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A Guide to Making Open Textbooks with Students - EPUB: Privacy & Anonymity

A Guide to Making Open Textbooks with Students - EPUB
Privacy & Anonymity
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Table Of Contents
  5. Introduction
  6. Contributors
  7. Open Pedagogy
    1. Open Pedagogy
  8. Project Ideas & Case Studies
    1. Creating an Open Textbook
    2. Case Study: Frank Lloyd Wright and His Madison Buildings
    3. Case study: Antología Abierta de Literatura Hispánica
    4. Interview with David Squires: Social Media Texts
    5. Student Spotlight: Samara Burns, Open Logic Project
    6. Interview with Gabriel Higginbotham, Open Oregon State
    7. Adapting an Open Textbook
    8. Case Study: Principles of Microeconomics
    9. Case Study: Expanding the Open Anthology of Earlier American Literature
    10. Student Spotlight: Matthew Moore, The Open Anthology of Earlier American Literature, 2nd Edition
  9. Student Rights & Faculty Responsibilities
    1. Licensing
    2. Privacy & Anonymity
    3. Digital Literacy
  10. Sample Assignments
    1. Teaching Guide: Expand an Open Textbook
    2. Assignment: Create an Open Textbook
  11. Resources
    1. CC Licensing Guide
    2. MOU for Students and Faculty
    3. Course: Becoming an Open Educator
  12. About the Publisher
  13. Licensing Information
  14. Other Open Textbooks Produced With Rebus Community Support
  15. As Seen In

13

Privacy & Anonymity

Privacy is also a concern, both ethically and legally, when embarking on Open Pedagogy projects.

Robin says she handles this by offering her students the option to use a pseudonym.

“You might have people who want to be in the open but they don’t want to develop their own digital identity attached to their real identity,” Robin said. “But if you’re going to allow that as an option you just have to understand enough about how privacy works on the web and data so that you’re not offering them some false sense of privacy that isn’t actually authentic.”

Steel said he is conscious of the students’ right to privacy under FERPA when building materials in the course of their education. He suggested several options to protect this federally mandated right of students.

  1. Get FERPA waivers from the students.
  2. Make the open resource and credit the students who contributed, but without identifying that they were part of a specific course.
  3. Allow students to use pseudonyms when building the open resource.
  4. All of the above.

He noted that not all students will feel personally passionate or attached to the things they build under their name in a course, and especially when projects are public, digital and archived in perpetuity on the web, they should not be forced to be affiliated with something they’ve done as classwork indefinitely.

David Squires, a visiting assistant professor teaching in Washington State University, who worked with his students to develop an OER textbook on social media, solved this attribution dilemma by crediting the students who built the open resource at the front of the book, rather than attaching individual students’ names to the chapters they specifically worked on.

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Copyright © 2017 by Rebus Community. A Guide to Making Open Textbooks with Students by Rebus Community is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.
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