de REL dans le cadre de leurs travaux. Alors que les enseignants s’adaptent à l’enseignement en ligne, ils pourraient considérer permettre l’utilisation et l’adaptation libre de leurs ressources de cours (tests éclairs, exercices, guides, etc.).
L’ABRC invite ceux et celles qui veulent plus d’information ou qui veulent savoir comment participer aux REL à consulter les liens suivants :
> FAQ sur l’éducation ouverte<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/fr/faire-avancer-la-recherche/communication-savant…>
> Introduction à l’utilisation des REL<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/fr/faire-avancer-la-recherche/communication-savant…>
> Analyse de l’environnement des services et du soutien à l’éducation ouverte au Canada<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/GTDO_analyse_du_context…>
> Page sur l’éducation ouverte<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/fr/faire-avancer-la-recherche/communication-savant…> du site web de l’ABRC
> Groupe de travail sur l’éducation ouverte de l’ABRC<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/fr/faire-avancer-la-recherche/communication-savant…>
Ces nouvelles ressources s’ajoutent à l’excellent corpus de contenu offert par les autres organisations actives dans ce domaine et auquel participent les bibliothécaires. Parmi ces organisations, il y a notamment BCcampus<https://bccampus.ca/> et eCampusOntario<https://www.ecampusontario.ca/> ici au Canada et SPARC<https://sparcopen.org/> en Amérique du Nord. (Tout récemment, le gouvernement du Québec a appuyé la création de La Fabrique REL<https://fabriquerel.org/> dans le cadre de son Plan d'action numérique en éducation et en enseignement supérieur<http://www.education.gouv.qc.ca/dossiers-thematiques/plan-daction-numerique…>.)
Les évènements mondiaux en 2020 ont permis de reconsidérer plusieurs aspects de notre monde, y compris notre modèle d’enseignement supérieur. Les ressources à jour, de grande qualité et sans barrière devraient jouer un rôle prépondérant dans un système d’enseignement supérieur innovateur sur le plan numérique et centré sur les étudiants au Canada et ailleurs au monde.
--
Lise Brin, MLIS
Program Officer / Agente de programme
[cid:image001.png@01D65B96.9BDF6820]
Canadian Association of Research Libraries
Association des bibliothèques de recherche du Canada
309 rue Cooper Street, Suite 203
Ottawa Ontario K2P 0G5
T 902.318.4485
E lise.brin(a)carl-abrc.ca<mailto:lise.brin@carl-abrc.ca>
W www.carl-abrc.ca
[cid:image002.png@01D65B96.9BDF6820]@carlabrc
Happy Monday everyone.
You can now find Introductory Physical Geology Laboratory Manual (First Canadian Edition) in our catalogue (https://openpress.usask.ca/geolmanual/) This is an adaption of Laboratory Manual for Introductory Geology (2015) by Deline, Harris, and Tefend.
Introductory Physical Geology Laboratory Manual – First Canadian Edition (v.3 – Jan 2020) – Open Textbook<https://openpress.usask.ca/geolmanual/>
Introductory Physical Geology Laboratory Manual – First Canadian Edition (v.3 - Jan 2020) by Joyce McBeth, Karla Panchuk, Tim Prokopiuk, Lyndsay Hauber, and Sean Lacey is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.
openpress.usask.ca
Heather M. Ross, BA BEd MEd
Educational Development Specialist
University of Saskatchewan
Gwenna Moss Centre for Teaching and Learning
Ph: 306-966-5327<tel:306-966-5327>
Find open textbooks and other open educational resources on:
http://open.usask.ca<http://open.usask.ca/>
Dear colleagues,
A Zero Textbook Cost pathway to an Associate of Science degree<https://bccampus.ca/projects/open-education/pathway-to-associate-of-science…> is now available, based on existing OER that align with core requirements for Associate of Science programs in B.C. This pathway is designed such that a student could feasibly complete an Associate of Science degree without spending any money on textbooks, as they would only use OER and other free resources.
In addition, BCcampus is awarding a grant to Thompson Rivers University so that they may develop their own institution-specific pathway. You can read more about that and the development of BCcampus' pathway in this blog post about the Associate of Science pathway<https://bccampus.ca/2020/07/07/a-pathway-to-open-for-science-programs-in-b-…>.
Best,
Arianna Cheveldave
Coordinator, Open Education, BCcampus
Email: acheveldave(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acheveldave@bccampus.ca> • LinkedIn: ariannacheveldave<https://ca.linkedin.com/in/arianna-cheveldave> • Pronouns: She/her
________________________________
I acknowledge that the land I live, work, and play on is the unceded territory of the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) peoples. I thank them for their hospitality.
Hi All,
I'm looking for some stellar Pressbook examples that I can share with faculty to really show off the interactive potential of the platform. Please share your institution's best academic titles - a bonus if they are social work or sociology related.
Thanks in advance,
Jessica
[663A4CA4]
Jessica Norman, MLS
eLearning Librarian, Reg Erhardt Library
Liaison to: Construction, Manufacturing & Automation
Specialist in: Open Educational Resources
Book an appointment<https://sait.libcal.com/appointment/16446>
(Office) 403.210.4073
jessica.norman(a)sait.ca<mailto:jessica.norman@sait.ca>
She/Hers/Her
Sorry about the cross post.
I have a professor who's looking for OER on Marketing Research. I've searched around, but haven't found any, but I'm hoping I've just missed something amazing that somebody else has. 🙂
Heather M. Ross, BA BEd MEd
Educational Development Specialist
University of Saskatchewan
Gwenna Moss Centre for Teaching and Learning
Ph: 306-966-5327<tel:306-966-5327>
Find open textbooks and other open educational resources on:
http://open.usask.ca<http://open.usask.ca/>
Hello Everyone, I’ve been working in the open but under the radar for a little while, but coming back to the critical advocacy work at a time when it seems to be needed most! I have missed visiting with you all and hearing about your work in your provinces and territories.
I am extending my connections and practice into the work of UNESCO and emerging working groups advocating for national action on the 2019 OER Recommendation that was ratified by Canada and 191 other nations.
I’ll type up a report just after the Open Education for a Better World conference led by the team in Slovenia (Mitja Jermol and Tanja Urbancic) I’m attending and look forward to reconnecting with you and confirming new practices and initiatives that are happening across Canada.
Happy Canada Day!
Jenni
Jenni Hayman, EdD
Chair, Teaching and Learning
Cambrian College
1400 Barrydowne Road
Sudbury, Ontario, P3A 3V8
Desk Phone: (705) 566-8101 x6827
Cell: (226) 500-0845
[cidclip_image001.png]
You have received this message from Cambrian College of Applied Arts and Technology, 1400 Barrydowne Road, Sudbury, Ontario P3A 3V8.
Click here<https://secure.cambriancollege.ca/manage-subscriptions/> to control the type of email you receive from the College or remove your email address from our lists.
Thank you for this!
Amanda Coolidge, MEd [she/her]
Director of Open Education, BCcampus
Cell: 250 818 4592 • Email: acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge@bccampus.ca>
Twitter: @acoolidge <http://www.twitter.com/acoolidge> • LinkedIn: amandacoolidge<https://www.linkedin.com/in/amandacoolidge/>
Learning. Doing. Leading.
BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus> • #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash>
For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality.
From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)lists.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Lise Brin <lise.brin(a)carl-abrc.ca>
Date: Monday, June 29, 2020 at 1:06 PM
To: CanadaOER List <canadaoer(a)lists.bccampus.ca>
Subject: [Canadaoer] CARL Releases Environmental Scan of OE Service and Support in Canada - L'ABRC publie une analyse de l’environnement des services et du soutien à l’éducation ouverte au Canada
Message bilingue – bilingual message :
New Report from CARL’s OEWG: Environmental Scan of Open Education Service and Support in Canada
https://www.carl-abrc.ca/news/oe-environmental-scan-released/
Monday, June 29, 2020. – The Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL) wishes to announce the publication of a new report by its Open Education Working Group (OEWG) that examines the landscape of regional and institutional post-secondary support for open education in Canada.
This comprehensive environmental scan of Canadian institutional and regional open education initiatives presents a summary and analysis of support models, services, technologies, and success stories. This report contributes an essential glimpse at the state of open education in Canada, and highlights regional variations, strengths and weaknesses of current approaches, as well as gaps and opportunities. The contents are based on a scan that was undertaken from June to December 2019, primarily involving publicly available information on institutions’ and organizations’ websites. The authors recognize that this methodology may have missed significant Canadian initiatives. CARL therefore invites anyone whose contributions have been missed to provide additions and corrections via the commenting feature on the project’s data capture spreadsheet<http://tiny.cc/vzj8qz>.
The report is authored by the following members of the OEWG: Nicole Askin (University of Manitoba), Mélanie Brunet (University of Ottawa), Rosarie Coughlan (Queen’s University), Caroline Daniels (Kwantlen Polytechnic University), Jean-François Durnin (Université de Montréal), Manisha Khetarpal (Maskwacis College), Ann Ludbrook (Ryerson University), Laurie Morrison (Brock University), and Ann Smith (Acadia University). CARL wishes to thank the authors for their commitment to this important and expansive project.
> Full text of report – English<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/OEWG_environmental_scan…> (PDF)
> Full text of report – French<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/GTDO_analyse_du_context…> (PDF)
Two of the authors of this report, Mélanie Brunet and Laurie Morrison, presented a webinar that summarized the findings of the environmental scan in January 2020. You can access the recording of this webinar on CARL’s YouTube channel<https://youtu.be/t8JcdhZvcWo>.
More information about the CARL Open Repositories Working Group is available on the CARL website<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/advancing-research/scholarly-communication/open-ed…>.
________________________________
Nouveau rapport du GTEO de l’ABRC : analyse de l’environnement des services et du soutien à l’éducation ouverte au Canada
https://www.carl-abrc.ca/fr/nouvelles/publication-analyse-de-lenvironnement…
Lundi 29 juin 2020 – L’Association des bibliothèques de recherche du Canada (ABRC) annonce la publication d’un nouveau rapport de son Groupe de travail sur l’éducation ouverte (GTEO) qui explore le soutien postsecondaire à l’éducation ouverte par établissement et par région au Canada.
Cette analyse globale de l’environnement des initiatives canadiennes en éducation ouverte par établissement et par région présente un résumé et une analyse des modèles, des services, des technologies et des réussites en matière de soutien. Ce rapport donne un aperçu fondamental de l’état de l’éducation ouverte au Canada et met en relief certaines variations, forces et faiblesses régionales des approches actuelles ainsi que des lacunes et des opportunités. Les contenus sont fondés sur une analyse réalisée de juin à décembre 2019 principalement à l’aide de renseignements publics offerts sur les sites web des établissements et des organisations. Les auteurs reconnaissent que cette méthodologie peut avoir manqué certaines initiatives canadiennes importantes. Par conséquent, l’ABRC invite les intervenants dont les contributions ont été omises à partager des ajouts et des corrections par la fonction de commentaires dans le tableur de saisie de données<http://tiny.cc/vzj8qz> du projet.
Les membres du GTEO suivants ont participé à la rédaction du rapport : Nicole Askin (University of Manitoba), Mélanie Brunet (Université d’Ottawa), Rosarie Coughlan (Queen’s University), Caroline Daniels (Kwantlen Polytechnic University), Jean-François Durnin (Université de Montréal), Manisha Khetarpal (Maskwacis College), Ann Ludbrook (Ryerson University), Laurie Morrison (Brock University), et Ann Smith (Acadia University). L’ABRC voudrait remercier les auteurs pour leur engagement dans ce projet important et grandissant.
> Rapport en texte intégral – français<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/GTDO_analyse_du_context…> (PDF)
> Rapport en texte intégral – anglais<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/OEWG_environmental_scan…> (PDF)
Deux des auteures du rapport, Mélanie Brunet et Laurie Morrison, ont présenté un webinaire résumant les conclusions de l’analyse de l’environnement en janvier 2020. L’enregistrement du webinaire est disponible sur la chaîne YouTube de l’ABRC<https://youtu.be/t8JcdhZvcWo>.
Pour plus de renseignements sur le Groupe de travail sur l’éducation ouverte de l’ABRC, visitez le site web de l’ABRC<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/fr/faire-avancer-la-recherche/communication-savant…>.
--
Lise Brin, MLIS
Program Officer / Agente de programme
[cid:image001.png@01D30653.78740D00]
Canadian Association of Research Libraries
Association des bibliothèques de recherche du Canada
309 rue Cooper Street, Suite 203
Ottawa Ontario K2P 0G5
T 902.318.4485
E lise.brin(a)carl-abrc.ca<mailto:lise.brin@carl-abrc.ca>
W www.carl-abrc.ca
[cid:image002.png@01D30653.78740D00]@carlabrc
Message bilingue – bilingual message :
New Report from CARL’s OEWG: Environmental Scan of Open Education Service and Support in Canada
https://www.carl-abrc.ca/news/oe-environmental-scan-released/
Monday, June 29, 2020. – The Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL) wishes to announce the publication of a new report by its Open Education Working Group (OEWG) that examines the landscape of regional and institutional post-secondary support for open education in Canada.
This comprehensive environmental scan of Canadian institutional and regional open education initiatives presents a summary and analysis of support models, services, technologies, and success stories. This report contributes an essential glimpse at the state of open education in Canada, and highlights regional variations, strengths and weaknesses of current approaches, as well as gaps and opportunities. The contents are based on a scan that was undertaken from June to December 2019, primarily involving publicly available information on institutions’ and organizations’ websites. The authors recognize that this methodology may have missed significant Canadian initiatives. CARL therefore invites anyone whose contributions have been missed to provide additions and corrections via the commenting feature on the project’s data capture spreadsheet<http://tiny.cc/vzj8qz>.
The report is authored by the following members of the OEWG: Nicole Askin (University of Manitoba), Mélanie Brunet (University of Ottawa), Rosarie Coughlan (Queen’s University), Caroline Daniels (Kwantlen Polytechnic University), Jean-François Durnin (Université de Montréal), Manisha Khetarpal (Maskwacis College), Ann Ludbrook (Ryerson University), Laurie Morrison (Brock University), and Ann Smith (Acadia University). CARL wishes to thank the authors for their commitment to this important and expansive project.
> Full text of report – English<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/OEWG_environmental_scan…> (PDF)
> Full text of report – French<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/GTDO_analyse_du_context…> (PDF)
Two of the authors of this report, Mélanie Brunet and Laurie Morrison, presented a webinar that summarized the findings of the environmental scan in January 2020. You can access the recording of this webinar on CARL’s YouTube channel<https://youtu.be/t8JcdhZvcWo>.
More information about the CARL Open Repositories Working Group is available on the CARL website<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/advancing-research/scholarly-communication/open-ed…>.
________________________________
Nouveau rapport du GTEO de l’ABRC : analyse de l’environnement des services et du soutien à l’éducation ouverte au Canada
https://www.carl-abrc.ca/fr/nouvelles/publication-analyse-de-lenvironnement…
Lundi 29 juin 2020 – L’Association des bibliothèques de recherche du Canada (ABRC) annonce la publication d’un nouveau rapport de son Groupe de travail sur l’éducation ouverte (GTEO) qui explore le soutien postsecondaire à l’éducation ouverte par établissement et par région au Canada.
Cette analyse globale de l’environnement des initiatives canadiennes en éducation ouverte par établissement et par région présente un résumé et une analyse des modèles, des services, des technologies et des réussites en matière de soutien. Ce rapport donne un aperçu fondamental de l’état de l’éducation ouverte au Canada et met en relief certaines variations, forces et faiblesses régionales des approches actuelles ainsi que des lacunes et des opportunités. Les contenus sont fondés sur une analyse réalisée de juin à décembre 2019 principalement à l’aide de renseignements publics offerts sur les sites web des établissements et des organisations. Les auteurs reconnaissent que cette méthodologie peut avoir manqué certaines initiatives canadiennes importantes. Par conséquent, l’ABRC invite les intervenants dont les contributions ont été omises à partager des ajouts et des corrections par la fonction de commentaires dans le tableur de saisie de données<http://tiny.cc/vzj8qz> du projet.
Les membres du GTEO suivants ont participé à la rédaction du rapport : Nicole Askin (University of Manitoba), Mélanie Brunet (Université d’Ottawa), Rosarie Coughlan (Queen’s University), Caroline Daniels (Kwantlen Polytechnic University), Jean-François Durnin (Université de Montréal), Manisha Khetarpal (Maskwacis College), Ann Ludbrook (Ryerson University), Laurie Morrison (Brock University), et Ann Smith (Acadia University). L’ABRC voudrait remercier les auteurs pour leur engagement dans ce projet important et grandissant.
> Rapport en texte intégral – français<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/GTDO_analyse_du_context…> (PDF)
> Rapport en texte intégral – anglais<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/OEWG_environmental_scan…> (PDF)
Deux des auteures du rapport, Mélanie Brunet et Laurie Morrison, ont présenté un webinaire résumant les conclusions de l’analyse de l’environnement en janvier 2020. L’enregistrement du webinaire est disponible sur la chaîne YouTube de l’ABRC<https://youtu.be/t8JcdhZvcWo>.
Pour plus de renseignements sur le Groupe de travail sur l’éducation ouverte de l’ABRC, visitez le site web de l’ABRC<https://www.carl-abrc.ca/fr/faire-avancer-la-recherche/communication-savant…>.
--
Lise Brin, MLIS
Program Officer / Agente de programme
[cid:image001.png@01D30653.78740D00]
Canadian Association of Research Libraries
Association des bibliothèques de recherche du Canada
309 rue Cooper Street, Suite 203
Ottawa Ontario K2P 0G5
T 902.318.4485
E lise.brin(a)carl-abrc.ca<mailto:lise.brin@carl-abrc.ca>
W www.carl-abrc.ca
[cid:image002.png@01D30653.78740D00]@carlabrc
Dear colleagues,
I am writing to ask that you consider completing a survey from the ICDE OER Advocacy Committee (a group on which I serve). The survey relates to the UNESCO OER Recommendation, adopted 25 November 2019, which includes the following five focus areas
i) Build the capacity of stakeholders to find, re-use, create and share OER
ii) Develop supportive policy
iii) Ensure inclusive and equitable access to quality OER
iv) Nurture the creation of sustainability models for OER
v) Facilitate international co-operation
The mandate of the ICDE OER Advocacy Committee (OERAC)<https://www.icde.org/knowledge-hub/icde-oer-advocacy-committee> is to promote and support the UNESCO Recommendation and implementation across the globe. The general objective for this survey is to map progress in the implementation of the UNESCO OER Recommendation<http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=49556&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION…> globally, in the context of the COVID-19 Pandemic. The questions have its foundation in the Recommendation but also on the work of the UNESCO OER Dynamic Coalition<https://en.unesco.org/themes/building-knowledge-societies/oer/dynamic-coali…>, in which ICDE takes part (along with Creative Commons, ISKME, Open Education Global, SPARC, the OERu, and many others).
We would sincerely appreciate it if you could complete this survey online by July 31, 2020. This survey is by necessity quite detailed and you should plan to spend at least 30-40 minutes for completion. Your responses will help us better understand country implementation efforts, and map progress.
You can access the survey here: https://forms.gle/N16zqRcLT4URK1Q4A
Thank you very much,
Rajiv
[logo gif]
Rajiv Jhangiani, Ph.D. (pronouns: he/him)
Acting Vice Provost, Teaching & Learning & Associate Vice Provost, Open Education
Kwantlen Polytechnic University
t 604.599.3253 e rajiv.jhangiani(a)kpu.ca<mailto:rajiv.jhangiani@kpu.ca>
www.kpu.ca/tlcommons<http://www.kpu.ca/tlcommons> | www.kpu.ca/cps<http://www.kpu.ca/cps> | www.kpu.ca/open<http://www.kpu.ca/open>
Administrative Coordinator: Janice Webster t 604.598.6215 e janice.webster(a)kpu.ca<mailto:janice.webster@kpu.ca>
This e-mail and any attachments may be confidential or legally privileged. If you received this message in error or are not the intended recipient, please destroy the e-mail message and any attachments or copies.
At KPU, we work, study, and live in a region south of the Fraser River which overlaps with the unceded traditional and ancestral lands of the Kwantlen, Musqueam, Katzie, Semihamoo, Tsawwassen, Qayqayt, and Kwikwetlen peoples.
I have an instructor looking to adapt an existing open textbook that is under a CC-BY-NC license, but we can only find it as a PDF. I'm wondering if anyone happens to have or know of a more open version, particularly Pressbooks if possible. See below for details about the book and his question about copyright.
Thank you.
Hi Heather —
I wanted to start a conversation with you about adapting an open textbook for MATH163. I expect you’ll be able to highlight some things to consider as I undertake this project.
This is the resource I am planning on adapting: https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/books/10/ . The textbook is released under CC4.0(BY+NC), which, from my understanding gives me licence to transform and build upon the material and then release it under a similar licence. My plan is to use this text as a base to create a custom text for the course. This will mostly consist of pruning the some of the material that my students aren’t prepared for, adding some material, and making minor notational changes throughout.
One immediate question/concern that I have is copyright of the .pdf output versus copyright of the .tex source file. The authors are resistant to release their source files to me. (I recognize that they are not obligated to). If I cannot get access to these my plan is to apply for funds from GMC to have a student, essentially, recreate the source files. I worry about possible copyright issues here.
Heather M. Ross, BA BEd MEd
Educational Development Specialist
University of Saskatchewan
Gwenna Moss Centre for Teaching and Learning
Ph: 306-966-5327<tel:306-966-5327>
Find open textbooks and other open educational resources on:
http://open.usask.ca<http://open.usask.ca/>
Dear colleagues,
In light of the financial constraints being faced by B.C.'s post-secondary institutions during the current pandemic, BCcampus has decided to remove the requirement that applicants to the Open Education Foundation Grant for Institutions<https://bccampus.ca/grants-calls-for-proposals/open-education-foundation-gr…> and the Sustainability Grant for Institutions<https://bccampus.ca/grants-calls-for-proposals/bccampus-open-education-sust…> must secure matching funds from their institutions equal to the grant total. These grants' calls for proposals have been updated to reflect this change.
If an applicant's institution is willing and able to provide in-kind and/or financial contributions to their proposed project, this information should be included on the grant application.
Sent on behalf of Lauri Aesoph, Manager, Open Education.
Best,
Arianna Cheveldave
Coordinator, Open Education, BCcampus
Email: acheveldave(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acheveldave@bccampus.ca> • LinkedIn: ariannacheveldave<https://ca.linkedin.com/in/arianna-cheveldave> • Pronouns: She/her
________________________________
I acknowledge that the land I live, work, and play on is the unceded territory of the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) peoples. I thank them for their hospitality.
Dear colleagues,
BCcampus has created a graphic explaining the benefits of OER in light of COVID-19. We are sharing it in multiple formats so that you may share and adapt it as you please, per its CC BY licence:
* The New Normal: Using OER to re-open education [PDF]<https://bccampus.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/Using-OER-to-reopen.pdf>
* The New Normal: Using OER to re-open education [Word]<https://bccampus.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/Word-Version.zip>
* The New Normal: Using OER to re-open education [InDesign]<https://bccampus.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/InDesign-Version.zip>
These files are available on our Reports, Reviews, and Resources<https://bccampus.ca/about-us/reports-and-reviews/> page, where you may also find links to our COVID-19 webinar series and support resources.
We hope that this graphic may help you spread the word of open education and OER during these tumultuous times.
Best,
Arianna Cheveldave
Coordinator, Open Education, BCcampus
Email: acheveldave(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acheveldave@bccampus.ca> • LinkedIn: ariannacheveldave<https://ca.linkedin.com/in/arianna-cheveldave> • Pronouns: She/her
________________________________
I acknowledge that the land I live, work, and play on is the unceded territory of the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) peoples. I thank them for their hospitality.
Good morning.
Like many of you, we have been quite busy providing consultations, workshops, and creating resources to support instructors who need to offer their courses remotely / online. We're wondering if anyone has developed or is in the process of developing resources you would be willing to share or we could link to related to offering the following types of courses in a remote / online format:
* Field-based
* Land-based
* Practicums
* Studio-based
* Performance-based
* Community / work-based
The resources we've been developing can be found on:
* Our website - https://teaching.usask.ca/
* Our blog - https://words.usask.ca/gmcte/
Thank you very much.
Heather M. Ross, BA BEd MEd
Educational Development Specialist
University of Saskatchewan
Gwenna Moss Centre for Teaching and Learning
Ph: 306-966-5327<tel:306-966-5327>
Find open textbooks and other open educational resources on:
http://open.usask.ca<http://open.usask.ca/>
Dear colleagues,
I am absolutely thrilled to share a job posting for a new, full-time, and ongoing position at KPU, for an Open Education Strategist. See: https://www.kpu.ca/hr/careeropportunity/20-39r-open-education-strategist-of…
The Open Education Strategist will provide project management and support for various open education initiatives and direct pedagogical consultation and technical training to KPU educators and programs on how to discover, adopt, adapt, or create open educational resources (OER) and how to design learning experiences that integrate principles of open pedagogy. This position will oversee the regular collection, management, and reporting of data for the Zero Textbook Cost (ZTC) program, plan the annual Open Education Research Institute, and provide support to OER grantees, Open Pedagogy Fellows, and Open Education Research Fellows. Through consultations, materials and training, the Open Education Strategist will communicate open education trends and practices to educators and peers. Collaborating with Teaching and Learning Commons staff, librarians, and other stakeholders within and outside of KPU, this position advances, supports, and evaluates open educational practices for KPU. The Open Education Strategist works closely with and reports to the Associate Vice Provost, Open Education.
Qualified candidates will have current knowledge of Creative Commons licenses and how to discover, adopt, revise, and remix OER educational resources (OER). A demonstrated ability to create or adapt OER using open education tools (e.g., Pressbooks, H5P, etc.), current knowledge of open pedagogy (e.g., renewable assignments), and the ability to design, develop and deliver information, resources and training on open educational practices is required. A Bachelor’s degree is required. A specialization in Communications, Education, Marketing, Educational Technology, or Library & Information Science would be an asset. This is a unionized (BCGEU) position that includes benefits.
A review of resumes will begin the week of May 25, 2020; however, the position will remain open until filled.
Please share this posting widely. I would be happy to address any questions about this position.
Thank you very much,
Rajiv
[logo gif]
Rajiv Jhangiani, Ph.D. (pronouns: he/him)
Acting Vice Provost, Teaching & Learning and Associate Vice Provost, Open Education
Kwantlen Polytechnic University
t 604.599.3253 e rajiv.jhangiani(a)kpu.ca<mailto:rajiv.jhangiani@kpu.ca>
www.kpu.ca/teaching-and-learning<https://www.kpu.ca/teaching-and-learning/>
www.kpu.ca/open<http://www.kpu.ca/open>
This e-mail and any attachments may be confidential or legally privileged. If you received this message in error or are not the intended recipient, please destroy the e-mail message and any attachments or copies.
At KPU, we work, study, and live in a region south of the Fraser River which overlaps with the unceded traditional and ancestral lands of the Kwantlen, Musqueam, Katzie, Semihamoo, Tsawwassen, Qayqayt, and Kwikwetlen peoples.
Dear CanadOER list members,
Some colleagues in the US have asked CARL if we have any knowledge of current or past OER creation or adaptation projects that involve cross-border US-Canada collaboration. They are interested in exploring fair dealing/fair use considerations that such projects would entail.
Note that they are meeting next week, so please contact me ASAP with any leads you may have.
Many thanks,
Lise
--
Lise Brin, MLIS
Program Officer / Agente de programme
[cid:image001.png@01D30653.78740D00]
Canadian Association of Research Libraries
Association des bibliothèques de recherche du Canada
309 rue Cooper Street, Suite 203
Ottawa Ontario K2P 0G5
T 902.318.4485
E lise.brin(a)carl-abrc.ca<mailto:lise.brin@carl-abrc.ca>
W www.carl-abrc.ca
[cid:image002.png@01D30653.78740D00]@carlabrc
FYI – please share widely. Everyone is welcome.
Veuillez SVP transmettre ce message largement. Tout le monde est bienvenu.
-----
Message bilingue – bilingual message :
Free Webinar: Discoverability and Sharing Open Educational Resources
http://www.carl-abrc.ca/mini-site-page/webinar-discoverability-and-sharing-…
Date: Thursday, May 21
Time: 1 p.m. ET
Register here: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_NcfeZHgVRsSfvJJUQ5INqQ
The Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL)’s Open Education Working Group (OEWG)<http://www.carl-abrc.ca/advancing-research/scholarly-communication/open-edu…> invites you to this webinar, which follows up on our earlier Community Call on OER Findability Issues by offering practical tips on how to ensure maximum visibility for open educational resources.
Unlike traditional publishing models, where marketing and promotion are completed for authors, engaging in open education activities requires some effort from practitioners in getting the word out there about their resources. This session will introduce you to workflows for making your resource discoverable, collecting impact data, and marketing and promotion processes to showcase the reach of your resources.
This session will cover:
* Identifying how resource formats and accessibility impact openness
* Developing a plan for sharing open educational resources
* Developing a plan for gathering data to show impact of your open educational resource
* Identify marketing and promotion processes for releasing your open educational resource
Presenter:
Erin Fields is a librarian focusing on open education supports at the University of British Columbia. Erin is currently the Open Education Visiting Program Officer for the Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL). She is the recipient of the 2018 Award of Excellence in Open Education and the Open Education Research & Advocacy Fellowship with BCcampus. Erin was also one of the 2019 UBC Open Educational Resource Champion recipients, a recognition from the UBC Vancouver Alma Mater Society, the VP Academic and Provost, and UBC Library.
-------
Webinaire gratuit : Exploration et diffusion des ressources éducatives libres
http://www.carl-abrc.ca/fr/mini-site-page/webinaire-exploration-et-diffusio…
Date : jeudi 21 mai
Heure : 13 h HE
Inscrivez-vous ici : https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_NcfeZHgVRsSfvJJUQ5INqQ
Le Groupe de travail sur l’éducation ouverte<http://www.carl-abrc.ca/fr/faire-avancer-la-recherche/communication-savante…> (GTEO) de l’Association des bibliothèques de recherche du Canada (ABRC) vous invite à ce webinaire, qui fait suite à notre appel communautaire précédent sur les questions de repérabilité des RÉL en offrant des conseils pratiques sur la façon d’assurer une visibilité maximale des ressources éducatives libres. Veuillez noter que ce webinaire se déroulera en anglais, mais que les diapositives seront disponibles en anglais et en français.
Contrairement aux modèles d’édition traditionnels, où le marketing et la promotion sont pris en charge pour les auteurs, la participation à des activités d’éducation ouverte exige des efforts de la part des praticiens pour faire connaître leurs ressources. Cette séance portera sur les flux de travail nécessaires pour rendre vos ressources repérables, sur la collecte de données d’impact et sur les processus de marketing et de promotion pour montrer la portée de vos ressources.
Cette séance portera sur les sujets suivants :
* déterminer comment les formats et l’accessibilité des ressources influent sur l’ouverture
* élaborer un plan de partage des ressources éducatives libres
* élaborer un plan de collecte de données pour démontrer l’incidence de votre ressource éducative libre
* cerner les processus de marketing et de promotion pour la diffusion de votre ressource éducative libre
Conférencière :
Erin Fields est bibliothécaire à l’University of British Columbia et se concentre sur le soutien à l’éducation ouverte. Erin est actuellement agente de programme invitée en éducation ouverte pour l’Association des bibliothèques de recherche du Canada (ABRC). Elle est lauréate du Prix d’excellence en éducation ouverte de 2018 et de la bourse de recherche et de promotion de l’éducation ouverte de BCcampus. Erin a également été l’une des lauréates de 2019 de la reconnaissance Open Educational Resource Champion de l’University of British Columbia décernée par l’Alma Mater Society de l’University of British Columbia, le bureau du doyen et vice-recteur à l’enseignement et la bibliothèque de l’University of British Columbia.
--
Lise Brin, MLIS
Program Officer / Agente de programme
[cid:image001.png@01D30653.78740D00]
Canadian Association of Research Libraries
Association des bibliothèques de recherche du Canada
309 rue Cooper Street, Suite 203
Ottawa Ontario K2P 0G5
T 902.318.4485
E lise.brin(a)carl-abrc.ca<mailto:lise.brin@carl-abrc.ca>
W www.carl-abrc.ca
[cid:image002.png@01D30653.78740D00]@carlabrc
On behalf of the OpenEd Conference Steering Committee
<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1BbGQKTQsrL5X3ZA0B1IjsUrmHX8c8SBuUtrJ9pm…>
, we invite you to participate in the OpenEd conference planning process.
Lend your talents and expertise for the construction of #OpenEd20 and to
assist laying the foundation for future OpenEd conferences.
Click here <https://forms.gle/L1gstFSnqFDkJUDj7> to submit an application
by *Monday May 11th* at 11:59pm local time.
*About the OpenEd Conference*
The Open Education Conference (“OpenEd”) is an annual convening for sharing
and learning about open educational resources, open pedagogy, and open
education.
This dynamic gathering celebrates the core values of open education that
strive to realize education ecosystems that are accessible, affordable,
equitable and inclusive to everyone, regardless of their background.
Building on a sixteen-year history, the conference is in the process of
redesigning itself through a community-driven planning process. The 2020
conference is being planned for November 9-11, 2020 in Denver, Colorado
(USA) and online.
*Volunteer Information*
The Steering Committee is looking for volunteers to help organize this
year’s conference and design a plan for the future. Regardless of
familiarity with open education, we welcome all members of the open
education community to apply to participate in their area of knowledge,
skills, and abilities.
Please carefully review the requirements and time commitments for the planning
teams
<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1bHV9e7UDUoA56CDrsMY8c5jl4kbh-E-4B128O1I…>
and
complete the application <https://forms.gle/L1gstFSnqFDkJUDj7> linked at
the bottom of the email.
*Planning Teams (**Read Full Details*
<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1bHV9e7UDUoA56CDrsMY8c5jl4kbh-E-4B128O1I…>
*) *
- Program Team
- Online Conference Team
- Diversity, Equity, Inclusion Team
- Future of OpenEd Team
- Communications Team
- Conference Policy Team
- Local Team
*Volunteer Opportunities (**Complete this Form*
<https://forms.gle/L1gstFSnqFDkJUDj7>*)*
- Planning Team Member (commit 3-4 hours/month May-December, by
application)
- Volunteer (pitch in when help is needed, such as reviewing proposals)
- Consultant (case-by-case volunteer support in a specialized area)
Please note that relevant experience and/or knowledge will be requested on
the application. Specific experiences or skills are preferred for the
successful execution of the goals for each group.
The application deadline is Monday May 11th. Applicants will be notified
and team members will be announced on May 22nd.
Thank you for considering participating in the development of #OpenEd20 and
the future of OpenEd. Here is the link for the application:
https://forms.gle/L1gstFSnqFDkJUDj7
Sincerely,
The OpenEd Conference Steering Committee
--
*Hailey Babb*
Open Education Coordinator
SPARC <http://sparcopen.org>
Dear members,
The BCcampus call for proposals for the 2020 H5P OER Development Grant<https://bccampus.ca/grants-calls-for-proposals/call-for-proposals-2020-h5p-…> is now live.
This opportunity is open to faculty, departments, working groups, instructors, and staff connected to B.C. post-secondary institutions who are interested in developing content for open textbooks using the platform H5P.
The maximum amount of each grant is $10,000.
The call closes on Friday, June 5.
For more information, click the link above. If you have any further questions, email opentext(a)bccampus.ca.
Best,
Arianna Cheveldave
Coordinator, Open Education, BCcampus
Email: acheveldave(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acheveldave@bccampus.ca> • LinkedIn: ariannacheveldave<https://ca.linkedin.com/in/arianna-cheveldave> • Pronouns: She/her
________________________________
I acknowledge that the land I live, work, and play on is the unceded territory of the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) peoples. I thank them for their hospitality.