 So hello. HBC you are participants. It is for 15 sorry I'm late on November 17. And I don't think we have many more of these to go, but I did want to bring your attention to a few OER that we have not discussed. There was one that I plan to share today, but it's blocked by the university. I will see if they can unblock it and I can share it next week. We had this far. And so the first site is sailor.org Academy and it's very similar to ones I shared last week, where you can find free courses and you can use segments of the courses in your class or sign it to students. So that part is the same. So I won't spend a whole lot of time reviewing this one. So the little hamburger gives you information college credit partners, which is interesting but that's not the point. Click on courses. So you can see the course catalog or you can search. So they have art, biology, business, a number of classes in business. And so if you're teaching finance or marketing or even business statistics, let's click that one. This course has 53 hours. It would take a student 53 hours to complete it. You get a free certificate once you complete the course. Here's the syllabus tells you it's entirely free. If you use their exams, their proctoring costs I think are cheaper than I know the one couldn't be used to use I think was in the double digits like 1715. So this one is five so you could in theory have students take an exam from here as well and have a proctor from within the course. There are the sections are units their study guides. There's resources which include a textbook. Which is also OER. So it's the introductory business, and we've looked at open stacks before so that's where they got the book from. And you can see that you can also build your courses on some of these sites. And on another one I'll show you you can create your course and actually have students pay to take the class. You can listen to, you know that part of OER where it could be monetized, monetized, and you can earn some, you know, side funding from your course. So you will not offer the course to students at Cookman, but you can create the course and then charge like $10 $25 for people to complete it. And I'll show it to you so I don't have to talk about. So those resources are here. So they have a number of variance and standard deviation descriptive statistics. So you know they got samples examples practice problems. They have a study guide. They have spreadsheet activities. So, you know, get the idea, you can work to find your course. Just by clicking courses, and let's see chemistry communication computer science economics English English as a second language geography history, global perspectives. So those college success is a complete course. I know, again, Dr. Smith I just kind of keep thinking about you and that one math philosophy. I know we have Dr. Rodriguez. I don't know if Dr. Newsom. I think maybe it may be Dr. companies with philosophy. I'm not sure. Nevertheless, physics political science, professional development. So you have professional writing customer service. So you can kind of even think about customer service if you have, if you're the advisor of a group, and they come in contact with other people, they may need customer service training. Think about not having to create that you can just come and have them do portions are all of that course. Decision making crisis communication public speaking for sales psychology and sociology I just want to cover all the courses that they have. And then this is just how you can get certificates of completion. And that was sailor.org Carnegie Mellon University. offers open learning initiative. So this is their featured course student cognition to walks, general chemistry. There's some new tools and features and again you can work your way through some of these are your own if you're interested but how to use this one is a little different. So you click where says educators up here. Are down here. And you can click on. Let's see student courses. And so you have, you will give students a course key, if you use it as a teacher. So you, you can send your students here with a course key, or you can have students come. Without teacher monitoring. So this is for independent learners. And you click in. So they must register. There's self pace, no one monitors their progress, and they don't grant score or credit. The difference and let's see. So summer. So here, they talk about this particular digital math. Try the technology behind digi mats. So these are items that are open and free the cognition toolkit. General chemistry, some classes have a fee 85 to 149 evidence based management is open and free. Introduction to Java graphical causal models, chemistry, Chinese. So again very similar to the others is just that some of these have a cost and some do not. And here you can actually add your own courses so you can teach with them. As a textbook replacement, or you create your own course with them and then have people pay you for that course material are for to take that class. So here's their course catalog. So under let's see life arts and humanities. If I click there. There's conflict you $10 per student visual design. So the course the prices vary. So if I back up their student success for independent learners. So here learning to learn online is a short course companion to help set up online learners for success that is open and free. So if you're teaching a student success or freshman seminar kind of course, and they are coming to the university from a traditional brick and mortar. So if your courses are a lot of the coursework is online, then, you know, that's a module that you can integrate into your course. Here is a open and free cognition to box, which is a short course companion introducing and providing direct practice and study strategies that are informed by learning science research. These two are open and free and can be assigned to students and so that's kind of how you use this it's not a lot of. Again, some things are free and some things are not. And you can build your own courses. And set a fee here the, here's the course catalog. So if I click on language and speech, just another. This elementary Chinese one is open and free in Spanish is $25 a student elementary Chinese to is has a fee. You can kind of scroll and the fee courses just to so you can evaluate or teach with this course and let me see I'm pretty sure you're going to have to set up an account. And so, you know, again that's another OER that provides some assistance, especially depending on your area and not in assistance in others. So this is the creative commons. Creative commons.org where if you you know everything that you use in your syllabus and your course and images photos. Sounds videos, whatever it is, if you didn't create it, you're supposed to cite it. And some of them will have varying creative common license attached to the product, no matter where you find it, even if you do a Google search for images. It's usually a little caveat or something at the bottom that says copyright use of this varies copyright infringement you know, so you're supposed to check you first follow up and check to see what license has been assigned to that particular item. You don't have to cite it, but some are public domain and open, you don't necessarily have to cite but always a good rule and a good rule of thumb, especially if you need to be able to go back to it. I know I found that I've used photos that I really liked and then when I was like oh I wanted to do that person who created who created that. Give Jeff. I can't remember if they created others and so I'll try to find it and like oh I know what site I found it I don't know what search engine I use because that does matter far as what you are what you retrieve. So here it is, you can check. I want something that I can use commercially, or I want something I can modify and adapt. And so depending on which one you can learn more about the different licenses and tools. There's research resources that help you with search terms, and with a meta search. There are extensions. That you can add to your browser. So it will help you search and filter the creative common license content. And then it helps you add the images to your works. If you're interested in that that's there. So for resources, just to click on a search guide so you have a sense. So you can search for the exact words, of course, you know, as we try to, you know, try to impart students to use quotation marks, if you want for phrases. And here are some other terms and some other operators. We all, you know, we talk about and or not, but here, you know, they provide symbols. And so they give you examples. It will so this access or so here, this access and you get the idea, especially if you've been away from searching for a while. And then you can also search using search method, they're mad at it, right. And so if you do it that way. They give you I like that they give you images. So I know we tried to explain to students, it would, it definitely helps to kind of click and show. And then often you have to kind of loop back for the people who are looking down when they should have been looking up. So it gives you that and it shows you a sample search. And here's how it works for audio and video. And here's how it works for images. Come back. And then, you know, depending on your area. If you're doing counseling, and maybe you're looking for people of color, because, you know, that's another area within within this that has been brought to the attention of many mean or graphic designers. And so now you can buy access to media that shows people of color, because if you do a general Google search. Sometimes you can go pages and pages and not see people of color are young people of color or middle age people of color. And you can't manipulate it especially if it doesn't have that type of creative license. So this one does not. So, you know, maybe not the best example for counseling so you want to use something more specific. But I'm gonna move on and just see if there's anything else. No. So, you know that was probably a good one. But let's say you want. You know, cream, and it'll give me pictures, anything so anything anywhere that can complete that. And it's not curious how this works says is over 10,000 images. So here's some books. So even if you're looking for things that are not necessarily related to your field, or you want young people, you know, you probably have to consider your terms. Young people have no respect so if you look for a quote, and here are different pictures of young people in different locales, and you can load more. So you get the idea, and you can see if there's audio. These are particular artists. So that's not what we're looking for really for a particular person. So young people, you can see to the description. And if you need it sounds because this is what this is sounds. And or you can go to videos. And it's these are the sources so it'll search YouTube, which of course you can go to YouTube and search you to. But, but here you're going through there, because you're looking for the Creative Commons license so that by coming through here the filters are already applied. However, if you go to you to you can under settings, check for Creative Commons license, or even type in creative commons, and then your search for you to make sure you can get a video that you don't have to, that you can use or not have to pay for, or not have to take take down if someone finds it. And so usually when people say, if we publish something in your paper or publish something, they'll ask, you know, what's your creative Commons license. It also bring you here about the different license that and just in case you know you've seen these abbreviations. And maybe you're, you know, you're interested in knowing what all of them include. And there are seven. So this is the one of course that we like the most the public domain. Yeah, seven and explains what it means. So this allows you to distribute remix adapt. And it allows for commercial use. This means you must give credit to the creator. This means that credit must be given to the creator and adaptations must be shared under the same terms. So it allows me users to distribute remix adapt and bill. And any medium or format so long as attribution is given to the creator. So it's given only non commercial. So that means if you were using this on a t shirt and sold the t shirt, you are violating the copyright for this one, because it's only non commercial use. And so this was only non commercial use as well. This one you can't make any derivatives or adaptations to the work. And so you get the idea, but that they're all here and and are explained. So if you can't find a particular photo or image you're looking for here. That is the other benefit of this site. And finally, happy trust is a digital library. You can log in for free accounts. You don't have, we don't carry this particular database. But if you are interested. It still doesn't. If you log in, you can get a free account. And you don't have to have a partner institution because there is an option to log in as a guest. And I'm not sure if my, if this computer saved my login information because I don't remember it off talking ahead. But if I were to type in, you know, and so this really is another place or source for your students to go for references and even for you working on your own individual research. And the other things that happy trust did is they have a, they had a partnership with I think Google and Google books. And so all the things that Google. In just a minute, but items that Google digitize, they also harvested and brought over to happy trust. So it's a massive collection. And they have some, some hard to find full text. So here it gives tells you about their collections. They have like 7,000 collections to have anything that you can kind of think of you, you can attempt to search here and I'm trying to think of something. But if I typed in penal code. According to this, there are almost a million full items. So it's the same way our library database catalog works. And so, you know, you can use Japanese because I didn't specify. So same kind of thing, you have your filters on the left tells you where they got the information from the format, the data publication place language, the author subject. And so this is just another source because it's digital online. It is an open source because again you can sign in as a visitor without having to have institution membership and many databases of course don't operate that way. And because this is a digital library is very helpful. The other place that I plan to show you, and it came up today when I was doing something else is the way back machine and I'm not sure if you've ever used it but we were trying to locate it on Cookman's website from like maybe a decade or so ago. So what you can do is type in cookman.edu. And so here. So the internet archive way back machine started because they're celebrating their 25th anniversary this year. They started trying to catalog and capture all of the internet. So they created this kind of randomized. Collecting. Oh, it's a word that it goes around and it's not a spider caterpillar is an insect I think though, but they created one worm, maybe. And what it does is it just goes and capture it takes pictures of a particular website and stores it. So I can go back here. I can go back to 1998. If I click on 1998 one day in 1998 on July 9. There was a snapshot taken at 100745. And that was probably not a good year so let's try. Trying to show you how this is effective and so here to capture a little more let's try April 271999 to see. So one you get to see how the website looks. And so the fact that you can kind of look at how a website or a webpage change over time you know that people out there who do all types of research. And so you, they may compare like changes of something for 2021 versus 2000 because you have 20 years of these shots that was taken in the links if they're here. They usually also still now the pictures of course. Very, because it depends on how they uploaded in the type of photo that they use. So that's why you see the, you don't see it in some places but here the pictures still work. And so you know if I had to do a talk about even do a presentation on just something about how Cookman has changed over time I can use their website to model that because I can compare just the band met website for example or the register academic computing. And it's really interesting because you know you can talk about placement, like, you know, quick access. You know if you think about what we have quick access to on the website today. It would not be as you know it's not concert corral or the band. So you can see that that's a shift that something happened that, you know, the quick links are now to academic departments and colleges. It's one of those things so if you ever find that you're trying to locate something on the internet from years ago, at least 25 years ago. You can come back to the way way back machine is the Internet archive and look for it that way. And so if you're looking for old bulletins that's what we were looking for. We were just trying to make some comparisons. So, but you can do this for anything you can do this for you know different types of research and you can assign it to students for research as well because sometimes you know they need to see what was before something that they currently see now to kind of just oppose their position or or even have an engaging conversation about change or I mean there's just a lot of ways you can kind of use this but even just for your personal use, but this is a OER and that is an open educational resource and so, you know how you use it is kind of up to you and that is, I think, what is so fun about OER that, you know, some people look at something and nothing kind of comes them on and they kind of pass it on and pass it over and someone else looks at that same item, website, image, movie, email, whatever. And they have an epiphany and an assignment or something to and of course all this is about free access to information for students and faculty and staff. Thank you very much.