Remixing openly licensed materials from different sources is a hallmark of OER but can make for complicated attributions. The webinar will start with best practices for attribution of curated openly licensed works. Three faculty will then share their experiences authoring and providing attributions of remixed OER in the Pressbooks and Libretexts platforms.
When: Wednesday, February 12, 2020 12pm PT/ 3pm ET
Featured Speakers:
Jennryn Wetzler; Assistant Director of Open Education for Creative Commons
Dave Dillon; Author of “Blueprint for Success in College and Career”
Athena Kashyap; English Professor at City College of San Francisco
Heather Ringo; English Professor at Solano College
Moderator:
Suzanne Wakim, OER, Distance Education, Student Learning Outcomes (SLO) Coordinator; Biology Faculty at Butte-Glenn Community College District
CCCOER Presents: Attributions. Authoring, and OER Platforms
1. February 12, 2020
12:00 pm PST
Welcome
image: pixabay.com
Unless otherwise indicated, this presentation is licensed CC-BY 4.0
2. Agenda
● Introductions
● CCCOER overview
● Attributions
● Developing OER with LibreText
● Authoring with Pressbooks
● Q & A
● Upcoming events and announcements
3. Speakers
Moderator: Suzanne Wakim
OER Coordinator, Biology Faculty
Butte College District
Jennryn Wetzler
Assistant Director
Global Education
Creative Commons
Dave Dillon
Counselor/Professor
Open Textbook Author
Grossmont College, CA
Athena Kashyap
English Professor
City College of San
Francisco, CA
4. ● Expand awareness & access to high-
quality OER
● Support faculty choice & development
● Foster regional OER advocacy
● Improve student success
CCCOER Mission
6. Call for Proposals open
Not sure what to submit or plan? Take a look
at our roundup of Open Education Week
activities from last year.
2019:
https://www.cccoer.org/2019/04/04/open-
education-week-2019-roundup/
Promotional Materials available for download
https://www.openeducationweek.org/
8. Unless otherwise noted, this presentation is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Contact me:
jennryn@creativecommons.org
15. Authoring with Pressbooks
Dave Dillon
Counselor/Professor
Open Textbook Author
Grossmont College, CA
Unless otherwise indicated,
this presentation is licensed
CC-BY 4.0
16. Blueprint for Success in College and Career
https://press.rebus.community/blueprint2/
Pressbooks
Rebus Community
22. Is this a proper attribution?
College Success. Authored by: Linda Bruce. License: CC BY: Attribution
23. Original content (first published) may
not include a source/link
College Success. Authored by: Linda Bruce. License: CC BY: Attribution
The Source is missing, and should read as follows:
College Success. Authored by: Linda Bruce. Located at:
https://courses.lumenlearning.com/wmopen-
collegesuccess/chapter/career-paths-2/
License: CC BY: Attribution.
24.
25.
26.
27. The Growing Guide to Using Pressbooks
https://guide.pressbooks.com/
See Section VIII. Media
Chapter 69 Media Attributions
And
Chapter 70 Adding Images
Thank you Steel Wagstaff and Apurva Ashok!
28. Developing OER with LibreText
Athena Kashyap
English Professor
City College of San
Francisco, CA
29. OER Attributions
on Libretexts: Nuts
and Bolts
By Athena Kashyap
Co-author of OERs: Writing and Critical
Thinking Through Literature
Writing, Reading, and College Success
30. Attributions in Libretexts
● Finding out Attribution guidelines of Libretexts and making sure they align with your
own understanding of how to attribute sources.
● Attributing images in Libretexts
● Creating a style guide so that you are attributing sources in a consistent manner
● Snags and Issues
31. Attribution Basics at LibreTexts
A conversation with Delmar Larsen from Libretext provided most useful information about
attributions on their platform about
● Content sources
● Images: Copyrighted
● Images: Not copyrighted
● Header textbox in Libretext
32. Attributing Texts That Have A CC license
Libretexts requires
1) name of source
2) link to the home page of the source
3) author
4) publishing house/ original providing platform
5) license
41. Snags and How to Avoid Them
● Check the requirements of your platform host. Make sure your own standards align with
those of your platform host.
● Provide attributions as you go along
● Prepare for permission forms not arriving on time. Have a back-up if the permissions
never come. In addition to the main OER databases, Google Advance Search is a great
way to find content that can be shared, adapted etc.
● Be consistent: Use a Style Guide. Also create a separate page where you list main
attributions you are using so that you can cut and paste this.
43. Wish List
● For the platform to have guidelines on their minimum attribution requirements. Maybe
our findings can be compiled into a guide that can be accessed from the platform help
page.
● I had watched this Webinar before starting my course!
45. Spring webinars (3pm EST unless otherwise noted)
Feb 12 CCCOER Webinar: Attributions, Authoring, Platform
Mar 3 Beginning to Open Up
Mar 4 Regional Leadership for Open Education
Mar 5 California Student Toolkit
Apr 8 CCCOER Webinar: Open Pedagogy with faculty and students
May 6 CCCOER Webinar: User-friendly Design with OER
June 3 CCCOER Webinar: Sustainability: If I had to do it over again ...
Descriptions & Registration:
bit.ly/CCCOERspring2020
46. 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
47. 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!