OPEN EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES 
 

Mokhamad Syaifudin 
Email: msyaifudin@gmail.com 

Universitas Islam Negeri Sunan Ampel Surabaya 
 

Abstract In this article a brief exposition of what open education resources 
is presented. The article begins by presenting the general idea of what OER 
is then move to the possible benefits and challenges to the OER for teaching 
and learning. Efforts to address the possible challenges in OER are also 
presented as well as the places where OER can be sought. In the end of the 
article samples of possible scenario of how to use the OER for teaching 
learning process are also detailed.  
 
Keywords: open educational resources, benefits and challenges, teaching 
and learning   

 
WHAT IS IT? 

Open Educational Resources (OER) are documents and media 
which are freely accessible for use in teaching, learning and even 
research. They are usually given open licences meaning that users of 
the resources are free to obtain, read, modify, and distribute them for 
lawful purposes(Atkins, Brown, & Hammond, 2007; Friesen, 2013; 
OECD, 2007).OER which are normally created by various people 
from around the world, can be found in various forms such as full 
courses, course modules, syllabi, lectures, assignments, course 
materials, videos, games and simulations (Atkins et al., 2007; McGill, 
2013; White et al., 2011). 

The advance of information technology such as today’s Internet 
services has made the OER are ubiquitous. More people are willing to 
create, share, obtain, or even just use or modify the easily accessible 
digital materials (White, Manton, & Warren, 2011). 

The term OER was firstly introduced in the UNESCO forum 
in 2002 (OECD, 2007) and has been attracted educators around the 
world since then. Nowadays, the OER concept has been bringing 
about some major revolution in how people can obtain their 
knowledge. If they want free course from top education providers, for 



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42 IJET | Volume 5, Issue 1. July 2016 

 

example, they can just easily go to some free open course work 
(OCW) providers on the Internet such as http://www.coursera.org, 
http://www.edX.org, https://www. futurelearn.com/, 
http://online.stanford.edu/courses and still many more that can be 
easily found online. In addition to OCW, people nowadays can easily 
search knowledge through using search engines that are also another 
breakthrough in the OER concepts. Teachers, students, researchers 
can easily research on certain topics by using search engines such as 
http://www.google.com, http://www.bing.com or http://www. 
yahoo.com. If they want more visual explanation the availability of 
video sharing websites such as http://www.youtube.com, 
http://www.vidio. com, http://www.vimeo.com are few 
alternatives to obtain knowledge through audiovisual presentation. 

 
IN WHAT WAY OER CAN BENEFIT PEOPLE TODAY 

The availability of today’s OER can benefit many parties such 
as teachers, students, researchers, material developers, parents and 
probably still many more. Unlike it used to be, when teachers were 
still the main information provider in the classroom, and the only 
information available in the classroom can be obtained mainly from 
them or from the available textbooks. Today, any information can be 
accessed by students from anyone, anywhere and from any sources 
from around the world. Interestingly, they can do it only by the touch 
of their fingers on their internet-connected mobile devices. The 
Information are no longer presented before them in static, black and 
white text or images but they are in more colorful, animated, or even 
in the form of audio and video. 

Teachers are no longer limited by the availability of blackboard 
and the dusty chalks to present their materials and to invite students to 
collaboratively work in front of the classroom, they can nowadays 
motivate them by presenting materials in a more engaging, and 
colorful audio visual materials that can either be self-created by them 
or obtained or shared from the Internet. World class and up-to-date 
materials are at their fingertips to discus or share with their students. 
Teachers’ time to prepare materials are nowadays tend to be 
substituted by selecting materials from the available OER as well as 



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Volume 5, Issue 1. July 2016 | IJET 43 

 

modifying it to suit their set educational goal. In short, today with the 
availability of OER, teachers can dedicate more time to selecting good 
and appropriate OER and finding ways of how to enable them to be 
used in their instruction.  

However, it is suggested that for teachers to make use of OER, 
they should not merely assume that they can easily and rapidly develop 
courses or prepare materials. On the contrary, they should consider 
spending more time on assessing how the OER can be used to enhance 
their teaching and learning practice (White et al., 2011). They should 
be very keen in selecting which OER that can help enriching and 
varying their students learning experiences. Also, they should then 
consider how they would OER into their teaching practice? 

White et al. (2011) identify various ways that teachers make 
use of OER in their instruction. They found that thirty nine percent of 
the teacher respondents use OER as is without any modification, 28 % 
use OER but with modification and adaptation here and there to suit 
their teaching/students’ needs, 22%use the OER without modification 
but provide the introduction or guidance for use with the OER 
materials, and 11% use OER only as source of ideas that they can later 
use to develop their own content for their own teaching purposes. 
Deciding on how to use the OER actually depends on many factors 
such as technical knowledge and skills, technology compatibility, 
learning needs, curriculum goals etc. Another factor that determines 
the use of OER is whether or not the OER wanted is easily 
discoverable. This discoverability aspect is actually on one of the 
challenges that OER creators or users have to address when working 
with OER (Thakrar et al., 2009; White et al., 2011). So far, OER 
users usually find OER through search engines, trusted sites, and OER 
or institutional repositories (White et al., 2011). More challenges will 
be presented in the OER challenges section below. 

Possible Benefits of OER for teachers and learners 
Using OER offers both teachers and learners benefits and 

challenges. Some benefits of using OER for teachers are that they are 
ready and freely available for use. It means that teachers can instantly 
use them without any cost. Many of the OER are often regularly 



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updated which means users can always have up-to-date learning 
materials. However updating can sometimes cause problems of 
dysfunctional links. Therefore, authors and users should be very 
careful. Since the OER are in the form of digital materials and available 
mostly online, they can be easily translated from one language to 
others by using web-based translators, or other translating tools which 
are nowadays easily accessible (“Benefits of open educational practices 
and resources,” 2014). Other benefits of OER as mentioned by the 
OECD (2007) and Hodgkinson-Williams (2010) are related to 
economic reasons, publicity reasons, personal satisfaction, as well as 
for increasing teachers’ personal reputations 

Some other benefits of OER are mentioned by Wheeler (2010) 
he said that OER today promote digital competencies because many 
OER in the form of web-based authoring tools such as comic maker 
(e.g. http://www.toondoo.com, http://www.pixton.com), info 
graphic maker (e.g. http://www.piktochart.com, http://vizualize. 
me/, http://www.easel.ly/), online presentation tools (e.g. 
http://www.movenote.com, http://videoscribe.co, https://www. 
powtoon.com/), educational games (e.g. http://www. 
learninggamesforkids.com/, http://www.thinkfun.com/play-
online/) available today facilitate learners to develop creativity and 
critical thinking.  Further, He mentions that OER also support lifelong 
learning because people can always access OER materials anytime and 
anywhere as long as they are connected to the Internet. Let’s take an 
example of video sharing websites that are free to access. People can 
always share knowledge and learn new knowledge through this site. 
Moreover, the OER potentially offer wider range of subjects and 
topics to learn to wider groups of audiences because they are placed on 
the Internet. 

More benefits of the OER suggested by few authors are 
summarized in the following Table 1. Learning from such suggested 
benefits would certainly help teachers to understand what is actually 
offered by OER and how it will possibly be beneficial for assisting in 
teaching and learning process. 

 
 

http://www.easel.ly/
http://www.movenote.com/
http://videoscribe.co/
https://www.powtoon.com/
https://www.powtoon.com/
http://www.thinkfun.com/play-online/
http://www.thinkfun.com/play-online/


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Volume 5, Issue 1. July 2016 | IJET 45 

 

Table 1 Possible benefits of OER for teaching and learning 
process 

 

Possible Challenges when using the OER 

In addition to the benefits, there must be challenges to the 
OER adaptation in teaching learning process. Few authors, as 
summarized in Table 2 below, suggest possible challenges that needs 
be addressed to work on possible solutions so that OER can still be 
useful for the purpose of teaching and learning despite the challenges. 

Authors Benefits 

Caswell, Henson, 
Jensen, and Wiley 
(2008) 

 Accessible by wider audiences at no cost or 
just a little 

 Enablers to universal rights to education 

 Making distance education a tool for social 
transformation 

 Faculty members can easily shares their 
work with others 

Hodgkinson-
Williams (2010) 

 Learners can easily access materials from 
around the world 

 Promoting informal learning 

 Teachers can preserve the records of their 
teaching and others can build upon them 

 Teachers can gain reputation by being 
online and share their work 
 

 Education institutions may improve their 
recruitment because students can easily 
find them 

 Promoting lifelong learning 
Thakrar, Wolfenden, 
and Zinn (2009) 

 Possible exposure to authentic samples (e.g. 
vocabularies by native speakers) 

 Representing multinational ideas 

 Democratizing access to knowledge 

 Promoting communities of practice 



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Table 2 Possible challenges to the use of OER 

 
Those challenges are nowadays seems to have been gradually 

addressed. Technology related issues for example, has been well 
addressed by the current development in technology products. The 
reliability of Internet connection, software compatibility issues, user 
friendliness of the OER tools are all nowadays getting more updated 
and improved to suit the needs of the society. More people nowadays 
live with technology and problems solve their technology related-
issues. The phenomena quickly happen in the society because 
technology today is no longer supplementary needs in people’s daily 
life rather become primary needs to help people live. A smart phone 
for example, social media, internet-based chat messenger which all are 
self-learned by people when utilizing them despite all the complexity 
that may be offered through features in those technology products. 

Another example of challenges to OER that has been currently 
addressed is the copyright issue. Through the creative common 
licensing nowadays, OER has been given different creative common 

Authors Challenges 

Caswell, 
Henson, 
Jensen, and 
Wiley 
(2008) 

 Content licensing can be troublesome if used 
with other contents licensed under different 
licenses. 

Hodgkinson-
Williams 
(2010) 

 Hardware reliability and compatibility issues 

 Absence of technical skills 

 Assuring the shared contents’ quality 

 Low interest in others’ created resources 

 Quality assurance and financial sustainability 
Thakrar, 
Wolfenden, 
and Zinn 
(2009) 

 Hardware issues (such the reliability of internet 
connection, printers and other technology-
related devices) 

 Technological knowledge and skills 

 Discoverability of the OER and adaptability of 
the OER 



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Volume 5, Issue 1. July 2016 | IJET 47 

 

licensing. The question is probably why OER needs this kind of 
licensing. Below is a brief explanation of what is creative common 
licensing is. 
 

Creative Common (CC) Licensing 

OER are surely the products of creative minds. The creator of 
the OER (usually called Licensor) deserve to claim the right as the 
owner of the OER work but may gives others (Licensee) licenses to 
copy, distribute, and make some uses of their work. One way to make 
that possible to happen is through giving specific licensing which 
nowadays known as CC licensing. There are few types of creative 
common licensing. Below is a brief description of the few types of 
creative commons licensing 
  

The first type of CC licensing is the 
Attribution licence. Figure 1 display the 
known logo for this type of licensing. This 
license means that the licensors offers others 
the right to use, reuse, modify and distribute 
their work even for commercial purpose, as 
long as their names are credited as the 
creator of the work. 
 

 

The second type of CC licensing is 
Attribution-ShareAlike licensing (see Figure 
2) for the logo. Similar to the first license, 
this type of license adds conditions to the 
licensees that they will have to license their 
work using the same license to their work if 
derivated from the Licensors work 
 

 

The third type of the licensing is Attribution-
NoDerivs (see figure 3 for the known logo of 
the license). Using this license, the licensor 
of a product give licensee the rights to 
redistribute the product to redistribute it 

 
Figure 3 CC 
License: 

Figure 1 CC License: 
CC-BY 

Figure 2 CC License: 

Attribution-ShareAlike 



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48 IJET | Volume 5, Issue 1. July 2016 

 

commercially or non-commercially as long as 
no modification is made to the product and 
licensor is credited. 
 

Attribution-
NoDerivs 
 

The fourth type of the licensing is the 
Attribution-Non Commercial (See figure 4 
for the logo) meaning that the licensor offers 
to the licensee to use, reuse, modify and 
distribute their product non-commercially. 
Though later the licensee has to credit the 
creator but he/she does not have to give 
similar license to the derivative works. 
 

 
Figure 4: CC 
License: 
Attribution-
NonCommercial 
 

The fifth type of the CC licensing is 
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike (see 
figure 5 for the logo). Using this license the 
licensor offers to licensee to use, reuse, 
modify and distribute their work non-
commercially as long as the licensee credit 
the licensor and give the derivative work 
identical license. 
 

 

 
 
Figure 5 CC 
License: 
Attribution-
NonCommercial-
ShareAlike 
 

The sixth type of CC Licensing is 
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs (See 
figure 6 for the logo). Through this type of 
licensing, the licensor give rights to the 
licensee to use his work as long as the 
licensor is credited, no modification to the 
work is made and no commercial use is 
done(Commons, 2016) 
 

 
Figure 6 CC 
License: 
Attribution-
NonCommercial-
NoDerivs 
 

 
 

 



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Volume 5, Issue 1. July 2016 | IJET 49 

 

WHERE TO ACCESS THE OER 

  So far, much effort has been applied by OER enthusiasts to 
compile OER in the form of annotated links in websites which are 
either personally or even institutionally maintained. Those websites 
are organized for different purposes and in various ways. The following 
Table 3 lists some OER sites that can be useful for finding OER for 
teachers, students or self-directed learners. 
 

Table 3  Annotated List of OER sites 

Catego
ries 

URL Annotation 

General 
Search 
Engines 

http://www.google.com 
http://www.yahoo.com 
http://www.bing.com 
http://www.lycos.com/ 

People today most probably 
start searching things using 
these popular search 
engines. OER can also be 
easily found using these 
tools, especially by using the 
advance features they 
provide.  

CC 
Search 
tools 

http://search.creativecommons
.org/ 
 

A creative commons (CC) 
search tool. Although, this 
tool is specifically designed 
to find content with CC 
licenses, it is advisable that 
users of the site should 
check as not all search 
results are under CC 
license.  

Video 
Search 
Tools 

http://www.youtube.com 
 
http://www.vimeo.com 
http://archive.org/details/mov
ies 
http://www.ted.com/ 
http://cc.aljazeera.net/ 

Video database sites that 
allow people to  
find and share videos. The 
videos can be of various 
licenses, but many videos 
with CC licenses can be 
easily found there by 
applying built-in filter 
provided in the site. 

http://www.youtube.com/


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50 IJET | Volume 5, Issue 1. July 2016 

 

Catego
ries 

URL Annotation 

Image 
Search 
Tools 

http://www.google.com/adva
nced_image_search 
http://www.pixabay.com 
http://openclipart.org/ 
 

Finding images using this 
tool has never been easier. 
Though not all images found 
are free to use but by using 
built-in filters in the sites, 
one can easily find the free 
ones. 

Open 
Textboo
k Search 

http://www.collegeopentextbo
oks.org/ 
http://openstaxcollege.org/ 
http://projects.siyavula.com/ 
http://www.ck12.org/ 
https://www.boundless.com/ 

These sites provide access to 
open textbooks developed 
and peer reviewed by 
educators from around the 
world. Although most of the 
books are science and 
mathematics-related, they 
can still be used for language 
teaching purposes. 

OER 
Database 

http://www.merlot.org/ 
http://cnx.org/ 
http://oerconsortium.org/ 
http://www.oercommons.com 
http://www.openculture.com 

These websites are databases 
for OER. The content 
ranges from full courses, to 
images, video, recorded 
lectures, lesson strategies 
etc.  

Open 
Courses 

http://oeru.org 
http://www.coursera.org 
http://www.edx.org 
https://www.futurelearn.com/ 
http://online.stanford.edu/cou
rses 
 

Learning with world class 
universities, accessing world 
class knowledge and experts 
is not difficult today through 
these websites. Learners can 
easily choose from various 
available free courses and 
obtain certification when 
they complete the course. 

Learning 
Manage
ment 
System 

httt://www.schoology.com 
http://www.myhaikuclass.com 
http://www.coursesites.com 
http://www.edmodo.com 

To start developing online 
learning, one will need 
these websites. They 
provide free access for 
registered users to instantly 
create their online courses 



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Volume 5, Issue 1. July 2016 | IJET 51 

 

Catego
ries 

URL Annotation 

or just online elements of 
their face-to-face courses. 
The features offered here 
include 
materials/assignment 
organizers, grade books, 
quiz creators, students 
learning statistics, 
attendance etc. 

 
The sites in the tables only provide tools, and they are 

worthless when users do not know what to do with them. Instead, it is 
even possible that the online tools would just cause confusion for users 
if the users do not have a clear plan of how to engage with them. In the 
same vein, Son (2011) advises that teachers should be “knowledgeable 
and skillful enough to guide students when and how to use which 
(online) tools for effective language learning”. In short, whatever 
technology is available out there; it is just a tool to assist teaching and 
learning. Teachers and students should be well educated and trained 
on how to make use of it effectively and efficiently for better teaching 
and learning experiences. 
 
A SAMPLE POSSIBLE SCENARIO FOR USING OER IN A 
TEACHING LEARNING PROCESS 
 The sites listed in Table 3 help OER seekers to find their 
possibly expected resources that they can use for their teaching or 
learning. The sites are just to give easy access to OER which are 
nowadays of various forms and types offering various features that 
helps people to be more creative, more attentive, more motivated and 
more explorative when learning in this digital era. This is made 
possible partly by the advance of web 2.0 technologies where people 
are given more freedom to access tools, materials, and support 
whenever they need ones. The web 2.0 technologies nowadays have 
given more possibilities for people to access valuable learning and 
teaching resources and tools by using only a web browser.  



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 Lets’ take an example of a video sharing website like YouTube. This 
web 2.0 website enables users not only to view but also to share and 
even discuss video contents over the web. Various contents are shared, 
searched and viewed by people all over the world. For teachers finding 
teaching materials are nowadays relatively easy because many types of 
videos of various themes are shared by people around the world. 
When a teacher wants to explain what a cappuccino is and how to 
make one, He/she can just search for the video about it and share to 
students. Thus, no need for the teachers to explain or create his/her 
own video just to explain about cappuccino to the students.  

Another example would be when a student is to make 
presentation for what he/she has been reading. The student is to 
present it in the form of info graphic, video animation, or even just a 
mind map. The teachers can then just refer the students to the online 
tools available nowadays for free to create an info graphic such as 
http://piktochart.com, http://visual.ly, or http://www.easel.ly/. 
There, they will create an info graphic for what they have read and 
make visual presentation. If students want to do video animation, they 
can try online tools such as http://www.videoscribe.co or 
http://www.powtoon.com. Alternatively, they can use mind map 
authoring tools which are available online such as http://popplet.com 
or https://bubbl.us/ 

A more complex scenario for using OER can be as follows. 
Teacher created an online space for interacting with students in a free 
learning management system (LMS) such http://www. 
schoology.com, http://coursesites.com, http:// edmodo.com, 
http://myhaikuclass.com etc. Those LMS are free to use but will be 
more functional if the user willing to pay for improved features or 
services. Then, students are to register on the LMS and start reading 
materials presented there. They will then share their opinion on the 
available discussion board within the LMS. They can ask questions 
there, help others by responding to their posts, or even make a digital 
portfolio there. In the LMS students can also work on a given quizzes 
where later the teachers can automatically grade the student’s 
objective tests. The teacher later makes a direct correction on students 

http://www.schoology.com/
http://www.schoology.com/
http://coursesites.com/
http://edmodo.com/
http://myhaikuclass.com/


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Volume 5, Issue 1. July 2016 | IJET 53 

 

submission online, as well as give the students work a feedback 
whenever necessary. 
 
REFERENCES 
 
Atkins, D. E., Brown, J. S., & Hammond, A. L. (2007). A review of the 

open educational resources (OER) movement: Achievements, challenges, 
and new opportunities: Creative common. 

Caswell, T., Henson, S., Jensen, M., & Wiley, D. (2008). Open 
Content and Open Educational Resources: Enabling universal 
education. The International Review of Research in Open and 
Distributed Learning, 9(1).  

Commons, C. (2016). About the licenses.   Retrieved from 
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/ 

Friesen, N. (2013). Realising the open in open educational resources: 
Practical concerns and solutions. In R. McGreal, W. Kinuthia, 
& S. Marshall (Eds.), Open educational resources: Innovation, 
research and practice (pp. 79-90). Vancouver: Commonwealth of 
Learning. 

Hodgkinson-Williams, C. (2010). Benefits and challenges of OER for 
higher education institutions. Paper presented at the OER 
Workshop for Heads of Commonwealth Universities, Cape 
Town, Africa. Retrieved from 
http://www.col.org/SiteCollectionDocuments/OER_Benefit
sChallenges_presentation.pdf. 

Matkin, G. W. (2010). The open educational resources movement: 
current status and prospects.  

McGill, L. (2013). What are open educational resources.   Retrieved 
from 
https://openeducationalresources.pbworks.com/w/page/248
36860/What are Open Educational Resources 

OECD. (2007). Giving knowledge for free: The emergence of open 
educational resources. Paris: OECD Publishing. 

Thakrar, J., Wolfenden, F., & Zinn, D. (2009). Harnessing Open 
Educational Resources to the Challenges of Teacher Education 

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/
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https://openeducationalresources.pbworks.com/w/page/24836860/What%20are%20Open%20Educational%20Resources


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in Sub-Saharan Africa. The International Review of Research in 
Open and Distributed Learning, 10(4).  

Wheeler, S. (2010). What’s so good about open educational resources. 
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White, D., Manton, M., & Warren, N. (2011). Open educational 
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