Paul Stacey, Creative CommonsLisa Young, Maricopa College District
Quill West, Tacoma Community College
November 13, 201312:00 pm Pacific, 3:00 pm Eastern
Fostering Open Policies on Your Campus & Beyond
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Quill West, Tacoma CollegePaul Stacey,
Creative Commons
Lisa Young, Maricopa College District
Moderator: James Glapa-GrossklagPresident, CCCOER Advisory BoardDean, College of the Canyons
Agenda
• CCCOER Introduction• Importance of Open Policies• Creative Commons & Open Case Studies
• Maricopa College District Open Policy
• Student-funded OER at Tacoma College• Q & A
• Promote adoption of OER to enhance teaching and learning
– Expanding access to education– Supporting professional development– Advancing the community college
mission
CCCOER
Funded by the William & Flora Hewlett Foundation
200+ Colleges in15 States & Provinces
How Important is OER at Your Campus?
Alignment of institutional
mission
Student role in OER Policy
& Practice
Labor Contract & Intellectual Property
Faculty Incentives to adopt OER
OER in Tenure &
Promotion
Paul StaceyAssociate Director of Global Learning
Creative Commons
Except where otherwise noted these materials are licensed Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 (CC BY)
Fostering Open Policieson Your Campus and Beyond
A Community College Consortium for Open Educational Resources (CCCOER) Webinar
13-Nov-2013
http://wiki.creativecommons.org/OER_Policy_Registry
http://bit.ly/HJZpgW
http://bit.ly/1bwTQvm
http://www.capetowndeclaration.org/
Policy Levels
Global Regional National State/Province Municipal Institutional Departmental Personal
• Strengthen implementation of OER policies across Europe
• Ensure education policy incorporate “open” principles
• Push for all educational content (both textbooks and other educational materials) produced in Europe with public funding (both at European level and in member states) under a free license (CC BY or CC BY -SA)
• Focus on K-12 education policy• Raise awareness and demonstrate
advantages of OER• Build a COMMUNITY of European
OER policy advocates• Create CONTENT such as outreach
materials on OER and policy analyses• Establish CONTACTS with
policymakers and key stakeholders to educate and understand
• Lead: Dr. Alek Tarkowski, Centrum Cyfrowe and CC Poland
http://wiki.creativecommons.org/European_OER_Policy_Project
http://bit.ly/1bq1I3P
1. Intellectual Property Rights, Copyright, and Licensing
2. Curriculum Design/Materials Development
3. Human Resource Policy
4. Sourcing (procuring) content
5. Costs
6. ICT Infrastructure and Connectivity
7. File Formats
8. Quality Assurance Policy Guidelines
1. IP, Copyright and Licensing
• IP & copyright policy provides access to materials directly paid for by public funds, public institutions, works created by staff at public institutions, and educational materials produced by government departments and agencies.
• Policy makes it widely accessible for the public good under an open licence. Amongst other benefits, this helps eliminate unnecessary duplication of public spending.
• Sharing should be the default expectation, not the exception.
• Student work?
• Funded by the US Department of Labor• $2 billion over 4 years• All courseware openly licensed (CC BY)
TAACCCTTrade Adjustment Assistance Community College & Career Training
http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/38818
• All successful applicants must allow broad access for others to use and enhance project products and offerings, including authorizing for-profit derivative uses of the courses and associated learning materials by licensing newly developed materials produced with grant funds with a Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY).
• This license allows subsequent users to copy, distribute, transmit and adapt the copyrighted work and requires such users to attribute the work in the manner specified by the Grantee.
• The purpose of the CCBY licensing requirement is to ensure that materials developed with funds provided by these grants result in Work that can be freely reused and improved by others.
CC BY Requirements – specific language
• Work that must be licensed under the CC BY includes both new content created with the grant funds and modifications made to pre-existing, grantee-owned content using grant funds.
• Only work that is developed by the grantee with the grant funds is required to be licensed under the CC BY license. Pre-existing copyrighted materials licensed to, or purchased by the grantee from third parties, including modifications of such materials, remain subject to the intellectual property rights the grantee receives under the terms of the particular license or purchase. In addition, works created by the grantee without grant funds do not fall under the CC BY license requirement.
• Requirements for open file formats, Open Source Software
CC BY Requirements – specific language
2. Curriculum Design/Materials Development
• Material will first be sourced from open content.• Adopt, adapt, create.• Support education institutions (individually or collectively)
and organizations to invest resources in the production and sharing of high quality educational resources and ongoing improvement and updating of curricula and teaching materials.
• Eliminate unnecessary duplication of effort by building on what already exists elsewhere, take advantage of pooled alternative resources, remove costs of copyright negotiation and clearance, and - over time - engage open communities of practice in ongoing quality improvement and quality assurance
http://solr.bccampus.ca/wp/
http://opencourselibrary.org/
3. Human Resource Policy • Incorporate the development of OER in job
descriptions.• OER produced by faculty members should count
towards career advancement. • OER production and publishing would be recognized
and given similar credit as peer-reviewed publications • Universities should allow time allocation for faculty to
produce OER materials. • Staff involved in OER production would be eligible to
receive OER grants (when available).
4. File Formats
• Release content in formats best suited for interoperability and re-use and are searchable and indexable by search engines
• Content should be made available in a file format that allows anyone to natively and directly edit the content. Content may be made available in multiple formats, but at least one of these formats must be openly editable by providing the original file format used to create the content. The type of file format varies by type of media.
• All new source code developed or created with TAACCCT grant funds will be released under an open license acceptable to either the Free Software Foundation and/or the Open Source Initiative.
• Foster the creation, adoption, and implementation of open policies that advance the public good.
• Do this by supporting advocates, organizations, policymakers, and connecting policy opportunities with those who can provide assistance.
Lisa Young, PhDCo-chair, Maricopa OER Steering CommitteeFaculty Instructional DesignerScottsdale Community College
Maricopa District Open Policy
Student-funded OER Project
Quill WestOER Project DirectorFaculty Librarian
Students as Advocates:
The TCC OER ProjectFeaturing E.J. IglesiasTCC Student Government
Images by: Tacoma Community College, Used with permission.
Communicate a solution.
Focus on the whole.
Structure matters.
There will be challenge.
Communicate. With everyone. Always.
Collaborations.
Student voice.
Next WebinarDec 11, 11:00 am (Pacific)
California Community Colleges Share it Forward with CC-BY
Image licensed for reuse by OpenSourceWay
Thank you for attending!
Please type your question in the chat window or click on the talk button.
Contact InformationUna Daly [email protected]
Paul Stacey [email protected]
Quill West [email protected]
Lisa Young [email protected] Glapa-Grossklag [email protected]