9 Adapting OER

Chapter Purpose

This chapter explains how you might use openly licensed works by cloning and adapting them for your purposes.  (Recall that this Guide that you are reading is itself an adaptation of another openly licensed work.)

Adaptation

The term “adaptation” is commonly used to describe the process of making changes to an existing work. Though we can also replace “adapt” with revise, modify, alter, customize, or other synonym that describes the act of making a change. The example below refers to adapting an open textbook but any OER (assignments, videos, lecture notes, diagrams, etc) can be adapted.

In addition to cost savings to students, one of the biggest advantages of choosing an open textbook is it gives faculty the legal right to add to, adapt, or delete the content of the textbook to fit their specific course without obtaining permission from the copyright holder. This is possible because the copyright holder has already granted permission by releasing their work using an open — or Creative Commons — license. This type of license gives users permission to use and reuse, share, copy, retain and modify the textbook without consulting the author.

Below are some examples of Pressbooks ‘textboxes’ that could be inserted into a cloned open textbook so that the textbook is then adapted more specifically for your purposes, using your own Learning Objectives, Exercises, and Key Takeaways.

Learning Objectives

Type your learning objectives here.

  • First
  • Second

Exercises

Type your exercises here.

  1. First
  2. Second

Key Takeaways

Type your key takeaways here.

  • First
  • Second

 

Reasons to adapt an open textbook

One of the benefits of using an openly licensed textbook or other educational resource is that you are free to adapt it to fit your needs. In other words, you can adjust the educational resources to fit your course curriculum, not the other way around.

Below are 10 more reasons adapting an open textbook might be for you:

  1. Address a particular teaching style or learning style
  2. Adjust for a different grade or course level
  3. Address diversity needs
  4. Meet a cultural, regional, or national preference
  5. Make the material more accessible for people with disabilities
  6. Add material contributed by students or material suggested by students
  7. Translate the material into another language
  8. Correct errors or inaccuracies
  9. Update the book with current information
  10. Add more media or links to other resources

Attributions

This chapter is an adaptation of, and is used under the noted license:

Getting Started with Pressbooks at TCC by TCC OER Librarian is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

(As such, it also contains the following content:

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

Cascadia's Guide to Pressbooks Copyright © 2021 by Cascadia College Learning Technologies & Design Team and cascadia is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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