Apply for a Textbook Affordability Small Grant--Deadline October 30, 2020
Program Type
Other
Start Date and Time
20-10-2020 12:00 PM
Location
Apply online anytime
Program Description
The Michael Schwartz Library, in collaboration with the Center for eLearning, Center for Instructional Technology and Distance Learning (CITDL), and the Center for Faculty Excellence, is sponsoring another Textbook Affordability Small Grant to help support faculty who are willing to adopt/adapt an open textbook for a class. Grant applications are due October 30, 2020.
Textbook Affordability Grant Overview
Textbook Affordability Grant Application (log in with your CSU email address)
Open Textbooks which are a type of open educational resource, are full, real textbooks licensed to be freely used, edited, and distributed. Increasingly, faculty members all across the country are adopting open textbooks as one way to address the crisis of textbook affordability. Visit the Open Textbook Library to peruse peer-reviewed textbooks and decide if one of them is right for your course, or send your syllabus to your personal librarian to map your current materials to openly-licensed content for you to consider. Successful applicants will receive support from a team of librarians and instructional designers who will help you adopt or adapt openly-licensed material for your use.
Contact your personal librarian for more information.
Apply for a Textbook Affordability Small Grant--Deadline October 30, 2020
Apply online anytime
The Michael Schwartz Library, in collaboration with the Center for eLearning, Center for Instructional Technology and Distance Learning (CITDL), and the Center for Faculty Excellence, is sponsoring another Textbook Affordability Small Grant to help support faculty who are willing to adopt/adapt an open textbook for a class. Grant applications are due October 30, 2020.
Textbook Affordability Grant Overview
Textbook Affordability Grant Application (log in with your CSU email address)
Open Textbooks which are a type of open educational resource, are full, real textbooks licensed to be freely used, edited, and distributed. Increasingly, faculty members all across the country are adopting open textbooks as one way to address the crisis of textbook affordability. Visit the Open Textbook Library to peruse peer-reviewed textbooks and decide if one of them is right for your course, or send your syllabus to your personal librarian to map your current materials to openly-licensed content for you to consider. Successful applicants will receive support from a team of librarians and instructional designers who will help you adopt or adapt openly-licensed material for your use.
Contact your personal librarian for more information.