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Image Credit: Defender of the Commons by Alan Levine CC0 Working with OER OE Ontario March 27, 2017 Clint Lalonde - BCcampus

OE Ontario Workshop

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Image Credit: Defender of the Commons by Alan Levine CC0

Working with OEROE OntarioMarch 27, 2017

Clint Lalonde - BCcampus

Unless otherwise noted, this presentation

is licensed under a Creative Commons

Attribution License.

Feel free to use, modify or distribute any or

all of this presentation with attribution.

Outline• Intro & Survey (5 min)

• Part 1: Creative Commons licenses (15

minutes)

• Activity: Copy that Image! (10 minutes)

• Part 2: Finding OER & OER resources (15

minutes)

Outcomes• Identify the different types of Creative

Commons licenses and what each one allows

and does not allow.

• Correctly attribute an open resource using the

TASL framework.

• Locate resources about OER and open

textbooks

“Open Educational Resources (OERs) are

any type of educational materials that are in

the public domain or introduced with an

open license. The nature of these open

materials means that anyone can legally

and freely copy, use, adapt and re-share

them.”

UNESCO

Creative Commons License Features

Credit: Adopting Open Textbooks Workshop by Paul Stacey CC-BY

Credit: Adopting Open Textbooks Workshop by Paul Stacey l(CC-BY)

Credit: This is a modified version of a slide from Adopting Open

Textbooks Workshop by Paul Stacey CC-BY. Text has been removed

and the CC0 logo has been added

Spectrum of Openness

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/

Credit: Adopting Open Textbooks Workshop by Paul Stacey (CC-BY)

How Machine Readable Code

works IRL*

Flickr Advanced Search

Google Advanced Search

* In Real Life

So how do I properly attribute the CC stuff I use?

T – Title

A – Artist

S – Source (Link)

L – CC License (w/Link)

If you modify, note what you

changed

http://wiki.creativecommons.org/Marking/Users#Examples

This is a modified image

based on the image Shark! by

guitarfish CC-BY Text and

arrow have been added.

Never will be me

This is a modified image

based on the image Shark! by

guitarfish CC-BY Text and

arrow was added. Shark text

from Wikipedia CC-BY-SA

Never will be me

Sharks are a group of fish characterized by a

cartilaginous skeleton, five to seven gill slits

on the sides of the head, and pectoral fins that

are not fused to the head.

Activity: Copy That Image! (10 min)

Use the Creative Commons search engine, you will

1. Find a CC licensed image (maybe of your home

institution?)

2. Add a copy of the image to a collaborative

Google doc

3. Write out an attribution statement using TASL

format.

CC search: search.creativecommons.org

Doc: bit.ly/ontarioshare

bit.ly/oe-ontario