3.1. Wed - Evaluating & Attributing OER

Day's Objectives

  1. Guest Speaker: Ashley Biddle

  2. Add a Creative Commons license to your work

  3. Properly attribute OER resources

Group Photo

9am - ED building stairs

Guest Speaker: Ashley Biddle

Leeward Community College: psychology, family resources

Ashley will share her experiences adopting and utilizing OER resources.

On Monday, you were introduced to Creative Commons (CC) licenses. In the next two days, we will go a little deeper and distinguish the different CC licenses and learn how to combine them. You will learn how to select two or more resources with different Creative Commons licenses and know whether or not you can use them together and what Creative Commons license you can apply to the remixed work. You will also learn how to add a Creative Commons license to your own work.

CC licenses are a combination of these elements:

The video "Creative Commons Kiwi" is by plccanz

Attribution: Others can copy, distribute, perform and remix your work if they credit your name as specified by you.

No Derivatives: Others can only copy, distribute, or perform verbatim copies of your work.

Share Alike: Others can distribute your work only under a license identical to the one you have chosen for your work.

Non-Commercial: Others can copy, distribute, display, perform or remix your work but for non-commercial purposes only.

Activity: Add Creative Commons License to Your Evaluation

Creative Commons
  1. http://creativecommons.org/

  2. Under Share your work, click Get Started

  3. Under License Features, answer the questions.

As you make your selections, you will notice the license adjusts.

https://creativecommons.org/choose/

For print material, copy the license button and the "This work is licensed..." statement including the hyperlinks.

For online material, copy the HTML code. The code will automatically generate a license button and statement.

Activity: License and Upload your Completed Evaluation

  1. After completing your OER Resource Evaluation you will apply a Creative Commons license to it and add the CC mark to the document. Be sure to include a hypertext link to the OER you reviewed in your document.

  2. Title the document "Review of..."

  3. Add a header following the example below.

  4. Upload your completed evaluation to the PRLS 2019 OER Textbook Review Google Folder.

  5. A link to your review will be included on Leeward's OER LibGuide.

Example OER Review Header

Review of Chapter 4, Nonverbal Communication (from Communication in the Real World: A Review of Communication Studies, Open Textbook Library)

Publication Date: 2016

Publisher: University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing

Reviewed By: Lisa Ann Bright, Instructor, Communication, Kapiʻolani Community College

Review Date: 5/16/18

Deliverable for the workshop: Completed OER Resource Evaluation with Creative Commons license

Mini-Lecture: Attribution

Mini Lecture: How to Attribute Images PRLS 2019

Activity: Attribute OER Resources

attribution builder

Back: Tuesday

Next: Thursday