INNOVATIVE IDEAS ABOUND
The grants will be needs-based, disbursed in amounts ranging from $500–$2,000: $500 to pay a graduate student for research, or $2,000 for a more technologically advanced project, and, Cross says, “wiggle room if we get one amazing project.” He spoke with more than 60 faculty members about their potential proposals at a recent information session offered by the NCSU Office of Faculty Development, and was impressed by the projects discussed. Several ideas involved social media platforms that students are already excited about or using. One education professor proposed licensing simulations online, using the Creativity Studio in the James B. Hunt Jr. Library, a “white-box” space with high-definition projectors and movable, writable walls. Associate Professor Michael Evans had been approached by a publisher asking for a mid-length text on digitally mediated learning, and hoped to make it open access after an initial year’s embargo. Evans, who is interested in ways that K-12 educational techniques can be adapted for higher education, finds it hard to find traditional textbooks that fit his subject. Professor Andrew Cooper feels that “we shouldn’t be making students choose between rent and books.” He has proposed an alt-textbook that serves both mathematics and mathematics education majors, which would include material serving both populations and an automatic grading feedback system.GROWING USE OF MICRO-FUNDING FOR ALT-TEXTBOOKS
The initiative owes much of its popularity to NCSU’s 2010 adoption of a free physics e-textbook, Physics Fundamentals by Dr. Vincent Coletta, Professor of Physics at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, which some 1,300 NCSU students use every year. While the print book sold for $150 to $190, the open access version is available free of charge to all students, faculty, and staff through the libraries’ website, with hard copies available for a small additional fee. Still, Cross explains, Physics Fundamentals was a more traditional project, taking an existing print text and making it free; “I hope that this will be the tip of the iceberg that will lead to more innovative stuff.” Similar mini-grant initiatives have proven popular in recent years. Temple University Libraries' Alternate Textbook Project was created in 2011 by Associate University Librarian (and LJ contributor) Steven Bell. Temple’s alt-textbook project completed its fourth round of submissions this past spring. The University of Massachusetts (UMass) Amherst launched its Open Education Initiative in March 2011, awarding 10 faculty members $1,000 each; the initial funding was provided by the UMass Amherst director of libraries and the provost, who each personally contributed $5,000. Both Temple and Amherst have been very generous in sharing their experiences, says Cross. “Micro-funding is one of the ways that NC State fosters innovation,” explained Laurie Reinhardt-Plotnik, Associate Vice Chancellor for University Development and Vice President for Development of the NC State University Foundation. “This grant program is one of several micro-funding opportunities on campus that foster the entrepreneurial thinking and activity that characterize our university.… This type of seed funding enables ideas like the alt-textbook project, a creative solution to a real world problem, to take flight.” Judging by attendance at the two information sessions, the number of proposals will no doubt exceed the available grant money. Cross hopes to be able to encourage even the faculty members who don’t get grants, pointing them toward the resources for their projects. “My hope is that even if we have to say no, we can still go forward and do some great things.”We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing
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