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2.2: Articles and Essays

  • Page ID
    344102
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    Bali, M., Cronin, C., & Jhangiani, R. S. (2020). Framing Open Educational Practices from a Social Justice Perspective. Journal of Interactive Media in Education. 2020(1), 10.

    OEP (open educational practices), inclusive of open pedagogy, is often understood with respect to the use of OER (open educational resources) but can be conceived with more expansive conceptualisations (see Cronin & McLaren 2018; DeRosa & Jhangiani 2017; Koseoglu & Bozkurt 2018). This article attempts to build on existing OEP research and practice in two ways. First, we provide a typology of OEP, giving examples of practices across a continuum of openness and along three axes: from content-centric to process-centric, teacher-centric to learner-centric, and practices that are primarily for pedagogical purposes to primarily for social justice (Bali 2017). Second, we employ Hodgkinson-Williams and Trotter’s (2018) conceptual framework, which builds on Fraser’s model of social justice, to critically analyse the ways in which the use/impact of OEP might be considered socially just, with a particular focus on expansive, process-centric OEP. We analyze for whom and in which contexts OEP can (i) support social justice along economic, cultural and political dimensions, and (ii) do so in transformative, ameliorative, neutral or even negative ways. We use the typology and framework to analyse specific process-centric forms of OEP including collaborative annotation, Wikipedia editing, open networked courses, Virtually Connecting, public scholarship, and learner-created OER. Analysing specific practices highlights diversity across the axes and subtle differences among them, such as when a particular practice is considered good pedagogy and how it can be modified to be more oriented towards social justice. We discuss limitations of each practice not just from its discourse and design, but also how it works in practice.

    Colvard, N. B., Watson, C. E., & Park, H. (2018). The Impact of Open Educational Resources on Various Student Success Metrics. International Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, 30(2), 262-276.

    There are multiple indicators which suggest that completion, quality, and affordability are the three greatest challenges for higher education today in terms of students, student learning, and student success. Many colleges, universities, and state systems are seeking to adopt a portfolio of solutions that address these challenges. This article reports the results of a large-scale study (21,822 students) regarding the impact of course-level faculty adoption of Open Educational Resources (OER). Results indicate that OER adoption does much more than simply save students money and address student debt concerns. OER improve end-of-course grades and decrease DFW (D, F, and Withdrawal letter grades) rates for all students. They also improve course grades at greater rates and decrease DFW rates at greater rates for Pell recipient students, part-time students, and populations historically underserved by higher education. OER address affordability, completion, attainment gap concerns, and learning. These findings contribute to a broadening perception of the value of OERs and their relevance to the great challenges facing higher education today.

    Creative Commons. (2023). Open Education. creativecommons.org.

    Information about Open Education and links to more.

    DOERS3 Equity Work Group. (2021, July 13). The OER Equity Blueprint: The Role of OER in Advancing Equity. DOERS3.

    An overview of research into why and how OER programs have worked to improve access and affordability, deepen student learning, and close equity gaps for historically underrepresented and minoritized students used for the DOERS3 OER Equity Blueprint.

    Jenkins, J. J., Hannans, J., Sanchez, L., & Leafstedt, J. (n.d.). Textbook Affordability and Student Success for Historically Underserved Populations at CSUCI.

    The soaring cost of college textbooks has been well documented. The negative effects of these rising costs have also been well established: from decreased access to higher education to increased time-to-graduation rates. As an alternative to traditional course materials, open education resources (OERs) are shown to be equivalent in academic quality, student satisfaction, and student learning outcomes. Despite OERs’ potential to offset the negative effects of rising textbook costs, no research to date has focused on OERs among historically underserved student populations. For each of these reasons, CSU Channel Islands’ openCI initiative recently completed a campus-wide study of over 700 undergraduate students. Statistical analysis revealed textbook prices to be a significant educational barrier for all CSUCI students, with a disproportionately negative effect among racial/ethnic minorities, low-income students, and first-generation college students. These results suggest a potential lack of navigational capital 5 among CSUCI’s historically underserved students, while also challenging each of us in higher education to remove unnecessary financial barriers to our student body’s academic success.

    Peet, L. (2020). Faculty Textbook Affordability Survey. Library Journal, 145(2), 10–12.

    The article discusses the interest of campuses throughout college and university libraries to the results of the 2019 Textbook Affordability Survey sponsored by Taylor & Francis Group and published by the "Library Journal." Topics include one of the survey's primary areas of focus, differing perceptions on the degree course material affordability that is an issue for their institution, and barriers to digital resource information.

    Robertson, T. (2017). Diversity, Equity and Inclusion in Open Research and Education. Tara Robinson Consulting.

    Tara Robertson's summary of her 2017 OpenCon presentation about DEI and Open Education initiatives.

    SPARC. (n.d.). Open Education Fact Sheet. The Scholarly Publishing & Academic Resources Coalition.

    Fact sheet about open education and OER.

    SUNY OER Services. (n.d.). Understanding OER.

    SUNY OER Community Course: a self-paced online course on OER from State University of New York.


    2.2: Articles and Essays is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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