Program Syllabus: June 2022 Cohort

Welcome

We warmly welcome you to the Rebus Community Textbook Success Program designed to support you in your equity-centred work to create inclusive learning experiences for your students. The Textbook Success Program is a professional development program that equips faculty, librarians, administrators, and managers with the tools they need to make great OER. The program is one year long and comprises two phases:

Phase 1 Meetings (July 5 - September 27, 2022)

  • WHEN: Tuesdays 3:30-5 pm (ET) on Zoom (see your calendar invitations for link)
  • WHO: Facilitator: Bryan McGeary (@bjm6168)
  • WHAT: 12 weekly themed sessions with your cohort to give you an overview of the open publishing process, and plan out the steps for your independent practical work in Phase 2.

Phase 2 Meetings (October 2022 - May 2023)

  • WHEN: Note that the meeting times for the 9 monthly meetings in PHASE 2 will be determined based on your input towards the end of PHASE 1.
  • WHO: Facilitator: Bryan McGeary (@bjm6168)
  • WHAT: Hands-on stage where you and your team work on your OER projects, with a mix of group check-ins with your cohort and 1:1 support sessions with your facilitator. We will alternate between a monthly cohort meeting and an individual support check-in with your team and your facilitator.

Image shows the meeting cadence for the TSP phases 1 and 2 | 624x353

You are required to attend all sessions, to the best of your ability. In case of absences, you must ensure that at least 1 member of your project team participates to update you and the cohort on your group’s progress. Review the program Memorandum of Understanding prior to participation.

Significant Learning Objectives

  1. Get to know Rebus’ collaborative open publishing approach with open education peers in a supportive learning environment.
  2. Connect and contribute to the OER community (eg. process of being in TSP, learning and OER that comes out of it, relationships).
  3. Reflect on your current pedagogical practices with the goal of creating your OER with learning experiences that are accessible, equitable, and inclusive.
  4. Create an efficient workflow and apply best practices that help your project progress in due time, with guidance from your Rebus facilitator and other cohort members.
  5. Gain confidence using open approaches and tools to advance your project and grow its user community.
  6. Build and strengthen institutional capacity for current and future open publishing projects.
  7. Recognize and grow your open education leadership skills.

Approaches and Methods

We designed the TSP to help examine and unlearn individual, institutional, and societal maladaptive assumptions and conventions that block designing learning for human diversity, equity, and global complexity. Our hope is that your engagement in the Textbook Success Program will allow you to transform first as individuals, and secondly as educators in ways unique to your professional contexts.

Rebus strives to build a learning community in the program where both participants and facilitators learn actively from each other as they draw on their own knowledge sources and critically reflect on individual, institutional, and societal practices in higher education to facilitate positive change. To move forward we will have to ask ourselves how we practice and why. Some of this will be uncomfortable but this is critical and necessary work to make learning truly inclusive, which is what we believe you are all here to do with your OER projects and in your roles in the higher education system. Please navigate through the program (materials, structure, conversations), with an openness and willingness for something new! This approach is critical to achieving the learning outcomes described earlier.

Facilitator

All TSP cohorts are led by an enthusiastic program alum. Your cohort facilitator, Dr. Bryan McGeary, is the Learning Design and Open Education Engagement Librarian at Pennsylvania State University, a SPARC Open Education Leadership Fellow, and a graduate of the Creative Commons Certificate. While a participant in the TSP in 2020, he worked on a collaborative project to produce the open text Understanding the Holocaust: Remembrance, Respect, and Resilience. Bryan looks back to a pleasurable past year when he facilitated both the June 21 and the LOUIS 21 TSP cohorts.

Tools and Resources

Program Technology

The Textbook Success Program is being facilitated using four different technological tools, the use of which is further detailed below:

Rebus Community Forum: This is your hub for all asynchronous cohort communication (including Q+A, team discussions, TSP session materials, summaries, surveys, etc.)

  1. You can sign up any time, but best do it prior to course start.
  2. Watch the introductory video [2 min] and navigation tutorial [3 min] to get started.
  3. Bookmark your June 2022 cohort forum space in your preferred browser for quick access to the course syllabus and the weekly threads.
  4. Your facilitator will practice the use of the tool during the first 2 sessions.
  5. Please post all TSP-related comments, ideas, and questions to the forum rather than emailing your facilitator. Tag the people involved for in-time responses.

TSP Curriculum Hub: This is a Google space where all session materials are compiled (i.e slides, handouts, templates). Organisation is in folders by session.

  1. You can access the CC BY licensed materials anytime.
  2. Bookmark the hub in your browser for quick access.
  3. Materials will be reshared in a timely manner on the Rebus Community forum (above) throughout the program.

Project Homepage: This is a Rebus-created website to broadcast your project-in-progress (including relevant documentation) to other TSP cohorts and the Open Education community. You can use it to promote your work and to recruit collaborators.

  1. You can sign up any time.
  2. Watch this video tutorial to get set up.
  3. Login using the landing page.
  4. You will get tasked to set up your own project homepage during the first few TSP sessions. Following that, you can update any progress as you are moving through your project.

Zoom: This is the tool we are using for our live video sessions. You will find the Zoom links in your calendar once you accept the invitations from Rebus.

  1. If you have never used Zoom, you will need to download the software to participate.
  2. We greatly appreciate it if you turn on your camera whenever possible as this will enhance the session experience for everybody in the room. We also understand that video is not always an option.
  3. We invite you to engage with your cohort via the chat function whenever you want to share your thoughts and questions. Please respond kindly to other people’s contributions.

Additional Resources

Schedule

Phase 1: Plan your Project

Image shows the stages in the open publishing cycle further elaborated in TSP sessions 1-12 | 690x381

  1. Introductions on 05 July 2022

We’ll start off with group introductions and learn about each project, in an effort to build a network of support and awareness. We’ll also share the Rebus approach to OER: how collaboration makes OER stronger, improves and diversifies content, builds adoption vectors, and increases community buy-in. We’ll discuss why considerations like accessibility, communications, formatting should be made early on. Finally, we’ll gather your goals and expectations for Phase 1.

  1. Project Scoping on 12 July 2022

Defining your project scope and expectations is critical to a successful project. You will learn what elements to consider before you start to scope your own project and write an initial summary to help communicate the vision for your project to team members, other collaborators and the future users of your resource. You will set up a homepage, where you can communicate your project progress throughout the year in the TSP program and afterwards.

  1. Storytelling and Communications on 19 July 2022

Communications strategy must be more than an afterthought. Your method of talking about your project is an integral element of building a successful OER project. Sharing the project’s story helps praise the work behind your resource(s), highlight its/ their use, and thus grow the book’s community to build long-term sustainability and success.

  1. Growing and Managing Teams on 02 August 2022

In this session we cover various roles and responsibilities, tasks and workload, types of teams, and how to find people to help your project succeed. We highlight the ways strong leaders plan tasks, motivate the team, and keep the project on track. Finally, we discuss ways to manage teams, while striking a balance between available time and the project’s requirements.

  1. Team check-in with your facilitator on 09 August 2022

This stage of the program will give you an opportunity for you and your team to meet 1:1 with your facilitator, and address any specific questions, challenges, or issues that have come up. It also offers your facilitator the chance to learn more about your work, and use this insight to tailor support in upcoming sessions.

  1. Accessibility and Inclusive Design on 16 August 2022

Thinking about accessibility and inclusive design up front yields resources that can be used by all students from the moment of release. By integrating these considerations into your project from the beginning you can reduce remediation work post-release.

  1. Content Creation on 23 August 2022

Content is one of the most anticipated parts of OER creation. In this session we discuss how to produce strong content that is optimal for learners and consistent across the OER project, while also keeping in mind considerations such as target audiences, diversity, accessibility, downstream uses like remixing, localizing, etc.

  1. Authoring and Editing Logistics on 30 August 2022

Content creation spans a wide range of activities and forms. This session encourages you to think outside of the box - what would be helpful for fellow educators to make full use of the resource you are creating? In this session we also explore editing, which is a critical phase of OER creation as it ensures the usability and readability of the text. We discuss how it plays out throughout the creation process in different ways, and how it helps your project become a cohesive resource.

  1. Review and Feedback on 06 September 2022

A critical piece of successful OER is getting feedback and review early on. In this session we talk about why peer review is important, how to get it done, and other methods to receive comments and critique on your project.

  1. Formatting and Release Preparation on 13 September 2022

Once your book’s content has been written, edited, and reviewed, you need to get it into formats to be shared in the world. We’ll talk about different approaches to formatting and layout, (using Pressbooks and other tools) and how to prepare for the book’s big release.

  1. Post-release and Adoptions on 20 September 2022

The book is out there. Now what? We’ll discuss adoptions, improvements, maintenance, and ways to expand your book so that it and the community around it live on.

  1. Curriculum Wrap-Up on 27 September 2022

In the final session for Phase 1, we look back on all the topics covered and reflect on the progress you have made. We discuss your plans for Phase 2 and highlight the ways in which you can continue to support and get support from your fellow cohort members.

Phase 2: Practical Application

Creating high-quality, accessible, representative, and valuable open resources takes time. We want to make sure that you have the support you need from this learning community for a full year. During Phase 2, you’ll get a chance to talk about your project progress and request guidance from your facilitator and other cohort members.

In Phase 2 of the program you will meet monthly (alternating between 60 min cohort meetings and 20 min 1:1 meetings with your facilitator) for a total of 9 months. You will move through the publishing cycle at different paces, based on your team resources and goals. Throughout this phase, your cohort facilitator will reference useful materials and templates from Phase 1 to guide and support you in your project work.

Goals:

To keep you progressing smoothly and hold you accountable, you will need to:

  • Create an anticipated timeline for your project that details all steps, responsibilities, and tasks to be completed by your team,
  • Set small goals in between the monthly meetings,
  • Plan the steps necessary to reach those goals and move your project forward,
  • Articulate the required support and/or anticipated challenges,
  • Troubleshoot using the expertise and support in your team, your TSP cohort, and/or institution,
  • Share your progress with the cohort and facilitator in the Rebus Community forum prior to sessions to receive more personalised feedback, input, or support,
  • Offer advice and share experiences with other teams in your cohort,
  • Frequently adjust the pace and workload in accordance with your greater project timeline,
  • Provide feedback on the TSP (program, curriculum, facilitation) to help enhance your experience when necessary.

The schedule for Phase 2 will look like this:

  1. Group check-in: October 25, 2022 from 3:30-4:30 pm ET
  2. Monthly 1:1 with your facilitator: November 16, 2022 from 3:30-4:30 pm ET
  3. Group check-in [Theme Licensing]: December 2o, 2022 from 3:30-4:30 pm ET
  4. Monthly 1:1 with your facilitator: January 31, 2023, from 3:30-4:30 pm ET
  5. Group check-in [Theme Accessibility]: February 28, 2023, from 3:30-4:30 pm ET
  6. Monthly 1:1 with your facilitator: March 28, 2023, from 3:30-4:30 pm ET
  7. Group check-in [Theme Review and Release Preparation]: April 25, 2023 from 3:30-4:30 pm ET
  8. Monthly 1:1 with your facilitator: May 23, 2023, from 3:30-4:30 pm ET
  9. Group check-in [Theme Celebration - Pre-Launch]: June 20, 2023, from 3:30-4:30 pm ET

Contact

We encourage transparency in what we do, so that everyone, including those outside the program, are aware of the work we are doing and can benefit from the knowledge shared. All communications will take place in the cohort forum discussion space. However, in the event of extraordinary circumstances, participants can contact Bryan McGeary (@bjm6168) privately via direct message on the Rebus Community forum.