 Do any of you remember the early days of the internet? For me, I recall using websites like Lycos and AltaVista to dredge through a swamp of search results when I tried to find information. Well, flash forward to the modern internet. Search algorithms like Google have significantly made it easier to find what you're looking for, unless you happen to be looking for OER resources. Hey colleagues, my name is Ryan Guy. In the short presentation, I'm going to showcase a tool that might make it a little bit easier for you to find OER resources. So, let's go ahead and dive in. According to their website, the Mason OER MetaFinder, or MOM for short, is a tool created by the librarians at George Mason University. Associate GMU librarian Wally Gorthorst explains that the purpose of the Mason OER MetaFinder is to provide real time federated search results of all major OER databases. However, it's important to know that the service goes far beyond that. For the main search page, which can be accessed from mom.gmu.edu, users can define the scope of discovery. This means that you can limit searchers to specific OER databases like OER Commons or Molo, or choose to expand your search results to sites that index materials in the public domain, like the Internet Archive and the New York Public Library's digital collections. Use of the tool is pretty simple. From the main page, enter some keywords you wish to search by. You can limit searchers to only searching titles and specific date ranges if you wish. Then, choose which databases you want to search in. The site splits up OER specific sites and those with deeper public domain sources to make it easy. Once your search results show up, which can take a minute, depending on how many databases you choose to search, you then have the ability to search by ranking, date, title, or author. One feature I found interesting was that as you review sources, the site asks you to leave a review. In theory, as more folks start to use this service, we should see a Yelp-like effect when the community consensus helps us get kind of a better idea of which sources are good and which ones are maybe not so good. Well, the Mason OER meta finder may not be the Google of OER, but it's certainly a step in the right direction. Thanks for watching.