Call for Applications: Open Educational Resources (OER) Adoption Cohort

The call for applications is live for UMassD faculty who are considering making the switch from traditional (and often costly teaching materials) to OER. The Office of Faculty Development (OFD), in collaboration with the Office of the Provost and the Claire T. Carney Library, invite participation in an Open Educational Resources (OER) faculty cohort which will meet during Spring 2025,and will provide participants with resources, tools, and guidance for selecting and remixing OER textbooks and ancillary material. Sessions will cover Creative Commons licenses, copyright, OER repositories, and OER best practices. The aim of the initiative is for participants to commit to replacing at least one required core textbook for a single course with an OER option in the Fall 2025 semester.

The price of textbooks has risen significantly over the past few decades, and many students report that they do not purchase textbooks due to cost. Access codes are a newer model from publishers where students pay a fee for access to digital course materials, and sometimes the cost is lower than print textbooks, but students do not have the option of the used textbook market, library materials, or keeping their resources beyond the term of the class. A great alternative to these options is to search for OER in your discipline.Consider applying for the cohort to explore your OER options.

For the full program description or to ask questions, please contact Emma Wood.

Photo by Artem Podrez: https://www.pexels.com/photo/laptop-on-a-table-4884118/

Retraction Watch

by Judy Farrar

One tool in the effort to highlight the fake paper crisis, is the non-profit Retraction Watch blog and database of retracted scientific papers. According to their blog, after they launched the website in 2010, the database listed about 200 papers.  Each year has seen an increase and as of now the database contains over 50,000 entries.  In September 2023 the Retraction Watch dataset was purchased by Crossref, an organization that assigns digital object identifiers, and was made a public resource with secure funding. Search the database at https://retractiondatabase.org/RetractionSearch.aspx

The Retraction Watch blog features topics such as the “The top 10 most highly cited retracted papers,” and “Retracted coronavirus (COVID-19) papers,” which currently lists over 450 retracted publications, and “Papers and peer reviews with evidence of ChatGPT writing.”  A recent feature is the Hijacked Journal tracker, a spreadsheet identifying hijacked journal domains based on an analysis of the archives of clone journals: https://retractionwatch.com/the-retraction-watch-hijacked-journal-checker

Caution sign
Photo by Oliver Hale on Unsplash