Open Access Week Featured Faculty Member: Elisabeth Buck, PhD, Associate Professor / Director, Writing & Multiliteracy Center, English & Communication

International Open Access Week (October 24-30, 2022) is a time to recognize Open Access (OA), and to inspire scholars to engage in this advantageous model in scholarship and research. The term Open Access refers to scholarly information that is available digitally, free of charge, and without other access barriers. Some teaching and learning materials, referred to as Open Educational Resources (OER), are published online under flexible licenses called Creative Commons Licenses that allow for sharing and remixing. This includes textbooks – Yes, we said FREE textbooks. Each day this week we will feature a UMass Dartmouth faculty member who uses OER in their classroom or publishes scholarly work under a Creative Commons license. Prof. Elisabeth Buck has experience with OER in the classroom as well as Open Access publishing.

Elisabeth Buck is a professor in the English & Communication Department, and she directs the Writing & Multiliteracy Center where UMD students receive free tutoring services. Something that students will not find in any of Prof. Buck’s courses such as ENL 352 Public Relations Writing is an expensive required textbook. Prof. Buck has made the leap to Open Educational Materials (OER), and saves students money on their bookstore bills by assigning free, openly licensed materials in her classes. In addition, she is author of a book called Open-Access, Multimodality, and Writing Center Studies (Palgrave Macmillan, 2017) which was nominated for the 2018 International Writing Centers Association Outstanding Book Award. Chapter Five of the text is available open-access. We commend Prof. Buck for her OER efforts in the classroom and in academic publishing.

UMass Dartmouth staff, faculty, and students can access the complete e-book of Open-Access, Multimodality, and Writing Center Studies using this library link. The library also retains a non-circulating print copy of this book and other faculty publications in the Archives & Special Collections – UMass Dartmouth | Claire T. Carney Library.