OER at City Tech

Tag: Electrical & Telecommunications Engineering Technology (Page 4 of 4)

New and Noteworthy OER 10/23

New and Noteworthy is the City Tech Library OER Team’s weekly roundup of new and noteworthy OER. We try to include at least one OER relevant to each school at City Tech in every post. At the end of the month, these resources will be compiled and distributed by the library liaison for your department. Please contact us if you know of new or particularly interesting OER to share with our colleagues or would like more information about OER initiatives at City Tech. 

Arts & Sciences

  1. The American LGBTQ Rights Movement: An Introduction, by Kyle Morgan and Meg Rodriguez, Humboldt State University (2020). License: CC BY-SA
    “The American LGBTQ Rights Movement: An Introduction is a peer-reviewed chronological survey of the LGBTQ fight for equal rights from the turn of the 20th century to the early 21st century. Illustrated with historical photographs, the book beautifully reveals the heroic people and key events that shaped the American LGBTQ rights movement. The book includes personal narratives to capture the lived experience from each era, as well as details of essential organizations, texts, and court cases that defined LGBTQ activism and advocacy.”

  2. Spanish I: Beginning Spanish Language and Culture, by Matthew Dean, Humboldt State University (2020). License: CC BY-NC-SA
    “This peer-reviewed textbook is designed for the true beginner with U.S. college students in mind. It contains themed chapters, which are divided into 8 sections. Each section has its own set of learning objectives, and is further separated into three types of assignments, Para estudiar en casa (with detailed explanations), Para practicar en casa (homework exercises), and Para practicar en clase (paired and group classwork activities). The explanations and primary input are written to be easily comprehensible. The individual exercises are geared towards acquisition of form and function, and the communicative classwork exercises promote interpersonal exchanges between students. The digital copy includes some embedded audio files, and we are developing a website to house many more resources.”

Professional Studies

  1. Clinical Procedures for Safer Patient Care, by Glynda Rees Doyle and Jodie Anita McCutcheon, British Columbia Institute of Technology (2020). License: CC BY
    “This open educational resource (OER) was developed to ensure best practice and quality care based on the latest evidence, and to address inconsistencies in how clinical health care skills are taught and practised in the clinical setting. The checklist approach, used in this textbook, aims to provide standardized processes for clinical skills and to help nursing schools and clinical practice partners keep procedural practice current.”

  2. Criminal Law, by University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing (2015). License: CC BY-NC-SA
    “Criminal Law uses a two-step process to augment learning, called the applied approach. First, after building a strong foundation from scratch, Criminal Law introduces you to crimes and defenses that have been broken down into separate components. It is so much easier to memorize and comprehend the subject matter when it is simplified this way…the second step of the applied approach is reviewing examples of the application of law to facts after dissecting and analyzing each legal concept.”

 

Technology and Design

  1. Semiconductor Devices: Theory & Application + Lab manual, by James Fiore, dissidents (2020). License: CC BY-NC-SA
    “This text covers the theory and application of discrete semiconductor devices including various types of diodes, bipolar junction transistors, JFETs, MOSFETs and IGBTs. It is appropriate for Associate and Bachelors degree programs in Electrical and Electronic Engineering Technology, Electrical Engineering and similar areas of study. Applications include rectifying, clipping, clamping, switching, small signal amplifiers and followers, and class A, B and D power amplifiers. A companion laboratory manual is available.”

  2. Writing for Strategic Communication Industries, by Jasmine Roberts, The Ohio State University (2019).
    “Good writing skills are important in today’s competitive work environment. This is especially the case for communication-related professions such as public relations, brand communication, journalism, and marketing. Writing for Strategic Communication Industries emphasizes practical application of academic inquiry to help readers improve their writing skills.”

 

Cailean Cooney, Assistant Professor, OER Librarian: ccooney@citytech.cuny.edu
Joshua Peach, Adjunct Reference & OER Librarian: jpeach@citytech.cuny.edu
Joanna Thompson, Adjunct OER Librarian: jthompson@citytech.cuny.edu

New and Noteworthy OER 9/11

Welcome to the new weekly blog series from the OER Team at the City Tech Library! Each week we will feature a few new or noteworthy open educational resources (OER). We will try to include at least one OER relevant to each school at City Tech in every post. At the end of the month, these resources will be compiled and distributed by the library liaison for your department. Please contact us if you know of new or particularly interesting OER to share with our colleagues or would like more information about OER initiatives at City Tech. 

Arts & Sciences 

  1. Teaching with Digital Tools and Apps, UMass Amherst Libraries (2020). License: CC BY-NC-SA
    “With the abundance in education technology (edtech) tools and apps currently available, and new ones popping up in app stores daily, how do you find the right ones for your practice? How do you ensure the digital tools and apps that you select for use in your classroom will enrich and extend your teaching, provide an accessible learning experience, and protect students’ privacy? What should you look for when evaluating the user experience of apps and tools?” Very timely!

  2. Climate Toolkit: A Resource Manual for Science and Action, by Frank D. Granshaw, Portland State University (2020). License: CC BY-NC
    “The Climate Toolkit is a resource manual designed to help the reader navigate the complex and perplexing issue of climate change by providing tools and strategies to explore the underlying science…. Unlike a standard textbook, it is designed to help readers do their own climate research and devise their own perspective rather than providing them with a script to assimilate and repeat.”

Professional Studies

  1. Open Health Collections (Open Michigan)
    “These Open Health Collections are representative samples of available open health educational resources. It includes many collections of openly licensed resources and tools for health sciences. Resources such as textbooks, courses, audio-videos, journals, images, datasets, software, and other mixed content. All of these resources are free for anyone to access worldwide. Many of them are also shared under open licenses that allow copies and modifications.”

  2. W.E. Upjohn Institute Open Access Books, W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research. License: CC BY-NC-SA
    “The W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, a private, not-for-profit, nonpartisan, independent research organization, has studied policy-related issues of employment and unemployment since its founding in 1945. The Upjohn Institute’s digital repository, Upjohn Research, serves as the product showcase for the work of our staff and external research partners, archived all the way back to the 1980s. In addition to working papers, books (most of which are open-access) and other items from the Upjohn Press, it also captures our Early Career Research Award projects and summaries of the Institute’s Dissertation Award winners.”

Technology and Design

  1. Be Credible: Information Literacy for Journalism, Public Relations, Advertising and Marketing Students, by Peter S. Bobkowski and Karna Younger, eCampus Ontario (2018). License: CC BY-NC
    “This free and open textbook teaches college-level journalism students, as well as students across other disciplines, to become information experts. Using the themes of credibility and information literacy, the book helps today’s students, who start out all their research with Google and Wikipedia, to specialize in accessing, evaluating, and managing information that often is not accessible through Google searches. The book includes chapters on public records, freedom of information requests, nonprofit organizations, for-profit companies, scholarly research, public data, interviews and more. Through current examples, instructional videos, suggested classroom activities, and practitioner insights, the authors challenge students to examine the credibility of the sources they use as current and future professional communicators.”

  2. Fundamentals of Electrical Engineering I, by Don Johnson, OpenStax CNX (2014). License: CC BY
    “The open course focuses on the creation, manipulation, transmission, and reception of information by electronic means. Elementary signal theory; time- and frequency-domain analysis; Sampling Theorem. Digital information theory; digital transmission of analog signals; error-correcting codes.”

 

Cailean Cooney, Assistant Professor, OER Librarian: ccooney@citytech.cuny.edu
Joshua Peach, Adjunct Reference & OER Librarian: jpeach@citytech.cuny.edu
Joanna Thompson, Adjunct OER Librarian: jthompson@citytech.cuny.edu 

 

 

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