The Faculty Quick Start Guide is an outcome of a project by …
The Faculty Quick Start Guide is an outcome of a project by ISKME, supported by a grant from the Michelson 20MM Foundation, to conduct a study and develop a set of resources to accelerate OER use for distance education, especially the urgent shift to remote learning during the pandemic in 2020. The Guide, created in collaboration with a selection of OER and online education champions across California community colleges (CCC), contains:
- Models and approaches to online learning, and to emergency remote learning in the context of COVID-19; - How and to what extent OER fits into these models, and local and state-level supports needed for its integration and sustainability; - Design considerations for integrating OER in online learning, including pedagogical and platform considerations; - Curatorial practices, such as using OER curation tools and aligning curated OER to learning outcomes; and, - Starting points and tips for colleges and faculty who want to initiate OER integration into distance education.
Tailored to faculty and campus administrators both in California and beyond, the Guide has the aim is to enable system-wide shifts to meet postsecondary institutions’ long term goals for distance learning, and faculty’s emergency plans for remote learning in response to the COVID-19 and potential future crises.
The Guide is also available as a PDF for download: https://drive.google.com/file/d/17AXs30dZeLOrGeNBQ-ISc_OJXIxE9xtB/view?usp=sharing.
See the companion guide for administrators at: https://www.oercommons.org/courses/iskme-michelson-20mm-oer-campus-administrator-quick-start-guide-public/edit
The links within this resource are designed to provide educators with background …
The links within this resource are designed to provide educators with background context regarding the development of the K-12 Voices for Open OER-DEIA Action Plan for K-12 District Implementation. Presented as a poster session at the 2022 OpenEd Conference, the slides explain the purpose of the Guide, as well as the development process.This guide is intendend as a strategic planning tool for district leaders wishing to promote the already pedagogically and financially compelling practice of creating or adapting open educational resources (OER) to help achieve district goals in serving all students through diversity, equity, inclusion, or accessibility (DEIA) lens. The guide provides step-by-step planning tools, including examples, templates, and resources to help district leaders articulate and establish action plans for what we refer to as "OER-DEIA." The entire guide is an open educational resource itself, free and openly licensed for reuse, remixing, and resharing.
This resource is intended as a module for graduate students in health …
This resource is intended as a module for graduate students in health sciences fields such as medicine, nursing, and public health, and librarians who work in these and related fields. The assignment will briefly review the literature on the three main themes (open access, social justice, and health equity) to provide background on the topic. Following this overview, students will break into groups, and each group will be given a topic with questions to spark discussion on the subject. Questions such as "Historically, how has access to health information created benefits or barriers to users?" or "When thinking about medical research, what stakeholders are concerned about open access and why?" Each group will select a notetaker to keep track of the responses, and time will be given in class to report out and have a wider discussion with each other. The materials provided include an optional pre-reading assignment, slide deck, lesson plan, and a sample comprehension check.
These resources are also available at https://scholarworks.iupui.edu/handle/1805/26714
The Oregon Math Project Practice Briefs provide a summary of research and …
The Oregon Math Project Practice Briefs provide a summary of research and practice related to critical topics in mathematics education. They were developed as a collaborative effort between Oregon State University and the Oregon Department of Education.
Introductory lecture to 11th semester (international semester) in Medicine. General introduction to …
Introductory lecture to 11th semester (international semester) in Medicine. General introduction to the concept of global health, and the importance of culture. Global health = local health, migrants health as an example
Introductory lecture to 11.semester (international semester) in Medicine. General introduction to the …
Introductory lecture to 11.semester (international semester) in Medicine. General introduction to the concept of global health, and the importance of culture. Global health = local health, migrants health as an example
This free, online article, developed for elementary teachers, describes a Kindergarten polar …
This free, online article, developed for elementary teachers, describes a Kindergarten polar science, standards aligned, unit centered on The Polar Express developing literacy, math, and science skills.
The skills of researching, inquiring of, and analyzing one’s own social identity …
The skills of researching, inquiring of, and analyzing one’s own social identity and positionality will be undertaken in a peer-group environment with supportive agreements. This takes place over the first two weeks of the term so that it will serve in this context as a framing device for the overall course. The ability to recognize and articulate one’s own positionality — and to relate it to larger, inseparable systems through intersectionality — will be a valuable life skill that will evolve with the student long beyond the course and their college experience.
This process is intended to serve students equitably by acknowledging the reality of unconscious bias, becoming more aware of intersectionality in our social identities (Hardiman et al., 2007; Sensoy & DiAngelo, 2012), and better understanding how implicit and explicit aspects of our identities affect our experience.
The Open for Antiracism (OFAR) Program – co-led by CCCOER and College …
The Open for Antiracism (OFAR) Program – co-led by CCCOER and College of the Canyons – emerged as a response to the growing awareness of structural racism in our educational systems and the realization that adoption of open educational resources (OER) and open pedagogy could be transformative at institutions seeking to improve. The program is designed to give participants a workshop experience where they can better understand anti-racist teaching and how the use of OER and open pedagogy can empower them to involve students in the co-creation of an anti-racist classroom. The capstone project involves developing an action plan for incorporating OER and open pedagogy into a course being taught in the spring semester. OFAR participants are invited to remix this template to design and share their projects and plans for moving this work forward.
The key objectives develop an understanding of the dimensions of access to …
The key objectives develop an understanding of the dimensions of access to health care; create greater awareness of health care access constraints from the household perspective; promote critical evaluation of policy options to address access constraints in relation to equity goals; promote and strengthen effective development and implementation of equitable health sector policies. The training materials can be used for a diverse set of target groups, but are primarily aimed at current and future health sector managers. It is also envisaged that the case studies can be used on an ad-hoc basis in post-graduate programs such as Masters in Public Health programs. Six case studies have been prepared for this course: Experiences of households in Sri Lanka, Availability of health services and resource allocation, Affordability of drugs in the context of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) Tax. Insurance funding for health systems, Health service acceptability issues, Access board game.
This course covers theory and evidence on government taxation policy. Topics include …
This course covers theory and evidence on government taxation policy. Topics include tax incidence, optimal tax theory, the effect of taxation on labor supply and savings, taxation and corporate behavior, and tax expenditure policy.
A noose is found hanging from a goalpost on a high school …
A noose is found hanging from a goalpost on a high school campus.
A swastika, 20 feet in diameter, is burned into the pavement at a junior high school.
A group of white high school students dresses in banana suits for a basketball game and taunts their majority-black rival with racial slurs.
A Sikh student has his turban pulled off and hair cut by fellow students.
Your school has plans and protocols in place to respond to fires, severe weather, medical emergencies, fights and weapons possession. But what about school incidents like those listed above that involve bigotry and hate? Are plans in place to respond to a bias incident or hate crime? Too often these plans are created in the moment during the actual crisis. Bias incidents are far too complex for on-the-fly planning; an early misstep can heighten tension and damage chances for long-term success.
Ši ataskaita yra pagrindinis O1 veiklos rezultatas ir susideda iš trijų pagrindinių …
Ši ataskaita yra pagrindinis O1 veiklos rezultatas ir susideda iš trijų pagrindinių dalių: 1) Tarptautinės ir Europos iniciatyvos; 2) Šalies ataskaita – Švedijos tyrimo atvejai; 3) Šalies ataskaita – Lietuvos tyrimo atvejai. Pirmoje dalyje buvo nagrinėjamos svarbiausios tarptautinių organizacijų, tokių kaip UNESCO, Jungtinių Tautų, EBPO ir Europos Tarybos, Jungtinio tyrimų centro ir CEDEFOP, iniciatyvos ir publikacijos. Antroje ir trečioje dalyse analizuojami kiekvienos šalies atvejai, kokybiniai ir kiekybiniai duomenys. Galiausiai pateikiamos praktinės idėjos apie skaitmeninę įtrauktį visiems besimokantiesiems ir geriausia praktika bei rekomendacijos dėl platesnės skaitmeninės įtraukties.
This resource was developed to use when teaching SOC 225: Social Diversity …
This resource was developed to use when teaching SOC 225: Social Diversity as described by the North Carolina Community College System. Specifically, this collection was curated by Porscha Orndorf for use at A-B Tech Community College, but is available to all those who want to use it.
Given the high prevalence of disability worldwide, the status of disabled people …
Given the high prevalence of disability worldwide, the status of disabled people remains an area of concern for practitioners who seek to respectfully engage with a stigmatized and often oppressed population. The book encourages practitioners to draw on intersectionality theory, the critical cultural competence framework and anti-oppressive practice approaches to contend with the concerns facing disabled people today. These issues include parenting, mass incarceration, ableism, aging and employment, among others. This title acknowledges difference and multisystemic privilege and oppression while also drawing readers’ attention to the importance of solidarity and allyship when it comes to meaningful social work practice with and social change for disabled people.
The event includes high-profile speakers and breakout sessions that provide strategies for …
The event includes high-profile speakers and breakout sessions that provide strategies for understanding equity through a trauma-informed practices approach. The site will provide access to speaker keynotes and breakout session recordings and materials from both. With consideration to current social movements in the U.S., as well as the recent advent of widespread distance learning, equity work is needed now more than ever. Our students deserve our highest-level of support.
Native Wellness Institute: Jillene Joseph Communication Across Barriers: Dr. Donna Beagle Ricky Robertson Resolve: Raphaelle Miller, Cara Walsh Oregon Center for Educational Equity; Daryl Dixon, Jesse Scott John Krownapple
The information within this resource are techniques that we have used to …
The information within this resource are techniques that we have used to address gaps in CTE equity. These techniques have assisted us in to beginning address inequity and we continue to use as part of a continous improvement process.
This Open Educational Resource (OER) carries a significant responsibility by presenting statistics …
This Open Educational Resource (OER) carries a significant responsibility by presenting statistics through an equity lens. The metaphor of a lens is used intentionally–as the glasses one wears can have a profound effect on what one sees. The book encourages further inspection of the ways in which data is collected, interpreted, and analyzed on a variety of social justice issues, such as health disparities, hunger and food insecurity, homelessness, behavioral health (mental health and substance use), and incarceration of males of color. It also attempts to reveal how the misuse of data can reinforce inequities, for example, by stigmatizing people and labeling neighborhoods as high poverty, violent, and having poor educational opportunities. Whether an intended or unintended consequence, irresponsible data use can contribute to racist impressions of people and communities.
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