Open Educational Practices Project Results in Student-Authored Mathematics Dictionary for Teachers and Parents
Dr. Carrie S. Cutler, clinical associate professor of mathematics education in the University of Houston College of Education, collaborated with UH Libraries Open Education Services to create a student-authored open educational resource (OER), The InterACTIVE Kids’ Math Dictionary.
Students in the summer 2024 Mathematics for Teachers I course each defined five mathematics concepts, developing both formal and “kids-speak” definitions for their assigned concepts. They incorporated various resources and interactive elements such as videos, games, and activities into their chapters. The course employed an open pedagogy approach by inviting students to contribute the work they developed for the course into the dictionary, making their work available with an open license of their choosing for others to reuse and adapt to their needs.
This course was the first successful implementation of the new Open Educational Practices award category in the UH Libraries Alternative Textbook Incentive Program (ATIP). For her Open Educational Practices proposal, Cutler replaced her traditional assignment with a renewable assignment. Renewable assignments allow students to engage in meaningful work that can be shared, reused, and repurposed, providing a foundation for other students to learn from and build upon.
“Renewable assignments are often contrasted with disposable assignments, which are assignments where students turn in work that is only seen by the instructor, graded, and then returned to the student,” said Ariana Santiago, head of Open Education Services. “These assignments are ultimately thrown away, which is unfortunate because the time and effort students put into their coursework can seem like it’s being wasted. Renewable assignments give student work an opportunity to live beyond the classroom, giving it a broader audience and purpose.”
Santiago and OER librarian Kate McNally Carter collaborated with Dr. Cutler to provide customized instruction during the course, focusing on the unique considerations of open publishing, open licensing, and how to cite and attribute different types of sources. They also provided technical support for the publishing platform students used to create and share their work, Pressbooks.
“This was a really enjoyable class for us to work with,” Carter noted. “The students were deeply engaged in the assignment and asked really great questions that allowed us to explore in-depth topics related to open publishing and intellectual property. We’re very proud of the work they put into their chapters to make this a great resource.”
The InterACTIVE Kids’ Math Dictionary can be used by teachers and parents to broaden their own conceptual understanding of mathematics and help teach math to children. It can also be used by young learners who can explore interactive elements that can help make connections between math and the real world.
Cutler intends to have future students add to the dictionary and improve upon it in subsequent semesters.
“We hope parents, teachers, and students will find the resource helpful in making sense of mathematics,” she said.
To learn more about open publishing, open pedagogy, and the Alternative Textbook Incentive Program, contact Open Education Services by emailing oer@uh.edu.