Acknowledgements |
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Introduction |
Maha Bali, Catherine Cronin, Laura Czerniewicz, Robin DeRosa, and Rajiv Jhangiani |
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1. Inequitable Power Dynamics of Global Knowledge Production and Exchange Must be Confronted |
Laura Czerniewicz |
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2. From “Open” to Justice |
Audrey Watters |
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3. The Fallacy of “Open” |
sava saheli singh |
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4. A Critical Take on OER Practices: Interrogating Commercialization, Colonialism, and Content |
Sarah Hare |
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5. Decolonising the Collection, Analyses and Use of Student Data: A Tentative Exploration/Proposal |
Paul Prinsloo |
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6. Reflections on Generosity of Spirit: Barriers to Working in the Open |
Samantha Streamer Veneruso |
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7. Open Pedagogy: A Response to David Wiley |
Suzan Koseoglu |
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8. Open Education in Palestine: A Tool for Liberation |
Javiera Atenas |
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9. Open Hearts, Open Minds, Crossed Purposes |
Simon Ensor |
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10. Antigonish 2.0: A Way for Higher Ed to Help Save the Web |
Bonnie Stewart |
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11. What is DigCiz and Why I am Not Marina Abramovic: Thoughts on Theory and Practice |
Autumm Caines |
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12. Locks on our Bridges: Critical and Generative Lenses on Open Education |
Amy Collier |
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13. Reclaiming Disruption |
Karen Cangialosi |
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14. Pedagogy and the Logic of Platforms |
Chris Gilliard |
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15. Queering Open Pedagogy |
Jesse Stommel |
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16. Student Spotlight: Matthew Moore, The Open Anthology of Earlier American Literature, 2nd edition |
Matthew Moore |
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17. Open Education, Open Questions |
Catherine Cronin |
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18. Diversity, Equity and Inclusion in Open Research and Education |
Tara Robertson |
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19. OER and the Language Problem (Part 2): The Status and Function Rationale |
Tannis Morgan |
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20. Towards Openness Provocation for #oeb17: How to Create a Non-inclusive Learning Environment |
Sherri Spelic |
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21. Queer Histories, Videotape, and the Ethics of Reuse |
Rachel Jurinich Mattson |
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22. Breaking Open: Ethics, Epistemology, Equity, and Power |
Maha Bali, Taskeen Adam, Catherine Cronin, Christian Friedrich, Sukaina Walji, and Christina Hendricks |
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23. OER, CARE, Stewardship, and the Commons |
Jim Luke |
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24. OER, Equity, and Implicit Creative Redlining |
Rajiv Jhangiani |
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25. Open as in Dangerous |
Chris Bourg |
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26. When Social Inclusion Doesn’t Go Far Enough: Concerns for the Future of the OER Movement in the Global South |
Cheryl Hodgkinson-Williams |
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27. What Open Education Taught Me |
Jaime Marsh |
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28. The Soul of Liberty: Openness, Equality and Co-creation |
Lorna M. Campbell |
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29. Open as a Set of Values, Not a Destination |
Billy Meinke-Lau |
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30. The Future of the Public Mission of Universities |
Robin DeRosa |
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31. The Tyranny of “Clear” Thinking |
Jess Mitchell |
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32. Open Praxis: Three Perspectives, One Vision |
Caroline Kuhn H., Taskeen Adam, and Judith Pete |
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33. Holding the Line on Open in an Evolving Courseware Landscape |
Nicole Allen |
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34. Exploring Origins as a Decolonizing Practice |
Adele Vrana and Siko Bouterse |
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35. Openness in Whose Interest? |
Maha Bali |
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36. Logic and Rhetoric: The Problem with Digital Literacy |
Naomi Barnes |
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37. Educational Content, Openness and Surveillance in the Digital Ecology |
Tel Amiel |
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38. A Reflection on Open: An Open Reflection |
Tutaleni Asino |
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Accessibility Assessment |