OE Week 2022, Douglas College

Thursday, March 10, 2022 10:00 am - 11:00 am PST (GMT -08:00)

The Path to the Future: Open Homework Systems

Please join our virtual Open Education Week 2022 Event to hear from two Douglas College faculty members who use two different open homework systems. This session is open to all.

Getting Started with H5P: Creating Interactive Content for Students

David N. Wright, Chair, English Department

Interactive video, branching scenarios, math quizzes, image sequences, fill-in-the-blank, you name it, H5P is a way to get students working through interactive content to apply learning. Whether instructors want to test baseline skills or help students measure their own understanding of concepts, H5P libraries are open source, community driven, and free to use, exchange, and create. The presentation will focus on how to get started with the H5P libraries (get in the "H5P kitchen," and find, borrow, and create H5P content that students can access. Along the way, we'll talk about integrating H5P content into open textbooks using Pressbooks, how H5P might integrate into Course Management Systems such as Blackboard, and future prospects.

Open and Individualized: Mechanics Homework Problems Project Using WeBWorK

Jennifer Kirkey, Physics, Astronomy and Engineering

Individualized homework problems delivered over the web are an effective way for students to learn first year mechanics.  This is not news, but I learned how effective it was and that it is worth spending the time developing more problems as part of an open community. WeBWorK is an open-source on-line homework system that gives students instant feedback. It has better quiz options than most Learning Management Systems.  WeBWorK has been used by the mathematics community for decades, but there are not many physics problems in the Open Problem Library (OPL) and less than 100 of the type needed for first and second-year physics and engineering students.  I am a physics instructor at a two-year teaching college, but I ended up working with an engineering professor and coop students at UBC, a large research university We hope to have more people join us in this worthwhile project.