 Okay, so I have I found five different we are resources and so I'm going to just kind of work through them. And you know any where you see if you have any questions or you want me to search for something specific. I can do that. Um, but this one is open access, and it's Pub the publishing and European European network so if I come here to home. That's why you see the languages. You see it's not, you know the first one is not just English but you can come over to language. And choose English, and then you can browse by language so items here that are in English they have 12,000 items. So if you're looking for something on religion. In general, take some minute. So here. So here is showing 8672 to 8692 so that's about 20 items. So here you have religion and the aesthetic conflict conflict attribution. So you can tell. Are these books. Yes, books. So I can, I can assign these books to a class. Yes, you can download them. So if I come here I can just click PDF. And they're, oh, something has to be in English. Yeah, it's translated. The first page kind of scare me. Um, but yeah, so it's in English and they can see the entire book here, or they can down click download. And you can download it. And then you can take your download and upload it to your court your canvas or your Merlot. Okay. Now you have, and this is kind of so let's say you only want it, and I hope I'm a test this too so in theory. You should have the acrobat. Adobe acrobat on your computer in your office or somewhere on campus. Right. So if I open it, and make sure I download this book. Save. But you may not want them to open. You may not want them to read the entire book. You may want them to only read a chapter. Okay. So I can go into here. Oh, I did something. Okay. And I can. I don't know what show me the, okay. Let's see page chapter. Whatever part two, let's say you only want them to read pages 107 to one looks like 72. You can go in and organize pages. So now you can extract only the pages you want them to see. They don't get the full document. Okay. So you just highlight. I don't know. So maybe you want the first page. First few pages. What's this. Okay. Oh, it's working. And however many pages. I don't know. I'm just kind of, and then you would hit extract. And then it'll say delete pages after extracting extract pages as a separate file. So I'm going to say extract as a separate file. And we're just going to house it here in the download folder. And so now it's extracting. And if I go back to. Download. It has extracted all those pages separately. That's not quite what I wanted, but you can see how it took it out. Okay. For you. And then this may be a little too cumbersome. You can go back to open documents. Download. And select the documents. That you extracted, and then you can combine them into one document. So I think there has, I think there has to be another way to do that. That's easier though. There's a, there has to be a way to extract those files and save them. Combined as a document. But you, but you can do that. Once you download it as a PDF, you can open it in Acrobat. Adobe Acrobat and just, you know, take out the pages you want them to read. If you don't want to give them the whole book, because you know, they may see the whole book and go. Yeah. Okay. And that's open access. Yes. Yes. This open access.com. Oh no, it's, um, what did we go? It is open. It's OAPN. OAPN. And I will put a list. I will, I will put all the links in the email. So you'll get this in an email. Okay. You'll get the recording and the links. Okay, good. Yeah. So you don't have to try to, yeah. All right. Yeah, this is, and so I think the, um, there's different rules about copyright for every country. And so this is the European version of open access. So, you know, just in case you can't find something here on some of the American sites or OER websites, you may want to try this one because, you know, they have quite a bit. They got religion in the body. Religion and nationalism and Chinese societies. We can look through the religion and the making of Nigeria, religion in states, religion in China, migration, identity, architecture, transformations. So, uh, if I was interested in philosophy as a topic, I would type in philosophy and I would browse. And if you spoke another language, you can select that language as well. You don't have to, you know, if you, if English, if you speak English and Spanish and French, you can check those three. Okay. I'll be able to take excerpts extract. Or you can download the whole book and just tell them what pages to read. Well, okay, but yeah, all right. Yeah, or right, or you are, I can show you again how to do the acrobat once you choose your book. And you want to extract something I could just do that show you how to do that separately. Okay. Yeah. This isn't so less philosophy of globalization. That's 2018 philosophy and a meaningless life. Philosophy for militants. Then it kind of goes Phoenix from the ashes. Photography photosynthesis. Yeah. So this that these are the three items they have for philosophy. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. I can see this browsing through that. What about ideal lives? Go. It's searching. It's just twirling. Not quite. I think the only. Okay. Leadership. So, um, you said that there was a version of this. In the United States. Well, for, um, for you, for the. America that we have all the others that we've kind of looked at, like Merlot. Would you? Yeah, it was just, yeah, those are just founded and are based in America. This one is based in Europe. So, um, but you know, it doesn't mean we can just keep looking in another place. Right. But, uh, what I'm trying to get at is, um, if I find material anywhere, I still would be able to compile it in a booklet form. Oh, Merlot. Definitely. Yep. Yes. If it's open access, yes. And you can either use just the links or, you know, you can download it and upload it to Merlot. It's probably best to download it just in case some of the sites change or, you know, okay, but now this session is not, uh, to show, just to show how to compile it in a book form on our Merlot account. Not no, but the workshop. We'll, we'll include that. Okay. Okay. Yeah, these are just quick minutes I put to, you know, I thought it would be to show people, um, because all of you are in so many different, um, disciplines, just a way to show you like some of the many OERs that are out there, just a quick minute. Although it ends up taking like 30, 45 minutes. Even when I do it by myself, it usually takes like 30, 45 minutes. Yeah. So that's, um, this particular. Website. And then the other one is, um, open book publishers. And here you can browse by categories. So they have philosophy here. So if I clicked it, they have 20 items. Okay. And, hmm. The atheist Bible. I mean, so if you see one, you want to. Basic knowledge and conditions on knowledge. Foundations for moral relativism. That's a different. It's about T1 what now. Any, any, any. Yeah. Tolerance, Adam. I just see the process of it come back and look at. I'll try this one. And so some of these are. Right. Not necessarily free. Some are and some are not. I think this was the one where it was like a mixture of free items. And some for pay. But usually when there's a way for you to search. Let's go back to the home. Currency. They usually give you. Oh, this is open. So when I search there, I get what that is. So I get found this one. Yeah, there's a theme. Read the PDF. And so the PDF appears. But if you wanted the hard copy on the book, you would have to pay. Okay. But if you just click on read the PDF. You know, you can see that students will be able to read the. The book without paying for it. Okay. They will still have access to the book without paying for it. Okay. And you can download it. Right here. It says PDF is free to download. Yeah. I got you. Because some of these, you know, all of these have so. Different interfaces that it takes me like a couple of minutes to kind of just. Get my head together like, okay, so what does this page. This is the one that talks about the materialism and the materialism in biology, archeology and religion here, that was philosophy. I know you say idealism. I don't know if this. So here says something about materialism. So this is part three of this particular book. the material world from imagination to new criticism and intertextual. So it pulled this idealism here. Okay. Now whether or not the rest of this is about or have anything. So but you can search the book over here says search this book. And so I the word idealism appears in chapters three and chapter six. And it appears once in this chapter. So I don't know, you know, but this would tell students you can give them a link or you can download it and then upload it. But it gives you the book to share with students. I was trying to I'm trying to think who else is in this. I know we have some people with digital humanities. There's law, science, history, environmental studies, economic sociology, science. What's been kind of hard is criminology. Some is like hit or miss with criminology, criminal justice vigilant from defender to offender. Yeah, they may have to just kind of do a little more deep diving into some of these fields. But religion and philosophy and you know, sociology, humanities, economics, you know, even literature, math and science, you know, they seem to appear across all of the OERs I've looked at so far. But some of like the aging studies, mental health counseling, some of that, you really kind of have to see if there's a chapter in a book about it. Because sometimes you just can't find it. And then this is another site, open stacks. And during the pandemic, open stacks kind of opened. And I may have talked about this last week, because it has a number of different URLs to get to it. Because this looks really familiar to me. I think I did this one last week. Think it just had a different URL. Okay. Yeah, but so these are free books as well. So you would kind of scroll or because it's an alphabetical order. So you would kind of go down to they have college success, which one of the faculty members from I think Kentucky, he's a college success coach. So the sociology, intro, intro, intro, there's stacks, accounting, economics. There's a way to search as well. You don't have to. There's psychology, history. And then yeah, I did this last because I remember saying that you can get together with the community. So if you just click search, you can then just click. Yep, because my keywords are my search words are still here. So here are some books and you can do filter by publication. So if you wanted something more recent like this year, you can click there and they have 171 publications that fall under some kind of way fall under religion. So religion may not be in the title of course, but somewhere in there, maybe something about it. Because that doesn't seem to have anything to do with books. You can get case studies subject. Hmm, says text religion. So it must mean that texts that religion is mentioned that doesn't mean the religious book humanities maybe. Yeah, so learning about religion, Catholic missions, Spanish colonialism, advanced search subjects, human type, new books. What did I do? English. Oh, you're still here on my side. Okay. Okay. I hadn't seen that in a while. Capitalism versus social. For an Institute of Humane Studies. Political philosophy, philosophy of liberty. Now we can go back to religion in the title. So here are a couple of books, a commentary on the reality of religion. And then these are pages, religion in the United States. So if we open that, it's just pages out of something. They have a quiz, short answer, references. So it looks like maybe a brief study guide or brief intro that they gave is a summary of something that they submitted here. Yeah. Religion and unconscious, comparing the world's main religions. Yeah, because and you can change the grade too. So opens, you know, anybody and everybody can contribute. And so, you know, that was fourth grade. That's something you would not want to, you know, include. So you can, you know, just not, you know, choose it. But they're supposed to include what they believe will be the grade level. So this page is in five different books. It's in the introduction to sociology, but all of these are in sociology texts. So it found the page from the book. So let's go back to. So this is, okay, this is commentary on the reality of religion. So it's from that book. Where is that other one? But you get that. So that's open stacks. And then yep, see, I'm at 430 trying to, I can't say I probably should have just done one. But then I was like, by the time they turn that video on and watch it, it'll be over. So I was like, oh, let's do, let's do more than if one, but five is four is probably a bit much. But this is cubes. Okay. And it has faculty mentoring. So this may not be for everyone, but it seems to lean toward like the sciences, the bio, the biology field. So they have software. Some is free software. I know Jupiter people use that for like coding and looking for they use it in digital humanities. But it's a place probably for the sciences and science majors. Yeah, I'm about to say if you unless your students are doing something. And there are projects, religion projects where students are doing like digital humanities, you know, they may use this, but usually, you know, you will be the one to teach them or they will have a class or something. I don't know. But they have some community driven collections. And then they have the open education resources. And they are basically basically this they like to share open software. But they have some materials here. This page will work with me. It's coming. Oh, this looks really sciency. So I'm gonna go ahead and just type in. Yeah, yeah, this seems to be geared towards science. And it does say bioquist. So it's probably geared toward science, the biologies. But, you know, yeah. So then there's the UNESCO Digital Library. And so again, this probably is for probably, maybe not for religion per se, but they have collections that if students are doing a report and they need to look at or they want to recall a speech that was given or statistics, there are a number of collections here. So if they click on the open access resources, or if you click there, you'll see some of what they have to offer. So like challenges and opportunities for women entrepreneurs in Africa. Because sometimes when students come to us, and they're looking for these kind of up to date, this kind of information in our catalog, you know, we may not have anything that specific. But here, because they do, of course, a lot of research about women, entrepreneurship, art, the youth, literacy, health care across the globe. And so, you know, that may, if they can't find it, this would be a good place to also start. They have interviews. You know, you can see what all they have, yearbooks. They have statistical work, historical works, legal matters, forms, questionnaires, dictionaries. And so, you can search for, let's see if, just in case there's something. So here for religion, it says 19,000 results. So here's like environmentalism as religion. The contribution by religions to the culture of peace. And this is a seminar. This is our conference. This is a book. So you can come over and choose which one. Oh, don't exclude. We want to, I don't like how they do that. So you would click here to exclude as opposed to include. Okay. But if you're looking for a particular article, a book, so here's a book. But I have to go through all this to get rid of everything. And then I've gotten rid of English. So I don't know. Gotta figure out how to get English back. Where are my search results? Let's just go to Let's go back to home. Let me try this again. So I got rid of what I wanted. That was a good idea. So we're going to do religion. So here's religion and politics today for 94. So it's a journal, but it's online. So here it tells you it's online. And if you just wanted a book, I just don't let you choose a book. I'm scared to click it. So now we're down to just the books. Cultural aspects and Christian is Christian and Islamic religion. So if I click here, I can see the full text here. And it's also available in these other languages. And I can share the link, which means I can get the link. I can print and I can download the book here. So I'm pretty sure this is, you know, if you're looking for something on a more global level. And like I said, I'll send you a list of these sources Okay, so that you don't have to kind of remember where we went and I can browse through them. Yes. Okay,