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CAAL-CBPA Strategic Plan: Goal 6.3 Administer an OER Development Grants Program for
educators in the region.
The Council of Atlantic Academic Libraries (CAAL)<https://caul-cbua.ca/> is
delighted to announce the recipients of this year’s AtlanticOER Development
Grants<https://atlanticoer-relatlantique.ca/grants/>. These grants are intended to
support educators in the Atlantic Region in the adaptation, adoption, creation, and
curation of open educational resources (OER), and to increase access to course materials
for students. With funding from the Council of Atlantic Ministers for Education and
Training (CAMET), the AtlanticOER Development Grant Program expanded this year. A new
tiered system of funding was introduced to better support textbook creation (up to
$7,000), adaptation (up to $3,500), and ancillary material creation projects (up to
$1,000).
The grants aim to support educators from provincially funded post-secondary institutions
in achieving the following objectives:
* Support the creation or adaptation of open textbooks and ancillary materials, such
as PowerPoint slides, quiz banks, images, and other digital study or interactive aids;
* Create a variety of OERs developed for use by educators and students in
credit-bearing courses;
* Establish supportive events for the development of content for OERs, such as sprints
(a collaborative in-person or virtual event to create or adapt an open textbook or
ancillary resources); or
* Distribute funds to maximize direct benefit to a wide range of student learners and
inquiry across a diversity of disciplines.
The 2024 Development Grant
recipients<https://atlanticoer-relatlantique.ca/2024/07/10/2024-recipients-of-the-atlanticoer-development-grants/>
are:
Dr. Cynthia Alexander, Department of Politics, Acadia University
[ATxaAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC]
Tier: Creation Grant
Project: The goal of this project is to create an interdisciplinary textbook that centers
a decolonizing approach to public policy, amplifying Indigenous experts’ policy approaches
and priorities. The project is reflective of over a decade of collaborative and community
based research, including community service learning initiatives undertaken in partnership
with Mi’kmaq and Inuit of Nunavut. The resulting textbook will be used to support both
students at Acadia and students at Nova Scotia Community College.
Team: Dr. Beverly McKee, School of Health and Human Services, Nova Scotia Community
College
Courses: Pols 2003 Introduction to Public Policy (Acadia); POLS 4803/5803 Canadian Public
Policy (Acadia); PRNS 2018 Health Promotion and Community Nursing (NSCC); PRNS
Introduction to Nursing (NSCC)
Dr. Yigit Aydede, Sobey School of Business and Economics, Saint Mary’s University
[h9AziBNXrCCNQAAAABJRU5ErkJggg==]
Tier: Creation Grant
Project: This project aims to create a new, interactive open textbook that will be used to
teach upper level undergraduate students in business and social science the foundational
data analytics skills in R and Python. The textbook will integrate practical programming
skills that will allow students to apply machine learning techniques directly to
real-world issues they encounter in their fields of study.
Courses: MGSC 1207 Introduction to Data Analytics for Business; MGSC 2207 Introductory
Statistics; ECON 3303 Intermediate Economic Statistics; ECON 4498 Research Seminar in
Economics
Dr. Karen Brebner, Department of Psychology, Saint Francis Xavier University
Tier: Adaptation Grant
Project: The goal of this project is to adapt and expand upon the book, Open Neuroscience
Initiative. The project aims to add a lab manual, supplement existing content, and create
chapter assignments with both student and expert feedback in mind.
Team: Dr. Erin Mazerolle Department of Psychology, StFX, Sherry Neville-MacLean,
Department of Psychology, StFX
Courses: PSYC 231 Brain and Behaviour I; PSYC 232 Brain and Behaviour II
André Davey, School of Access, Education, and Language, Nova Scotia Community College
[D9MF3MozQH83gAAAABJRU5ErkJggg==]
Tier: Adaptation Grant
Project: The goal of this project is to adapt an open Math textbook to make it suitable
for teaching Health Mathematics. Current options for OER focused on Math do not meet the
learning outcomes for students who take Health Mathematics. This textbook will provide
better access for future Licensed Practical Nurses to interactive learning materials with
Nova Scotia based case studies.
Courses: Math 1048, Math 1049 Health Mathematics; Math 1025 Health Math Extension from
Graduate Math IV
Dr. Elizabeth Jewett, Director of Extended Learning, Mount Allison University
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Tier: Creation Grant
Project: The goal of this project is to create an introductory Canadian Studies textbook
that makes use of a variety of media types and knowledges to support different styles of
learning. The textbook will provide to a range of audiences inside and outside the
university a comprehensive interdisciplinary introduction to Canada and to critical
Canadian Studies that seeks to restructure how narratives of Canada are discussed to
emphasize the different ways of knowing, seeing, and experiencing this country.
Team: Andrew Nurse, Acting Director of Canadian Studies at Mount Allison University,
Elizabeth Miller Public Services and Special Collections Librarian at Mount Allison
University
Courses: CANA 1001 Contemporary Canada: An Introduction; CANA 1011 Representing Canada
Dr. Laura Lambe, Department of Psychology, Saint Francis Xavier University
[A3KF5zJcHX9FAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC]
Tier: Creation Grant
Project: The goal of this project is to create a comprehensive textbook on Introductory
Clinical Psychology for undergraduate students. Graduate students from Atlantic Canada
will be invited to contribute to this book on their areas of expertise. The project team
seeks to create a resource that integrates EDI principles and Canadian content, and to
garner feedback from students on their experience with the newly developed OER.
Team: Dr. Angela Weaver, Department of Psychology, StFX
Course: PSYC 379 Introduction to Clinical Psychology
Hannah Rosborough, Instruction and Scholarly Communication Librarian, Sir James Dunn
Library, Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University
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Tier: Creation Grant
Project: The goal of this project is to create a Legal Citation Guide that will benefit
students and legal professionals. This accessibly designed resource will include commonly
cited primary and secondary sources, including explanations of specific components of
legal citation and a glossary of legal sources. It will also provide guidance tailored to
law students on formatting for legal documents and major papers.
Course: LAWS 1014/1024 Legal Research and Writing
Dr. Mo Snyder, Department of Earth and Environmental Science, Acadia University
[Haf9PNOmPukE8AZnOY+vJ8wOAh9Xyz+PzmhSyFS345wAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC]
Tier: Adaptation Grant
Project: The goal of this project is to revise, update, and add material to the open
textbook “Geological Structures: A Practical Introduction”. This textbook combines
theoretical, practical, and experiential learning to further enrich the geoscience
learning experience for students
Team: Dr. John Waldron, Acadia University
Courses: GEOL 3603 Structural Geology and Tectonics; EAS 233 Geological Structures
Matthew Walker, School of Performing Arts, Dalhousie University
[7WMKbovyXp389TNzf8XOPmusuZj38gAAAAASUVORK5CYII=]
Tier: Creation Grant
Project: The goal of this project is to create a textbook entitled Devised Theatre Tools
for Actor Training, which seeks to articulate how devised methods and collaborative models
can serve the actor in training. The collaborative nature of Devised training seeks to
give actors greater autonomy and thereby can empower them as artists. The book will also
aim to provide each artist with the agency to determine the parts of their own complex
identity they wish to represent in their work.
Team: Sara Graham, Accessibility Consultant
Courses: THEA 1801, THEA 1802, THEA 2801, THEA 2802, THEA 3801, THEA 3802, THEA 4801, THEA
4802
We are pleased to offer support to educators in the region in developing OERs.
Alexandra Marcaccio (she/ her/ elle)
AtlanticOER Lead
Council of Atlantic Academic Libraries / Conseil des bibliothèques postsecondaires de
l’Atlantique (CAAL-CBPA)120 Western Parkway, Suite 202, Bedford, NS B4B 0V2 | W:
caul-cbua.ca<https://caul-cbua.ca/> | T: 902-830-6467 | E:
oer@caul-cbua.ca<mailto:oer@caul-cbua.ca>
CAAL-CBPA 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 CAAL-CBPA wish to express our sincerest gratitude to the First Peoples who share
their ancestral homelands with us all.
CAAL-CBPA 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.