Schools, colleges, and universities have closed their campuses and pivoted to remote instruction in a matter of weeks as the COVID-19 threat became a reality. Student’s lives are being disrupted not only by the adjustment to remote instruction but also due to job loss, family responsibilities, and healthcare needs. Commercial publishers are offering faculty and students one-time “free” instruction materials during the crisis in hopes of gaining new customers. Colleges are now facing big questions about their future including maintaining student enrollment, selecting instructional materials, managing faculty and staff costs, and even how the physical campus might be reconfigured.
Join our panelists to hear how open education has made their campuses more resilient and continues to help with student equity including support for underrepresented populations and students with disabilities. You will hear strategies and talking points for helping stakeholders on your campus understand how open educational resources, prudent fair-use, and open educational practices (pedagogy) support both teaching and learning in the crisis and will continue to contain costs, address student needs, and inspire innovation for the future.
When: Wednesday, May 6th, 2020 12 pm PDT/3 pm EDT
Featured Speakers:
Tonja Conerly, San Jacinto Community College, Texas
Meredith Jacob, Creative Commons USA at American University Washington College of Law @meredithjacob
Michael Mills, Montgomery College, Maryland
Suzanne Wakim, Butte Community College, California
Quill West, Pierce College District, Washington
1. May 6, 2020, 12:00 pm PST
Welcome
Image by mohamed Hassan from Pixabay, modified by Liz Yata
Unless otherwise indicated, this presentation is licensed CC-BY 4.0
3. Speakers
Tonja Conerly
San Jacinto Community College,
Texas
Suzanne Wakim
Butte Community College,
California
Meredith Jacob
Creative Commons USA at
American University Washington
College of Law
Quill West
Pierce College,
Washington
Michael Mills
Montgomery College,
Maryland
Moderator:
Una Daly
CCCOER Director
Open Education Global
4. ● Expand awareness & access to high-
quality OER
● Support faculty choice & development
● Foster regional OER leadership
● Improve student success
CCCOER Mission
8. Tonja Conerly
Professor of Sociology
San Jacinto Community College
Co-Chair, Houston Area OER
Consortium (HAOER)
tonja.conerly@sjcd.edu
9. EQUITABLE EDUCATION=
OER + TECHNOLOGY
EQUITABLE
EDUCATION
OER
FACULTY
TRAINING
HARDWARE
(COMPUTER, TABLET
PHONE)
INTERNET
10. Equity Support during the Pandemic
Financial:
Student funding from SJC Foundation
Virtual Gala to raise money for students and staff
Emotional:
Provide services from licensed counselors
San Jac Cares – (faculty, staff, administrators) contact students directly
to find out about transition and other needs
Educational:
Support students staying in school, drop will notify Ed. Planner
Wi-Fii in School Parking Lots (Free wi-fii in public library parking lots)
Provide Computers for students and faculty
Online support and workshops for students and faculty
San Jacinto is a Hispanic Serving Institution (HSI) - 61.1%
11. Suzanne Wakim
Coordinator of Open Educational
Resources, Student Learning
Outcomes, & Distance Education
Butte Community College
wakimsu@butte.edu
12. Universal Design for Learning and Open
Educational Practices
Provide multiple means of representation: give learners
various ways of acquiring information and knowledge (text,
video, audio)
Provide multiple means of action and expression: provide
learners alternatives for demonstrating what they know
(essay, diagram, table, outline)
Provide multiple means of engagement: tap into learners'
interests, challenge them appropriately, and motivate them
to learn. (authentic, intrinsic/extrinsic motivation)
13. Michael Mills
Vice President of the Office of E-
Learning, Innovation and Teaching
Excellence
Montgomery College
michael.mills@montgomerycollege.edu
22. Copyright, Creative Commons Licenses, and
Open Educational Resources
Most educational materials are copyrighted by default - even things on the open
internet - books, articles, supplementary materials, photographs and illustrations
(almost everything created after 1924).
So you need either:
- A right to use under the law
- Public domain, fair use, or other exception
- A license or other permission
- Permission, an institutional license, a purchase, or a Creative Commons license (an open
copyright license
23. Evaluation No, I need
permission or a
license
Yes. Is there a
limitation in the
law?
Is this currently
protected by
copyright?
No, it’s not
protected.
Yes, fair use or
a specific
limitation or
exception
It’s an idea, not
a copyrighted
expression
It’s in the
public domain
because of
time or USG
work
Is there a CC
license?
Do I have
permission?
Do I have an
institutional license
Is there an implied
license?
24. 1. Are you doing something new or different (something
“transformative”) with the material?
AND
1. Is the amount you are using -- whether a part or the whole --
appropriate ?
If yes to both, it’s unlikely that you’ll be providing a “substitute” for the
copyright work in its intended market - which is the only pocketbook issue
relevant to fair use.
Fair Use: Two Core Questions
25. ● Subjecting works to critique and analysis
● Using works to illustrate arguments
● Copying works to promote accessibility
● Providing texts for language learning
● Promoting media literacy
● Developing new educational materials
● Employing “orphan works”
● And many more…
Examples of Fair Use in Action
26. A few examples include:
● Excerpting a passage for close reading (glossing,
discussion questions, language learning, etc)
● Including an image for illustration of a teaching point or
documentation of an historical event
● Including an image or a text from source material for
student activities or assesment
Relying on Fair Use to Create OER
27. Ask:
● What is my purpose?
● Is it transformative? (How is it different than the purpose of the
original?)
● Does it substitute in the market for the original?
Document:
● What’s excluded from the open license
● Identify the 3rd party materials
● What your reasoning was (doesn’t have to be in the resource
itself)
How to implement
28. ● Uses designed mainly to set a mood or grab attention
● Uses that aren’t proportionate
● Uses of commercial educational materials
Fair Use Caution Flags in Education
30. Spring webinars (3pm EDT unless otherwise noted)
June
3
User-friendly Design with OER
Descriptions & Registration:
bit.ly/CCCOERspring2020
31. Stay in the Loop
● Upcoming Conferences
See our website under “Get-Involved”
● Join our Community Email
○ https://www.cccoer.org/community-email/
● Read our EDI blog posts
○ https://www.cccoer.org
Image: pixabay.com
http://cccoer.org
32. Questions?
Contact Info:
@unatdaly -- unatdaly@oeglobal.org
@CCCOER Liz Yata -- lizyata@oeglobal.org
Lisa Young -- lisa.young@scottsdalecc.edu
@suetash Sue Tashjian -- stashjian@necc.mass.edu
Thank you!