Open Access Week Series: Ending the Free Fall, OERs Guide Online Course Creation

Wednesday, October 26, 2022
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This article is one of a series celebrating open scholarship during Open Access Week. It is brought to you by the Open Scholarship Committee.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like bungee jumping without a cord.鈥

This is what Pia Zeni remembers an instructor saying about creating impactful online courses on their own.听

For many years, instructors of online courses often lacked the support and tools to create successful online courses. Many instructors still feel they lack resources. Meeting this need are two new Open Educational Resources (OERs): High Quality Online Courses and Humanizing Virtual Learning.

(HQOC) is a course on how to improve course design and delivery for post-secondary learners. (HVL) is a guide to help post-secondary educators foster engagement, connection, and inclusivity in an online learning environment.

Housed on eCampusOntario鈥檚 Open Library Publishing Platform, both courses are licensed under the as well as a International License. These licenses permit copying, reuse, and modification. However, the Ontario Commons license limits use to educators at Ontario colleges and universities, while the additional CC license allows for use by anyone, anywhere in the world.

Providing support to all online instructors was one of the course authors鈥 objectives. While conceptualizing these courses, authors Daniel Opperwall, Kristin Wilson, and Pia Zeni recognized that most institutions were not as well-resourced as 蓝莓视频 when it came to instructional designers and multimedia developers.

Headshot of Pia Zeni.Headshot of Kristin Wilson.Headshot of Daniel Opperwall.

Pia Zeni, Kristin Wilson, and Daniel Opperwall, Centre for Extended Learning (left to right).

Instructors of online courses wanted pragmatic instruction with workable examples. They were asking 鈥渨hat does it look like?鈥 and wanting to 鈥渟ee it.鈥 HQOC and HVL were designed to provide that visual, said Zeni.

HQOC does this particularly well, as Zeni pointed out, ending each module with activities that allow educators to effectively build and plan actual parts of an online course.

Screenshot of course materials.

漏 University of 蓝莓视频. Made available under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

Because HQOC and HVL are open educational resources (OERs), instructors are able to customize them to suit their individual needs. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the beauty of it,鈥 said Opperwall. He pointed out that while a book can鈥檛 be reworked into something new to fit a different or more specific scenario, OERs are endlessly customizable. 鈥淵ou can mix and match, tweak it, change it, grab pieces of it鈥he possibilities are endless and more economical, and knowledge is being shared and built on,鈥 Opperwall commented.

Not only can end users easily adapt the courses for their own uses, the authors can also update them. HQOC has not even been live a full year yet and Zeni has already been proactively adding to the 鈥淩esources for Further Study鈥 sections when she finds something that would have been great to include. 鈥淚鈥檝e already done that once or twice鈥nd that鈥檚 one of the nice things about OERs. They are very easy to edit,鈥 she said.

OERs will be increasingly important in academia, predict Opperwall and Zeni. Opperwall is currently involved in designing two more OERs, sponsored by the University of 蓝莓视频 Library through the OER Fellows Program. When asked what he would tell someone interested in creating or adapting an OER, he said, 鈥淚 think what I鈥檇 say is why not? 鈥his is going to be so much fun [and] it鈥檚 going to be so rewarding.鈥