Could This Be the End of Textbooks?
Early last
month, a letter
arrived on President Obama’s digital inbox calling on him to commit to policies
that support the development of Open Educational Resources, known more commonly
as OER’s. The letter was first developed and signed by multiple organizations from the education, library, technology,
public interest and legal communities. The heart of this letter can be summed
up by a key paragraph that appeared on page 2 of the letter:
Your Administration recognized the impact and value of Open
Educational Resources in the open government initiatives announced in September
2014 as part of the Second Open Government National Action Plan. In this
announcement, the U.S. formally expressed its commitment to Open Education and
launched an initiative entitled “Promote Open Education to Increase Awareness
and Engagement” stating that “there is a growing body of evidence that the use
of open education resources improves the quality of teaching and learning,
including by accelerating student comprehension and by fostering more
opportunities for affordable cross-border and cross-cultural educational
experiences.” As barriers between formal classroom learning, online learning,
and skills and certification-based learning are broken down, a wide range of
educational materials, from training materials to public engagement and education
materials can be adapted and reused for teaching and learning purposes.
The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
defines OER’s as follows: “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.” On their website,
you can read about the work they have done dating back to 2002 towards “establishing
a self-sustaining and adaptive global OER ecosystem and demonstrating its
potential to improve teaching and learning.”
Commenting
on this letter, journalist Nichole Dobo of the The Hechinger Report asked the question,
should educational materials be set free for all to use? Some say, yes. She
went on to describe OER’s as having the ability to be “far more powerful in
reshaping our schools than the banal acronym implies.” Dobo went on to talk
about one of the simplest forms of an OER, Wikipedia. While this site doesn’t always get the
best reviews from educators because of how quickly content can be added, and
altered, it is as Dobo explains “a free, online encyclopedia that can be
repurposed and rewritten by anyone, anywhere, without fear of violating
copyright laws.” Dobo went on to give another example of an OER available today
that has systems in place to ensure that content has been validated by others
in the educational community. CK12 has
developed a library of free resources for science, technology, engineering, and
math (STEM) that can be accessed by both teachers and students for classroom
instruction, enrichment, intervention, or reteaching.
How can a
teacher get started with OER’s in their classroom? It is simple. You can start
with a resource site such as the Open
Professionals Education Network. From there, you can browse an extensive
list of OER websites big and small. Need a good website to start with? Try
visiting OER Commons. This site
allows users to search for content by subject, grade level, and/or by Common
Core standard. From there, users are able to filter and search through hundreds
and in many cases thousands of lessons, assessments, and performance tasks that
have been loaded to the site by other educators. Users can rate the resources
and provide comments for others.
In the
coming years, it will be interesting to see how the rise of OER’s impact the
traditional textbook market. In many ways, it may be like when we all watched Netflix take on its biggest competitor of
the last decade, Blockbuster
Video. Of course, we all know how that story ended.
This article was written originally for MultiBriefs Education.
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