The OER Knowledge Cloud makes use of cookies. By continuing, you consent to this use. More information.
Faculty Perceptions and Use of Open Educational Resources in Postsecondary STEM Classrooms
Posadas, Gabriel

Published16 May 2025
InstitutionMississippi State University
CountryUnited States, North America

ABSTRACT
This study examined how faculty in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) or STEM-related fields perceive and utilize open educational resources (OER) in their classrooms and how faculty characteristics (e.g., age, teaching experience, OER experience) influence their adoption. A quantitative survey was administered to 48 STEM faculty across 8 colleges at a large, southeastern university. Findings revealed that faculty generally acknowledged OER’s benefits, particularly its cost-saving potential, and all faculty without prior OER experience and 86.5% of faculty with OER experience expressed neutral to positive perceptions regarding OER’s ability to reduce financial burdens. Faculty with OER experience also recognized its potential to enhance teaching, responding positively to using OER to improve their skills (70.3%), foster student learning environments (79.4%), and align with learning objectives (86.5%). However, faculty without prior OER experience expressed their reservations about OER’s ability to promote student independence (45.5% negative responses) and replace traditional textbooks (45.4% negative responses). When examining how faculty characteristics influenced its utilization, older faculty (above 48 years old) and those with more teaching experience (above 7 years) were less likely to incorporate OER into their curricula (p<0.05) but more likely to use OER for professional development (p<0.05). For younger and less experienced faculty, they were more likely to incorporate OER into their curricula (p<0.05) but less likely to use OER to improve their pedagogy (p<0.01). These findings suggested that while all faculty acknowledged the value of OER as an educational tool, some faculty still withhold hesitancy toward its adoption.

This study emphasized OER’s potential to address both financial and pedagogical challenges present in higher education through the enhancement of STEM faculty teaching practices and creation of engaging learning environments, particularly in a field that experiences frequent advancements that require rapid updates to course materials to maintain relevancy. Future studies should continue to explore relationships between characteristics of the faculty and how they utilize OER as well as investigate strategies to improve OER adoption within higher education.

Keywords OER · faculty adoption · STEM · post-secondary

LanguageEnglish
RefereedYes
URLhttps://www.proquest.com/openview/1d77f9d866e4ba54b5913f47fc96f7c7/1
Export optionsBibTex · EndNote · Tagged XML · Google Scholar


Viewed by 79 distinct readers




CLOUD COMMUNITY REVIEWS

The evaluations below represent the judgements of our readers and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Cloud editors.

Click a star to be the first to rate this document


POST A COMMENT
SIMILAR RECORDS

College students in Rhode Island have saved nearly $900K on textbooks in a year
Roddy, Kate
Through the same initiative, over 40 professors in the state have adopted openly licensed textbooks.
Match: oer; united states; north america

Re-purposing an OER for the online language course: a case study of Deutsch Interaktiv by the Deutsche Welle
Dixon, Edward M.; Hondo, Junko
This paper will describe pedagogical approaches for re-purposing an open educational resource (OER) designed and produced by the Deutsche Welle. This free online program, Deutsch Interaktiv, consists of authentic ...
Match: oer; united states; north america

A big publisher embraces OER
McKenzie, Lindsay
Match: oer; united states; north america

STEM@1000mph: Developing Open Educational Resources in a live engineering project
Lanham, John; Howard, Yvonne; Drew, Ben; Johns, Dan
Higher education institutions are recognising the clear benefits of open educational resources, and academics are engaging with the development of these resources. This paper presents a case study of OERs being ...
Match: oer; stem

OER impact study: Research report
Masterman, Liz; Wild, Joanna
Executive Summary (partial) Aims The OER Impact Study was conducted between November 2010 and June 2011 by a team from the University of Oxford. Its remit was to investigate university lecturers’ and students’ use ...
Match: oer; united states; north america

OER state legislative guide
Creative Commons USA
This week, Creative Commons USA released a new resource for state policymakers interested in tackling the high cost of college textbooks and improving student outcomes in the process. The resource, an “OER State ...
Match: oer; united states; north america

Open educational resources and institutional repositories
Ferguson, Christine L.
This installment of The Balance Point column delves into the ways in which libraries create and store open educational resources (OER) in institutional repositories (IR), addressing issues such as preservation and ...
Match: oer; united states; north america

Marking Open and Affordable Courses: Best Practices and Case Studies
Ainsworth, Breeman; Allen, Nicole; Dai, Jessica; Elder, Abbey; et al.
This collaboratively authored guide helps institutions navigate the uncharted waters of tagging course material as open educational resources (OER) or under a low-cost threshold by summarizing relevant state ...
Match: oer; united states; north america

Teaching with OER during pandemics and beyond
Van Allen, Jennifer; Katz, Stacy
Purpose Open Educational Resources (OER) are learning materials openly licensed so that others may retain, reuse, revise, remix or redistribute (the 5Rs) these materials. This paper aims to raise awareness of OER by ...
Match: oer; united states; north america

Open educational resources in the United States: Insights from university foreign language directors
Thoms, Joshua J.; Thoms, Becky L.
This study reports the results of a survey completed by 155 university foreign language (FL) directors in the United States (US) during Fall 2012. Survey respondents come from a variety of institutions and direct a ...
Match: oer; united states; north america