Tag Archives: open education week

Anatomy, Access, and Real-World Application: An Interview with Michael O’Hara

Happy Open Education Week! During this week, we celebrate and advocate for open educational resources. Open educational resources (also called OER) are defined by SPARC as “teaching, learning, and research resources that are free of cost and access barriers, which also carry legal permission for open use.” These teaching and learning materials — like videos, slide decks, podcasts, worksheets, and textbooks — are free to access, use, share, and modify in the digital environment without copyright concerns because their creators have given others permission to do so.   

Why are open educational resources so important? For students, their biggest appeal is they are zero or low cost. Open textbooks can save students hundreds of dollars each semester. For faculty, OER offer an opportunity to craft course materials that are highly relevant, current, and meaningful for their discipline. In addition to remixing and modifying existing materials, faculty can create new materials or textbooks.  

Temple University Libraries and University Press’s joint imprint North Broad Press provides Temple faculty with an opportunity to author their own open textbook or other digital project. All North Broad Press titles are peer reviewed and freely available online. Check out a list of 14 open educational resources in progress.   

To learn more about why Temple faculty are driven to author an open textbook with North Borad Press, we spoke with Michael O’Hara, Associate Professor of Instruction in the Doctor of Physical Therapy program in the College of Public Health at Temple. He and his co-author Jacqueline Phillips, Associate Clinical Professor in the Health Sciences department of the College of Nursing and Health Professions at Drexel University, recently published a new open textbook, Hands-on Anatomy, which provides comprehensive anatomical information with a focus on how to palpate structures in real-world clinical situations. 

Why did you choose to write Hands-on Anatomy as an open textbook? 

The costs associated with pursuing a degree in higher education can present several barriers to students. Instead of purchasing required course materials, students may opt for more financially reasonable resources or forgo materials, such as course textbooks, all together. Who could blame them? Human anatomy is a course that serves as the cornerstone for all healthcare professionals and may require ongoing study to best prepare for future clinical practice. Co-author, Jacquie Phillips, and I wanted to provide students with a valuable resource that could not only serve as a valuable introductory textbook to the human body but do so without students’ hesitation for taking on the costs. 

What role did students play in the project? 

Healthcare professionals need to be prepared for meeting the clinical needs of patients of all body types. It has been well-described in literature on human anatomy education that models used to present visuospatial relationships of the body, such as structures for surface palpation, tends to lack the diversity of patients commonly encountered in clinical practice. For this textbook, we wanted to celebrate the diversity of our student body by presenting models of all individuals of gender, race, and body type. Our intent is to not only improve the learning experience for students but make the content more approachable by learning from individuals that may share similar characteristics as the reader. 

Tell us about the process of publishing this textbook with North Broad Press, the joint open access imprint of the Libraries and Temple University Press. 

Putting together a textbook is not a casual undertaking – but having a fantastic support network to navigate this process made the creation of Hands-on Anatomy that much easier. The team at North Broad Press was there every step of the way to provide guidance, feedback, and solutions to make this textbook the best that it can be. 

You chose a Creative Commons license for your textbook. Were you familiar with Creative Commons prior to this project?   

My understanding of Creative Commons licenses for textbooks was fairly superficial prior to beginning this project. Over the time in developing this textbook, I not only learned more about the value of Creative Commons licenses but garnered a better appreciation for the importance of sharing materials. 

What advice would you offer faculty who might be considering authoring an open textbook?    

The advice I would give faculty considering authoring an open textbook is to recognize this process is a marathon, not a sprint! Putting together daily, weekly, and monthly objectives allowed Jacquie and I to take on this textbook one page, one section, and one chapter at a time. By being consistent and chipping away little by little focuses on progress, not perfection, and before long – you will have a full textbook ready to go. 

Thank you, Mike! 

If you feel inspired to create an OER, Temple Libraries can support you! For more information about OER, visit our Open Educational Practices guide. Contact your subject librarian if you want help locating and implementing OER in your courses.  

If you’re interested in writing your own open textbook, contact Mary Rose Muccie (maryrose.muccie@temple.edu) and Alicia Pucci (alicia.pucci@temple.edu) for more information.   

Celebrate Open Education Week with the Libraries!

Temple University Libraries is celebrating Open Education Week from March 10 to March 14, 2025. Open Education Week is an annual celebration designed to raise awareness about open educational resources and practices. 

Open educational resources (OER) are teaching and learning materials that are free of cost and access barriers, and which have permissions for reuse. Examples of OER include videos, images, lab activities, homework assignments, and textbooks.

Open educational practices — also known as open pedagogy — use OER to support student learning by inviting them to become active participants in the teaching and learning environment, engaging in knowledge creation and sharing. 

Faculty who use OER instead of a commercial textbook can help save students hundreds of dollars a semester. Faculty who use OER can also revise, remix, and build upon the content created by others, customizing the material to meet the needs of their particular class. This can aid in bringing about a more holistic teaching and learning experience.  

Check out our Open Educational Practices guide to learn more.  

Open Education Week Events   

To mark Open Education Week, Temple University Libraries will be offering the following activities: 

Student Event 

  • Stop by the Textbook Affordability table on the first floor of Charles Library to share your story about how textbook costs impact you, learn more about how to advocate for zero-cost course materials, and craft a ‘Thank you!’ to your professors who have used affordable textbooks. 

Online Workshops 

  • Make Your Courses Affordable with Zero-Cost Course Materials 
    Monday, March 10 | Noon | Register 
    Join us as we highlight multiple options for locating zero-cost course materials, including open educational resources (OER) and library resources. 
  • How to Promote Your Open Scholarship  
    Tuesday, March 11 | Noon | Register  
    This workshop will cover strategies on how faculty can promote their open scholarship. This will cover building a scholarly profile, where to store your work, how to showcase your work on social media, and how to express this hard work in the promotion and tenure process. 
  • Copyright and Creative Commons: Considerations for Content Creators 
    Wednesday, March 12 | 1:00 PM | Register  
    Join us as we cover the basics of Creative Commons licenses—what they are, how to find CC-licensed material, and how to license your own work. 
  • Transform Your Information Literacy Assignments with Open Educational Practices 
    Thursday, March 13 | Noon | Register 
    Join us as we provide an introduction to open educational practices and how they connect with the information literacy concepts you want to teach. Gain strategies for moving beyond traditional research paper assignments to more renewable assignments where students are actively engaging in knowledge creation. 
  • Textbook Affordability Project Application Information Session  
    Friday, March 14 | 1:00 PM | Register  
    Join us as we discuss the TAP grant award opportunities, application process, requirements, and answer any of your application questions. 

Faculty Drawing 

  • Attend our Open Education Week workshops for a chance to be entered. Registering for more events increases your chances of winning a library swag bag! 

Faculty Peer-to-Peer OER Advisor Panel
Wednesday, March 12 | 3:00 PM | Register

Have you been thinking about converting your course to zero-cost course materials for your students but are not sure how or where to start? Consider taking advantage of a new resource that can support your transition process.

In this online session the panelists will introduce the Faculty Peer-to-Peer OER Advisors program and share the types of assistance available from the faculty OER advisors. Working with Temple University librarians, the advisors can identify OER and other zero-cost resources, as well as using their past experience with this process to offer tips and suggestions for a smooth conversion to zero-cost course materials.

Apply for a Textbook Affordability Project Grant Award! 

Open Education Week is also a great time to learn more about Temple University Libraries’ Textbook Affordability Project, which awards grants ranging from $500 to $1,500 to faculty who adopt, adapt, or create free alternatives to commercial educational resources. Engaging in open educational practices, like replacing a disposable assignment with a renewable assignment, is also an option. Over 100 Temple faculty have been awarded grants since 2011. The call for applications will open on February 24, 2025, and close on April 4, 2025. 

We hope you will join us for our Open Education Week events! 

Opening Educational Resources for Behavioral Health Practitioners: An Interview with Sean E. Snyder

Happy Open Education Week! During this week, we celebrate and advocate for open educational resources. Open educational resources (also called OER) are defined by SPARC as “teaching, learning, and research resources that are free of cost and access barriers, which also carry legal permission for open use.” These teaching and learning materials — like videos, slide decks, podcasts, worksheets, and textbooks — are free to access, use, share, and modify in the digital environment without copyright concerns because their creators have given others permission to do so.  

Why are open educational resources so important? For students, their biggest appeal is they are zero or low cost. Open textbooks can save students hundreds of dollars each semester. For faculty, OER offer an opportunity to craft course materials that are highly relevant, current, and meaningful for their discipline. In addition to remixing and modifying existing materials, faculty can create new materials or textbooks. 

Temple University Libraries and University Press’s joint imprint North Broad Press provides Temple faculty with an opportunity to author their own open textbook. All North Broad Press titles are peer reviewed and freely available online. Check out a list of 15 open textbooks in progress.  

To learn more about why Temple faculty are driven to author an open textbook, we spoke with Sean E. Snyder, MSW, LCSW. Sean is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker who has taught courses on child emotional challenges at Temple University and Thomas Jefferson University and has lectured at the University of Pennsylvania. He’s the author a new open textbook, A Developmental Systems Guide for Child and Adolescent Behavioral Health Practitioners, which provides clinicians with actionable evidence-based practices for the assessment, diagnosis, and treatment of child and adolescent mental and behavioral health.   

Why did you choose to write A Developmental Systems Guide for Child and Adolescent Behavioral Health Practitioners as an open textbook? 

I put myself in the shoes of a student first – how could a class text be helpful and useful to them as they learn to be a therapist or counselor? My thoughts were – it needs to be in very actionable terms and it needs to be available to them when they are done with the course. The hope was that students could come back to the book in their practice – and not be turned away by a paywall. 

Going beyond Temple University, we all know there is a crisis of mental healthcare service capacity in the United States. The hope with this textbook was to make what we know from the science and lived experience of how to best support the mental health of children free and easily accessible. It’s putting trustworthy information out in the meta-verse and anchoring some of the core concepts of mental healthcare for children. In the book, Dr. Bruce Chorpita calls this “therapeutic intelligence:”  

Therapeutic intelligence refers to the idea that at any given moment, if you knew everything in those 1200 randomized trials, what would you do at any given moment with a child, whether you were a therapist, or whether you were a teacher, or a bus driver, or a soccer coach or anyone else who comes into contact with children? How would you behave in a way that fosters the psychological development, the emotional intelligence, the health and wellness of that child?

An open access textbook is at least a small drop in the bucket towards that vision of therapeutic intelligence in our society.  

Your book features many contributing authors and voices. Tell us about this collaborative process and why it was important for this project. 

Democratization of knowledge is fundamental to education, learning, and culture, among other things. That means folks can access the knowledge we create but also have access to creating that knowledge base. Coproduction of knowledge requires dialogue of different voices – the partnership that this book required was my favorite part of the process. I got to interact with so many brilliant people from all walks of life, and they all pushed my ongoing learning and personal growth. I am so appreciative of everyone involved in this process. 

It was important when reaching out to coauthors that I had the value of access in mind – what voices have been marginalized in academia, how can this book create access in that space for them? How could being a coauthor on this book potentially contribute to their professional paths? The book has so many diverse voices across different aspects of identity- race, ethnicity, primary language, sexual/gender identity and expression, first-gen college student. Again, the best part of this book was working together. 

Tell us about the process of publishing this textbook with North Broad Press, the joint open access imprint of the Libraries and Temple University Press. 

The process was very collaborative with the folks at North Broad Press (NBP) – we set expectations at the beginning, then they let me “do my thing.” They were supportive of any changes I made to the format or other aspects of the book. I was happy to have two great peer reviewers look at the book as well, especially during a period where getting peer reviewers was hard!  Overall, the NBP team made the process feel easy. 

You chose a Creative Commons license for your textbook. Were you familiar with Creative Commons prior to this project? 

I was familiar with this kind of license because of my exposure to folks working in the “open science” space. The process of selecting a license was new to me – there is some nuance that can allow varying degrees of how someone can use, remix, and adapt. The NBP team walked me through the process and helped me ensure that the license supported the overall aim of increasing access and dissemination of the content.  

What advice would you offer faculty who might be considering authoring an open textbook?   

The process reminded me a lot of doing a research protocol – set up your SOP and make sure your protocol is set to keep you anchored during the writing process, especially if you have coauthors. Instead of updating an IRB to any changes you want to make to the protocol, you update the publishing team on the changes you hope to make. Give yourself a long enough time horizon to write and revise, knowing that literature can update over the course of writing the book.  And of course, let your passion come to life. A book allows you so much space to let that happen. 

Thank you, Sean! 

If you feel inspired to create an OER, Temple Libraries can support you! For more information about OER, visit our Discovering Open Educational Resources guide. Contact your subject librarian if you want help locating and implementing OER in your courses. If you’re interested in writing your own open textbook, contact Mary Rose Muccie (maryrose.muccie@temple.edu) and Alicia Pucci (alicia.pucci@temple.edu) for more information.   

Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Open Textbook Publishing: An Interview with Dr. Carmelo A. Galati

Image by Tom from Pixabay. 

Happy Open Education Week! During this week, we celebrate and advocate for open educational resources. Open educational resources (also called OER) are defined by SPARC as “teaching, learning, and research resources that are free of cost and access barriers, which also carry legal permission for open use.” These are teaching and learning materials — like videos, slide decks, podcasts, worksheets, and textbooks — that are free to access, use, share, and modify in the digital environment without copyright concerns because their creators have given others permission to do so. 

Why are open educational resources so important? For students, their biggest appeal is they are zero or low cost. Open textbooks can save students hundreds of dollars each semester. For faculty, OER offer an opportunity to craft course materials that are highly relevant, current, and meaningful for their discipline. In addition to remixing and modifying existing materials, faculty can create new materials or textbooks. 

North Broad Press logo

Temple University Libraries and University Press’s joint imprint North Broad Press provides Temple faculty with an opportunity to author their own open textbook. All North Broad Press titles are peer reviewed and freely available online. Check out a list of 17 open textbooks in progress

To learn more about why Temple faculty are driven to author an open textbook, we spoke with Dr. Carmelo A. Galati, Associate Professor of Instruction and the Co-Director of the Italian Studies Program at Temple University. Dr. Galati is the author a new open textbook, Gratis!: A Flipped-Classroom and Active Learning Approach to Italian, which is currently under review with North Broad Press. This textbook is intended for students with no previous knowledge of Italian.  

Why did you choose to write Gratis!: A Flipped-Classroom and Active Learning Approach to Italian as an open textbook?  

While leading a session on active learning for teachers of Italian at a professional workshop under the jurisdiction of the General Consulate of Italy in Philadelphia and the Italian Ministry of Education (October 2019), my colleague, Dr. Cristina Gragnani, and I discovered university students are not the only ones affected by the high and growing cost of language textbooks. High school programs are also facing issues and are unable to provide students with affordable educational tools to promote the Italian language and culture. Temple University’s Italian Studies program’s work within the Philadelphia community to disseminate Italian culture dates to the early 20th century. In support of that pioneering work educating students and promoting Italian culture, we created an open-access, introductory-level Italian textbook for Temple University students, as well as high school students in the greater Philadelphia area and beyond. Doing so makes foreign language study accessible to all and places Temple University at the forefront of internationalization at the secondary education and university levels. 

Tell us about the process of publishing this textbook with North Broad Press, the joint open access imprint of the Libraries and Temple University Press. 

Prior to Gratis! I did not have experience in textbook publications, as most of my writing projects dealt with peer-reviewed academic journals and edited volumes. Thanks to the guidance of Annie Johnson (former Assistant Director for Open Publishing Initiatives and Scholarly Communications), Mary Rose Muccie (Director, Temple University Press), and Alicia Pucci (Scholarly Communications Associate), the process has been a positive and rewarding experience. From the very first day of being contracted to author Gratis! everyone at North Broad Press has been very supportive and has shown great enthusiasm for the project. Whenever questions arose regarding copyright, formatting, use of videos, or anything in between, they were quick to respond by email and to schedule video conferences with me should I need further clarification.  

You chose a Creative Commons license for your textbook. Were you familiar with Creative Commons prior to this project?  

I was not familiar with Creative Commons (CC) prior to the project. As a language textbook, Gratis! is filled with lots of images to introduce, reinforce understanding of, and assess vocabulary knowledge of each lesson and unit. Creative Commons has made the inclusion of images much less stressful since I did not need to purchase individual licenses for the book’s photographs. Furthermore, in choosing a CC license for Gratis!, instructors who wish to adopt it are free to add more material. This may include new integrated grammar or vocabulary exercises that align with the context of each chapter. The CC license allows instructors to choose cultural reading materials to assess reading comprehension as well, since educators can write and add additional reading content to the book.  

You received an OER Development Grant from the PA GOAL program. Did this impact how you envision faculty and students using this textbook?   

The OER Development Grant supported the development of videos, images, and interactive H5P exercises that serve as ancillary materials and provide students with instant feedback. The grant provided funding for four undergraduate Italian majors (Aidan Giordano, Andrew Raker, Julia Rudy and Eileen Scanlan), studying at our Temple University Rome campus, working with two Italian faculty members and the Director of Student Activities (Daniela Curioso, Bruno Montefusco, and Gianni Marangio, respectively), to create original video content for each of the textbook’s chapters. The students’ contributions allow language learners to experience studying abroad virtually through videos that document their travels around Rome, provide a virtual campus tour of Villa Caproni (the building which houses the Temple Rome campus along the banks of the Tiber River), and record interviews with local Italian university students discussing differences between the American and Italian Educational system.  

Thanks to the OER Development Grant, Gratis! emulates the leading publishers in providing students with competencies that they will acquire by the completion of each chapter. Units include specific vocabulary that integrates grammar and culture lessons, while online ancillary materials provide students with additional support and instant feedback. 

All the unique videos, images, and H5P exercises that appear in Gratis! can be found in TUScholarShare’s Teaching and Learning Materials collection for download and reuse.    

What advice would you offer faculty who might be considering authoring an open textbook?  

If you are looking for a way to provide affordable educational tools for students and the opportunity to continuously reflect on and update best practices and initiatives to promote diversity, equity, and inclusion, then authoring an open textbook is the way to go! Most Italian language textbooks contain microaggressions that endorse heteronormative culture and behaviors, promote traditional family planning, and ultimately present a false picture of the world in which we live. In writing Gratis! I have been able to represent diverse realities for Italian-language learners and to make the learning process inclusive to all! Gratis! does not promote stereotypes of traditionally conservative Italians. Instead, it teaches inclusive vocabulary regarding the LGBTQIA+ community. It presents students with language regarding places of worship for all faiths, not just Roman Catholicism. In its goal to represent Italy’s diverse realities, Gratis! depicts Italians of all cultures, races, and religions. 

Thank you, Dr. Galati! 

If you feel inspired to create an OER, Temple Libraries can support you! For more information about OER, visit our Discovering Open Educational Resources guide. Contact your subject librarian if you want help locating and implementing OER in your courses. If you’re interested in writing your own open textbook, contact Mary Rose Muccie (maryrose.muccie@temple.edu) and Alicia Pucci (alicia.pucci@temple.edu) for more information.