Main image
Home Defining OER

References & Additional Resources

Achieve. (2011). Rubrics for evaluating open education resource (OER) objects.

Aesoph, L.M. (2018). Self-publishing guide. Victoria, BC: BCcampus. Available at: https://opentextbc.ca/selfpublishguide/ (CC BY 4.0).

Blake, D. (2012). Open Education and flexible learning. Retrieved from Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_education#/media/File:Open_education_and_flexible_learning_-_Graphic_illustration.jpg (CC 0)

Bliss, T.J. & Tuiloma, S.H. (2022). Open Educational Resources. EdTechnica: The Open Encyclopedia of Educational Technology. Available at: https://edtechbooks.org/encyclopedia/oer

Buranyi, S. (2017). Is the staggeringly profitable business of scientific publishing bad for science? The Guardian.

Casey, C.C., Goodsett, M., Hoover, J.K., Robertson, S. & Whitchurch, M. (2022). Open pedagogy. EdTechnica: The Open Encyclopedia of Educational Technology. Available at: https://edtechbooks.org/encyclopedia/open_pedagogy

Copyright House. (2022). Signatories of the Berne Convention.

Creative Commons. (2022). About the licenses.

Creative Commons. (2022). License Chooser.

Creative Commons. (2022). Open Education.

Creative Commons. (2015). What is OER?

Creative Commons. (2022). What we do.

Creative Commons Wiki. (2011). Different Types of OER Meet Different Needs.

Creative Commons Wiki. (2021). GFDL vs. CC-by-sa.

Curry, S. (2017). It’s time for academics to take back control of research journals. The Guardian.

Developers Android. (2021). Supported media formats.

Digital Age Project. (2015). Digital Age Toolkit.

Fitzgerald, B. (2007). Open Content Licensing (OCL) for Open Educational Resources. QUT, Australia.

Freedom Defined. (2015). Free Cultural Works definition.

Freedom Defined. (2021). Reasons why not to use the Non-Commercial restriction.

GNU. (2021). List of open content licenses.

Google. (2022). File types and external devices that work on Chromebooks.

Grodecka, K. Sliwowski, K. (2014). OER Mythbusting.

Harmon, E., & Malcolm, J. (2017). Diego Gomez finally cleared of criminal charges for sharing research.

Harrison, M., De Vries, I., Paskevicius, M. & Morgan, T. (2022). Rethinking and recasting the textbook: Reframing learning design with open educational practices. University of Cape Town. Preprint. Available at: https://doi.org/10.25375/uct.21359958.v1

Higgins, P. (2013). "Fair Use Creep," and other copyright bogeymen, appear in Congress. Electronic Frontier Foundation.

Hodgkinson-Williams, C. (2010). Benefits and Challenges of OER for Higher Education Institutions.

JISC. (2013). Open Educational Resources (OERs).

Kawachi, P. (2014). Quality assurance guidelines for open educational resources: TIPS framework. COL.

Kernohan, D. & Thomas, A. (2012). Open Educational Resources – a historical perspective. JISC.

Kurlanska, C. (2022). OERs as a reflection of theory and praxis. Worcester Polytechnic Institute.

Mandhani, A. (2017). Publishers withdraw copyright suit against Delhi University and Rameshwari Photocopy Centre.

Marin, V.I., Peters, L.N. & Zawacki-Richter, O. (2022). (Open) educational resources around the world: an international comparison. COER. Available at: https://edtechbooks.org/oer_around_the_world

Menon, M. & Ali, P.K.M. (2012). Learning from advocacy: A case of OER policy implementation in the Wawasan Open University. OER Knowledge Cloud.

Munro, D., Omassi, J. & Yano, B. (2016). OER Student Toolkit. Victoria, BC: BCcampus. Available at: https://opentextbc.ca/studenttoolkit (CC BY 4.0).

Naughton, J. (2015).  Aaron Swartz stood up for freedom and fairness – and was hounded to his death. The Guardian.

OECD. (2007). 'Giving Knowledge for Free - the Emergence of Open Educational Resources.

OER Commons. (2022). Benefits of Open Educational Resources.

Poggenpoel, L. & Pienaar, M. (2015). Open Educational Resources: The basics. Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Pretoria.

Smallpdf. (2022). Tool for editing PDF files.

South African Government. (1978).Copyright Act 98 of 1978.

South African Institute for Distance Education. (2012). OER policy review and development toolkit.

StackOverflow. (2009). Video File Formats supported in iPhone.

Sutton, M. (2014). Colombian student faces prison charges for sharing an academic article online.

Thomas, B. (2022). How and why to evaluate open educational resources (OERs). Faculty Focus. Available at: https://www.facultyfocus.com/articles/course-design-ideas/how-and-why-to-evaluate-open-educational-resources-oers/?st=FFdaily%3Bsc%3DFF221026%3Butm_term%3DFF221026

UNESCO. (2010). The ABC of copyright. Paris: UNESCO.

Unwin, T., Naseem, A., Pawluczuk, A., Shareef, M., Spiesberger, P., West, P. & Yoo, C. (2020). Guidance Note 2: Sharing Open Educational Resources (OER) with Creative Commons (CC) open licenses, Education for the most marginalised post‐COVID-19: Guidance for governments on the use of digital technologies in education, UNESCO.

Van Damme, D. (2014). The innovation potential of OER/How is OER innovative (slide 11-32).

Web Archive. (2014). Accessible documents and presentations, JiscTechDisc.

WikiEducator. Say Libre.

WikiEducator. What is free content.

Wikipedia. (2022). Copyright.

Wikipedia. (2015). OpenCourseWare.

Wikipedia. (2015). Open Education.

Wikipedia. (2015). Open Educational Resources – History.

Wiley, D. (nd). Brief History of OER.

Wiley, D. (nd). Defining the "Open" in Open Content and Open Educational Resources.

Wiley, D. (2016). An Open Education reader. Available at: https://edtechbooks.org/openedreader

WIPO. (1979). Berne Convention for the protection of literary and artistic works.

WIPO. (nd). World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO).

World Trade Organization. (2022). TRIPS: Trade-related aspects of intellectual property rights.

World Wide Web Consortium. (2022). Making the Web accessible.