 Good morning, I am doing the or you minute, and we'll just go right into it. So the first one is wiki books, and this is how it looks, and it's pretty straightforward. So here for English, there are 93,000 plus open content textbooks. So if we click here, can browse by topic by subjects. So here's like anthropology for social science. There's some completed books. Here's some books nearing completion have finished partly freshly started. You can also click on a cookbook, for example. So you can find recipes and cookbooks, their feature books being click on humanities, for example. And here's guide to Harry Potter, United States history book, guitar. And then click on other projects within with the within wiki wiki species data news, pedia quote source, versatility and voyage, go into different communities or create communities. And then go to the main page. So here are three. They tell you they have 3400 books. And so this is there, like, library stacks. So computing engineering languages, humanities, so they have law, math, science, they have health science, recreational activities, some miscellaneous immigration culinary transportation again social science. Standard curricula. Senior is for K 12. And then let's say for health sciences we click there, we can then see some of the books that they have available geriatric medicine. So if we wanted to look at the book we would click it. Okay, it gives you some information. So if you want this book. So, and of course with the internet. And you know people. Start and start things. So we can come here. And here's the book as a number of books it seems. You can click it. And then you can click download to download the book here the chapters what is geriatrics aging health. And again, you can use these by clicks, clearly just choosing a chapter or section within a chapter. And that's wiki books. The next one is the project Gutenberg and project Gutenberg is a library of over 60,000 free books. And I like to start with project Gutenberg if I'm looking for information that's static. You know, particular philosopher, you know, their philosophy is the same as it was when their initial book was printed. And if you're looking for a theorist, you can come here to see if any of their prior works have fallen into public domain, or if they have become part of project Gutenberg, which means someone digitized it and you can access it. So there's no fear registration, no special apps. And you can find free books by searching browsing, looking at the bookshelf. You can look at the top 100 by popularity so if you just kind of click there just to see which items have proven most popular. You'll see the top 25 Frankenstein so most of this looks like literary works. And again, this is where you can send students, you know if you're using a classic. They don't need to buy the great gas fee, they can come here and read the book online. There's some with images. There's some without images. So they have a number of ways to access the book and read it. This means that they can send it to their Google Drive, or their one drive, or their Dropbox. If you're looking for something. Just kind of want to browse to see what they have. You can then click the Dropbox that says search and browse, click book search, and do a quick search. So if we're looking for a non. There's no records found, which is interesting. I know I found his work somewhere else just. So the word black. So it was a black folk. So if I look at it by subject. Black humor, black women. Black race, black ins, black South Africa. particular someone blacks in Canada, blacks in West British West Indies fiction. Blacks and Jamaica black English Southern states. And so I was trying to find a me. I have a look up how to spell somebody's name is spelling is man. See if this works by him. See if this works by typing play don't just to make sure it worked. So if you type in the person's name if they have anything it will pop up I just want to make sure that feature works and I was not getting anything with the other two people. So that is project Gutenberg is pretty straightforward. You know you can browse the bookshelf by clicking on bookshelves and little slow. Education is fiction, language, science. And then a detailed listing of all bookshelves, anthropology, archaeology, architecture, astronomy, atheism. So even if you don't see like religion by, you know, itself, atheism, maybe an option. And then if we come to ours, you don't see religion. But you may see different topics related to religion. And that may be another way to find information, because here's Christianity. So again, this is project Gutenberg. The next one is free books for doctors and this is what it is. It's a OER promoting free access to medical books. And so here's information about cove it, terminology, different publications, and they are free you see the PDF. And some come with an app like right here it says PDF plus free smartphone app. And so for those of you who are teaching medical related information. I think you'll probably enjoy this site because you should be able to find something about a click more and you see all of the topics that are here. So there is genetics, geriatrics, general textbooks, biology, biochemistry, cardiovascular disease, climate and health, even if you want to connect it to environment dictionaries, which may be helpful. Education. So if I click there. See that some are not all in English. So you can use the filter to make sure you filter English only, if that is necessary so here's one principles of epidemiology and the public health practice, pathology, neuroscience, nutrition, neurology, neurochemistry. So when we think of healthcare or mental health or counseling, the psychiatry, psychoanalysis, psychology, psychiatry, sociology, and it tells you how many there are. So if I click on sports medicine, there's this item. So these are articles on sports medicine. So if I'm looking at the knee. So if I looked at hip dislocation. There's some background information. And then it gives me to another site. Some of these will take you out and you may then have to register for a free account, but this one comes from WebMD. So that is free books for doctors. So if you're looking at covers again, you can click on topics. Let's see the topics. It was pretty straightforward, not a whole lot of, not a whole lot of extra clicking. Here's book alerts that you can sign up for and subscribe. That shouldn't have taken that long so you can explore that site. The next one is the Smithsonian open access, and you can download share millions of images without asking. So if you're looking for some amazing photos that are high quality that will work in your presentations without them seeming, you know, to be blurred or pixelated. This is another source for you to look. And it's just for 2D, 3D digital images. And this includes images and data from across the 19 museums, non research centers, libraries, archives and the National Zoo. There's a video that gives you a little more information about it. And here you would just, you know, depends on what you're looking for. Just kind of go, go forward. So one of the collections, some of the collections that I enjoy that they have. I think it's the American Museum, the Museum of American History, they have like the almost every museum had, you know, like the African American Museum, American, the Native American, they generally have like media, media materials. And one of the collections that I always try to look for at all these different museums are the buttons, because I just, I love what I just kind of like looking at the, like the protest buttons or, you know, the people, they may have had a full jacket full of buttons they collected about particular issues and so they'll have a picture of the jacket but then they'll actually have the buttons that you can see. I think that's one of the things I like. So if you're looking for, you know, just something to add some creativity and to your slide decks and something that kind of spark interest or even a conversation. Frederick Douglass like this photo here. I think Frederick Douglass is the most photographed African American in history. And something like that he has a, it's a claim I can't get the think it's something like it's related to him having the most photographs from a particular time period or something. But you know this is a wonderful picture to you know add to a slide and of course you can talk about so many things it doesn't have to relate to African American history. It can relate to even treatment of slaves you can tie it to excerpts from his novel. You're doing like a movement. In the East. So many different ways to use photos, the timelines instead of having words you can use pictures and so again come having a resource like this to find these open photos that you don't you can give attribution you can say you know this comes from the Smithsonian, but you don't have to seek permission to use. You can read purpose, you can edit. And again, you can do that without photos so this one gets you pretty clear of any copyright violations because it tells you upfront that you can use them. The last one is open Michigan, and here it is. The University of Michigan provides access to his research teaching and creative works. So, you can find materials to use for learning our teaching, you can share a journal article or data set. You can also use the other like minded people. So we can click on find walks you through find open education resources find open data find open publications. Find open content. So if you're looking for a data set for your students you can click here. Here are some examples that they provide. So like Twitter had maintains public data. Amazon Web service has public data. We do have this government ICPSR which we are a member so we do have this database on our database page, the deep blue data is data developed and used to support research at University of Michigan. But just to give you idea if we click here. Here's the Twitter. And you can click there and find you can request information, or you can click and just kind of delve in. I, this is one of sites that, you know, I will tell you the same thing I brought tell students, you know, set aside some time to explore. It's probably not going to be the quickest thing you do. So open education resources, I click there. They have it by school college or unit. So if I'm looking for public health. I can click here and I'll see the courses that are available. And then I get the direction to health informatics. I get the class. And then I get the materials. So I get the syllabus I can download handouts lectures. So, and then in this way it operates very much very similar to other sites need review that is open Michigan. Thank you for your time and attention. And again there's only one more of these, and I will be sure to let you to send that one next week and that would be the final OER minute for the semester. Thank you.