Dear colleagues,
Libretexts<https://libretexts.org/index.html> is a wiki-based alternative to open
textbooks. Founded by Dr. Delmar Larsen, Associate Professor of Chemistry at the
University of California at Davis, this non-profit project originated in Chemistry (when
it was called ChemWiki) but has since grown (with the help of US federal funding) to
encompass a variety of STEM, Social Science, and other disciplines. Libretexts is a
hyperlibrary that has imported all of the available open textbooks (including the OpenStax
open textbooks currently used in Math and Physics). Unlike Wikipedia, not anyone can edit
Libretexts (there is faculty oversight), which is why institutions such as the U of
Michigan, U of Kansas, California State U and others use Libretextsas a customized open
textbook for many of their Science courses.
Beyond text, Libretexts embeds multimedia (e.g., video), dynamic figures, Jupyter
notebooks, Hypothes.is<http://Hypothes.is> annotations, and supports print on
demand. (See:
https://libretexts.org/advanced.html). Instructors who use Libretexts for
their required course readings can also avail of learning analytics that can shed insight
a range of interesting behaviours, such as the percentage of your students who have
accessed the required readings for the first time only 24 hours prior to the exam (i.e.
cramming).
Delmar has kindly offered to provide a webinar for our faculty who are interested in
learning more about this approach to OER (note that there is no fee associated with using
Libretexts for either students or KPU). The webinar is scheduled for Tuesday June 11 at
10-11am. For those unable to make that time, the webinar will be recorded and made
available online.
If you are interested in attending this webinar please let me know by replying to this
email.
Thank you,
Rajiv
[logo gif]
Rajiv Jhangiani, Ph.D.
Associate Vice Provost, Open Education
Kwantlen Polytechnic University
t 604.599.3253 e rajiv.jhangiani@kpu.ca<mailto:rajiv.jhangiani@kpu.ca>
www.kpu.ca/open<http://www.kpu.ca/open>
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At KPU, we work, study, and live in a region south of the Fraser River which overlaps with
the unceded traditional and ancestral lands of the Kwantlen, Musqueam, Katzie, Semihamoo,
Tsawwassen, Qayqayt, and Kwikwetlen peoples.