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The module, “ What is Localization? ,” provided overview of localization—making content context-specific. This module, “Students and OER,” will present OER activities you can use with your students.
The OER process has the potential for supporting new instructional approaches in the classroom. These approaches become possible because the conditions that OER provides lend flexibility for sharing educational resources worldwide. These conditions are scaffolded by the variety of nonrestrictive licenses to choose from (see OER Licensing and Conditions of Use ) as well as the ability to access these resources through OER repositories. As educators integrate OER into their teaching, students benefit from exposure to a wider range of pedagogical expressions through the materials created by other educators and learners from all over the world. This diversity of pedagogical approaches and cultural perspectives is a foundational aspect of OER. The endless options that this diversity provides give educators and learners a springboard for integrating new ways of working in educational environments.
Students are not only impacted by the diversity of materials offered through OER. The OER process opens up possibilities for collaborations with other students as well as with their teachers in creating content. Here are a few ideas on how OER can benefit students:
Katrín’s assignment in her teacher training class is to use OER with her students.
Students collaborate on an English assignment to create a web-based magazine.
Your experience using open and freely shared course-related materials is valuable in the reuse and evolution of the materials. Tell us your story ; how you’ve used these materials and how their use has impacted how you teach or learn.
These links provide direct access to several course-related components available in OER Commons . Consider using or remixing one or more of these components to either present to your students or as hands-on activity for your students to engage with the OER process.
Course-related Components in OER Commons | |
Activities or labs | Syllabi |
Homework and assignments | Lesson plans |
Textbooks | Lecture notes |
Simulations | Audio lectures |
Games | Video lectures |
Assessments | Teaching and learning strategies |
The results list for all the course-related components can be refined using any combination of over 70 filtering criteria by clicking on the “Filter Results” button.
The OER process of use, modification, and sharing back can become part of an instructional approach you take with students. Not only can you customize openly sharable materials that you present to your students, but you can also facilitate the OER process with your students to help them become producers of content. The content your students create becomes part of their learning process as well as a representation of their learning.
We’re discussing the impact of OER in Teaching and Learning in OER Commons. Post your stories, suggestions, and questions with using OER materials in your teaching and learning. Here are a few questions to consider in your post:
The following resources have been selected to provide more information on concepts we covered in this module.
This module presented OER activities you can use with your students. The next module, “ What are Open Textbooks? ,” will provide an overview of open textbooks.
For more information about OER Commons, send an email to info@oercommons.org .
Use this feedback form to send OER Commons general feedback, a feature request, or information about a bug/problem you had using the site.
To see the ever-growing list of the new content providers and contributors to OER Commons, visit the Content Providers page often. You can be one too!
Successful students create to learn, and learn to create. Shneiderman, B. (2002). Leonardo’s Laptop. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
The "How Tos" of OER Commons is a set of learning modules evolving out of the development of OER Commons ( (External Link) ), a teaching and learning network for free-to-use educational materials from around the world, created and licensed by the Institute for the Study of Knowledge Management in Education (ISKME).
Course contributors are Lisa Petrides, Amee Godwin, and Cynthia Jimes, and online learning consultant, Patricia Delich.
For more information, visit (External Link) and (External Link) .
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