1 About Open Educational Resources

Open Education​

Open education encompasses a set of practices directed at making the process and products of education more transparent, understandable and available to all. Open education seeks to make education more accessible, affordable, and inclusive through the use of open educational resources. Throughout this module participants will gain an understanding of open educational resources and the impact they have when producing, sharing and building knowledge.

This is an adaptation from Open UBC  and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

 

Open Educational Resources (OER)​

“Open Educational Resources (OER) are learning, teaching and research materials in any format and medium that reside in the public domain or are under copyright that have been released under an open license, that permit no-cost access, re-use, re-purpose, adaptation and redistribution by others.” ​United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization

Short History of OER by Holly Ashbourne is licensed under a/an Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0), except where otherwise noted

 

What are OER?

The easiest way to define OER is to think of them as Free resources with Permissions. Free includes cost, meaning it should be freely available and not cost money to access it. But free also means that the OER should be free of access barriers too. For example, you shouldn’t have to purchase expensive software to view or read an OER. Permissions in the OER landscape refers to the 5R permissions: Retain, Revise, Remix, Reuse, and Redistribute. These permissions are clearly articulated to students, faculty, community members, and anyone in the world using open licenses, such as Creative Commons licenses. It is important to know that copyright is automatic in Canada, and by applying a Creative Commons license to your creative or intellectual work, you are clearly articulating to users what they can and cannot do with your work.

Using the example of an open textbook written by an American professor for a U.S. college to further explore the 5R permissions. Because the American professor used a Creative Commons license for their open textbook, students are able to freely retain or keep a copy of the textbook on their computer, their phone, or even print a copy for their own use. Now, let’s say a professor at Univeristy of Toronto finds this open textbook and wants to use it in their class. They are able to not only retain a copy but they can redistribute it to their students by posting a link to it in their course’s Quercus site. Let’s then say they want to also revise the content and want to add more localized examples and case studies. They also would like to add openly licensed images and some quiz questions and video content. This professor can actually remix the original open textbook from the U.S. professor, adding in all of these examples, images, videos, and quiz questions and ultimately create a course learning material that is tailored to the unique learning context of students at the University of Toronto. Finally, the same professor could then redistribute this resource and make it available to others who could in turn create their own revised/remixed versions tailored to their unique cultural geographical, and learning context

This section was adapted from Module 1: OER 101 by Stephanie Quail is licensed under a/an Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0), except where otherwise noted

 

 

Free vs. Open​

“Free” means that there is no required cost to access materials. It does not mean that users may also reuse, modify, or share the materials.​ Open materials allow users to revise and remix them with other open resources or self-generated content to produce new material.

Open Licensing​

Creative commons licenses

Creative Commons (CC) is an international non-profit organization that promotes the sharing and reuse of works by providing free legal tools. Its main product are the six open licenses.​

The six Creative Commons licenses are a combination of four conditions. These can also be represented by two letters – CC BY-SA – or written out in long form – Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike.​

  • Attribution (BY)​
  • ShareAlike (SA)​
  • NonCommercial (NC)​
  • NoDerivatives (ND)

 

This is an adaptation from Navigating Licenses and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

Open Educational Resources at UTSC Copyright © by David Kwasny is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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