National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election

Dear Canada OER Community, I was reflecting on the fact that we recently went through a federal election campaign where affordability was a central concern for seemingly every party, even to the point of floating vague promises (e.g. wireless mobile cost reductions with little specifics on how this would be practically achieved). Specifically, the NDP noted post-secondary affordability as a key issue, but its focus was more on tuition and grants, and it appeared, to the best of my knowledge, silent on textbook costs. Many parties also seemed relatively unconcerned about making expenditure promises if they figured they would garner votes. Couple these with the fact we are likely looking at a shorter time frame to the next election (most saying 18 to 24 months) and that every party will be looking to improve on their performance from earlier in the month, and I was wondering if there was interest in trying to get OER funding on to any of the federal party's radar (with the hope that given it is a relatively non-partisan issue, that if one party were to propose OER funding others may simply adopt it). I think there might be a variety of approaches/strategies to pursue to get OER funding, but thought I would see if there was some collective interest in pursuing this. Michael -- Michael B. McNally, Associate Professor, Faculty of Education (School of Library and Information Studies) 5-171 Education North, University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta CANADA T6G 2J4 mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca Phone: 780-492-3934 Fax: 780-492-2430

Yes let’s do it!! How do we proceed? Amanda Coolidge, MEd [she/her] Associate Director of Open Education, BCcampus Cell: 250 818 4592 • Email: acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Twitter: @acoolidge <http://www.twitter.com/acoolidge> • LinkedIn: amandacoolidge<https://www.linkedin.com/in/amandacoolidge/> Learning. Doing. Leading. BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus> • #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash> For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality. From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Date: Thursday, October 31, 2019 at 5:06 PM To: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Dear Canada OER Community, I was reflecting on the fact that we recently went through a federal election campaign where affordability was a central concern for seemingly every party, even to the point of floating vague promises (e.g. wireless mobile cost reductions with little specifics on how this would be practically achieved). Specifically, the NDP noted post-secondary affordability as a key issue, but its focus was more on tuition and grants, and it appeared, to the best of my knowledge, silent on textbook costs. Many parties also seemed relatively unconcerned about making expenditure promises if they figured they would garner votes. Couple these with the fact we are likely looking at a shorter time frame to the next election (most saying 18 to 24 months) and that every party will be looking to improve on their performance from earlier in the month, and I was wondering if there was interest in trying to get OER funding on to any of the federal party's radar (with the hope that given it is a relatively non-partisan issue, that if one party were to propose OER funding others may simply adopt it). I think there might be a variety of approaches/strategies to pursue to get OER funding, but thought I would see if there was some collective interest in pursuing this. Michael -- Michael B. McNally, Associate Professor, Faculty of Education (School of Library and Information Studies) 5-171 Education North, University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta CANADA T6G 2J4 mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Phone: 780-492-3934 Fax: 780-492-2430

I would agree, count me in. Get Outlook for iOS<https://aka.ms/o0ukef> ________________________________ From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Amanda Coolidge <acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Sent: Friday, November 1, 2019 11:30:37 AM To: Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca>; Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Yes let’s do it!! How do we proceed? Amanda Coolidge, MEd [she/her] Associate Director of Open Education, BCcampus Cell: 250 818 4592 • Email: acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Twitter: @acoolidge <http://www.twitter.com/acoolidge> • LinkedIn: amandacoolidge<https://www.linkedin.com/in/amandacoolidge/> Learning. Doing. Leading. BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus> • #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash> For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality. From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Date: Thursday, October 31, 2019 at 5:06 PM To: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Dear Canada OER Community, I was reflecting on the fact that we recently went through a federal election campaign where affordability was a central concern for seemingly every party, even to the point of floating vague promises (e.g. wireless mobile cost reductions with little specifics on how this would be practically achieved). Specifically, the NDP noted post-secondary affordability as a key issue, but its focus was more on tuition and grants, and it appeared, to the best of my knowledge, silent on textbook costs. Many parties also seemed relatively unconcerned about making expenditure promises if they figured they would garner votes. Couple these with the fact we are likely looking at a shorter time frame to the next election (most saying 18 to 24 months) and that every party will be looking to improve on their performance from earlier in the month, and I was wondering if there was interest in trying to get OER funding on to any of the federal party's radar (with the hope that given it is a relatively non-partisan issue, that if one party were to propose OER funding others may simply adopt it). I think there might be a variety of approaches/strategies to pursue to get OER funding, but thought I would see if there was some collective interest in pursuing this. Michael -- Michael B. McNally, Associate Professor, Faculty of Education (School of Library and Information Studies) 5-171 Education North, University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta CANADA T6G 2J4 mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Phone: 780-492-3934 Fax: 780-492-2430

Yes. Let’s work on this. Sent from my iPhone On Nov 1, 2019, at 11:56 AM, Tim Carson <tcarson(a)bccampus.ca> wrote: CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the University of Saskatchewan. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe. If in doubt, please forward suspicious emails to phishing(a)usask.ca I would agree, count me in. Get Outlook for iOS<https://aka.ms/o0ukef> ________________________________ From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Amanda Coolidge <acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Sent: Friday, November 1, 2019 11:30:37 AM To: Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca>; Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Yes let’s do it!! How do we proceed? Amanda Coolidge, MEd [she/her] Associate Director of Open Education, BCcampus Cell: 250 818 4592 • Email: acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Twitter: @acoolidge <http://www.twitter.com/acoolidge> • LinkedIn: amandacoolidge<https://www.linkedin.com/in/amandacoolidge/> <image001.png> Learning. Doing. Leading. BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus> • #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash> For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality. From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Date: Thursday, October 31, 2019 at 5:06 PM To: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Dear Canada OER Community, I was reflecting on the fact that we recently went through a federal election campaign where affordability was a central concern for seemingly every party, even to the point of floating vague promises (e.g. wireless mobile cost reductions with little specifics on how this would be practically achieved). Specifically, the NDP noted post-secondary affordability as a key issue, but its focus was more on tuition and grants, and it appeared, to the best of my knowledge, silent on textbook costs. Many parties also seemed relatively unconcerned about making expenditure promises if they figured they would garner votes. Couple these with the fact we are likely looking at a shorter time frame to the next election (most saying 18 to 24 months) and that every party will be looking to improve on their performance from earlier in the month, and I was wondering if there was interest in trying to get OER funding on to any of the federal party's radar (with the hope that given it is a relatively non-partisan issue, that if one party were to propose OER funding others may simply adopt it). I think there might be a variety of approaches/strategies to pursue to get OER funding, but thought I would see if there was some collective interest in pursuing this. Michael -- Michael B. McNally, Associate Professor, Faculty of Education (School of Library and Information Studies) 5-171 Education North, University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta CANADA T6G 2J4 mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Phone: 780-492-3934 Fax: 780-492-2430 _______________________________________________ Canadaoer mailing list Canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca https://lists.bccampus.ca/mailman/listinfo/canadaoer

Great idea! Here in BC, and I expect it’s true elsewhere, students have had a very powerful voice in encouraging the provincial government to move forward. I don’t know if there are groups of students already working on the federal level, but it would be good to find out. And if there aren’t, is there a national student group that would be good to reach out to and see if they would work on this with us? Christina ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Christina Hendricks, PhD (she, her) Professor of Teaching, Philosophy Academic Director, Centre for Teaching, Learning and Technology The University of British Columbia | Vancouver Campus | Musqueam Traditional, Ancestral, Unceded Territory Irving K. Barber Learning Centre 214 – 1961 East Mall | Vancouver BC | V6T 1Z1 Canada Phone 604 822 1136 christina.hendricks(a)ubc.ca<mailto:christina.hendricks(a)ubc.ca> http://ctlt.ubc.ca/<http://ctlt.ubc.ca> | https://chendricks.org On November 1, 2019 at 11:59:49 AM, Ross, Heather (heather.ross(a)usask.ca<mailto:heather.ross(a)usask.ca>) wrote: Yes. Let’s work on this. Sent from my iPhone On Nov 1, 2019, at 11:56 AM, Tim Carson <tcarson(a)bccampus.ca> wrote: CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the University of Saskatchewan. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe. If in doubt, please forward suspicious emails to phishing(a)usask.ca I would agree, count me in. Get Outlook for iOS<https://aka.ms/o0ukef> ________________________________ From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Amanda Coolidge <acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Sent: Friday, November 1, 2019 11:30:37 AM To: Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca>; Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Yes let’s do it!! How do we proceed? Amanda Coolidge, MEd [she/her] Associate Director of Open Education, BCcampus Cell: 250 818 4592 • Email: acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Twitter: @acoolidge <http://www.twitter.com/acoolidge> • LinkedIn: amandacoolidge<https://www.linkedin.com/in/amandacoolidge/> <image001.png> Learning. Doing. Leading. BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus> • #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash> For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality. From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Date: Thursday, October 31, 2019 at 5:06 PM To: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Dear Canada OER Community, I was reflecting on the fact that we recently went through a federal election campaign where affordability was a central concern for seemingly every party, even to the point of floating vague promises (e.g. wireless mobile cost reductions with little specifics on how this would be practically achieved). Specifically, the NDP noted post-secondary affordability as a key issue, but its focus was more on tuition and grants, and it appeared, to the best of my knowledge, silent on textbook costs. Many parties also seemed relatively unconcerned about making expenditure promises if they figured they would garner votes. Couple these with the fact we are likely looking at a shorter time frame to the next election (most saying 18 to 24 months) and that every party will be looking to improve on their performance from earlier in the month, and I was wondering if there was interest in trying to get OER funding on to any of the federal party's radar (with the hope that given it is a relatively non-partisan issue, that if one party were to propose OER funding others may simply adopt it). I think there might be a variety of approaches/strategies to pursue to get OER funding, but thought I would see if there was some collective interest in pursuing this. Michael -- Michael B. McNally, Associate Professor, Faculty of Education (School of Library and Information Studies) 5-171 Education North, University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta CANADA T6G 2J4 mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Phone: 780-492-3934 Fax: 780-492-2430 _______________________________________________ Canadaoer mailing list Canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca https://lists.bccampus.ca/mailman/listinfo/canadaoer _______________________________________________ Canadaoer mailing list Canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca https://lists.bccampus.ca/mailman/listinfo/canadaoer

Definitely need the student associations onboard. There are two main national ones: CASA<https://www.casa-acae.com/>, and CFS<https://cfs-fcee.ca/>. They don't seem to get along that well with either each other or the provincial and local unions they represent, but maybe they can be united on an issue like this? N We have moved! The Office of Open Learning has moved to the CEI as of Monday, 26 August. We apologize for any delay in getting back to you as we settle in and look forward to welcoming you in our new offices! Prof. Nick Baker Director Office of Open Learning Room CEI-2241 Ed Lumley Centre for Engineering Innovation (entrance at 700 California Ave) University of Windsor 401 Sunset Ave. Windsor, Ontario N9B 3P4 (519) 253-3000 ext. 4925 fax (519) 971-3693 www.uwindsor.ca/openlearning Twitter: @nbaker The University of Windsor is built on the traditional territory of the Three Fires Confederacy of First Nations, which includes the Ojibwa, the Odawa, and the Potawatomie. As a settler here, I acknowledge and thank the traditional custodians of the land for their wisdom and connection to this place. ________________________________ From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Hendricks, Christina <christina.hendricks(a)ubc.ca> Sent: November 1, 2019 3:06 PM To: Ross, Heather <heather.ross(a)usask.ca>; Tim Carson <tcarson(a)bccampus.ca> Cc: Amanda Coolidge <acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca>; Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Great idea! Here in BC, and I expect it’s true elsewhere, students have had a very powerful voice in encouraging the provincial government to move forward. I don’t know if there are groups of students already working on the federal level, but it would be good to find out. And if there aren’t, is there a national student group that would be good to reach out to and see if they would work on this with us? Christina ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Christina Hendricks, PhD (she, her) Professor of Teaching, Philosophy Academic Director, Centre for Teaching, Learning and Technology The University of British Columbia | Vancouver Campus | Musqueam Traditional, Ancestral, Unceded Territory Irving K. Barber Learning Centre 214 – 1961 East Mall | Vancouver BC | V6T 1Z1 Canada Phone 604 822 1136 christina.hendricks(a)ubc.ca<mailto:christina.hendricks(a)ubc.ca> http://ctlt.ubc.ca/<http://ctlt.ubc.ca> | https://chendricks.org On November 1, 2019 at 11:59:49 AM, Ross, Heather (heather.ross(a)usask.ca<mailto:heather.ross(a)usask.ca>) wrote: Yes. Let’s work on this. Sent from my iPhone On Nov 1, 2019, at 11:56 AM, Tim Carson <tcarson(a)bccampus.ca> wrote: CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the University of Saskatchewan. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe. If in doubt, please forward suspicious emails to phishing(a)usask.ca I would agree, count me in. Get Outlook for iOS<https://aka.ms/o0ukef> ________________________________ From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Amanda Coolidge <acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Sent: Friday, November 1, 2019 11:30:37 AM To: Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca>; Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Yes let’s do it!! How do we proceed? Amanda Coolidge, MEd [she/her] Associate Director of Open Education, BCcampus Cell: 250 818 4592 • Email: acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Twitter: @acoolidge <http://www.twitter.com/acoolidge> • LinkedIn: amandacoolidge<https://www.linkedin.com/in/amandacoolidge/> <image001.png> Learning. Doing. Leading. BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus> • #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash> For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality. From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Date: Thursday, October 31, 2019 at 5:06 PM To: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Dear Canada OER Community, I was reflecting on the fact that we recently went through a federal election campaign where affordability was a central concern for seemingly every party, even to the point of floating vague promises (e.g. wireless mobile cost reductions with little specifics on how this would be practically achieved). Specifically, the NDP noted post-secondary affordability as a key issue, but its focus was more on tuition and grants, and it appeared, to the best of my knowledge, silent on textbook costs. Many parties also seemed relatively unconcerned about making expenditure promises if they figured they would garner votes. Couple these with the fact we are likely looking at a shorter time frame to the next election (most saying 18 to 24 months) and that every party will be looking to improve on their performance from earlier in the month, and I was wondering if there was interest in trying to get OER funding on to any of the federal party's radar (with the hope that given it is a relatively non-partisan issue, that if one party were to propose OER funding others may simply adopt it). I think there might be a variety of approaches/strategies to pursue to get OER funding, but thought I would see if there was some collective interest in pursuing this. Michael -- Michael B. McNally, Associate Professor, Faculty of Education (School of Library and Information Studies) 5-171 Education North, University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta CANADA T6G 2J4 mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Phone: 780-492-3934 Fax: 780-492-2430 _______________________________________________ Canadaoer mailing list Canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca https://lists.bccampus.ca/mailman/listinfo/canadaoer _______________________________________________ Canadaoer mailing list Canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca https://lists.bccampus.ca/mailman/listinfo/canadaoer

Hi all, I would certainly be on board with this! It would be fantastic to see a national initiative in this area, and I would throw anything at it to make that happen. There is a massive impediment to it though, as with any national level higher ed project, and that is where to pitch it because there is not a natural home for this ask within the federal government. Without a ministry, it is very hard to get government to care about it, especially since it is in an area that is a provincial mandate and with the provinces clearly not happy with the feds right now. I don't want to pour cold water on the idea, but want to be realistic about the uphill battle it would be to even get noticed, let alone a commitment to resources. Having said that, I think there are elements that could possibly fit within these departments: * Innovation, Science, and Economic Development (probably the closest bet) * Employment and Social Development (a long shot, but ESD administers student loans so maybe) * Canadian Heritage and Multiculturalism (another long shot, but could be targeted campaign around the things they care about - have to be creative here) * Treasury Board and Ministry of Digital Government (yes, we have one of those) * Open Government - would need to be creative and it doesn't directly have a ministerial portfolio attached (but falls under the above's purview), so less likely to get funding, but Canada is the OGP chair this year, and has committed to the Open by default approach (which has recently filtered into things like procurement of software as well), so may be able to leverage this, plus the tri-council open requirements. At the provincial level, anywhere we have a conservative government, as in my own province of Ontario, is going to be a blocker to this for a number of reasons. With that in mind though, conservative governments are making higher ed less accessible to their constituents, more expensive if you do manage to get in, and generally disinvesting in this file, so there is an opportunity to hammer the alternative parties to be the opposite. So I think it will be a tough sell, but absolutely worthwhile trying. Cheers Nick We have moved! The Office of Open Learning has moved to the CEI as of Monday, 26 August. We apologise for any delay in getting back to you as we settle in and look forward to welcoming you in our new offices! Prof. Nick Baker Director Office of Open Learning Room CEI-2241 Ed Lumley Centre for Engineering Innovation (entrance at 700 California Ave) University of Windsor 401 Sunset Ave. Windsor, Ontario N9B 3P4 (519) 253-3000 ext. 4925 fax (519) 971-3693 www.uwindsor.ca/openlearning Twitter: @nbaker The University of Windsor is built on the traditional territory of the Three Fires Confederacy of First Nations, which includes the Ojibwa, the Odawa, and the Potawatomie. As a settler here, I acknowledge and thank the traditional custodians of the land for their wisdom and connection to this place. ________________________________ From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Amanda Coolidge <acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Sent: November 1, 2019 2:30 PM To: Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca>; Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Yes let’s do it!! How do we proceed? Amanda Coolidge, MEd [she/her] Associate Director of Open Education, BCcampus Cell: 250 818 4592 • Email: acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Twitter: @acoolidge <http://www.twitter.com/acoolidge> • LinkedIn: amandacoolidge<https://www.linkedin.com/in/amandacoolidge/> Learning. Doing. Leading. BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus> • #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash> For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality. From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Date: Thursday, October 31, 2019 at 5:06 PM To: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Dear Canada OER Community, I was reflecting on the fact that we recently went through a federal election campaign where affordability was a central concern for seemingly every party, even to the point of floating vague promises (e.g. wireless mobile cost reductions with little specifics on how this would be practically achieved). Specifically, the NDP noted post-secondary affordability as a key issue, but its focus was more on tuition and grants, and it appeared, to the best of my knowledge, silent on textbook costs. Many parties also seemed relatively unconcerned about making expenditure promises if they figured they would garner votes. Couple these with the fact we are likely looking at a shorter time frame to the next election (most saying 18 to 24 months) and that every party will be looking to improve on their performance from earlier in the month, and I was wondering if there was interest in trying to get OER funding on to any of the federal party's radar (with the hope that given it is a relatively non-partisan issue, that if one party were to propose OER funding others may simply adopt it). I think there might be a variety of approaches/strategies to pursue to get OER funding, but thought I would see if there was some collective interest in pursuing this. Michael -- Michael B. McNally, Associate Professor, Faculty of Education (School of Library and Information Studies) 5-171 Education North, University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta CANADA T6G 2J4 mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Phone: 780-492-3934 Fax: 780-492-2430

I forgot to add that I will be bringing a trades/vocational Ed voice to the table....just another lever to move the issue forward Get Outlook for iOS<https://aka.ms/o0ukef> ________________________________ From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Nick Baker <nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca> Sent: Friday, November 1, 2019 12:10:11 PM To: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Hi all, I would certainly be on board with this! It would be fantastic to see a national initiative in this area, and I would throw anything at it to make that happen. There is a massive impediment to it though, as with any national level higher ed project, and that is where to pitch it because there is not a natural home for this ask within the federal government. Without a ministry, it is very hard to get government to care about it, especially since it is in an area that is a provincial mandate and with the provinces clearly not happy with the feds right now. I don't want to pour cold water on the idea, but want to be realistic about the uphill battle it would be to even get noticed, let alone a commitment to resources. Having said that, I think there are elements that could possibly fit within these departments: * Innovation, Science, and Economic Development (probably the closest bet) * Employment and Social Development (a long shot, but ESD administers student loans so maybe) * Canadian Heritage and Multiculturalism (another long shot, but could be targeted campaign around the things they care about - have to be creative here) * Treasury Board and Ministry of Digital Government (yes, we have one of those) * Open Government - would need to be creative and it doesn't directly have a ministerial portfolio attached (but falls under the above's purview), so less likely to get funding, but Canada is the OGP chair this year, and has committed to the Open by default approach (which has recently filtered into things like procurement of software as well), so may be able to leverage this, plus the tri-council open requirements. At the provincial level, anywhere we have a conservative government, as in my own province of Ontario, is going to be a blocker to this for a number of reasons. With that in mind though, conservative governments are making higher ed less accessible to their constituents, more expensive if you do manage to get in, and generally disinvesting in this file, so there is an opportunity to hammer the alternative parties to be the opposite. So I think it will be a tough sell, but absolutely worthwhile trying. Cheers Nick We have moved! The Office of Open Learning has moved to the CEI as of Monday, 26 August. We apologise for any delay in getting back to you as we settle in and look forward to welcoming you in our new offices! Prof. Nick Baker Director Office of Open Learning Room CEI-2241 Ed Lumley Centre for Engineering Innovation (entrance at 700 California Ave) University of Windsor 401 Sunset Ave. Windsor, Ontario N9B 3P4 (519) 253-3000 ext. 4925 fax (519) 971-3693 www.uwindsor.ca/openlearning Twitter: @nbaker The University of Windsor is built on the traditional territory of the Three Fires Confederacy of First Nations, which includes the Ojibwa, the Odawa, and the Potawatomie. As a settler here, I acknowledge and thank the traditional custodians of the land for their wisdom and connection to this place. ________________________________ From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Amanda Coolidge <acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Sent: November 1, 2019 2:30 PM To: Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca>; Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Yes let’s do it!! How do we proceed? Amanda Coolidge, MEd [she/her] Associate Director of Open Education, BCcampus Cell: 250 818 4592 • Email: acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Twitter: @acoolidge <http://www.twitter.com/acoolidge> • LinkedIn: amandacoolidge<https://www.linkedin.com/in/amandacoolidge/> Learning. Doing. Leading. BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus> • #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash> For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality. From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Date: Thursday, October 31, 2019 at 5:06 PM To: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Dear Canada OER Community, I was reflecting on the fact that we recently went through a federal election campaign where affordability was a central concern for seemingly every party, even to the point of floating vague promises (e.g. wireless mobile cost reductions with little specifics on how this would be practically achieved). Specifically, the NDP noted post-secondary affordability as a key issue, but its focus was more on tuition and grants, and it appeared, to the best of my knowledge, silent on textbook costs. Many parties also seemed relatively unconcerned about making expenditure promises if they figured they would garner votes. Couple these with the fact we are likely looking at a shorter time frame to the next election (most saying 18 to 24 months) and that every party will be looking to improve on their performance from earlier in the month, and I was wondering if there was interest in trying to get OER funding on to any of the federal party's radar (with the hope that given it is a relatively non-partisan issue, that if one party were to propose OER funding others may simply adopt it). I think there might be a variety of approaches/strategies to pursue to get OER funding, but thought I would see if there was some collective interest in pursuing this. Michael -- Michael B. McNally, Associate Professor, Faculty of Education (School of Library and Information Studies) 5-171 Education North, University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta CANADA T6G 2J4 mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Phone: 780-492-3934 Fax: 780-492-2430

Nick, also Indigenous education, which is the one area of education funded by the federal government. Sent from my iPhone On Nov 1, 2019, at 12:10 PM, Nick Baker <nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca> wrote: CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the University of Saskatchewan. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe. If in doubt, please forward suspicious emails to phishing(a)usask.ca Hi all, I would certainly be on board with this! It would be fantastic to see a national initiative in this area, and I would throw anything at it to make that happen. There is a massive impediment to it though, as with any national level higher ed project, and that is where to pitch it because there is not a natural home for this ask within the federal government. Without a ministry, it is very hard to get government to care about it, especially since it is in an area that is a provincial mandate and with the provinces clearly not happy with the feds right now. I don't want to pour cold water on the idea, but want to be realistic about the uphill battle it would be to even get noticed, let alone a commitment to resources. Having said that, I think there are elements that could possibly fit within these departments: * Innovation, Science, and Economic Development (probably the closest bet) * Employment and Social Development (a long shot, but ESD administers student loans so maybe) * Canadian Heritage and Multiculturalism (another long shot, but could be targeted campaign around the things they care about - have to be creative here) * Treasury Board and Ministry of Digital Government (yes, we have one of those) * Open Government - would need to be creative and it doesn't directly have a ministerial portfolio attached (but falls under the above's purview), so less likely to get funding, but Canada is the OGP chair this year, and has committed to the Open by default approach (which has recently filtered into things like procurement of software as well), so may be able to leverage this, plus the tri-council open requirements. At the provincial level, anywhere we have a conservative government, as in my own province of Ontario, is going to be a blocker to this for a number of reasons. With that in mind though, conservative governments are making higher ed less accessible to their constituents, more expensive if you do manage to get in, and generally disinvesting in this file, so there is an opportunity to hammer the alternative parties to be the opposite. So I think it will be a tough sell, but absolutely worthwhile trying. Cheers Nick We have moved! The Office of Open Learning has moved to the CEI as of Monday, 26 August. We apologise for any delay in getting back to you as we settle in and look forward to welcoming you in our new offices! Prof. Nick Baker Director Office of Open Learning Room CEI-2241 Ed Lumley Centre for Engineering Innovation (entrance at 700 California Ave) University of Windsor 401 Sunset Ave. Windsor, Ontario N9B 3P4 (519) 253-3000 ext. 4925 fax (519) 971-3693 www.uwindsor.ca/openlearning Twitter: @nbaker The University of Windsor is built on the traditional territory of the Three Fires Confederacy of First Nations, which includes the Ojibwa, the Odawa, and the Potawatomie. As a settler here, I acknowledge and thank the traditional custodians of the land for their wisdom and connection to this place. ________________________________ From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Amanda Coolidge <acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Sent: November 1, 2019 2:30 PM To: Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca>; Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Yes let’s do it!! How do we proceed? Amanda Coolidge, MEd [she/her] Associate Director of Open Education, BCcampus Cell: 250 818 4592 • Email: acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Twitter: @acoolidge <http://www.twitter.com/acoolidge> • LinkedIn: amandacoolidge<https://www.linkedin.com/in/amandacoolidge/> <image001.png> Learning. Doing. Leading. BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus> • #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash> For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality. From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Date: Thursday, October 31, 2019 at 5:06 PM To: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Dear Canada OER Community, I was reflecting on the fact that we recently went through a federal election campaign where affordability was a central concern for seemingly every party, even to the point of floating vague promises (e.g. wireless mobile cost reductions with little specifics on how this would be practically achieved). Specifically, the NDP noted post-secondary affordability as a key issue, but its focus was more on tuition and grants, and it appeared, to the best of my knowledge, silent on textbook costs. Many parties also seemed relatively unconcerned about making expenditure promises if they figured they would garner votes. Couple these with the fact we are likely looking at a shorter time frame to the next election (most saying 18 to 24 months) and that every party will be looking to improve on their performance from earlier in the month, and I was wondering if there was interest in trying to get OER funding on to any of the federal party's radar (with the hope that given it is a relatively non-partisan issue, that if one party were to propose OER funding others may simply adopt it). I think there might be a variety of approaches/strategies to pursue to get OER funding, but thought I would see if there was some collective interest in pursuing this. Michael -- Michael B. McNally, Associate Professor, Faculty of Education (School of Library and Information Studies) 5-171 Education North, University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta CANADA T6G 2J4 mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Phone: 780-492-3934 Fax: 780-492-2430 _______________________________________________ Canadaoer mailing list Canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca https://lists.bccampus.ca/mailman/listinfo/canadaoer

Heather, I was thinking of initiatives along the lines you mention. I agree with Nick. With the education portfolio being of provincial jurisdiction, it makes it tricky to target the Federal Government for funding. Having said that, they fund specific projects. Indigenous ed is one, the whole Trades Harmonization project is another. Tim will know all about that ☺ Maybe there is room to work strategically around federally funded projects to generate awareness and even engage in conversations about policy… Just a thought. I would love to see Canada have a national policy / directive on Open Education! A lot of Caribbean Governments do…. The Commonwealth of Learning could provide advise on how to go about it. Cheers, Rosario [rosario.jpg] Rosario Passos Instructional Development Consultant (IDC) Learning and Teaching Centre British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT) 3700 Willingdon Avenue, Burnaby, BC V5G 3H2 Tel: (604) 456 1266 rosario_passos(a)bcit.ca<mailto:rosario_passos(a)bcit.ca> www.bcit.ca/ltc Education for a Complex World Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> On Behalf Of Ross, Heather Sent: November 1, 2019 12:19 PM To: Nick Baker <nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca> Cc: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Nick, also Indigenous education, which is the one area of education funded by the federal government. Sent from my iPhone On Nov 1, 2019, at 12:10 PM, Nick Baker <nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca<mailto:nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca>> wrote: CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the University of Saskatchewan. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe. If in doubt, please forward suspicious emails to phishing(a)usask.ca<mailto:phishing(a)usask.ca> Hi all, I would certainly be on board with this! It would be fantastic to see a national initiative in this area, and I would throw anything at it to make that happen. There is a massive impediment to it though, as with any national level higher ed project, and that is where to pitch it because there is not a natural home for this ask within the federal government. Without a ministry, it is very hard to get government to care about it, especially since it is in an area that is a provincial mandate and with the provinces clearly not happy with the feds right now. I don't want to pour cold water on the idea, but want to be realistic about the uphill battle it would be to even get noticed, let alone a commitment to resources. Having said that, I think there are elements that could possibly fit within these departments: * Innovation, Science, and Economic Development (probably the closest bet) * Employment and Social Development (a long shot, but ESD administers student loans so maybe) * Canadian Heritage and Multiculturalism (another long shot, but could be targeted campaign around the things they care about - have to be creative here) * Treasury Board and Ministry of Digital Government (yes, we have one of those) * Open Government - would need to be creative and it doesn't directly have a ministerial portfolio attached (but falls under the above's purview), so less likely to get funding, but Canada is the OGP chair this year, and has committed to the Open by default approach (which has recently filtered into things like procurement of software as well), so may be able to leverage this, plus the tri-council open requirements. At the provincial level, anywhere we have a conservative government, as in my own province of Ontario, is going to be a blocker to this for a number of reasons. With that in mind though, conservative governments are making higher ed less accessible to their constituents, more expensive if you do manage to get in, and generally disinvesting in this file, so there is an opportunity to hammer the alternative parties to be the opposite. So I think it will be a tough sell, but absolutely worthwhile trying. Cheers Nick We have moved! The Office of Open Learning has moved to the CEI as of Monday, 26 August. We apologise for any delay in getting back to you as we settle in and look forward to welcoming you in our new offices! Prof. Nick Baker Director Office of Open Learning Room CEI-2241 Ed Lumley Centre for Engineering Innovation (entrance at 700 California Ave) University of Windsor 401 Sunset Ave. Windsor, Ontario N9B 3P4 (519) 253-3000 ext. 4925 fax (519) 971-3693 www.uwindsor.ca/openlearning<http://www.uwindsor.ca/openlearning> Twitter: @nbaker The University of Windsor is built on the traditional territory of the Three Fires Confederacy of First Nations, which includes the Ojibwa, the Odawa, and the Potawatomie. As a settler here, I acknowledge and thank the traditional custodians of the land for their wisdom and connection to this place. ________________________________ From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca>> on behalf of Amanda Coolidge <acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca>> Sent: November 1, 2019 2:30 PM To: Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca>>; Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca>> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Yes let’s do it!! How do we proceed? Amanda Coolidge, MEd [she/her] Associate Director of Open Education, BCcampus Cell: 250 818 4592 • Email: acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Twitter: @acoolidge <http://www.twitter.com/acoolidge> • LinkedIn: amandacoolidge<https://www.linkedin.com/in/amandacoolidge/> <image001.png> Learning. Doing. Leading. BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus> • #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash> For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality. From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca>> on behalf of Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca>> Date: Thursday, October 31, 2019 at 5:06 PM To: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca>> Subject: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Dear Canada OER Community, I was reflecting on the fact that we recently went through a federal election campaign where affordability was a central concern for seemingly every party, even to the point of floating vague promises (e.g. wireless mobile cost reductions with little specifics on how this would be practically achieved). Specifically, the NDP noted post-secondary affordability as a key issue, but its focus was more on tuition and grants, and it appeared, to the best of my knowledge, silent on textbook costs. Many parties also seemed relatively unconcerned about making expenditure promises if they figured they would garner votes. Couple these with the fact we are likely looking at a shorter time frame to the next election (most saying 18 to 24 months) and that every party will be looking to improve on their performance from earlier in the month, and I was wondering if there was interest in trying to get OER funding on to any of the federal party's radar (with the hope that given it is a relatively non-partisan issue, that if one party were to propose OER funding others may simply adopt it). I think there might be a variety of approaches/strategies to pursue to get OER funding, but thought I would see if there was some collective interest in pursuing this. Michael -- Michael B. McNally, Associate Professor, Faculty of Education (School of Library and Information Studies) 5-171 Education North, University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta CANADA T6G 2J4 mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Phone: 780-492-3934 Fax: 780-492-2430 _______________________________________________ Canadaoer mailing list Canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:Canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> https://lists.bccampus.ca/mailman/listinfo/canadaoer

Thanks everyone for contributing to this conversation, I have been reading along with great interest. I wonder if we can take some of the bigness out of it just by starting with a first step of developing common key messages and numbers? Lena From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Rosario Passos <Rosario_Passos(a)bcit.ca> Date: Friday, November 1, 2019 at 5:36 PM To: "Ross, Heather" <heather.ross(a)usask.ca>, Nick Baker <nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca> Cc: "canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca" <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Heather, I was thinking of initiatives along the lines you mention. I agree with Nick. With the education portfolio being of provincial jurisdiction, it makes it tricky to target the Federal Government for funding. Having said that, they fund specific projects. Indigenous ed is one, the whole Trades Harmonization project is another. Tim will know all about that ☺ Maybe there is room to work strategically around federally funded projects to generate awareness and even engage in conversations about policy… Just a thought. I would love to see Canada have a national policy / directive on Open Education! A lot of Caribbean Governments do…. The Commonwealth of Learning could provide advise on how to go about it. Cheers, Rosario [cid:image002.jpg(a)01D590DB.7D0ED7E0] Rosario Passos Instructional Development Consultant (IDC) Learning and Teaching Centre British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT) 3700 Willingdon Avenue, Burnaby, BC V5G 3H2 Tel: (604) 456 1266 rosario_passos(a)bcit.ca<mailto:rosario_passos(a)bcit.ca> www.bcit.ca/ltc Education for a Complex World Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> On Behalf Of Ross, Heather Sent: November 1, 2019 12:19 PM To: Nick Baker <nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca> Cc: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Nick, also Indigenous education, which is the one area of education funded by the federal government. Sent from my iPhone On Nov 1, 2019, at 12:10 PM, Nick Baker <nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca<mailto:nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca>> wrote: CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the University of Saskatchewan. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe. If in doubt, please forward suspicious emails to phishing(a)usask.ca<mailto:phishing(a)usask.ca> Hi all, I would certainly be on board with this! It would be fantastic to see a national initiative in this area, and I would throw anything at it to make that happen. There is a massive impediment to it though, as with any national level higher ed project, and that is where to pitch it because there is not a natural home for this ask within the federal government. Without a ministry, it is very hard to get government to care about it, especially since it is in an area that is a provincial mandate and with the provinces clearly not happy with the feds right now. I don't want to pour cold water on the idea, but want to be realistic about the uphill battle it would be to even get noticed, let alone a commitment to resources. Having said that, I think there are elements that could possibly fit within these departments: * Innovation, Science, and Economic Development (probably the closest bet) * Employment and Social Development (a long shot, but ESD administers student loans so maybe) * Canadian Heritage and Multiculturalism (another long shot, but could be targeted campaign around the things they care about - have to be creative here) * Treasury Board and Ministry of Digital Government (yes, we have one of those) * Open Government - would need to be creative and it doesn't directly have a ministerial portfolio attached (but falls under the above's purview), so less likely to get funding, but Canada is the OGP chair this year, and has committed to the Open by default approach (which has recently filtered into things like procurement of software as well), so may be able to leverage this, plus the tri-council open requirements. At the provincial level, anywhere we have a conservative government, as in my own province of Ontario, is going to be a blocker to this for a number of reasons. With that in mind though, conservative governments are making higher ed less accessible to their constituents, more expensive if you do manage to get in, and generally disinvesting in this file, so there is an opportunity to hammer the alternative parties to be the opposite. So I think it will be a tough sell, but absolutely worthwhile trying. Cheers Nick We have moved! The Office of Open Learning has moved to the CEI as of Monday, 26 August. We apologise for any delay in getting back to you as we settle in and look forward to welcoming you in our new offices! Prof. Nick Baker Director Office of Open Learning Room CEI-2241 Ed Lumley Centre for Engineering Innovation (entrance at 700 California Ave) University of Windsor 401 Sunset Ave. Windsor, Ontario N9B 3P4 (519) 253-3000 ext. 4925 fax (519) 971-3693 www.uwindsor.ca/openlearning<http://www.uwindsor.ca/openlearning> Twitter: @nbaker The University of Windsor is built on the traditional territory of the Three Fires Confederacy of First Nations, which includes the Ojibwa, the Odawa, and the Potawatomie. As a settler here, I acknowledge and thank the traditional custodians of the land for their wisdom and connection to this place. ________________________________ From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca>> on behalf of Amanda Coolidge <acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca>> Sent: November 1, 2019 2:30 PM To: Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca>>; Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca>> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Yes let’s do it!! How do we proceed? Amanda Coolidge, MEd [she/her] Associate Director of Open Education, BCcampus Cell: 250 818 4592 • Email: acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Twitter: @acoolidge <http://www.twitter.com/acoolidge> • LinkedIn: amandacoolidge<https://www.linkedin.com/in/amandacoolidge/> <image001.png> Learning. Doing. Leading. BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus> • #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash> For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality. From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca>> on behalf of Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca>> Date: Thursday, October 31, 2019 at 5:06 PM To: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca>> Subject: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Dear Canada OER Community, I was reflecting on the fact that we recently went through a federal election campaign where affordability was a central concern for seemingly every party, even to the point of floating vague promises (e.g. wireless mobile cost reductions with little specifics on how this would be practically achieved). Specifically, the NDP noted post-secondary affordability as a key issue, but its focus was more on tuition and grants, and it appeared, to the best of my knowledge, silent on textbook costs. Many parties also seemed relatively unconcerned about making expenditure promises if they figured they would garner votes. Couple these with the fact we are likely looking at a shorter time frame to the next election (most saying 18 to 24 months) and that every party will be looking to improve on their performance from earlier in the month, and I was wondering if there was interest in trying to get OER funding on to any of the federal party's radar (with the hope that given it is a relatively non-partisan issue, that if one party were to propose OER funding others may simply adopt it). I think there might be a variety of approaches/strategies to pursue to get OER funding, but thought I would see if there was some collective interest in pursuing this. Michael -- Michael B. McNally, Associate Professor, Faculty of Education (School of Library and Information Studies) 5-171 Education North, University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta CANADA T6G 2J4 mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Phone: 780-492-3934 Fax: 780-492-2430 _______________________________________________ Canadaoer mailing list Canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:Canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> https://lists.bccampus.ca/mailman/listinfo/canadaoer

Hi everyone, observing this conversation with interest. I’m wondering if part of the plan could leverage CICAN, who are already doing advocacy work with the fed gov’t on behalf on colleges and institutes (https://www.collegesinstitutes.ca/policyfocus/) . They are well resourced and well established with v. large membership and it might be worth a phone call with Denise Amyot – a few years ago I was invited to do a talk at their annual conference on open education and innovation…turns out it was sponsored by a publisher - which was awkward - but there was quite a bit of interest by people in the room about the textbook cost problem. Tannis Tannis Morgan, PhD Advisor, Teaching and Learning, BCcampus Cell: 778-991-6246<mailto:778-991-6246> • Email: tmorgan(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:tmorgan(a)bccampus.ca> Twitter: @tanbob<https://twitter.com/tanbob> • Skype: tannismorgan • Pronouns: She/her ________________________________ Learning. Doing. Leading. BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus> • #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash> For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality. -- From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Rosario Passos <Rosario_Passos(a)bcit.ca> Date: Friday, November 1, 2019 at 2:36 PM To: "Ross, Heather" <heather.ross(a)usask.ca>, Nick Baker <nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca> Cc: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Heather, I was thinking of initiatives along the lines you mention. I agree with Nick. With the education portfolio being of provincial jurisdiction, it makes it tricky to target the Federal Government for funding. Having said that, they fund specific projects. Indigenous ed is one, the whole Trades Harmonization project is another. Tim will know all about that ☺ Maybe there is room to work strategically around federally funded projects to generate awareness and even engage in conversations about policy… Just a thought. I would love to see Canada have a national policy / directive on Open Education! A lot of Caribbean Governments do…. The Commonwealth of Learning could provide advise on how to go about it. Cheers, Rosario [cid:image002.jpg(a)01D590C4.BF2F3730] Rosario Passos Instructional Development Consultant (IDC) Learning and Teaching Centre British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT) 3700 Willingdon Avenue, Burnaby, BC V5G 3H2 Tel: (604) 456 1266 rosario_passos(a)bcit.ca<mailto:rosario_passos(a)bcit.ca> www.bcit.ca/ltc Education for a Complex World Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> On Behalf Of Ross, Heather Sent: November 1, 2019 12:19 PM To: Nick Baker <nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca> Cc: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Nick, also Indigenous education, which is the one area of education funded by the federal government. Sent from my iPhone On Nov 1, 2019, at 12:10 PM, Nick Baker <nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca<mailto:nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca>> wrote: CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the University of Saskatchewan. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe. If in doubt, please forward suspicious emails to phishing(a)usask.ca<mailto:phishing(a)usask.ca> Hi all, I would certainly be on board with this! It would be fantastic to see a national initiative in this area, and I would throw anything at it to make that happen. There is a massive impediment to it though, as with any national level higher ed project, and that is where to pitch it because there is not a natural home for this ask within the federal government. Without a ministry, it is very hard to get government to care about it, especially since it is in an area that is a provincial mandate and with the provinces clearly not happy with the feds right now. I don't want to pour cold water on the idea, but want to be realistic about the uphill battle it would be to even get noticed, let alone a commitment to resources. Having said that, I think there are elements that could possibly fit within these departments: * Innovation, Science, and Economic Development (probably the closest bet) * Employment and Social Development (a long shot, but ESD administers student loans so maybe) * Canadian Heritage and Multiculturalism (another long shot, but could be targeted campaign around the things they care about - have to be creative here) * Treasury Board and Ministry of Digital Government (yes, we have one of those) * Open Government - would need to be creative and it doesn't directly have a ministerial portfolio attached (but falls under the above's purview), so less likely to get funding, but Canada is the OGP chair this year, and has committed to the Open by default approach (which has recently filtered into things like procurement of software as well), so may be able to leverage this, plus the tri-council open requirements. At the provincial level, anywhere we have a conservative government, as in my own province of Ontario, is going to be a blocker to this for a number of reasons. With that in mind though, conservative governments are making higher ed less accessible to their constituents, more expensive if you do manage to get in, and generally disinvesting in this file, so there is an opportunity to hammer the alternative parties to be the opposite. So I think it will be a tough sell, but absolutely worthwhile trying. Cheers Nick We have moved! The Office of Open Learning has moved to the CEI as of Monday, 26 August. We apologise for any delay in getting back to you as we settle in and look forward to welcoming you in our new offices! Prof. Nick Baker Director Office of Open Learning Room CEI-2241 Ed Lumley Centre for Engineering Innovation (entrance at 700 California Ave) University of Windsor 401 Sunset Ave. Windsor, Ontario N9B 3P4 (519) 253-3000 ext. 4925 fax (519) 971-3693 www.uwindsor.ca/openlearning<http://www.uwindsor.ca/openlearning> Twitter: @nbaker The University of Windsor is built on the traditional territory of the Three Fires Confederacy of First Nations, which includes the Ojibwa, the Odawa, and the Potawatomie. As a settler here, I acknowledge and thank the traditional custodians of the land for their wisdom and connection to this place. ________________________________ From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca>> on behalf of Amanda Coolidge <acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca>> Sent: November 1, 2019 2:30 PM To: Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca>>; Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca>> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Yes let’s do it!! How do we proceed? Amanda Coolidge, MEd [she/her] Associate Director of Open Education, BCcampus Cell: 250 818 4592 • Email: acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Twitter: @acoolidge <http://www.twitter.com/acoolidge> • LinkedIn: amandacoolidge<https://www.linkedin.com/in/amandacoolidge/> <image001.png> Learning. Doing. Leading. BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus> • #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash> For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality. From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca>> on behalf of Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca>> Date: Thursday, October 31, 2019 at 5:06 PM To: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca>> Subject: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Dear Canada OER Community, I was reflecting on the fact that we recently went through a federal election campaign where affordability was a central concern for seemingly every party, even to the point of floating vague promises (e.g. wireless mobile cost reductions with little specifics on how this would be practically achieved). Specifically, the NDP noted post-secondary affordability as a key issue, but its focus was more on tuition and grants, and it appeared, to the best of my knowledge, silent on textbook costs. Many parties also seemed relatively unconcerned about making expenditure promises if they figured they would garner votes. Couple these with the fact we are likely looking at a shorter time frame to the next election (most saying 18 to 24 months) and that every party will be looking to improve on their performance from earlier in the month, and I was wondering if there was interest in trying to get OER funding on to any of the federal party's radar (with the hope that given it is a relatively non-partisan issue, that if one party were to propose OER funding others may simply adopt it). I think there might be a variety of approaches/strategies to pursue to get OER funding, but thought I would see if there was some collective interest in pursuing this. Michael -- Michael B. McNally, Associate Professor, Faculty of Education (School of Library and Information Studies) 5-171 Education North, University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta CANADA T6G 2J4 mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Phone: 780-492-3934 Fax: 780-492-2430 _______________________________________________ Canadaoer mailing list Canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:Canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> https://lists.bccampus.ca/mailman/listinfo/canadaoer

Hello everyone, I agree that the time is ripe for this. One important step that would boost any efforts in this direction would be if the UNESCO OER recommendation receives approval later this month at the general conference. If this happens it will create a broader international obligation for our federal government in support of which we can help articulate an effective strategy. If you are unfamiliar with the recommendation see: https://unesco.ijs.si/project/unesco-recommendation-on-open-educational-reso... Cheers, Rajiv [logo gif] Rajiv Jhangiani, Ph.D. (pronouns: he/him) Associate Vice Provost, Open Education Kwantlen Polytechnic University t 604.599.3253 e rajiv.jhangiani(a)kpu.ca<mailto:rajiv.jhangiani(a)kpu.ca> www.kpu.ca/open<http://www.kpu.ca/open> This e-mail and any attachments may be confidential or legally privileged. If you received this message in error or are not the intended recipient, please destroy the e-mail message and any attachments or copies. 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. From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Tannis Morgan <tmorgan(a)bccampus.ca> Date: Friday, November 1, 2019 at 2:58 PM To: Rosario Passos <Rosario_Passos(a)bcit.ca>, "Ross, Heather" <heather.ross(a)usask.ca>, Nick Baker <nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca> Cc: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election CAUTION External Sender: Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe. Hi everyone, observing this conversation with interest. I’m wondering if part of the plan could leverage CICAN, who are already doing advocacy work with the fed gov’t on behalf on colleges and institutes (https://www.collegesinstitutes.ca/policyfocus/) . They are well resourced and well established with v. large membership and it might be worth a phone call with Denise Amyot – a few years ago I was invited to do a talk at their annual conference on open education and innovation…turns out it was sponsored by a publisher - which was awkward - but there was quite a bit of interest by people in the room about the textbook cost problem. Tannis Tannis Morgan, PhD Advisor, Teaching and Learning, BCcampus Cell: 778-991-6246<mailto:778-991-6246> • Email: tmorgan(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:tmorgan(a)bccampus.ca> Twitter: @tanbob<https://twitter.com/tanbob> • Skype: tannismorgan • Pronouns: She/her ________________________________ Learning. Doing. Leading. BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus> • #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash> For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality. -- From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Rosario Passos <Rosario_Passos(a)bcit.ca> Date: Friday, November 1, 2019 at 2:36 PM To: "Ross, Heather" <heather.ross(a)usask.ca>, Nick Baker <nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca> Cc: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Heather, I was thinking of initiatives along the lines you mention. I agree with Nick. With the education portfolio being of provincial jurisdiction, it makes it tricky to target the Federal Government for funding. Having said that, they fund specific projects. Indigenous ed is one, the whole Trades Harmonization project is another. Tim will know all about that ☺ Maybe there is room to work strategically around federally funded projects to generate awareness and even engage in conversations about policy… Just a thought. I would love to see Canada have a national policy / directive on Open Education! A lot of Caribbean Governments do…. The Commonwealth of Learning could provide advise on how to go about it. Cheers, Rosario [cid:image002.jpg(a)01D591FB.3E204A20] Rosario Passos Instructional Development Consultant (IDC) Learning and Teaching Centre British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT) 3700 Willingdon Avenue, Burnaby, BC V5G 3H2 Tel: (604) 456 1266 rosario_passos(a)bcit.ca<mailto:rosario_passos(a)bcit.ca> www.bcit.ca/ltc Education for a Complex World Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> On Behalf Of Ross, Heather Sent: November 1, 2019 12:19 PM To: Nick Baker <nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca> Cc: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Nick, also Indigenous education, which is the one area of education funded by the federal government. Sent from my iPhone On Nov 1, 2019, at 12:10 PM, Nick Baker <nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca<mailto:nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca>> wrote: CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the University of Saskatchewan. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe. If in doubt, please forward suspicious emails to phishing(a)usask.ca<mailto:phishing(a)usask.ca> Hi all, I would certainly be on board with this! It would be fantastic to see a national initiative in this area, and I would throw anything at it to make that happen. There is a massive impediment to it though, as with any national level higher ed project, and that is where to pitch it because there is not a natural home for this ask within the federal government. Without a ministry, it is very hard to get government to care about it, especially since it is in an area that is a provincial mandate and with the provinces clearly not happy with the feds right now. I don't want to pour cold water on the idea, but want to be realistic about the uphill battle it would be to even get noticed, let alone a commitment to resources. Having said that, I think there are elements that could possibly fit within these departments: * Innovation, Science, and Economic Development (probably the closest bet) * Employment and Social Development (a long shot, but ESD administers student loans so maybe) * Canadian Heritage and Multiculturalism (another long shot, but could be targeted campaign around the things they care about - have to be creative here) * Treasury Board and Ministry of Digital Government (yes, we have one of those) * Open Government - would need to be creative and it doesn't directly have a ministerial portfolio attached (but falls under the above's purview), so less likely to get funding, but Canada is the OGP chair this year, and has committed to the Open by default approach (which has recently filtered into things like procurement of software as well), so may be able to leverage this, plus the tri-council open requirements. At the provincial level, anywhere we have a conservative government, as in my own province of Ontario, is going to be a blocker to this for a number of reasons. With that in mind though, conservative governments are making higher ed less accessible to their constituents, more expensive if you do manage to get in, and generally disinvesting in this file, so there is an opportunity to hammer the alternative parties to be the opposite. So I think it will be a tough sell, but absolutely worthwhile trying. Cheers Nick We have moved! The Office of Open Learning has moved to the CEI as of Monday, 26 August. We apologise for any delay in getting back to you as we settle in and look forward to welcoming you in our new offices! Prof. Nick Baker Director Office of Open Learning Room CEI-2241 Ed Lumley Centre for Engineering Innovation (entrance at 700 California Ave) University of Windsor 401 Sunset Ave. Windsor, Ontario N9B 3P4 (519) 253-3000 ext. 4925 fax (519) 971-3693 www.uwindsor.ca/openlearning<http://www.uwindsor.ca/openlearning> Twitter: @nbaker The University of Windsor is built on the traditional territory of the Three Fires Confederacy of First Nations, which includes the Ojibwa, the Odawa, and the Potawatomie. As a settler here, I acknowledge and thank the traditional custodians of the land for their wisdom and connection to this place. ________________________________ From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca>> on behalf of Amanda Coolidge <acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca>> Sent: November 1, 2019 2:30 PM To: Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca>>; Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca>> Subject: Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Yes let’s do it!! How do we proceed? Amanda Coolidge, MEd [she/her] Associate Director of Open Education, BCcampus Cell: 250 818 4592 • Email: acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> Twitter: @acoolidge <http://www.twitter.com/acoolidge> • LinkedIn: amandacoolidge<https://www.linkedin.com/in/amandacoolidge/> <image001.png> Learning. Doing. Leading. BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus> • #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash> For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality. From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca>> on behalf of Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca>> Date: Thursday, October 31, 2019 at 5:06 PM To: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca>> Subject: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election Dear Canada OER Community, I was reflecting on the fact that we recently went through a federal election campaign where affordability was a central concern for seemingly every party, even to the point of floating vague promises (e.g. wireless mobile cost reductions with little specifics on how this would be practically achieved). Specifically, the NDP noted post-secondary affordability as a key issue, but its focus was more on tuition and grants, and it appeared, to the best of my knowledge, silent on textbook costs. Many parties also seemed relatively unconcerned about making expenditure promises if they figured they would garner votes. Couple these with the fact we are likely looking at a shorter time frame to the next election (most saying 18 to 24 months) and that every party will be looking to improve on their performance from earlier in the month, and I was wondering if there was interest in trying to get OER funding on to any of the federal party's radar (with the hope that given it is a relatively non-partisan issue, that if one party were to propose OER funding others may simply adopt it). I think there might be a variety of approaches/strategies to pursue to get OER funding, but thought I would see if there was some collective interest in pursuing this. Michael -- Michael B. McNally, Associate Professor, Faculty of Education (School of Library and Information Studies) 5-171 Education North, University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta CANADA T6G 2J4 mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> Phone: 780-492-3934 Fax: 780-492-2430 _______________________________________________ Canadaoer mailing list Canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca<mailto:Canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> https://lists.bccampus.ca/mailman/listinfo/canadaoer

It certainly appears we have enough interest, and perhaps the right timing to get something going, and I quite appreciate Lena's idea that we don't need to solve this all at once. A few questions to I've been thinking about over the past few days: 1) How do we want to keep this conversation going? Do we continue it as a long email thread discussion; do we want to plan a conference call; is there another approach most well suited? 2) Would the goal be to influence the government, with the goal of policy implementation in the short term, or do we go for the parties so that this would be an issue in the next election (or do we just aim for both objectives)? Relatedly does anyone have any expertise on the limitations under the Lobbying Act/know of a good resource for explaining such rules and limitations? 3) Are we aiming to build a single voice for advocacy bringing together all the interested groups, or do we want to develop key messages and a common set of numbers/stats and let individuals groups pursue their own approach? Michael On Sun, Nov 3, 2019 at 5:00 AM Rajiv Jhangiani <rajiv.jhangiani(a)kpu.ca> wrote:
Hello everyone,
I agree that the time is ripe for this. One important step that would boost any efforts in this direction would be if the UNESCO OER recommendation receives approval later this month at the general conference. If this happens it will create a broader international obligation for our federal government in support of which we can help articulate an effective strategy. If you are unfamiliar with the recommendation see: https://unesco.ijs.si/project/unesco-recommendation-on-open-educational-reso...
Cheers,
Rajiv
[image: logo gif]
*Rajiv Jhangiani, Ph.D. *(pronouns: he/him) Associate Vice Provost, Open Education Kwantlen Polytechnic University *t* 604.599.3253 *e* rajiv.jhangiani(a)kpu.ca www.kpu.ca/open
This e-mail and any attachments may be confidential or legally privileged. If you received this message in error or are not the intended recipient, please destroy the e-mail message and any attachments or copies.
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.
*From: *Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Tannis Morgan <tmorgan(a)bccampus.ca> *Date: *Friday, November 1, 2019 at 2:58 PM *To: *Rosario Passos <Rosario_Passos(a)bcit.ca>, "Ross, Heather" < heather.ross(a)usask.ca>, Nick Baker <nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca> *Cc: *Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> *Subject: *Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election
*CAUTION External Sender:* Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe.
Hi everyone, observing this conversation with interest.
I’m wondering if part of the plan could leverage CICAN, who are already doing advocacy work with the fed gov’t on behalf on colleges and institutes (https://www.collegesinstitutes.ca/policyfocus/) . They are well resourced and well established with v. large membership and it might be worth a phone call with Denise Amyot – a few years ago I was invited to do a talk at their annual conference on open education and innovation…turns out it was sponsored by a publisher - which was awkward - but there was quite a bit of interest by people in the room about the textbook cost problem.
Tannis
*Tannis Morgan, PhD*
Advisor, Teaching and Learning, BCcampus
Cell: 778-991-6246 *•* Email: tmorgan(a)bccampus.ca
Twitter: @tanbob <https://twitter.com/tanbob> *•* Skype: tannismorgan *•* Pronouns: She/her ------------------------------
*Learning. Doing. Leading.*
BCcampus.ca <https://bccampus.ca/> *•* @BCcampus <https://twitter.com/BCcampus> *•* #BCcampus <https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash>
*For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁ**ɬ** təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w (Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and respect, and we thank them for their hospitality.*
--
*From: *Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Rosario Passos <Rosario_Passos(a)bcit.ca> *Date: *Friday, November 1, 2019 at 2:36 PM *To: *"Ross, Heather" <heather.ross(a)usask.ca>, Nick Baker < nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca> *Cc: *Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> *Subject: *Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election
Heather, I was thinking of initiatives along the lines you mention.
I agree with Nick. With the education portfolio being of provincial jurisdiction, it makes it tricky to target the Federal Government for funding. Having said that, they fund specific projects. Indigenous ed is one, the whole Trades Harmonization project is another. Tim will know all about that J
Maybe there is room to work strategically around federally funded projects to generate awareness and even engage in conversations about policy… Just a thought. I would love to see Canada have a national policy / directive on Open Education! A lot of Caribbean Governments do…. The Commonwealth of Learning could provide advise on how to go about it.
Cheers,
Rosario
*Rosario Passos*
Instructional Development Consultant (IDC)
Learning and Teaching Centre
*British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT)*
3700 Willingdon Avenue, Burnaby, BC V5G 3H2
Tel: (604) 456 1266 rosario_passos(a)bcit.ca www.bcit.ca/ltc
*Education for a Complex World*
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*From:* Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> *On Behalf Of *Ross, Heather *Sent:* November 1, 2019 12:19 PM *To:* Nick Baker <nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca> *Cc:* Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> *Subject:* Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election
Nick, also Indigenous education, which is the one area of education funded by the federal government.
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On Nov 1, 2019, at 12:10 PM, Nick Baker <nbaker(a)uwindsor.ca> wrote:
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Hi all,
I would certainly be on board with this! It would be fantastic to see a national initiative in this area, and I would throw anything at it to make that happen.
There is a massive impediment to it though, as with any national level higher ed project, and that is where to pitch it because there is not a natural home for this ask within the federal government. Without a ministry, it is very hard to get government to care about it, especially since it is in an area that is a provincial mandate and with the provinces clearly not happy with the feds right now. I don't want to pour cold water on the idea, but want to be realistic about the uphill battle it would be to even get noticed, let alone a commitment to resources.
Having said that, I think there are elements that could possibly fit within these departments:
- Innovation, Science, and Economic Development (probably the closest bet) - Employment and Social Development (a long shot, but ESD administers student loans so maybe) - Canadian Heritage and Multiculturalism (another long shot, but could be targeted campaign around the things they care about - have to be creative here) - Treasury Board and Ministry of Digital Government (yes, we have one of those)
- Open Government - would need to be creative and it doesn't directly have a ministerial portfolio attached (but falls under the above's purview), so less likely to get funding, but Canada is the OGP chair this year, and has committed to the Open by default approach (which has recently filtered into things like procurement of software as well), so may be able to leverage this, plus the tri-council open requirements.
At the provincial level, anywhere we have a conservative government, as in my own province of Ontario, is going to be a blocker to this for a number of reasons. With that in mind though, conservative governments are making higher ed less accessible to their constituents, more expensive if you do manage to get in, and generally disinvesting in this file, so there is an opportunity to hammer the alternative parties to be the opposite.
So I think it will be a tough sell, but absolutely worthwhile trying.
Cheers
Nick
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*From:* Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Amanda Coolidge <acoolidge(a)bccampus.ca> *Sent:* November 1, 2019 2:30 PM *To:* Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca>; Canada OER < canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> *Subject:* Re: [Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election
Yes let’s do it!! How do we proceed?
*Amanda Coolidge, MEd [she/her]*
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*From: *Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> *Date: *Thursday, October 31, 2019 at 5:06 PM *To: *Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca> *Subject: *[Canadaoer] National OER Advocacy for the Next Federal Election
Dear Canada OER Community,
I was reflecting on the fact that we recently went through a federal election campaign where affordability was a central concern for seemingly every party, even to the point of floating vague promises (e.g. wireless mobile cost reductions with little specifics on how this would be practically achieved). Specifically, the NDP noted post-secondary affordability as a key issue, but its focus was more on tuition and grants, and it appeared, to the best of my knowledge, silent on textbook costs.
Many parties also seemed relatively unconcerned about making expenditure promises if they figured they would garner votes. Couple these with the fact we are likely looking at a shorter time frame to the next election (most saying 18 to 24 months) and that every party will be looking to improve on their performance from earlier in the month, and I was wondering if there was interest in trying to get OER funding on to any of the federal party's radar (with the hope that given it is a relatively non-partisan issue, that if one party were to propose OER funding others may simply adopt it).
I think there might be a variety of approaches/strategies to pursue to get OER funding, but thought I would see if there was some collective interest in pursuing this.
Michael
--
Michael B. McNally, Associate Professor, Faculty of Education (School of Library and Information Studies) 5-171 Education North, University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta CANADA T6G 2J4 mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca Phone: 780-492-3934 Fax: 780-492-2430
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-- Michael B. McNally, Associate Professor, Faculty of Education (School of Library and Information Studies) 5-171 Education North, University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta CANADA T6G 2J4 mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca Phone: 780-492-3934 Fax: 780-492-2430

That's a great idea, Michael. Definitely count me in. I also think the student associations are a key component of this. Having a campaign that gets a statement or perspective from each institution's student association. I know there was a letter-writing campaign by students at one point. Personally, I'd like to see as well coordinated six month to year-long campaign. Perhaps pulling together crafted messages (in short letter or infographic form) from each participating institution, which includes a student association and faculty perspective, and is situated under a common tagline/hashtag (call to action) could be sent to the NDP (or multiple parties) on a staggered basis - via mail, email, and social media. The messages could highlight money saved to students, improved pedagogical approaches, and flexibility that OER affords instructors, etc. I would think any coordinated effort that gets press would put pressure on the parties. Just some Friday thoughts. Cheers, Erik On Thu, Oct 31, 2019 at 6:06 PM Michael McNally <mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca> wrote:
Dear Canada OER Community,
I was reflecting on the fact that we recently went through a federal election campaign where affordability was a central concern for seemingly every party, even to the point of floating vague promises (e.g. wireless mobile cost reductions with little specifics on how this would be practically achieved). Specifically, the NDP noted post-secondary affordability as a key issue, but its focus was more on tuition and grants, and it appeared, to the best of my knowledge, silent on textbook costs.
Many parties also seemed relatively unconcerned about making expenditure promises if they figured they would garner votes. Couple these with the fact we are likely looking at a shorter time frame to the next election (most saying 18 to 24 months) and that every party will be looking to improve on their performance from earlier in the month, and I was wondering if there was interest in trying to get OER funding on to any of the federal party's radar (with the hope that given it is a relatively non-partisan issue, that if one party were to propose OER funding others may simply adopt it).
I think there might be a variety of approaches/strategies to pursue to get OER funding, but thought I would see if there was some collective interest in pursuing this.
Michael
-- Michael B. McNally, Associate Professor, Faculty of Education (School of Library and Information Studies) 5-171 Education North, University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta CANADA T6G 2J4 mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca Phone: 780-492-3934 Fax: 780-492-2430 _______________________________________________ Canadaoer mailing list Canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca https://lists.bccampus.ca/mailman/listinfo/canadaoer
-- Erik Christiansen BA, MLIS Assistant Professor/Librarian, Mount Royal University Subject Areas: Psychology, Student Wellness/Counselling, Health and Physical Education Phone: (403) 440-5168 Twitter: @eriksation <https://twitter.com/eriksation> Website: erikchristiansen.net
participants (11)
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Amanda Coolidge
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Erik Christiansen
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Hendricks, Christina
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Lena Patterson
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Michael McNally
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Nick Baker
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Rajiv Jhangiani
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Rosario Passos
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Ross, Heather
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Tannis Morgan
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Tim Carson