1. OER
Benefits &
Challenges
Emma Clausen
In fulfillment of course requirements:
“How to Use Open Educational
Resources”
Washington State Board for
Community & Technical Colleges
Winter Cohort 2014
This work is licensed under a Creative
Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0
International License.
“On open educational resources -- Beyond definitions” by opensourceway is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0
2. Benefit #1
F
R
E
E
“Swing Jumping” by wsilver is licensed under CC BY 2.0
Students have access to
free or low-cost alternatives
to traditionally published
textbooks
3. E
N
G
A
G
E
“Kids Cubbies, Cubby house furniture and Kids playground equipment” by Matt’s Homes is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0
Benefit #2
Students can interact with
content in dynamic ways
through options like
streaming media and online
games and assessments
4. A
C
C
E
S
S
“Leeford FC at London Playing Fields Foundation Spring Football Festival, 16 June
2012” by Paul Wiklinson is licensed under CC BY 2.0
Benefit #3
Free and low cost
alternative course materials
open doors and level the
playing field for students
Faculty can be confident
that all students have
access to course materials
5. C
O
N
N
E
C
T
“Leila and Austin - Our Grandkids with Siesta Key sand castle.” by Jim Mullhaupt is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0
Benefit #4
Faculty can connect with
other faculty across the
state, country, and globe
6. C
L
I
M
B
“Playground Ages 2-5” by Sadie Hernandez is licensed under CC BY 2.0
Benefit #5
Faculty can take small
steps in implementing OER
content such as adding
images, streaming media,
or individual course
modules or assessments
7. Challenge #1
P
L
A
Y
“Sandbox” by ericaxel is licensed under CC BY 2.0
There are countless OER
repositories and few places
where these repositories
are aggregated together
which complicates the
search process
8. B
A
L
A
N
C
E
“Teeter-Totter” by Neal Jennings is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0
Challenge #2
The search, modification (if
any), and implementation
process is time consuming
Faculty must find balance
during the process
9. D
I
S
C
O
V
E
R
“Playground porthole view, Falls Lake” by Nathania Johnson is licensed under CC BY 2.0
Challenge #3
The “discoverability” of
OER depends on its
metadata - how it was
described by its creator which can complicate the
search process
10. E
V
A
L
U
A
T
E
“Enjoying the view from up high” by Ken Bosma is licensed under CC BY 2.0
Challenge #4
OER must be evaluated
completely before
implementation
Although some OER are
vetted and reviewed by the
creator/institution faculty
must critically review each
OER for relevancy and
accuracy
11. S
U
P
P
O
R
T
“GMC NFL Monday Football Playground Build Lynn, MA” by United Way of Massachusetts Bay & Merrimack Valley is
licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0
Challenge #5
Faculty must have support
from their department,
colleagues, and institution
to pursue OER
opportunities