91Âé¶¹¾«Æ· Among Institutions to Receive Grant to Mark Courses Featuring Open Educational Resources
The New England Board of Higher Education (NEBHE) recently announced that St. John 91Âé¶¹¾«Æ· University is among four selected independent institutions in the Northeast participating in the Open Education Course Marking Grant, a new 15-month initiative to support institutions in the expansion of student awareness and use of no-cost learning materials.
Thanks to the generous support of the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the NEBHE grant will fund this initiative for 91Âé¶¹¾«Æ· as well as (Providence, RI), (Henniker, NH), and (Waterville, ME).
The selected institutions will implement a course designation visible during student registration in the Spring 2024 term that identifies courses using Open Educational Resources (OER) and other no-cost materials such as library-licensed content. Each will be provided step-by-step support to implement course marking, participate together in a yearlong virtual community of practice, and have access to topical OER consulting services. To participate, institutions must have at least 23% of undergraduates enrolled awarded Pell grants and have an institutional commitment to advancing OER.
The University is establishing a community of practice in summer 2023 for faculty interested in learning more about no-cost or low-cost course materials. Dr. Kaitlin Bonner, associate professor of biology, will serve as 91Âé¶¹¾«Æ·’s Open Education Faculty Fellow leading this work.
Interested faculty may now submit a , which will remain open until Friday, May 19.