open textbooks presentation at ubc

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Open Textbooks: What are they, and how might we promote them? Christina Hendricks Sr. Instructor, Philosophy and Arts One, UBC 2014-2015 Faculty Fellow with the BCcampus Open Textbook Project Unless otherwise noted, this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. Feel free to use, modify or distribute any or all of this presentation with attribution

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Open Textbooks: What are they, and how might we promote them?

• Christina Hendricks

• Sr. Instructor, Philosophy and Arts One, UBC

• 2014-2015 Faculty Fellow with the BCcampus Open Textbook Project

Unless otherwise noted, this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Feel free to use, modify or distribute any or all of this presentation with attribution

Open Textbooks: What, and how promote?

Agenda

• What is BCcampus and the Open Textbook

Project?

• What are open textbooks?

• How might we best spread the word?

Connect the expertise, programs, and resources

of all BC post-secondary institutions under a

collaborative service delivery framework

123

Open Education & Professional Learning

Student Services & Data Exchange

Collaborative Programs & Shared Services

bccampus.caSlide from Clint Lalonde, Bccampus, CC-BY

open.bccampus.ca

What are Open Textbooks?

Textbooks that are , of course!

But what does that mean?...

The 5 “R’s” of openness

• Therighttomake,ownandcontrolcopiesofthecontentRetain

• TherighttousethecontentinawiderangeofwaysReuse

• Therighttoadapt,adjust,ormodifythecontentitselfRevise

• Therighttocombinetheoriginalorrevisedcontentwithotheropencontenttocreatesomethingnew

Remix

• Therighttosharecopiesoftheoriginalcontent,yourrevisions,oryourremixeswithothers

Redistribute

Source: David Wiley, http://opencontent.org/blog/archives/3221 CC-BY

Slide adapted from Mary Burgess, BCcampus, licensed CC-BY

Open Educational Resources

“OER are teaching, learning, and research resources that reside in the public domain or have been released under an intellectual property license that permits their free use and re-purposing by others.”

-- William and Flora Hewlett Foundationhttp://www.hewlett.org/programs/education/open-educational-resources

Open Textbooks

Similar to any other textbook, but with an open license to allow revision/reuse

• Often a “creative commons” license

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/

Online, PDF, ebook, or printed • Free of cost online; often small charge for

printed version

Benefits of open textbooks: Cost

Students spend $1200/yron textbooks

Source: Fixing the Broken Textbook Market U.S. Student PIRGs, licensed CC BY 4.0

Cover image: Center for Public Interest Research, CC-BY 4.0 license

-- College Board, U.S.

65% of students have not

purchased a textbook for a

course during their academic

career because of price

Nearly half said textbook cost

affected course choice

Slide adapted from Clint Lalonde, BCcampus, CC-BY

Benefits of open textbooks: Own & Retain

Ebooks may not

allow you to

copy and paste,

print orredistribute

May only have

access for short period of time

System Lock, Flickr photo shared by Yuri Samoilov, licensed CC BY 2.0

Benefits of open textbooks: Adaptability

Take out what you don’t need, add in your own materials or OER from others …

E.g., lecture

notes, videos,

images,quizzes, & more

CC-A license to remix, flickr photo shared by fotonen, CC BY 2.0

Where to find open textbooks

open.bccampus.ca

openstaxcollege.org

open.umn.edu/opentextbooks/

Collegeopentextbooks.org

HELP?

Looking for ways to:

• Increase awareness of OER and open textbooks• Encourage adoption of open textbooks by faculty• Encourage reviews of open textbooks by faculty• Hopefully increase the number of open textbooks

over time (will require more funding)

Thank You

[email protected]

@clhendricksbc

http://blogs.ubc.ca/christinahendricks

open.bccampus.ca