COMMUNITY COLLEGE OPEN TEXTBOOK PLANNING PROJECT

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COMMUNITY COLLEGE OPEN TEXTBOOK PLANNING PROJECT. Development & Repurposing. Proposed Workflow. What is the most feasible workflow process for collecting, using and disseminating community college Open Textbooks?. Planned Workflow Process Basis. Collaboration and sharing Breadth Depth - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of COMMUNITY COLLEGE OPEN TEXTBOOK PLANNING PROJECT

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What is the most feasible workflow processfor collecting, using and disseminating community college Open Textbooks?

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Planned Workflow Process Basis

• Collaboration and sharing

• Breadth

• Depth

• Open and unrestricted use

• Universal accessibility

• Institutional buy-in

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Open Textbook Adoption Tasks• Locate and categorize suitable open content

– Topics by top courses that represent 80% of enrollments– Reading level– Depth and scope

• Evaluate– Quality– Accessibility– Cultural relevance– Currency– Authority– Articulation

• Customize, Remix, and Organize– Interoperability– Accessibility– License type– Cultural relevance

• Disseminate in print and digital formats – Student (DIY) for production of open textbook– Campus bookstore and/or printshop services for production of open textbook– Proprietary services

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Content Review Panel

• Five CCCOER members – Two University of California representatives– Two California State University representatives– Two other experts

• Determine and define the necessary elementsof a model CC Open Textbook– Reading level– Depth and scope – Quality and accuracy– Cultural relevance– Currency– Authority of source

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Technical Panel

• Interoperability standards

• Content dissemination processes

• Accessibility

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Possible Workflow Roles(Adapted from eduCommons)

• Producer– Person(s) in charge of putting most of the course content into Inventory– Can check how many CCOT are in Producer workflow status

• QA– First person to determine the quality of a CCOT– In charge of making sure the links work and that the site conforms to certain

standards• Reviewer

– Second person to determine the quality of a CCOT – Usually the Reviewer is a faculty member

• Publisher– Final person to inspect a CCOT and moves it to

public view• Administrator

– Can perform the functions of every role– Can add new users

• Viewer– Can perform no function; can only view contents– Cannot alter objects or move them through the work flow

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Workflow Summary

• Locate and collect open content• Vet the content

– Quality• Depth, breadth, cultural relevancy, authority of source, etc.

– Technical• Accessibility, interoperability, etc.

• Prepare open content for CC use– Customize, organize, localize, convert for

accessibility, interoperability

• Provide publication and dissemination options

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Workflow

Stage 1: Coordinate Panels

Stage 2: Collect Content

Stage 3: Vet Content

Stage 4: Disseminate Content

Proposed

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Stage 1

• Staff – Select and invite

Content Panel members

– Select and invite Technical Panel members

– Coordinate communications and meetings for Panels

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Stage 2: Staff

• Staff – Identify and prioritize CCOT content needs,

based on courses that represent 80% of enrollments

• Planning project - only Mathematics: Statistics– Invite community college faculty to

recommend, submit and/or develop OT for Open Textbook Project

– Locate CCOT– Verify that the open license

of the CCOT is modifiable (if not, seek permission from author)

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Stage 2: Panels

• Content Panel – Set criteria for CCOT minimum standards– Develop a set of searchable identifiers for

CCOT (e.g., metatags, discipline, reading level, year of development, author, etc.)

• Technical Panel – Set criteria for CCOT

minimum standards

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Stage 2: Community

• Open Textbook Project Community Volunteers and others – Develop and contribute

CCOT that meet minimum content and technical standards (esp. accessibility)

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Stage 3: Staff• Staff

– Assign a tracking number to each CCOT and enters basic info about the CCOT into Inventory database

– Post CCOT with ratings of below minimum standards to Open Textbook Project Community Volunteers for revision

– Convert CCOT to meet interoperability minimum standards– Add CCOT with rating of “exceeds” or

“meets” minimum standards to Inventory as a link to original source or as file

• Inventory based on eduCommons model

– Archive “canonical” snapshot of the CCOT for a given course for articulation purposes

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Stage 3: Panels

• Content Panel – Assign searchable identifiers to CCOT– Rate CCOT by criteria

• Technical Panel – Rate CCOT by criteria

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Stage 4: Faculty & Students

• Faculty – Select CCOT for use in actual courses– Disseminate CCOT to students via download

access from the Inventory for DIY student printing, campus services, or proprietary services

• Faculty and students – Rate CCOT after use in an actual course– Ratings posted to Inventory automatically

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Proposed Timeline

Stage 1: Coordinate Panels

Stage 2: Collect Content

Stage 3: Vet Content

Stage 4: Disseminate Content

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Proposed Workflow for Campuses

• Form Taskforce on campus to address adoption of open textbooks– Curriculum approval– Pedagogical standards– Articulation– Tech support– Bookstore and print shop services – Library– Faculty and department participation– Faculty training in development of OER– Marketing

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Proposed Workflow for Campuses

• Foster community of educators who will use and contribute to open content appropriate for use as textbook at community colleges

– Educate campus community about OER and open textbooks

– Provide model Board policies about OER

– Provide model tenure and promotionincentives for faculty to participate in OER

– Provide guide for development and implementation of campus Taskforce to address adoption of open textbooks

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What Sustainability and

Business Models

are most viable for the

Community College

OpenTextbook Project?

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Sustainability

• Unique sustainability challenges of open educational resource projects

• Must find a way to sustain– Production and sharing of

open educational resources– Use and reuse of their open

educational resources by end users

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“Sustainability is more than funding models.”

~ S. Downes ~

• Quality processes• Technical• Openness, access

and licenses• Staffing• Workflow• Maintenance

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Sustainability• Explore the viability of institutional

and/or student use fees

• Examine the relationship and cost-models for Connexion’s digital university press and the campus

• Bookstores and Printshops as point-of-purchase centers

• Identify sources of operating support from states, institutions, foundations and other complementary organizations

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Sustainability and Business Models

Cathedral vs. BazaarConnexions

Breshears’ OpenTextbook Business ModelDownes’ OER funding models

Dholakia’s OER revenue modelsStanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy model

FOSS ApproachOthers?