An OER COUP: College Teacher and Student Perceptions of Open Educational Resources

Authors

  • TJ Bliss Brigham Young University
  • T. Jared Robinson Brigham Young University
  • John Hilton Brigham Young University
  • David A. Wiley Brigham Young University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5334/2013-04

Keywords:

community college, textbooks, open education

Abstract

Despite increased development and dissemination, there has been very little empirical research on Open Educational Resources (OER). Teachers and students involved in a large-scale OER initiative at eight community colleges across the United States were given a detailed questionnaire aimed at uncovering their perceptions of the cost, outcomes, uses and perceptions of quality of the OER used in their courses. Teachers and students alike reported significant cost savings and various pedagogical and learning impacts due to the implementation of OER in the classroom. In addition, most students and teachers perceived their OER to be at least equal in quality to traditional textbooks they had used in the past. Implications for further research are discussed.

 

Author Biographies

TJ Bliss, Brigham Young University

Educational Inquiry, Measurement, and Evaluation - Ph.D. Candidate

T. Jared Robinson, Brigham Young University

Educational Inquiry, Measurement, and Evaluation - Ph.D. Student

John Hilton, Brigham Young University

Religious Education, Assistant Professor 

David A. Wiley, Brigham Young University

Instructional Psychology and Technology - Associate Professor

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Published

2013-02-08

Issue

Section

Articles