 Hello, and welcome to our poster, Creating More Accessible Educational Networks, the Open Scholarship Knowledge Base by me, Crystal Steltenpole, and my colleague, Erin Buchanan. We wanted to provide some information on an exciting initiative by the Center for Open Science that will help educators come together to share best practices when teaching open scholarship. Importantly, this initiative is aimed at fostering an interdisciplinary community of instructors at all educational levels because we all know how difficult it is to update our course materials with the best practices in the field on top of all of our other responsibilities. On the OSKB, you can find a variety of course materials from syllabi and primary sources like research articles and policy documents to simulations, tutorials, and activities. There are a number of collections around education, data analysis, reproducibility, and publishing that can be helpful for high school through graduate students, plus those outside of the educational system. All materials on the OSKB are free to access. We are really hoping that folks from the Society for the Teaching of Psychology would be interested in sharing their knowledge around the teaching of open scholarship practices. If you teach about open science or anything like that, we would love to know what you're doing. If you're interested in submitting to the OSKB, first make an account on our host, OER Commons, select the group that matches who would be most interested in your resource and request to join it. Usually it takes less than a business day to get added to a group. Once you're in that group, click on the contribute to this group button, add the resource and relevant information, and submit. There are a few things that are really important to note. We're looking specifically for educational resources that are related to the what, why, and how of open scholarship and our open access. If the thing you're wanting to submit is not currently open access, we do have a reading list on Zotero that would benefit from your addition. We would also love to hear your suggestions on how to improve OSKB. You can follow us on Twitter or join our monthly community meetings. It's been really nice to meet with other educators who are trying to improve the way that we teach about research practices in a variety of fields. Feel free to reference the contributor guides that are posted on the main page or email oskb at cos.io with any questions or comments. We'll also be in the live room if anyone has any questions. Thank you.