General Handouts
- Quick Guide to OER Vocabulary (word)
created by Jennifer Snoek-Brown, Tacoma Community College (TCC) Library, 2019 (CC BY SA 4.0). Some examples adapted from the “How Do I Know It’s OER” handout by San Bernadino Valley College, (CC BY NC 4.0), and the “Learn OER” modules by the Washington SBCTC, (CC BY 4.0) - Quick Guide to Copyright, OER, & CC Licenses: What They Look Like and What They Mean (word)
created by Jennifer Snoek-Brown of TCC Library, 2019. (CC BY 4.0)
Model Permission Letters
- Permission to Use: Student work in your OER (pdf) Students own the copyrights to their academic work(s). Faculty cannot use student work, even if you remove the student’s name, without first obtaining their permission.
- Permission to Use: Video in OER Model Letter (pdf)
posted by author Dr. Kenneth D. Crews (formerly of Columbia University) on “Asking For Permission” (CC BY) - Permission to Use: Text in OER Model Letter (pdf)
posted by author Dr. Kenneth D. Crews (formerly of Columbia University) on Asking For Permission (CC BY) - Permission to Use: Material in a Course Management System Model Letter (pdf)
posted by author Dr. Kenneth D. Crews (formerly of Columbia University) on Asking For Permission (CC BY)
Checklists
- Checklist for Evaluating Open Educational Resources (OER) (word) Reused and adapted by Amy Wolfe, Brooklyn College OER Developer, from the Austin Community College District’s Office of Instructional & Faculty Development “Checklist for Evaluating Open Educational Resources (OER)” is licensed CC BY 4.0
- OER Evaluation Checklist Reused and adapted from Kirkwood Community College Library’s guide on open textbooks. It was developed by Sarah Hare, Scholarly Communication Librarian Indiana University Bloomington (formerly Crissinger at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign). This work is licensed under a (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)
- OER Evaluation Criteria (pdf) by the Affordable Learning Georgia (ALG), adapted from CCCOER Review Guideline (CC-BY 3.0.)
Quick Guide Pages: First | ← Previous Page |
The “Handouts” page in the Brooklyn College “Quick Guide to OER for Teaching & Learning” has been curated by OER Developer Amy Wolfe.