doi:10.3402/rlt.v20i0/14395


Open educational resources: staff attitudes and awareness

Vivien Rolfe*

Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, De Montfort University, Leicester, UK

(Received 25 October 2010; final version received 27 April 2011)

Attitudes are changing in education globally to promote the open sharing of
educational courses and resources. The aim of this study was to explore staff
awareness and attitudes towards ‘‘open educational resources’’ (OER) as a
benchmark for monitoring future progress. Faculty staff (n �6) were invited to
participate in semi-structured interviews that facilitated the development of a
questionnaire. Staff respondents (n �50) were not familiar with the term OER but
had a clear notion of what it meant. They were familiar with open content
repositories within the university but not externally. A culture of borrowing and
sharing of resources exists between close colleagues, but not further a field, and
whilst staff would obtain resources from the Internet, they were reticent to place
materials there. Drivers for mobilising resources included a strong belief in open
education, the ability of OER to enhance individual and institutional reputations
and economic factors. Barriers to OER included confusion over copyright and
lack of IT support. To conclude, there is a positive collegiate culture within the
faculty, and overcoming the lack of awareness and dismantling the barriers to
sharing will help advance the open educational practices, benefitting both faculty
staff and the global community.

Keywords: open educational resources; staff attitudes; sustainability

Introduction

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) first talked about placing learning

materials for free on the Internet in 2001 (Goldberg 2001), and soon after the term

‘‘Open Educational Resources’’ (OER) emerged and was defined as: ‘‘educational

resources, enabled by information and communication technologies, for consultation,

use and adaptation by a community of users for non-commercial purposes’’

(UNESCO 2002). As the OER movement has gained momentum, so has the

definition expanded to embrace the benefits of providing opportunities for knowl-

edge transfer and to facilitate the sharing of best practices (The William and Flora

Hewlett Foundation 2010).

Central to the growth of the use of OERs has been the technological

developments supporting the production and retrieval of resources, and the

emergence of a clear and simple licensing mechanism under Creative Commons

(Bissell 2009). Since the first MIT initiative, the number of repositories storing OER

has grown in number and constantly shifts (CERI and OECD 2007; Friesen 2009).

The OER placed in these repositories range in granularity from whole courses such

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*Email: vrolfe@dmu.ac.uk

Research in Learning Technology

Vol. 20, 2012

RLT 2012. # 2012 V. Rolfe. Research in Learning Technology is the journal of the Association for Learning Technology (ALT),

a UK-based professional and scholarly society and membership organisation. ALT is registered charity number 1063519. http://

www.alt.ac.uk/. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons "Attribution 3.0 Unported

(CC BY 3.0)" license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) permitting use, reuse, distribution and transmission, and

reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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as those offered by the OpenCourseWare Consortium (OCWC 2011), to materials

and learning objects such as those available on the Multimedia Educational Resource

for Learning and Online Teaching (MERLOT 2011) and to raw asset files (Jorum

2011). Search for free open educational resources on Jorum and this retrieves

�12,000 items licensed for use worldwide under Creative Commons, giving users

permission to reuse resources with a minimal restriction such as a requirement to

attribute the author, to share alike or to prevent commercial use (Creative Commons

Organisation 2011).
One of the major challenges that the OER movement faces if it is to flourish is

that of long-term sustainability (Atkins, Brown, and Hammond 2007; D’Antoni

2008). As Friesen notes (2009), the lifespan of a content repository can be fragile, and

in his example he describes 11 repositories that were discontinued in the present

decade, of which only two were over 5 years old. There are many factors that

contribute to sustainability, central to which is the role that institutional staff play in

producing and using the content, and many staff have already voluntarily chosen to

champion and pioneer OER. Downes (2007) describes the importance of staff,

partnerships and communities in the OER movement, and also academic staff are

fundamental to providing quality assurance and learner support that are important

drivers of sustainability (D’Antoni 2008).

If institutional staff are to play such a critical role as indeed they have up to now,

it is essential to understand their attitudes and behaviours towards OER to provide

a benchmark to monitor progress and to identify strategies for training and support.

A small number of studies have explored staff attitudes towards OER. In a global

questionnaire of 193 institutional managers from 49 countries, the most significant

barriers surrounding the use of OER included the lack of time and lack of a reward

system (CERI and OECD 2007). The strongest perceived opportunity was the ability

to gain access to the best quality materials. Fundamental to the sustainability of OER

is the notion of sharing, and a smaller survey of 109 faculty members investigated

more deeply about staff perceptions of knowledge sharing in a Korean institution

and drivers for this activity were identified as having a clear purpose and necessity to

share, along with relevant reward systems (Kim and Ju 2008). One further study

evaluated the incentives and disincentives from the view of the general public in

relation to the OpenCourseWare initiative, where incentives to using OER included

the fact there was no associated cost and that resources were available at any time to

enable the user to pursue a subject of interest (Arendt and Shelton 2009).

The aim of the current research was to explore staff awareness and behaviours

surrounding OER with a focus on attitudes to sharing resources, to provide

benchmarks for monitoring future progress of these new educational practices as

they develop. In this study, the term ‘open educational resource’ was assumed to refer

to high-quality, open-licensed materials available for global use (The William and

Flora Hewlett Foundation 2010). An abstract of this paper was presented at OER

2010 (Rolfe 2010a).

Material and methods

Questionnaires and interviews

In 2009, academic staff from the Faculty of Health and Life Sciences were invited to

participate in preliminary interviews (n �6) that were semi-structured, recorded and

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transcribed. The content was analysed by clustering the statements obtained into

emerging themes, facilitated by the use of a spreadsheet (Rolfe et al. 2008). The

interview responses were used to form the basis of a questionnaire that contained

questions on: (1) basic demographics, (2) awareness of the term OER and where to

find OER and (3) an analysis of staff attitudes and experiences of open content and

associated behaviours. Staff attitudes were evaluated using a 5-point Likert Scale

where 1 indicated ‘‘strongly disagree’’ and 5 represented ‘‘strongly agree’’. Some

questions were open ended. The questionnaires were distributed online via the tool
Survey Monkey and by paper copy and were made available for 1 month. All staff

were e-mailed regarding the survey and one reminder was issued. A prize incentive

was offered.

Statistical analysis

Data were analysed using a Chi-squared test and Mann�Whitney U Test.
Significance was assumed at pB0.05. Attitudinal data are presented as the mean

Likert response 9 standard deviation (SD).

Results

Staff demographics

Out of 307 academic staff (full time and part time), there were 50 survey responses

(16% of staff), in which 66% of respondents were female and 34% were male.

Participation was evenly split across the four academic schools (Table 1).

Awareness of OER and technologies

In total, nine staff members (18%) had heard of the term OER (Table 2). Around half

were aware of the university video library and half were aware of DORA, an open
research paper archive, of which the proportion of male colleagues aware was

Table 1. Staff demographics.

Female Male Total

No. of respondents age
(years)

33 17 50

30�39 7 2 9
40�49 12 8 20
50�59 13 6 19
60� 1 1 2

Time in faculty (years)
0�5 13 5 18
6�10 11 3 14
11�20 7 5 12
�21 2 4 6

School
Pharmacy 7 6 13
Nursing and midwifery 10 4 14
Allied health sciences 8 3 11
Applied social sciences 8 4 12

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significantly higher than female staff (76% vs. 39%, respectively, pB0.05). The

Virtual Analytical Laboratory (an open laboratory skills resource) was familiar to

36% of staff. Only 20% had heard of Jorum, and fewer had heard of bioscience-

related repositories that reflected the subject profile of the staff population that also

includes healthcare professions. Despite the claimed lack of awareness of OER, the

meaning of the term appeared reasonably self-explanatory and clear to staff, eliciting

the following open responses:

Freedom to share learning and teaching resources created by any member of the
University to improve the student experience.

Open access to resources and materials for learning.

Attitudes and behaviours surrounding borrowing and sharing resources openly

The next section of the questionnaire explores current working practices in relation

to sharing and borrowing resources. The results indicated that three quarters of

staff currently share and borrow learning resources, mostly with close working

colleagues (Table 3). Higher numbers of female staff members shared and

borrowed compared to male colleagues (pB0.05). Also, 50% of staff obtained

resources from the Internet, whilst only 12% placed resources there to make them

globally available.

Staff attitudes to borrowing and sharing were then explored more deeply using a

series of statements and a Likert Scale, where 1 represented strongly disagree and

5 represented strongly agree. Overall, male and female staff shared similar attitudes

to sharing and borrowing resources (p�0.05, Mann�Whitney U Test, data not
shown), so that the total data were pooled and are presented in Table 4. When

asked to indicate how they felt about sharing, strong drivers for sharing resources

included a belief in open education and as a reputation enhancer both for the

institution and the individual. Strong drivers for borrowing were for economic

reasons. Staff shared a collegiate attitude, and statements regarding the idea that

sharing gives colleagues an advantage, or that staff wanted to work individually,

were weakly expressed.

Table 2. Awareness of OER and associated technologies.

Tick the box(s) to indicate which of the
following you have heard of ?

Female
(n �33)

Male
(n �17)

Total
(n �50) Total%

Open educational resources (OER) 4 5 9 18
DMU Video Library 18 8 26 52
DMU DORA
YouTube EDU

13
14

13*
11

26
25

52
50

iTunesU 13 8 21 42
Virtual Analytical Laboratory (VAL) 11 7 18 36
MIT 11 2 13 26
ALT Open Access Repository 5 6 11 22
Jorum 5 5 10 20
Bioscience Image Bank 4 4 8 16
Bristol BioMed Image Archive 3 2 5 10

*pB0.05, Chi-square test (female vs. male)

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Activity and attitudes in new staff versus longer standing staff members

The data were divided into staff who had worked in the faculty 10 years or less

(n �32) and longer standing members of staff who had been employed by the faculty
for 11 years or more (n �18). Data from Tables 3 and 4 were reanalysed. There was
no significant difference in the levels of activity between the two groups (p�0.05,

Chi-squared test and Mann�Whitney U Tests), with the exception that the
proportion of newer staff members borrowing from colleagues was higher than

longer standing members (96% vs. 68%, respectively, pB0.05), and new staff were

Table 3. Borrowing and sharing behaviour.

Statement
Female
(n �33) Male (n �17) Total (n �50) Total%

Do you make your materials
available to others to share?
Yes 25 12 37 74
No 3 4 7 14
Unanswered 5 1 6 12

To whom do you make your
resources available?
Academic colleagues who you
work closely with

24* 9 33 66

Academic colleagues within the
faculty

10 8 18 36

Other academic colleagues, for
example, through a subject
network

9 4 13 26

Academic colleagues outside
the faculty but in DMU

5 6 11 22

Openly available to anyone
who wants them globally

4 2 6 12

Unanswered 3 3 6 12

Do you use resources that have
originated elsewhere?
Yes 25 13 38 76
No 3 3 6 12
Unanswered 5 1 6 12

Where do you obtain resources?
Academic colleagues who you
work closely with

21* 6 27 54

Resources taken from the
Internet

16 9 25 50

Resources supplied through a
textbook manufacturer

13 9 22 44

Other academic colleagues, for
example, through a subject
network

6 8 14 28

Academic colleagues within the
faculty

6 7 13 26

Academic colleagues outside
the faculty but in DMU

2 4 6 12

*pB0.05, Chi-square test (female vs. male).

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more likely to borrow from close colleagues than more experienced staff (75% of

newer staff vs. 37% of longer standing staff, pB0.05).

Newer staff members had greater concerns over copyright and were more positive

towards the notion that ‘‘borrowing resources saves time and money’’, whereas

longer standing members of staff viewed more positively the statements ‘‘it is not

easy to adapt resources to meet my needs’’ and ‘‘I prefer to work individually and use

my own resources’’ (pB0.05, Mann�Whitney U Test).

Activity and attitudes by age group

The data were divided into age groups, 30�49 years (n �29) versus 50 plus (n �21).
Data from Tables 3 and 4 were reanalysed. There was no significant difference in the

attitudes and behaviours between the two groups (p�0.05, Chi-square test and

Mann�Whitney U Tests).

General comments regarding OER implementation

The following preferences were offered as incentives to engaging in OER in the future

(Table 5), and the results show that the strongest preferences included the need for

technical and IT assistance, and clarity over copyright, whereas a lower priority was

the need for incentives for people to produce resources. When asked about copyright

ownership in more detail, just over half (54%) of the total staff thought that

copyright for educational resources resided with the university, but 24% were unclear,

Table 4. Staff attitudes towards using educational resources.

Statement Mean SD

Indicate how do you feel about SHARING your
educational resources?
I believe in open education 4.1 0.6
OER enhances the reputation of my institution 4.0 0.7
Sharing resources enhances my reputation as a good teacher 3.9 0.8
I’d be happy for someone to adapt my resources 3.9 0.8
I would need to be acknowledged as the author 3.7 0.7
I have no support for making materials openly available 3.3 1.1
I have concerns over copyright 3.2 1.1
Why give away resources to other universities 2.3 0.9
I don’t wish to give colleagues the advantage of using my
resources

2.2 1.2

I don’t wish to share resources that I’ve spent a long time
preparing

1.9 0.8

How do you feel about BORROWING educational resources?
Borrowing resources saves time and money 4.0 0.6
I only use resources from someone I know and trust 3.5 1.0
I have trouble finding resources of high enough quality 3.3 1.0
I’d only use resources recommended by someone I know
and trust

3.2 0.9

It is not easy to adapt resources to meet my needs 3.1 1.0
I don’t really know where to look for them 2.8 1.1
I prefer to work individually and use my own resources 2.7 0.9

Likert scale data where 1 � strongly disagree and 5 � strongly agree.

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and 16% felt that resources were copyright of the individual. In fact, the situation is

complex with electronic resources copyright of the university, although other forms

of teaching material are copyright of the individual member of staff.

In a final section on the questionnaire, staff opinion of OER was expressed in an

open comment section. Staff comments raised the notion of needing a clear

institutional strategy and a clear vision of the purpose for becoming involved in

OER and how an institution could ensure that contributions were duly recognised:

A clear purposeful reason why it is good for me personally and for the institution.

A strong coherent strategy, not a half hearted, two or three people do all the work with
no proper policy.

Danger that other people nick your ideas and get all the credit in an institute which may
be seen to be lacking in OER.

Interview responses

The initial interviews that led to the development of the questionnaire themes

highlighted levels of awareness and understanding of OER by staff, which were

similar to the survey results, with staff perhaps not having heard of the term but

having a relatively clear understanding of what it meant. As reflected by the survey,

the perception of sharing and borrowing activity going on within the institution was

strong, and there were benefits to be gained:

I would have thought it was something we should be doing more of because I would have
thought there are a lot of people that continually re-invent the wheel.

What I want to encourage is between us we can share material in a way that we can
releases ourselves for sabbaticals.

I would be quite happy with that, the ultimate aim is to get it as widely shared out as
possible. If you develop a wonderful resource and only 3 people ever see it well it’s not
much of a resource is it.

The interviews identified barriers to sharing resources, which included time and IT

infrastructure and other barriers that were deeper rooted and more personal and that

Table 5. General comments regarding OER implementation.

Statement Female Male Total Total%

What infrastructure, help and rewards would you
like to see?
IT/technical assistance 24 8 32 64
Clarity over copyright 22 10 32 64
Staff development 22 7 29 58
Incentives for people who develop the resources 17 7 24 48
The use of open source services, for example,
YouTube, Picassa, (open to all)

13 8 21 42

An institutional repository (resources open to
DMU staff & students)

14 5 19 38

Blackboard (resources open to DMU staff &
students)

11 7 18 36

Wider use of external repository, for example,
JORUM (open to all)

9 6 15 30

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did not materialise through the questionnaire. Whilst the idea that staff shared

resources was clearly articulated in the initial interviews and the questionnaire, it is

perceived that some staff do not participate, and perhaps this was linked to staff feeling

insecure and, therefore, protecting their own work. The need for recognition was also

expressed once more, and it was interesting to gain a perspective from staff who are

asked to borrow resources and are then rebutted or those staff who produce materials

yet do not have the opportunity to share them. These comments suggest how the

activities of sharing and borrowing, central to the growth and sustainability of open

educational practices, are entrenched in both professional and personal feelings and

attitudes.

Ownership and security

I think some people see it as their resources, they have spent their time doing it and they
think therefore they are theirs.

I think there is a feeling of well if it is available anyone can do it, you would be
indispensable if you know what I mean. I think it’s to do with job security and things like
that.

Confidence

Some people won’t do it so you can ask and you will get knocked back and that kind of
puts you off.

And also I suppose nobody asks really so you don’t really assume that anybody else
would want your resources.

Recognition

You wouldn’t want somebody who is not prepared any lecture notes to nick yours that
you have spent all weekend doing. The scales have got to be equal rather than tipped in
one persons favour.

Discussion

The use of OER and understanding of open educational practices is advancing

globally, and in the United Kingdom, large numbers of individuals and institutions

are contributing in particular through the Higher Education Funding Council for

England (HEFCE) OER Programme presently run by the Higher Education

Academy (HEA) and the Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC), (JISC

2010). How to grow and sustain these open educational practices is a major

challenge, and operational models have described financial, technical and content-

based solutions, but more current thinking is placing staff and communities at the

heart of the sustainability of OER (D’Antoni 2008; Downes 2007). Despite this, only

one published study has looked at institutional staff awareness and attitudes to OER

(CERI and OECD 2007), although there is a wealth of research ongoing as part of

the OER Programme, and much to be learned about sharing, use and reuse from

previous work on reusable learning objects. The current study, therefore, contributes

to the understanding of staff awareness, attitudes and behaviours surrounding OER

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in a UK University and identifies both incentives and barriers to mobilising

resources. The survey is openly available to use and repurpose (Rolfe 2010b).

In the current study, 50 staff members responded to the survey representing 16% of

total academic staff, which although was a small sample, did equally represent all four

schools. This is a reasonable response rate for a voluntary questionnaire, and these

figures, perhaps, reflect the lack of awareness of OER at this moment in time of the

study (staff interviewed and sampled in 2009). The present aim was to provide a snap-

shot of staff opinion and activity in time and to provide benchmarks for monitoring
future progress and activity as OERs are promoted and institutional strategy evolves.

Awareness

In total, nine staff members (18%) had heard of the term ‘open educational
resources’. No comparable published survey data exists, although the results of a

recent survey of global health care professionals and scientists with an interest in

Sickle Cell and Thalassemia revealed that out of 226 respondents, 42% were aware of

the term ‘open educational resources’ (Rolfe, Fowler, and Dyson, forthcoming),

potentially a higher figure due to increased awareness in the United States where

many of the respondents were located. In the present survey, half of the respondents

were aware of the institutional repositories for video and research publications,

although only one fifth had heard of Jorum, an external free online repository service
developed for United Kingdom Further and Higher Education that promotes the

sharing of OER globally. Staff had a clear understanding of what the term OER

meant, which was an important outcome because the clarity of terminology is

essential for the positive engagement of people in new ideas and initiatives. In a

previous survey of staff attitudes towards e-learning, academic staff were unclear as

to what e-learning meant or the types of technologies involved, were less aware of the

potential benefits and less likely to adopt e-learning strategies in their teaching (Rolfe

et al. 2008). Our current study, therefore, endorses the term OER as one that,
although the majority of staff had not heard of, the name does clearly relay the

activities that it represents.

Activity and attitudes

Fundamental to the OER movement is an individual’s desire to borrow and share

resources, and for institutions to cultivate collegiality. Our results show a strong

tendency of faculty staff to freely share resources with immediate colleagues, with

female colleagues significantly more active than male staff. This concords with

previous findings of a multi-centre study with 130 respondents, which looked at

attitudes towards sharing e-learning resources (Bell and Rothery 2006). Sharing

occurred locally, but staff were apprehensive about making resources more openly
available. In our survey, when considering OER more broadly, although half of the

staff obtained resources from the Internet, only 12% claimed to place resources there

to make them globally available, and again a similar picture in Bell and Rothery’s

study with only 6% of respondents making their educational materials openly

available. As Dholakia, King, and Baraniuk (2006) suggested in their literature

review in which they propose a model for OER sustainability, central to sustainability

is the community and growth of a critical mass of interested individuals and it

adopting technologies and approaches to create networks and discussion. Then, a

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vibrant community emerges. In our faculty, there is clearly a positive element on

which to build on, but understanding the motivations and characteristics of potential

users is important to develop strong and sustainable strategies and practices.

It is vital to understand the drivers and motivational forces behind adopting OER

and to identify barriers and challenges. In the current study, the strongest drivers for

sharing and borrowing included a belief in open education, as a reputation enhancer

both for the institution and the individual, and economic factors that were a

significant reason for participating. Staff shared a collegiate attitude, and statements
that OER would give colleagues advantages and wanting to work individually were

weakly expressed, although deeper rooted concerns were more readily expressed

during the interviews. In the interviews, staff were concerned with job security and

wanted clear recognition for time spent producing OER. Some staff lacked the

confidence to make their resources available. In a multi-national survey of

institutional managers (CERI and OECD 2007), they perceived that staff barriers

to the use of OER would include time and skills, and barriers to producing OERs

would be lack of reward systems, but this surveys none of the more personal attitudes
such as lack of confidence or lack of job security.

These motivational factors are different to those observed in other studies,

reflecting the idiosyncratic nature of institutions and departments, and differences in

research techniques. Larsen and Vincent-Lancrin (2005) suggested a strong motiva-

tional force for people to make OER available was that material would be adopted

and modified by others. Kim and Ju (2008) observed in a Korean University that staff

strongly viewed knowledge sharing as an important motivator, and similar to our

study, a lack of trust, openness and IT infrastructure were not expressed by staff as
strong dissuading factors. This study selected staff randomly and therefore might have

produced a fairer picture of opinions than the current study that was self-selecting.

OER moving forwards

In terms of OER moving forwards within the institution, staff expressed a need for

IT and technical assistance, clarity over copyright and staff development. Copyright

is a recurring barrier, and when questioned, staff were mixed as to their under-

standing of where the copyright of educational materials resided, with the university,
the faculty or the individual? Similar confusion in the ownership of digital materials

was observed in Bell and Rothery’s study (2006). Institutions need to provide clear

and transparent copyright policies and guidance, and articles such as that by Bissell

(2009) that explain about open licences should be used as a starting point since it

provides clear recommendations to educators and policy makers on how to proceed

with copyright licensing for OER. Other information sources, including JISC Legal,

explain the permissions that need to be obtained to mobilise material, and where

these permissions might lie (JISC Legal 2011).
The role of individual pioneering staff is fundamental to the long-term

sustainability of the OER movement, but institutions need to provide support and

resources to embed OER into educational practices (Atkins, Brown, and Hammond

2007). As with e-learning in general, a sustainable approach requires cultural and

institutional change, where staff share visions and are supported by organisational

structures (Gunn 2010). In theory, the emergence of strong communities will provide

a self-fulfilling prophecy, providing a community of producers, users and re-users

(Dholakia, King, and Baraniuk 2006) and also providing a motivational force to

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sharing work (Larsen and Vincent-Lancrin 2005). Many OER projects, such as the

‘‘HumBox’’ repository, have achieved an end-user community and through this have

demonstrated that user activity extends beyond initial project activity (Borthwick

and Dicken 2010), and this addresses the view of Downes (2007) describing the

importance of all staff and partnerships in the building of OER communities.

Study limitations

Different institutions will have different cultural contexts. The current study was
limited to one faculty within one higher education institution. The survey sample was

small with 50 respondents, and larger scale studies are required in multiple centres to

provide a rich body of data from which to draw conclusions. The interviews yielded a

broader selection of views than the open questions could ascertain, so further

research needs to incorporate appropriate methodologies for obtaining a richness of

opinion. Selecting participants on a voluntary basis is likely to engage more pro-

active staff, so responses may well be more positively biased. An alternative strategy

would be the randomised selection of participants and employing alternative market
research strategies for improving the response rate.

Conclusion

As interest in OER advances in the United Kingdom, it will be critical to understand

staff attitudes and behaviours surrounding it, particularly in a climate of growing

financial constraint. The current study provided an evaluation of staff perceptions of

OER and associated behaviours and found that, although staff were unfamiliar with
the term ‘open educational resources’, it was rather self-explanatory, and this should

ease the promotion of further training and activities. There is already a culture of

localised sharing and borrowing of material, but for staff to engage in open education

practices beyond the institution, work needs to be done to explore the wider barriers.

These might include some of the more deep-rooted concerns that emerged in the

interviews, and these would need to be explored to successfully transform working

practices. This study provides a benchmark against which to monitor future progress

and also identifies pitfalls that need to be addressed to build a sustainable
programme of OER production, use and reuse within the institution.

Acknowledgements

The author thanks the UK Subject Centre for Bioscience for supporting this project as part of
their Open Educational Resource Phase 1 Project ‘‘An interactive laboratory and fieldwork
manual for the biosciences’’.

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