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Open textbook

An open textbook is a textbook licensed under an open license, and made available online to be freely used by students, teachers and members of the public. Many open textbooks are distributed in either print, e-book, or audio formats that may be downloaded or purchased at little or no cost.[1]

Part of the broader open educational resources movement,[2][3] open textbooks increasingly are seen as a solution to challenges with traditionally published textbooks, such as access and affordability concerns.[4] Open textbooks were identified in the New Media Consortium's 2010 Horizon Report as a component of the rapidly progressing adoption of open content in higher education.[5]

Usage rights

The defining difference between open textbooks and traditional textbooks is that the copyright permissions on open textbooks allow the public to freely use, adapt and distribute the material. Open textbooks either reside in the public domain or are released under an open license that grants usage rights to the public so long as the author is attributed.[6]

The copyright permissions on open textbooks extend to all members of the public and cannot be rescinded.[7] These permissions include the right to do the following:

  • use the textbook freely
  • create and distribute copies of the textbook
  • adapt the textbook by revising it or combining it with other materials[1]

Some open licenses limit these rights to non-commercial use or require that adapted versions be licensed the same as the original.

Open licenses

Some examples of open licenses are:

Waivers of copyright that place materials in the public domain include:

  • Creative Commons Public Domain Tools: CC0 (if you are the copyright holder) and the Creative Commons Public Domain Mark (to be applied to works "free of known copyright restrictions") [5]

Affordability

 
Everything you wanted to know about abstract algebra, but were afraid to buy[8]

Open textbooks increasingly are seen as an affordable alternative to traditional textbooks in both K-12 and higher education.[9] In both cases, open textbooks offer both dramatic up-front savings and the potential to drive down traditional textbook prices through competition.[10]

Higher education

In the United States, textbook costs increased 88% from July 2006 to July 2016.[11] For this reason, in 2019, students were recommended to budget at least $1,230 per year for textbooks.[12] Overall, open textbooks have been found by the Student Public Interest Research Groups (PIRGs) to offer 80% or more savings to higher education students over traditional textbooks.[13][14][15]

In 2010, research commissioned by the Florida state legislature pointed to the savings potential open textbooks could secure for students.[16][17] Legislative reports in Texas[18] and North Dakota[19] also pointed to the potential of open textbook programs to secure cost savings. State-backed initiatives began in Washington,[20] Ohio,[21] California,[22] and Texas.[23] In Canada, the province of British Columbia became the first jurisdiction to have a similar open textbook program.[24] In subsequent years, various state, provincial, national, and institutional initiatives emerged to support creation and use of open textbooks.[25][26]

Open Oregon, a state-funded initiative active since 2015, indicated in an annual report that open textbooks can not only secure significant savings for students, these savings compound over time as materials are reused. For instance, Open Oregon initially offered $52,098 in funding for open textbooks in 2015. By 2019, the program estimated that students in Oregon higher education had secured $477,409.24 in savings.[27][28]

Organizations supporting creation of open textbooks cite other reasons for doing so that go beyond cost savings. In 2010, the Florida state legislature pointed to "compelling academic reasons" for using open textbooks that included: "improved quality, flexibility and access to resources, interactive and active learning experiences, currency of textbook information, broader professional collaboration, and the use of teaching and learning technology to enhance educational experiences" (OATTF, p. i).[29]

 

Based on survey data gathered in September 2020, Student PIRGs cited additional reasons for supporting accessible open textbooks in light of the evolving COVID-19 pandemic. They noted that, while commercial textbook prices had not continued to surge in the past year, students experiencing economic uncertainty, food shortages, and limited access to Internet were more likely to forgo or lose access to course materials. This report highlighted the economic inequalities that are further exacerbated by an educational market characterized by cost inflation and demanding technological requirements.[30]

Research

A meta-analysis of 22 studies of 100,012 students found that there were no differences between open and commercial textbooks for learning performance.[31] Students enrolled in courses with open textbooks had a lower withdrawal rate than students enrolled in courses in commercial textbooks.[31] Systematic reviews of open educational resources, including open textbooks, concluded that faculty and student perceptions of the quality of open textbooks was comparable to that of commercial textbooks.[32][33]

Platforms

Open textbooks and other open educational resources may be found on several platforms, typically organized by universities and non-profit organizations, such as MERLOT.[34] The University of Minnesota Open Textbook library is coordinated through the Center for Open Education and is a repository of downloadable open textbooks. OpenStax is both a platform for locating open textbooks and an open textbook creator. Peer review is a common practice across platforms.[34]

K–12 education

Research at Brigham Young University has produced a web-based cost comparison calculator for traditional and open K-12 textbooks. To use the calculator the inputs commercial textbook cost, planned replacement frequency, and number of annual textbook user count are required. A section is provided to input time requirements for adaptation to local needs, annual updating hours, labor rate, and an approximation of pages. The summary section applies an industry standard cost for print-on-demand of the adapted open textbook to provide a cost per student per year for both textbook options. A summed cost differential over the planned period of use is also calculated.[35]

Milestones

Several organizations, publishers, and initiatives have taken a lead in furthering open textbook publishing, particularly in North America.

In early 2011, Connexions announced a series of two grants that would allow the platform to produce a total of 20 open textbooks ultimately distributed as the OpenStax collection. Initially funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the Michelson 20MM Foundation, and the Maxfield Foundation, this project expanded over an 18-month time frame to include open textbooks for Anatomy & Physiology, Sociology, Biology, Biology for non-majors, and Physics.[36][37][38] The second phase of the OpenStax project would produce an additional 15 titles. The most expensive part of this process was image rights clearing with cleared images becoming available for reuse in even more titles.[39] As of June 2021, OpenStax indicates that their textbooks are in use in 60% of U.S. colleges and universities and 100 countries worldwide.[40]

In February 2012, the Saylor Foundation sponsored an "Open Textbook Challenge", offering a $20,000 reward for newly written open textbooks or existing textbooks released under a CC-BY license.[41]

After its launch in 2012, the BC Open Textbook Pilot went on to win many accolades for its commitment to providing open textbooks to students in British Columbia, Canada. BCcampus was tasked with coordinating the program, whose goal was to "make higher education more accessible by reducing student cost through the use of openly licensed textbooks."[42] BCcampus' catalog of open textbooks is widely regarded as a leading source of information about existing OER in Canada.[43] The organization has taken the lead in educating the OER community about textbook accessibility via its Accessibility Toolkit.[44] In 2015 and 2016, BCcampus won Creative Innovation and Open Education Excellence awards from the Open Education Consortium.[45] In 2018, it won a SPARC Innovator Award.[46]

In 2012, David Ernst, a faculty member in the College of Education and Human Development at the University of Minnesota, founded Open Textbook Library (OTL) to help other faculty members locate and adopt open textbooks. Ernst launched traveling workshops that presented the concept of OER to faculty members and invited them to review textbooks in OTL using a pre-set rubric.[47] In 2014, Ernst created Open Textbook Network to provide peer support to institutions looking to expand their open education initiatives. Later renamed Open Education Network, this organization had grown by June 2021 to comprise 140 members and 1,147 campuses across North America and select locations worldwide.[48] Its initiatives came to include local workshops, a publishing cooperative, a certificate in OER Librarianship, and an annual Summer Summit. Meanwhile, Open Textbook Library had grown to 883 textbooks by June 2021.[49]

In 2013, the Maricopa County Community College District launched the Maricopa Millions Study. The goal of this project was to "radically decrease student costs by offering LOW COST or NO COST options for course materials." The project aimed to save students $5 in five years.

In 2013, Tidewater Community College rolled out the first known degree program using exclusively zero-cost course materials. Tidewater's Associate of Science in Business Administration was known as a "Z-Degree" program, and in 2017 the college reported that the degree had garnered students $1 million in savings to date.[50][51]

Based in Canada, the Rebus Foundation emerged in the 2010s to provide support for authors seeking to publish open textbooks. The foundation provides professional development, facilitates workshops, and encourages authors to connect over shared OER projects.[52]

Also emerging in the 2010s, Pressbooks set out to provide "open-source, book production ... built around the WordPress platform."[53] Since the platform's introduction, many institutions have built open textbook publishing efforts around Pressbooks. Some of the results may be viewed on the Pressbooks Directory.[54] As of June 2021, more than 2,500 books had been published to the directory.

Awards

Because authors do not make money from the sale of open textbooks, many organizations have tried to use prizes or grants as financial incentives for writing open textbooks or releasing existing textbooks under open licenses.[55][56][57] Examples of grants and awards follow.

In November 2010, Anthony Brandt was awarded an "Access to Artistic Excellence" grant from the National Endowment for the Arts for his innovative music appreciation course in Connexions.[58] "Sound Reasoning"[59] "takes a new approach [to teaching music appreciation]: It presents style-transcendent principles, illustrated by side-by-side examples from both traditional and contemporary music. The goal is to empower listeners to be able to listen attentively and think intelligently about any kind of music, no matter its style. Everything is listening based; no ability to read music is required." The module being completed with grant funds is entitled "Hearing Harmony". Brandt cites choosing the Connexions open content publishing platform because "it was an opportunity to present an innovative approach in an innovative format, with the musical examples interpolated directly into the text."

In December 2010, open textbook publisher Flat World Knowledge was recognized by the American Library Association's Business Reference and Services Section (ALA BRASS)[60] by being named to the association's list of "Outstanding Business Reference Sources: The 2010 Selection of Recent Titles". The categories of business and economics open textbooks from Flat World Knowledge's catalog were selected for this award and referenced as "an innovative new vehicle for affordable (or free) online access to premier instructional resources in business and economics."[61] Specific criteria used by the American Library Association BRASS when evaluating titles for selection were:

A resource compiled specifically to supply information on a certain subject or group of subjects in a form that will facilitate its ease of use. The works are examined for authority and reputation of the publisher, author, or editor; accuracy; appropriate bibliography; organization, comprehensiveness, and value of the content; currency and unique addition to the field; ease of use for intended purpose; quality and accuracy of indexing; and quality and usefulness of graphics and illustrations. Each year more electronic reference titles are published, and additional criteria by which these resources are evaluated include search features, stability of content, graphic design quality, and accuracy of links. Works selected are intended to be suitable for medium to large academic and public libraries.

The Text and Academic Author's Association awarded a 2011 Textbook Excellence Award ("Texty")[62] to the first open textbook to ever win such recognition in that year. A maximum of eight academic titles could earn this award each year. The title "Organizational Behavior"[63] by Talya Bauer and Berrin Erdogan earned one of seven 2011 Textbook Excellence Awards granted. Bauer & Erdogan's "Organizational Behavior" open textbook was published by Flat World Knowledge.

Other significant honors can be found via Open Education Global—a community that presents annual awards for innovation and leadership in open education.[64]

Instruction

Open textbooks are flexible in ways that traditional textbooks are not,[65] which gives instructors more freedom to use them in the way that best meets their instructional needs.[66][67]

One common frustration with traditional textbooks is the frequency of new editions, which force the instructor to modify the curriculum to the new book. Any open textbook can be used indefinitely, so instructors need only change editions when they think it is necessary.

Many open textbooks are licensed to allow modification. This means that instructors can add, remove or alter the content to better fit a course's needs. Furthermore, the cost of textbooks can in some cases contribute to the quality of instruction when students are not able to purchase required materials. A Florida governmental panel found after substantial consultation with educators, students, and administrators that "there are compelling academic reasons to use open access textbooks such as: improved quality, flexibility and access to resources, interactive and active learning experiences, currency of textbook information, broader professional collaboration, and the use of teaching and learning technology to enhance educational experiences."[68] (OATTF, p. i)

Authorship

Author compensation for open textbooks works differently than traditional textbook publishing. By definition, the author of an open textbook grants the public the right to use the textbook for free, so charging for access is no longer possible. However, numerous models for supporting authors are developing. For example, a startup open textbook publisher called Flat World Knowledge pays its authors royalties on the sale of print copies and study aids.[69] Other proposed models include grants, institutional support and advertising.[70]

American legislation

Legislation "to authorize grants for the creation, update, or adaption of open textbooks" and assure those developed would be made available under favorable licenses was introduced into the 111th United States Congress, both in the Senate[71][72][73] and the House of Representatives.[74] Findings specific to open textbooks detailed in the bill text are:

  1. The growth of the Internet has enabled the creation and sharing of open content, including open educational resources.
  2. The U.S. President has proposed a new, significant federal investment in the creation of online open-source courses for community colleges that will make learning more accessible, adaptable, and affordable for students.
  3. The high cost of college textbooks continues to be a barrier for many students in achieving higher education, and according to the Advisory Committee on Student Financial Assistance, 200,000 qualified students fail to enroll in college each year due to cost.
  4. The College Board reported that for the 2007-2008 academic year an average student spent an estimated $805 to $1,229 on college books and supplies.
  5. Making high quality open textbooks freely available to the general public could significantly lower college textbook costs and increase accessibility to such education materials.
  6. Open textbooks can improve learning and teaching by creating course materials that are more flexible, adaptable, and accessible through the use of technology.

This legislation did not reach the floor of either chamber for debate or vote prior to the conclusion of the 111th Congress.

After this initial foray into legislation supporting OER in higher education, the U.S. Congress funded an Open Textbook Pilot Program in 2018. As of 2021, funding had been renewed every year. In 2021, $7 million was awarded to nine projects nationwide.[75][76]

Industry opposition

The current higher education textbook industry has voiced stiff opposition to creation and adoption of open textbooks.[77] The industry is represented by Bruce Hildebrand, a former senior vice president from the controversial firm Hill & Knowlton International Public Relations, who is now acting as executive director for higher education for the Association of American Publishers.[78]

Accessibility

As institutions moved toward digital access during the COVID-19 pandemic, accessibility of course materials became a mounting concern. Specifically, accessibility for people with disabilities has been a challenge across resources including open textbooks. Web accessibility is defined by W3C as adherence to Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG). Studies have increasingly shown that open textbooks fail multiple criteria outlined in WCAG.[79][80][81][82][83][84][85] These studies have caused the open education community to produce guides for improving the accessibility of open textbooks and OER.[44][86]

Projects and Initiatives

A number of projects and initiatives around the world seek to develop, support and promote open textbooks. Two very notable advocates and supporters of open textbook and related open education projects include the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation[87] and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.[88]

Australian Open Textbook Project

The Australian Open Textbook Project[89] is investigating the current and potential role of open textbooks in Australian higher education.[89] The project has a particular focus on social justice[90] and is funded by the National Centre for Student Equity in Higher Education (NCSEHE).[91]

BCcampus

BCcampus[92] supports online college and university education in British Columbia (BC), Canada. In 2012 BCcampus was awarded the first in a series of provincial funds from the BC Ministry of Advanced Education to support the use and development of open textbooks in British Columbia, including the creation of open textbooks in popular subjects.[93] BCcampus provides a library of curated open textbooks[94] and extensive support for open textbook development.[95]

Digital Open Textbooks for Development (DOT4D)

The DOT4D project[96] is based at The University of Cape Town and funded by the Canadian International Development Research Centre (IDRC).[97] The project focuses on supporting the use of open textbook use in South African higher education.[98] DOT4D has a particular focus on social justice.[99]

eCampus Ontario

eCampus Ontario[100] is a Canadian non-governmental organisation (NGO). It supports the use of OER and partners with higher education institutions to support the development of open textbooks.[101] eCampus Ontario also provide a curated collection of OER, including open textbooks.[102]

OpenStax

OpenStax (formerly Connexions and OpenStax College) was founded in 2011 and is based at Rice University. As at June 2021 OpenStax provided 61 openly licensed, curriculum aligned textbooks for universities, colleges and high schools, largely available in US English but with some textbooks available in Polish.[103] OpenStax has charitable status and is funded from a variety of sources, including foundation funding.[104] During 2019 it was reported that OpenStax materials were being used by half of all higher education institutions in the United States.[105]

Open Education Network

The Open Education Network[106] (formerly the Open Textbook Network) is based at The University of Minnesota. A membership organisation, The Open Education Network supports the use of OER in Higher Education.[107] The associated Open Textbook Library had curated 886 open textbooks for reuse as at June 2021.[108]

Polish Coalition for Open Education (KOED) and the Polish Government

The KOED[109] advocates for the use of OER in Poland.[110] The work of KOED informed the Polish Government investment in open textbooks for use in primary and secondary education during 2012 and 2013.[111] A range of open textbooks have been developed and made available.[112][113]

Siyavula

Based in South Africa, Siyavula[114] was founded in 2007[115] and offers high school maths and science open textbooks. Initially funded through a Shuttleworth Foundation fellowship, the South African government provided 2.5 million print copies of Siyavula textbooks to South African high school students during 2012.[116]

UK Open Textbooks Project

The Hewlett Foundation funded UK Open Textbooks project[117] (2017–2018) was a collaborative pilot project investigating the applicability of two methods of open textbook adoption to the UK context.

 
Siyavula Open Textbooks

See also

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  92. ^ "BCcampus – We facilitate innovation in teaching, learning, and educational technology for BC's post-secondary system: collaborative projects for multiple institutions". Retrieved 2021-06-30.
  93. ^ Burgess, Mary (2017-03-27). "The BC Open Textbook Project". Open: The Philosophy and Practices that are Revolutionizing Education and Science. pp. 227–236. doi:10.5334/bbc.r. ISBN 9781911529002.
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  99. ^ Cox, Glenda; Masuku, Bianca; Willmers, Michelle (2020-05-11). "Open Textbooks and Social Justice: Open Educational Practices to Address Economic, Cultural and Political Injustice at the University of Cape Town". Journal of Interactive Media in Education. 2020 (1): 2. doi:10.5334/jime.556. ISSN 1365-893X.
  100. ^ "About". eCampusOntario. Retrieved 2021-06-30.
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  117. ^ "UK Open Textbook Project". UK Open Textbook Project. Retrieved 2021-06-30.

External links

  • BC Open Textbooks
  • Mavs Open Press
  • Milne Open Textbooks
  • OASIS (Openly Available Sources Integrated Search)
  • OER Africa
  • Open Oregon
  • Open Textbook Library at the University of Minnesota
  • OpenStax
  • PDX Open
  • Pressbooks Directory

open, textbook, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, available, as. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as Reflinks documentation reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message An open textbook is a textbook licensed under an open license and made available online to be freely used by students teachers and members of the public Many open textbooks are distributed in either print e book or audio formats that may be downloaded or purchased at little or no cost 1 Part of the broader open educational resources movement 2 3 open textbooks increasingly are seen as a solution to challenges with traditionally published textbooks such as access and affordability concerns 4 Open textbooks were identified in the New Media Consortium s 2010 Horizon Report as a component of the rapidly progressing adoption of open content in higher education 5 Contents 1 Usage rights 1 1 Open licenses 2 Affordability 2 1 Higher education 2 1 1 Research 2 1 2 Platforms 2 2 K 12 education 3 Milestones 4 Awards 5 Instruction 6 Authorship 7 American legislation 8 Industry opposition 9 Accessibility 10 Projects and Initiatives 10 1 Australian Open Textbook Project 10 2 BCcampus 10 3 Digital Open Textbooks for Development DOT4D 10 4 eCampus Ontario 10 5 OpenStax 10 6 Open Education Network 10 7 Polish Coalition for Open Education KOED and the Polish Government 10 8 Siyavula 10 9 UK Open Textbooks Project 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksUsage rights EditFurther information open content The defining difference between open textbooks and traditional textbooks is that the copyright permissions on open textbooks allow the public to freely use adapt and distribute the material Open textbooks either reside in the public domain or are released under an open license that grants usage rights to the public so long as the author is attributed 6 The copyright permissions on open textbooks extend to all members of the public and cannot be rescinded 7 These permissions include the right to do the following use the textbook freely create and distribute copies of the textbook adapt the textbook by revising it or combining it with other materials 1 Some open licenses limit these rights to non commercial use or require that adapted versions be licensed the same as the original Open licenses Edit Some examples of open licenses are Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 1 Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike CC BY SA 2 Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike CC BY NC SA 3 GNU Free Documentation License 4 Waivers of copyright that place materials in the public domain include Creative Commons Public Domain Tools CC0 if you are the copyright holder and the Creative Commons Public Domain Mark to be applied to works free of known copyright restrictions 5 Affordability EditFurther information Textbook Market Everything you wanted to know about abstract algebra but were afraid to buy 8 Open textbooks increasingly are seen as an affordable alternative to traditional textbooks in both K 12 and higher education 9 In both cases open textbooks offer both dramatic up front savings and the potential to drive down traditional textbook prices through competition 10 Higher education Edit In the United States textbook costs increased 88 from July 2006 to July 2016 11 For this reason in 2019 students were recommended to budget at least 1 230 per year for textbooks 12 Overall open textbooks have been found by the Student Public Interest Research Groups PIRGs to offer 80 or more savings to higher education students over traditional textbooks 13 14 15 In 2010 research commissioned by the Florida state legislature pointed to the savings potential open textbooks could secure for students 16 17 Legislative reports in Texas 18 and North Dakota 19 also pointed to the potential of open textbook programs to secure cost savings State backed initiatives began in Washington 20 Ohio 21 California 22 and Texas 23 In Canada the province of British Columbia became the first jurisdiction to have a similar open textbook program 24 In subsequent years various state provincial national and institutional initiatives emerged to support creation and use of open textbooks 25 26 Open Oregon a state funded initiative active since 2015 indicated in an annual report that open textbooks can not only secure significant savings for students these savings compound over time as materials are reused For instance Open Oregon initially offered 52 098 in funding for open textbooks in 2015 By 2019 the program estimated that students in Oregon higher education had secured 477 409 24 in savings 27 28 Organizations supporting creation of open textbooks cite other reasons for doing so that go beyond cost savings In 2010 the Florida state legislature pointed to compelling academic reasons for using open textbooks that included improved quality flexibility and access to resources interactive and active learning experiences currency of textbook information broader professional collaboration and the use of teaching and learning technology to enhance educational experiences OATTF p i 29 Based on survey data gathered in September 2020 Student PIRGs cited additional reasons for supporting accessible open textbooks in light of the evolving COVID 19 pandemic They noted that while commercial textbook prices had not continued to surge in the past year students experiencing economic uncertainty food shortages and limited access to Internet were more likely to forgo or lose access to course materials This report highlighted the economic inequalities that are further exacerbated by an educational market characterized by cost inflation and demanding technological requirements 30 Research Edit A meta analysis of 22 studies of 100 012 students found that there were no differences between open and commercial textbooks for learning performance 31 Students enrolled in courses with open textbooks had a lower withdrawal rate than students enrolled in courses in commercial textbooks 31 Systematic reviews of open educational resources including open textbooks concluded that faculty and student perceptions of the quality of open textbooks was comparable to that of commercial textbooks 32 33 Platforms Edit Open textbooks and other open educational resources may be found on several platforms typically organized by universities and non profit organizations such as MERLOT 34 The University of Minnesota Open Textbook library is coordinated through the Center for Open Education and is a repository of downloadable open textbooks OpenStax is both a platform for locating open textbooks and an open textbook creator Peer review is a common practice across platforms 34 K 12 education Edit Research at Brigham Young University has produced a web based cost comparison calculator for traditional and open K 12 textbooks To use the calculator the inputs commercial textbook cost planned replacement frequency and number of annual textbook user count are required A section is provided to input time requirements for adaptation to local needs annual updating hours labor rate and an approximation of pages The summary section applies an industry standard cost for print on demand of the adapted open textbook to provide a cost per student per year for both textbook options A summed cost differential over the planned period of use is also calculated 35 Milestones EditSeveral organizations publishers and initiatives have taken a lead in furthering open textbook publishing particularly in North America In early 2011 Connexions announced a series of two grants that would allow the platform to produce a total of 20 open textbooks ultimately distributed as the OpenStax collection Initially funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation the Michelson 20MM Foundation and the Maxfield Foundation this project expanded over an 18 month time frame to include open textbooks for Anatomy amp Physiology Sociology Biology Biology for non majors and Physics 36 37 38 The second phase of the OpenStax project would produce an additional 15 titles The most expensive part of this process was image rights clearing with cleared images becoming available for reuse in even more titles 39 As of June 2021 OpenStax indicates that their textbooks are in use in 60 of U S colleges and universities and 100 countries worldwide 40 In February 2012 the Saylor Foundation sponsored an Open Textbook Challenge offering a 20 000 reward for newly written open textbooks or existing textbooks released under a CC BY license 41 After its launch in 2012 the BC Open Textbook Pilot went on to win many accolades for its commitment to providing open textbooks to students in British Columbia Canada BCcampus was tasked with coordinating the program whose goal was to make higher education more accessible by reducing student cost through the use of openly licensed textbooks 42 BCcampus catalog of open textbooks is widely regarded as a leading source of information about existing OER in Canada 43 The organization has taken the lead in educating the OER community about textbook accessibility via its Accessibility Toolkit 44 In 2015 and 2016 BCcampus won Creative Innovation and Open Education Excellence awards from the Open Education Consortium 45 In 2018 it won a SPARC Innovator Award 46 In 2012 David Ernst a faculty member in the College of Education and Human Development at the University of Minnesota founded Open Textbook Library OTL to help other faculty members locate and adopt open textbooks Ernst launched traveling workshops that presented the concept of OER to faculty members and invited them to review textbooks in OTL using a pre set rubric 47 In 2014 Ernst created Open Textbook Network to provide peer support to institutions looking to expand their open education initiatives Later renamed Open Education Network this organization had grown by June 2021 to comprise 140 members and 1 147 campuses across North America and select locations worldwide 48 Its initiatives came to include local workshops a publishing cooperative a certificate in OER Librarianship and an annual Summer Summit Meanwhile Open Textbook Library had grown to 883 textbooks by June 2021 49 In 2013 the Maricopa County Community College District launched the Maricopa Millions Study The goal of this project was to radically decrease student costs by offering LOW COST or NO COST options for course materials The project aimed to save students 5 in five years In 2013 Tidewater Community College rolled out the first known degree program using exclusively zero cost course materials Tidewater s Associate of Science in Business Administration was known as a Z Degree program and in 2017 the college reported that the degree had garnered students 1 million in savings to date 50 51 Based in Canada the Rebus Foundation emerged in the 2010s to provide support for authors seeking to publish open textbooks The foundation provides professional development facilitates workshops and encourages authors to connect over shared OER projects 52 Also emerging in the 2010s Pressbooks set out to provide open source book production built around the WordPress platform 53 Since the platform s introduction many institutions have built open textbook publishing efforts around Pressbooks Some of the results may be viewed on the Pressbooks Directory 54 As of June 2021 more than 2 500 books had been published to the directory Awards EditBecause authors do not make money from the sale of open textbooks many organizations have tried to use prizes or grants as financial incentives for writing open textbooks or releasing existing textbooks under open licenses 55 56 57 Examples of grants and awards follow In November 2010 Anthony Brandt was awarded an Access to Artistic Excellence grant from the National Endowment for the Arts for his innovative music appreciation course in Connexions 58 Sound Reasoning 59 takes a new approach to teaching music appreciation It presents style transcendent principles illustrated by side by side examples from both traditional and contemporary music The goal is to empower listeners to be able to listen attentively and think intelligently about any kind of music no matter its style Everything is listening based no ability to read music is required The module being completed with grant funds is entitled Hearing Harmony Brandt cites choosing the Connexions open content publishing platform because it was an opportunity to present an innovative approach in an innovative format with the musical examples interpolated directly into the text In December 2010 open textbook publisher Flat World Knowledge was recognized by the American Library Association s Business Reference and Services Section ALA BRASS 60 by being named to the association s list of Outstanding Business Reference Sources The 2010 Selection of Recent Titles The categories of business and economics open textbooks from Flat World Knowledge s catalog were selected for this award and referenced as an innovative new vehicle for affordable or free online access to premier instructional resources in business and economics 61 Specific criteria used by the American Library Association BRASS when evaluating titles for selection were A resource compiled specifically to supply information on a certain subject or group of subjects in a form that will facilitate its ease of use The works are examined for authority and reputation of the publisher author or editor accuracy appropriate bibliography organization comprehensiveness and value of the content currency and unique addition to the field ease of use for intended purpose quality and accuracy of indexing and quality and usefulness of graphics and illustrations Each year more electronic reference titles are published and additional criteria by which these resources are evaluated include search features stability of content graphic design quality and accuracy of links Works selected are intended to be suitable for medium to large academic and public libraries The Text and Academic Author s Association awarded a 2011 Textbook Excellence Award Texty 62 to the first open textbook to ever win such recognition in that year A maximum of eight academic titles could earn this award each year The title Organizational Behavior 63 by Talya Bauer and Berrin Erdogan earned one of seven 2011 Textbook Excellence Awards granted Bauer amp Erdogan s Organizational Behavior open textbook was published by Flat World Knowledge Other significant honors can be found via Open Education Global a community that presents annual awards for innovation and leadership in open education 64 Instruction EditOpen textbooks are flexible in ways that traditional textbooks are not 65 which gives instructors more freedom to use them in the way that best meets their instructional needs 66 67 One common frustration with traditional textbooks is the frequency of new editions which force the instructor to modify the curriculum to the new book Any open textbook can be used indefinitely so instructors need only change editions when they think it is necessary Many open textbooks are licensed to allow modification This means that instructors can add remove or alter the content to better fit a course s needs Furthermore the cost of textbooks can in some cases contribute to the quality of instruction when students are not able to purchase required materials A Florida governmental panel found after substantial consultation with educators students and administrators that there are compelling academic reasons to use open access textbooks such as improved quality flexibility and access to resources interactive and active learning experiences currency of textbook information broader professional collaboration and the use of teaching and learning technology to enhance educational experiences 68 OATTF p i Authorship EditAuthor compensation for open textbooks works differently than traditional textbook publishing By definition the author of an open textbook grants the public the right to use the textbook for free so charging for access is no longer possible However numerous models for supporting authors are developing For example a startup open textbook publisher called Flat World Knowledge pays its authors royalties on the sale of print copies and study aids 69 Other proposed models include grants institutional support and advertising 70 American legislation EditLegislation to authorize grants for the creation update or adaption of open textbooks and assure those developed would be made available under favorable licenses was introduced into the 111th United States Congress both in the Senate 71 72 73 and the House of Representatives 74 Findings specific to open textbooks detailed in the bill text are The growth of the Internet has enabled the creation and sharing of open content including open educational resources The U S President has proposed a new significant federal investment in the creation of online open source courses for community colleges that will make learning more accessible adaptable and affordable for students The high cost of college textbooks continues to be a barrier for many students in achieving higher education and according to the Advisory Committee on Student Financial Assistance 200 000 qualified students fail to enroll in college each year due to cost The College Board reported that for the 2007 2008 academic year an average student spent an estimated 805 to 1 229 on college books and supplies Making high quality open textbooks freely available to the general public could significantly lower college textbook costs and increase accessibility to such education materials Open textbooks can improve learning and teaching by creating course materials that are more flexible adaptable and accessible through the use of technology This legislation did not reach the floor of either chamber for debate or vote prior to the conclusion of the 111th Congress After this initial foray into legislation supporting OER in higher education the U S Congress funded an Open Textbook Pilot Program in 2018 As of 2021 funding had been renewed every year In 2021 7 million was awarded to nine projects nationwide 75 76 Industry opposition EditThe current higher education textbook industry has voiced stiff opposition to creation and adoption of open textbooks 77 The industry is represented by Bruce Hildebrand a former senior vice president from the controversial firm Hill amp Knowlton International Public Relations who is now acting as executive director for higher education for the Association of American Publishers 78 Accessibility EditAs institutions moved toward digital access during the COVID 19 pandemic accessibility of course materials became a mounting concern Specifically accessibility for people with disabilities has been a challenge across resources including open textbooks Web accessibility is defined by W3C as adherence to Web Content Accessibility Guidelines WCAG Studies have increasingly shown that open textbooks fail multiple criteria outlined in WCAG 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 These studies have caused the open education community to produce guides for improving the accessibility of open textbooks and OER 44 86 Projects and Initiatives EditA number of projects and initiatives around the world seek to develop support and promote open textbooks Two very notable advocates and supporters of open textbook and related open education projects include the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation 87 and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation 88 Australian Open Textbook Project Edit The Australian Open Textbook Project 89 is investigating the current and potential role of open textbooks in Australian higher education 89 The project has a particular focus on social justice 90 and is funded by the National Centre for Student Equity in Higher Education NCSEHE 91 BCcampus Edit BCcampus 92 supports online college and university education in British Columbia BC Canada In 2012 BCcampus was awarded the first in a series of provincial funds from the BC Ministry of Advanced Education to support the use and development of open textbooks in British Columbia including the creation of open textbooks in popular subjects 93 BCcampus provides a library of curated open textbooks 94 and extensive support for open textbook development 95 Digital Open Textbooks for Development DOT4D Edit The DOT4D project 96 is based at The University of Cape Town and funded by the Canadian International Development Research Centre IDRC 97 The project focuses on supporting the use of open textbook use in South African higher education 98 DOT4D has a particular focus on social justice 99 eCampus Ontario Edit eCampus Ontario 100 is a Canadian non governmental organisation NGO It supports the use of OER and partners with higher education institutions to support the development of open textbooks 101 eCampus Ontario also provide a curated collection of OER including open textbooks 102 OpenStax Edit OpenStax formerly Connexions and OpenStax College was founded in 2011 and is based at Rice University As at June 2021 OpenStax provided 61 openly licensed curriculum aligned textbooks for universities colleges and high schools largely available in US English but with some textbooks available in Polish 103 OpenStax has charitable status and is funded from a variety of sources including foundation funding 104 During 2019 it was reported that OpenStax materials were being used by half of all higher education institutions in the United States 105 Open Education Network Edit The Open Education Network 106 formerly the Open Textbook Network is based at The University of Minnesota A membership organisation The Open Education Network supports the use of OER in Higher Education 107 The associated Open Textbook Library had curated 886 open textbooks for reuse as at June 2021 108 Polish Coalition for Open Education KOED and the Polish Government Edit The KOED 109 advocates for the use of OER in Poland 110 The work of KOED informed the Polish Government investment in open textbooks for use in primary and secondary education during 2012 and 2013 111 A range of open textbooks have been developed and made available 112 113 Siyavula Edit Based in South Africa Siyavula 114 was founded in 2007 115 and offers high school maths and science open textbooks Initially funded through a Shuttleworth Foundation fellowship the South African government provided 2 5 million print copies of Siyavula textbooks to South African high school students during 2012 116 UK Open Textbooks Project Edit The Hewlett Foundation funded UK Open Textbooks project 117 2017 2018 was a collaborative pilot project investigating the applicability of two methods of open textbook adoption to the UK context Siyavula Open TextbooksSee also EditOpen educational resources Open content Openness California Open Source Textbook Project Global Text CK 12 Foundation Free High School Science Texts OER Commons MIT OpenCourseWare WikiToLearn WikibooksReferences Edit a b Learn More About Open Textbooks the Student PIRGs Open Education SPARC Free to Learn Guide by Hal Plotkin An Open Educational Resources Policy Development Guidebook for Community College Governance Officials Funded by The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation Living document is open licensed for iterative improvement Creative Commons 2010 Open Education Conference 2009 Interactive Open Textbook Panel Discussion Video 1 02 08 Murugan Pal CK12 Foundation Eric Frank Flat World Knowledge Cable Green WA State Board for Community and Technical Colleges Barbara Illowsky De Anza College Steve Acker Ohio State University 2010 Horizon Report Chapter 7 Archived 2012 03 16 at the Wayback Machine Johnson L Levine A Smith R amp Stone S 2010 for the New Media Consortium and the EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative Accessed Dec 23 2010 Dramatically Bringing Down the Cost of Education with OER by the Center of American Progress About the Licenses by Creative Commons http abstract pugetsound edu Huffington Post In The Public Interest Open Textbooks and the Tech Friendly Generation by Sarah Sather Sep 30 2010 Connexions What are open textbooks February 26 2009 Accessed December 29 2010 College tuition and fees increase 63 percent since January 2006 The Economics Daily U S Bureau of Labor Statistics www bls gov Retrieved 2021 06 11 College Board Research ǀ Trends in College Pricing ǀ Resource Library Research 2019 05 31 Retrieved 2021 06 11 New Report Finds Switching To Open Textbooks Saves Students Thousands by Nicole Allen September 30 2010 A Call for Open Textbooks by Steve Kolowich Inside Higher Ed October 1 2010 The Textbook Alternative That Could Save Students 700 Per Year by Dennis Carter eCampus News October 7 2010 Florida Open Access Textbook Task Force Final Report submitted in fulfillment of the requirements contained in 1004 091 2 F S February 27 2010 Cook Ida 2020 08 26 2010 Faculty and Administrator Open Educational Resources Survey Report UCF OER Studies and Reports https reportcenter highered texas gov meeting board supporting documents ix k open educational resources grant program bare URL PDF Audit Report Finds North Dakota University System Open Educational Resources Initiative Has Saved Students Over 1 1 million State Auditor s Office Retrieved 2021 06 15 Washington s 2 year Colleges Out to Beat High Cost of Textbooks by Katherine Long The Seattle Times November 7 2010 Ohio s Digital Textbook Project Webinar Summary by Sue Polanka No Shelf Required Ebooks in Libraries Wright State University October 25th 2010 Open Textbooks In California U S Department of Education 2010 Governor Texas Should Move to Online Textbooks by Kelley Shannon AP in Business Week April 7 2010 List of North American OER Policies amp Projects SPARC Retrieved 2021 06 14 Open Textbooks Pilot Program www2 ed gov 2020 09 22 Retrieved 2021 06 14 BC to offer free textbooks online CBC News Online Continuing Savings from Past OER Grants openoregon org Retrieved 2021 06 14 Estimating student savings from no cost low cost course materials openoregon org Retrieved 2021 06 14 BC to offer free textbooks online The Globe and Mail October 17 2012 Retrieved 22 October 2012 Fixing the Broken Textbook Market Third Edition Student PIRGs 2021 02 24 Retrieved 2021 06 14 a b Clinton Virginia Khan Shafiq July 2019 Efficacy of Open Textbook Adoption on Learning Performance and Course Withdrawal Rates A Meta Analysis AERA Open 5 3 233285841987221 doi 10 1177 2332858419872212 ISSN 2332 8584 Hilton John August 2016 Open educational resources and college textbook choices a review of research on efficacy and perceptions Educational Technology Research and Development 64 4 573 590 doi 10 1007 s11423 016 9434 9 ISSN 1042 1629 Hilton John June 2020 Open educational resources student efficacy and user perceptions a synthesis of research published between 2015 and 2018 Educational Technology Research and Development 68 3 853 876 doi 10 1007 s11423 019 09700 4 ISSN 1042 1629 a b Cheung Simon K S 2020 Cheung Simon K S Li Richard Phusavat Kongkiti Paoprasert Naraphorn Kwok Lam For eds A Review of Open Access Textbook Platforms Blended Learning Education in a Smart Learning Environment Lecture Notes in Computer Science Cham Springer International Publishing 12218 114 125 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 51968 1 10 ISBN 978 3 030 51968 1 S2CID 220729582 Can My K 12 School Save Money with Open Textbooks Department of Instructional Psychology and Technology and the Center for the Improvement of Teacher Education and Schooling at Brigham Young University Research funded by The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation 2011 Smith Mitch Why Pay for Intro Textbooks Inside Higher Ed Archived from the original on 16 June 2013 Retrieved 24 April 2013 Robe Johnathan Free College Textbooks Wave of the Future Forbes Archived from the original on 8 August 2013 Retrieved 24 April 2013 Guttenplan D D 12 February 2012 Big Savings for U S Students in Open Source Book Program New York Times Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 24 April 2013 Connexions Conference 2011 Part 3 by Barbara Illowsky February 20 2011 OpenStax openstax org Retrieved 2021 06 25 Open Textbook Challenge Wave I Winners Fourth Textbook Released 6 February 2012 The Project BCcampus Retrieved 2022 01 27 Find Open Textbooks BCcampus OpenEd Resources Retrieved 2021 06 23 a b Coolidge Amanda Doner Sue Robertson Tara Gray Josie 2018 08 31 Accessibility Toolkit 2nd Edition BCcampus ISBN 978 1 77420 030 8 2015 OE Award Winners Projects The Open Education Consortium www oeconsortium org Retrieved 2021 06 23 Recognition BCcampus Retrieved 2021 06 23 Review Rubric Open Textbook Library Retrieved 2021 06 30 About Open Education Network Retrieved 2021 06 25 Open Textbook Library Open Textbook Library Retrieved 2021 06 25 Z Degree adds up to 1 million in savings plus student retention and better grades TCC Today 2017 10 03 Retrieved 2021 06 23 Reducing Textbook Cost to 0 Tidewater Community College SPARC Retrieved 2021 06 23 Rebus Community Collaboration and Creation for OER Rebus Community Retrieved 2021 06 25 Christie Jordanne 2020 05 01 Using Pressbooks to Create Collaborative Open Textbooks Technology Tools for Teaching in Higher Education The Practical Handbook Series Centre for Higher Education Research Policy amp Practice CHERPP retrieved 2021 06 25 Pressbooks Directory pressbooks directory Retrieved 2021 06 30 Henderson Serena Ostashewski Nathaniel December 2018 View of Barriers incentives and benefits of the open educational resources OER movement An exploration into instructor perspectives First Monday First Monday doi 10 5210 fm v23i12 9172 S2CID 54454159 Retrieved 2021 06 30 Using Grant Funding to Promote Open Textbooks er educause edu Retrieved 2021 06 30 Todorinova Lily Wilkinson Zara T November 2020 Incentivizing faculty for open educational resources OER adoption and open textbook authoring Journal of Academic Librarianship 46 6 102220 doi 10 1016 j acalib 2020 102220 ISSN 0099 1333 PMC 7427534 PMID 34173397 Dr Anthony Brandt wins National Endowment for the Arts Grant for Connexions Course on Connexions November 23 2010 Sound Reasoning by Dr Anthony Brandt Houston TX Connexions Business Reference amp Services Section BRASS American Library Association Reference and User Services Association 2011 Outstanding Business Reference Sources The 2010 Selection of Recent Titles American Library Association Reference and User Services Quarterly December 29 2010 Description of Textbook Excellence Awards Textys from the Text and Academic Author s Association 2011 Organizational Behavior by Talya Bauer and Berrin Erdogan Irvington NY Flat World Knowledge 2010 OE Awards for Excellence Organized by Open Education Global awards oeglobal org Retrieved 2021 06 25 OER The Myth of Commercial Textbook Reliability Archived 2011 04 11 at the Wayback Machine by Geoff Cain College Open Textbooks Community March 19 2011 ASU Statepress Archived 2012 03 10 at the Wayback Machine Open Source Alternatives Bring Flexibility to Textbooks February 25 2010 7 Things You Should Know About Open Textbook Publishing by Judy Baker and Jacky Hood Educause Learning Initiative March 8 2011 Florida Open Access Textbook Task Force Final Report submitted in fulfillment of the requirements contained in 1004 091 2 F S February 27 2010 Flat World Knowledge Archived 2012 07 30 at archive today Author s World Resources on Open Textbooks Archived 2011 07 28 at the Wayback Machine the Student PIRGs S 1714 IS Open College Textbook Act of 2009 Introduced in Senate IS by Richard Durbin D IL Sep 24 2009 Open Textbook bill by Greg DeKoenigsberg Opensource com Dec 15 2009 Free Online Textbooks Becoming a Reality by Tanika Cooper Daily Nebraskan University of Nebraska via UWire The College Network July 26 2010 H R 4575 Open College Textbook Act of 2010 sponsored by David Wu D OR Feb 2 2010 Open Textbooks Pilot Program www2 ed gov 2020 09 22 Retrieved 2021 06 30 Open Textbook Pilot Grant Program SPARC Retrieved 2021 06 30 Publishers Criticize Federal Investment in Open Educational Resources by Josh Keller The Chronicle of Higher Education May 24 2011 Campus Overload Live with Jenna Johnson College Textbooks January 13 2011 OpenEd20 Open for Who Assessing the Accessibili opened20 sched com Retrieved 2021 06 25 Singh Jaspreet Fernando Zeon Trevor Chawla Saniya 2015 09 09 LearnWeb OER Improving Accessibility of Open Educational Resources arXiv 1509 02739 cs HC Da Rosa Silvia Motz Regina September 2016 Do we have accessible oer repositories 2016 International Symposium on Computers in Education SIIE 1 6 doi 10 1109 SIIE 2016 7751867 ISBN 978 1 5090 4596 9 S2CID 33442078 Reed Michelle Turner Ciara 2018 Experiential Learning and Open Education Partnering with Students to Evaluate OER Accessibility Pacific University Press retrieved 2021 06 25 Barnes Christopher 2018 10 26 OER and Accessibility Designing Equitable Foundations for Open Education All Musselman Library Staff Works Navarrete Rosa Lujan Mora Sergio 2018 11 01 Bridging the accessibility gap in Open Educational Resources Universal Access in the Information Society 17 4 755 774 doi 10 1007 s10209 017 0529 9 hdl 10045 82029 ISSN 1615 5297 S2CID 18745454 Zhang Xiangling Tlili Ahmed Nascimbeni Fabio Burgos Daniel Huang Ronghuai Chang Ting Wen Jemni Mohamed Khribi Mohamed Koutheair 2020 01 03 Accessibility within open educational resources and practices for disabled learners a systematic literature review Smart Learning Environments 7 1 1 doi 10 1186 s40561 019 0113 2 ISSN 2196 7091 S2CID 209542772 Anderson Talea Accessibility Case Studies for Scholarly Communication Librarians and Practitioners Simple Book Publishing opentext wsu edu Retrieved 2021 06 25 Open Educational Resources The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation Washington State Community and Technical Colleges Launch the Washington State Student Completion Initiative Archived 2012 03 14 at the Wayback Machine The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Oct 14 2009 a b About Australian Open Textbooks as Social Justice australianopentextbooks edu au Retrieved 2021 07 01 Social Justice Australian Open Textbooks as Social Justice australianopentextbooks edu au Retrieved 2021 07 01 National Centre for Student Equity in Higher Education NCSEHE Retrieved 2021 07 01 BCcampus We facilitate innovation in teaching learning and educational technology for BC s post secondary system collaborative projects for multiple institutions Retrieved 2021 06 30 Burgess Mary 2017 03 27 The BC Open Textbook Project Open The Philosophy and Practices that are Revolutionizing Education and Science pp 227 236 doi 10 5334 bbc r ISBN 9781911529002 Browse Our Collections BCcampus OpenEd Resources Retrieved 2021 06 27 Find Open Textbooks BCcampus OpenEd Resources Retrieved 2021 06 27 Digital Open Textbooks for Development www dot4d uct ac za Retrieved 2021 06 30 Digital Open Textbooks for Development www dot4d uct ac za Retrieved 2021 06 27 About Digital Open Textbooks for Development www dot4d uct ac za Retrieved 2021 06 27 Cox Glenda Masuku Bianca Willmers Michelle 2020 05 11 Open Textbooks and Social Justice Open Educational Practices to Address Economic Cultural and Political Injustice at the University of Cape Town Journal of Interactive Media in Education 2020 1 2 doi 10 5334 jime 556 ISSN 1365 893X About eCampusOntario Retrieved 2021 06 30 Open Textbook Initiative eCampusOntario Retrieved 2021 06 27 eCampusOntario Open Library Portal Retrieved 2021 06 27 OpenStax openstax org Retrieved 2021 06 27 OpenStax openstax org Retrieved 2021 06 27 Kelly Rhea 2019 09 11 More than Half of All U S Colleges and Universities Using OpenStax Textbooks Campus Technology Retrieved 2021 06 07 Open Education Network Retrieved 2021 06 30 Join Open Education Network Retrieved 2021 06 27 Open Textbook Library Open Textbook Library Retrieved 2021 06 27 Koalicja Otwartej Edukacji KOED Retrieved 2021 06 30 Our mission Koalicja Otwartej Edukacji Retrieved 2021 06 27 Poland s Grand Experiment in Open Source Education www opensocietyfoundations org Retrieved 2021 06 27 Zintegrowana Platforma Edukacyjna zpe gov pl Retrieved 2021 06 27 Open textbooks in public education Experience from Poland and Romania Open Educational Resources Policy in Europe oerpolicy eu Retrieved 2021 06 27 Siyavula www siyavulaeducation com Retrieved 2021 06 30 About us www siyavulaeducation com Retrieved 2021 06 27 McGivern Chris 2017 12 12 Mark Horner and Siyavula Opening Access to Education The Shuttleworth Foundation Retrieved 2021 06 27 UK Open Textbook Project UK Open Textbook Project Retrieved 2021 06 30 External links EditBC Open Textbooks Mavs Open Press Milne Open Textbooks OASIS Openly Available Sources Integrated Search OER Africa Open Oregon Open Textbook Library at the University of Minnesota OpenStax PDX Open Pressbooks Directory Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Open textbook amp oldid 1104488821, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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