Open Educational Resources (OER) are teaching, learning, and research materials that reside in the public domain or have been released under a Creative Commons license. OERs are free, so their use in the classroom can significantly reduce textbook costs for students. Under some licenses, users have permission to remix, revise, and redistribute the content of open materials.
The Library can help you find subject-specific collections of open educational resources, and an ever-growing list is available in this guide
If you're entirely new to OER, or you'd like more information about copyright, finding OER, teaching with OER or publishing OER, try the OER Starter Kit from Iowa State University.
You can use this meta finder to search all the collections below at once, or you can go into each collection separately.
Collections indicated with an asterisk (*) are the recommended places to start.
The Public Domain Project, founded by Pond5, is a collection of multiple file types all within the public domain, including video footage, music tracks, sound effects, after effects, photographs, illustrations, and 3D models.
Wheaton began support of OER in the classroom in Fall of 2015 as a partnership between the Wallace Library and the Library, Technology and Learning Committee (LTLC). Faculty seeking to adopt OER materials in the classroom in place of traditional textbooks can work with Library staff for support and/or apply for an LTLC stipend to support this work.
Since the initiative began, OER adoptions on campus have saved students hundreds of thousands of dollars in textbook costs. If you are interested in transforming a course into one that uses Open Educational Resources, consider applying for LTLC’s Open Educational Resources Stipends.
For questions about OER, contact a Research & Instruction librarian.