Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Answers to common questions about OER

 

What are OERs?

 

Definition through Hewlett Foundation:
“Open Educational Resources are teaching, learning and research materials in any medium – digital or otherwise – that reside in the public domain or have been released under an open license that permits no-cost access, use, adaptation and redistribution by others with no or limited restrictions.”[4]
Citation: William & Flora Hewlett Foundation. “Open Educational Resources.” Accessed June 15, 2019. https://hewlett.org/strategy/open-educational-resources/

What is NOT an OER?

If a resource is not free or openly licensed, it cannot be described as an OER. For example, most materials accessed through your library’s subscriptions cannot be altered, remixed, or redistributed. These materials require special permission to use and therefore cannot be considered “open.” Table 1 below explains the difference between OER and other resources often misattributed as OER.

Table 1: Components of an OER
Material Type Openly Licensed Freely Available Modifiable
Open educational resources Yes Yes Yes
Free online resources under all rights reserved copyright No Yes No
Materials available through the University Library No Yes No
Open access articles and monographs Yes Yes Maybe
What are open textbooks?

What are open textbooks? From BCcampus website: https://open.bccampus.ca/what-is-open-education/what-are-open-textbooks/

Open textbooks are a subset of open educational resources (OER) and reside in the public domain — where copyrights have been waived by the copyright holder or copyright has expired — or have been released by the copyright holder under an open-copyright licence. The B.C. Open Textbook Collection, Canada’s first major repository of these OER, is available for all to use.
Open textbooks are available digitally, accessed online or through shareable formats, to be freely used by anyone: students, instructors, librarians, and members of the public. In general, they can be modified, printed, shared, retained, remixed, and reused. If the work has been released with a Creative Commons – or other open-copyright – licence, the user must adhere to that licence’s legal requirements.

How do I get started?

Searching for OER can be difficult when you’re starting from a narrow perspective. For the most results, start with a broad search focused on your discipline. Once you’ve brought together a large collection of resources, then you can begin to limit your results.

6 minute Video: https://pressbooks.bccampus.ca/uvicoerguidelines/chapter/finding-oer/

How do I evaluate the OER's I have found?

Now evaluate the OERs that you have found. There are a number of rubrics available to help you evaluate the resources. BCcampus has developed a set of criteria for evaluating OER. See if textbook/resource matches your criteria and based on content, presentation, online accessibility, production options, platform compatibility, delivery options, interactivity, consistency between online and printed versions, and available ancillary material (test banks, PowerPoints, etc.). You can read these reviews when you search for different books in the collection. If a book hasn’t been reviewed, consider submitting a review request.  The reviews are comprehensive.

Should I create a NEW textbook or adopt an open textbook?

Before you think about creating a NEW open textbook, consider adopting an open textbook that you found. Adopt the textbook and gather feedback about the textbook from your students. Adopting open educational resources means that you are selecting openly licensed free resources (like textbooks) to use “as is” in your classroom. For example, Physics faculty adopted a number of chapters from University Physics Volumes 1-3 published by OpenStax for their PHYS 120, 130, 216 courses. The Copyright and Scholarly Communications Office (CSCO) at UVic Libraries assisted the faculty by collating the chapters required for each course into a pdf for easy by students. The CSCO also curated the Chapter content on Pressbooks for the three courses. Earth and Ocean Sciences have adopted open textbooks for a number of their courses, e.g.: EOS 120 – Physical Geology. History 230A Canada to Confederation adoption an open textbook for their course as well.

Should I adapt an open textbook?

“The term adaptation is commonly used to describe the process of making changes to an existing work. Though we can also replace “adapt” with revise, modify, alter, customize, or other synonym that describes the act of making a change.” From BCcampus Adaptation Guide (CC BY)

Reasons to Adapt an Open Textbook
One of the benefits of using an openly licensed textbook or other educational resource is that you are free to adapt it to fit your needs. In other words, you can adjust the educational resources to fit your course curriculum, not the other way around.  

How do I copyright my work – open licensing – CC license – only 2 CC license

https://opentextbc.ca/adaptopentextbook/chapter/choose-licence/

All OER are made available under some type of open license—a set of authorized permissions from the rights holder of a work for any and all users. The most popular of these licenses are Creative Commons (CC) licenses, customizable copyright licenses that allow others to reuse, adapt, and re-publish content with few or no restrictions. CC licenses allow creators to explain in plain language how their works can be used by others.

Still have questions? Check out our OER by Discipline Directory!

From The Directory:

This resource was adapted from the BCcampus Open Education OER by Discipline DirectoryThis support guide lists a broad range of open educational resources (OER) organized by discipline. OER are teaching, learning, and research resources that, through permissions granted by the copyright holder, allow others to use, distribute, keep, or make changes to them. This directory was developed to highlight as many OER as possible — case studies, courses, games, repositories, simulations, textbooks, videos, and more — and organize them so faculty can easily locate resources in their subject area.

If you are looking for support or resources, you can check out the section:

Appendix A: Teaching and Learning Online – Help and Resources

More on OER @ UVic

ABSTRACT
This paper focuses on the ways educators can work within the guidelines of copyright
while using digital media to develop educational content in legal and ethical ways
by exploring several key contemporary trends in digital content creation.

The UVic Open Hub

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“The UVic Open Hub is a portal for developing open education initiatives, resources, and community to increase the availability, access, reuse, and redistribution of knowledge artifacts and to support the participation of stakeholders, including undergraduate and graduate students, staff, faculty, and administrators, in areas spanning research (open access, open scholarship, open data), teaching and learning (open education, open pedagogy, open educational resources), and service (connecting open practices for community engagement, marketing, recruitment).”

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Inba Kehoe
Head, Scholarly Communication &          Copyright Officer

CCYBYExcept where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License