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Open Educational Resources (OER): Textbooks and More

This guide provides information and resources for faculty who are interested in exploring opportunities for using textbooks and learning materials published through non-commercial sources in their (physical or virtual) classrooms.

Finding OER Material for Your Classes

An OER logo created by Jonathas Mello shows hands springing from an open book

Open Education Resources Logo, by Jonathas Mello, used under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Ready to start looking for OER materials you can use for your class? On this page, you will find links to textbook repositories and other collections of OER resources.

There are three types of finding tools for OER mateials: 

  • Open repositories host OER content on their sites.
  • Curated lists of OER materials bring together resources that meet determined criteria. They may represent materials approved by a specific institution, or materials on a specific topic.
  • OER search engines are tools like Google, only they are restricted to searching collections of OER content.

Be sure to check out our subject/discipline-specific resources, as well. Need help searching? Ask a librarian!

Know about a resource we didn't include? Send us your suggestions, and we will add them to the guide.

Meta-Search Tools

Search across multiple platforms in a single search.

Resources from the Library

The eBook Collection

Not OER, but free to students! The library's e-book collections include a selection of textbooks, and many works of literature and culture that may be valuable resources for your classes. The number of simultaneous users is controlled by the publisher; for best results look for material with unlimited user access.

Search All Atlantic Cape eBooks from Ebscohost

eBook Collections

Magazines from the Libraries

Scholarly Books and Literature

Find Images

Textbook Collections

Repositories


Curated Lists

Not Just Textbooks

These repositories offer access to many types of learning materials.

Primary Sources

Find Media

Credits

This guide was developed by Leslie Murtha, Robert Mast, Amanda Carey, Janet Hauge, and Mike Sargente, Atlantic Cape Community College Libraries.
Published June 2020.