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Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources Stuart Nicol Stephanie (Charlie) Farley Open Education Resources Learning, Teaching, and Web Services University of Edinburgh

Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

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Page 1: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

Stuart Nicol Stephanie (Charlie) Farley

Open Education ResourcesLearning, Teaching, and Web Services

University of Edinburgh

Page 2: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

Welcome

Aims for today1) Know more about OER when you leave than

when you came in2) Create a fully attributable, shareable artifact

By AIGA [Public domain], via Wikimedia

Page 3: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

What is an OER?An OER is a freely available and openly licensed digital resource.

“OER are teaching, learning, and research resources that reside in the public domain or have been released under an intellectual property license that permits their free use and re-purposing by others. Open educational resources include full courses, course materials, modules, textbooks, streaming videos, tests, software, and any other tools, materials, or techniques used to support access to knowledge”

The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation

Page 4: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

Open Access vs. Open Education Resources (OER)

Open Access refers to publications released under an open license (e.g. open access journals).

Open Data refers to data that is freely available to use and republish.

Open Education Resources (OER) specifically refers to using materials for teaching & learning released under an open licence.

Materials available on the web without explicit copyright statement or open licence should not be considered OERs.• The absence of a copyright statement does not necessarily mean

that the material is free to use or adapt.• OERs should always display a licence containing the terms of reuse.

Page 5: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

Some definitions• Intellectual property rights (IPR) are the rights given to persons

over the creations of their minds (usually for a set period of time).• Copyright is an area of IPR that covers the rights of authors of

creative works.• A licence is the permission, or authorisation, to re-use a

copyrighted work.• A Creative Commons (CC) licence is one of several open licenses

that enable the free distribution of an otherwise copyrighted work.• By applying an open licence to a copyrighted work, rights holders

give permission for others to copy or change their work in ways that would otherwise infringe copyright law.

Page 6: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

https://youtu.be/p6p5FEt9_OA

https://youtu.be/da3vQ1Wr4FA?t=52s

Page 7: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

Creative Commons licenses

Page 8: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

Edinburgh's OER vision1. For the common good: Teaching and learning materials

exchange to enrich the University and the sector;

2. Edinburgh at its best: Showcasing openly the highest quality learning and teaching;

3. Edinburgh’s treasures: Making available online a significant collection of unique learning materials available openly to Scotland, the UK and the world, promoting health and economic and cultural well-being.

Page 9: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

What our guidelines sayOER aligns with the University’s mission“Use, creation, and publication of OERs is consistent with the University’s reputation, values and mission to ‘Make a significant, sustainable and socially responsible contribution to Scotland, the UK and the world, promoting health and economic and cultural wellbeing.’”

Everyday teaching & learning material exchange“It is expected that OERs used, created or published by individual staff and students will normally be single units or small collections [...] rather than whole courses.”

Page 10: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

Our support for OER• OER support service: centrally support service.

– Advice / staff and student training sessions / awareness raising

• Open.Ed website– Showcasing Edinburgh’s OERs / how-to guides /

news and information. In the future will also include sharing & searching tools.

– open.ed.ac.uk

Page 11: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources
Page 12: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

Aim: Create an ‘infographic’ from open resources

Focusing on:• Where to source openly

licensed resources• How to attribute Creative

Commons licensed materials

• Signpost where and how to share and license your work

http://piktochart.com

Page 13: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

Activity 1: What is your strategic vision in one sentence and 3 key words (10 mins)

By AIGA [Public domain], via Wikimedia

On the theme of: “Using the digital to capture the international”

Page 14: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

Activity 2: Search for 3 suitable images

that visually support your message

Page 15: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

A good rule of thumb is to use the acronym TASL, which stands for Title, Author, Source, Licence:• Title - What is the name of the material?• Author - Who owns the material?• Source - Where can I find it?• Licence - How can I use it?• Lastly, is there anything else I should know

before I use it?

What attribution information do I need?

Page 16: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

It’s a good idea to keep track of attribution information as you go (and keep it if possible).

But is that enough information?

Keep track of resources resources you use

Attributing Creative Commons Materials by ccAustralia & CCI ARC, licensed under CC BY 2.5

Page 17: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

Search for images (15 mins)CC Search provides a useful ‘meta-search’ over a number of media platforms:

http://search.creativecommons.org/

Page 18: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

Activity 3: Create team infographic

panel (10 mins)

with image attribution applied

http://piktochart.com

Page 19: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

The licence tells you to be reasonable:

“You may satisfy the conditions in (1) and (2) above in any reasonable manner based on the medium, means and context in which the Licensed Material is used. For example, it may be reasonable to satisfy some or all of the conditions by retaining a copyright notice, or by providing a URI or hyperlink associated with the Licensed Material, if the copyright notice or webpage includes some or all of the required information.”

There is no one right way; just make sure your attribution is reasonable and suited to the medium you're working with. That being said, you still have to include attribution requirements somehow, even if it's just a link to an About page that has that info.

Attribution doesn’t need to be complicated

Best practices for attribution by Creative Commons, licensed under CC BY 4.0

Page 20: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

Attributing Creative Commons Materials by ccAustralia & CCI ARC, licensed under CC BY 2.5

Page 21: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

The good, the bad, and the uglyThe Creative Commons Wiki provides detailed information on how to correctly attribute resources in a number of contexts: https://wiki.creativecommons.org/Best_practices_for_attribution

Good: "Creative Commons 10th BirthdayCelebration San Francisco" by tvol islicensed under CC BY 4.0

Average: Photo by tvol / CC BY

Incorrect: Photo: Creative Commons

Page 22: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

Powerpoint templatesTeam Link

1 Bit.ly links (for event only)2 Links removed from3 uploaded SlideShare.4 Bit.ly link5 Bit.ly link

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Share &feedback

Page 24: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

Sharing OERs• Ensure that the material is your own work, or contains only openly licensed work shared

under the agreed terms. The copyright service will be able to help if you are unsure about copyright issues ([email protected])

• Choose the most appropriate license for your material. The Creative Commons website licence chooser is a useful tool for choosing & generating the licence text and image: http://creativecommons.org/choose/. Some platforms allow you to choose and generate a licence in the upload workflow (Flickr, YouTube, Vimeo, etc.).

• University of Edinburgh should be stated as the licensor so that the resource can be correctly attributed:© The University of Edinburgh.

• More information can be found in the University’s Open Educational Resource Policy (http://open.ed.ac.uk/about/)

Page 25: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

Where should I share my OER?There are several options for sharing your OER depending on subject area and target audience.

Page 26: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

OER

Repository

JORUMMERLOTXpert

OERCommonsTESConnect

Social Media

Youtube FlickeriTunesU

SlideshareSoundCloud

OpenCourseWareMIT OpenCourseWare

OpenLearnTU Delft OCW

Page 27: Stay Legal: Use Open Educational Resources

Examples: SlideShare & FlickrMany platforms incorporate CC licensing options. SlideShare & Flickr both allow you to apply a default licence across an account or change for each uploaded resource.• http://bit.ly/1OnClk9

• http://bit.ly/24Lrbiy