https://redmine.gc.cuny.edu/https://redmine.gc.cuny.edu/favicon.ico2022-10-27T15:35:26ZCUNY Graduate Center - Project Tracking SystemCUNY Academic Commons - Feature #17101: OER tag and CC licensing notification systemhttps://redmine.gc.cuny.edu/issues/17101?journal_id=746192022-10-27T15:35:26ZBoone Gorgesboone@gorg.es
<ul><li><strong>File</strong> <a href="/attachments/23844">oer-toggle-site.png</a> <a class="icon-only icon-download" title="Download" href="/attachments/download/23844/oer-toggle-site.png">oer-toggle-site.png</a> added</li></ul><p>We no longer show the OER toggle during creation, so we don't need to consider that case. See <a class="issue tracker-2 status-5 priority-4 priority-default closed" title="Feature: Refining the OER Tag : Remove OER tag option from Creation Process (Resolved)" href="https://redmine.gc.cuny.edu/issues/16332">#16332</a>.</p>
<p>This should be a technically easy lift. Just need to have language, and a sense of how/where the message should appear. The OER toggle is on Dashboard > Settings > General (see attached). If the message is triggered by a change in the OER setting, it makes sense to show a message right above or below. But note that the license setting is elsewhere - on Dashboard > Settings > Writing. So we will need to move that setting, or at least point users in the right place.</p>
<p>There's also a question of whether the converse logic applies. If you have OER checked, but then change to a closed license, should you see a similar message?</p> CUNY Academic Commons - Feature #17101: OER tag and CC licensing notification systemhttps://redmine.gc.cuny.edu/issues/17101?journal_id=746302022-10-27T17:09:54ZLaurie Hurson
<ul></ul><p>Hi All,</p>
<p>I think there might be 3 scenarios to work out here:</p>
<p>1. <br />If User Selects OER Tag in Setting General</p>
<p>Then the following notice can appear below the text (and below the clarifying text that it already there):</p>
<p>"We noticed that you have tagged your site as an OER but no Creative Commons license is present on the site. In order to be considered an "OER" you must select a default creative Commons license for the entire site in Settings>Writing [link] or assign a CC license to pages or posts that are OER. To learn more about open educational resources (OER) open licensing visit our documentation [link TBD]."</p>
<p>2. <br />A user selects a site wide CC license in Settings>Writing but is not tagged as OER. After they select license and save an alert message at the top reading:</p>
<p>"We noticed you have indicated a Creative Commons license for the site, which allows your content to be reused and remixed. To learn more about Creative Commons licenses on the Commons See our CC documentation here. [link TBD]. If you are creating or using OER on the site, please be sure to tag your site as OER in Settings>General [link]</p>
<p>3. (less likely) A user indicates a CC license on a page or post (not sitewide)</p>
<p>"We noticed you indicate a Creative Commons license for this page or post, which allows the content to be reused and remixed. To learn more about Creative Commons licenses on the Commons See our CC documentation here. [link TBD]. If you are creating or using OER on the site, please be sure to tag your site as OER in Settings>General [link].</p> CUNY Academic Commons - Feature #17101: OER tag and CC licensing notification systemhttps://redmine.gc.cuny.edu/issues/17101?journal_id=746322022-10-27T17:37:43ZBoone Gorgesboone@gorg.es
<ul></ul><p>Thanks, Laurie. I hadn't thought about 3. How this is implemented depends on how we design the interface for CC on individual items. Is this part of the scope for the upcoming release? I remember it being mentioned in passing but I don't see a ticket for it.</p>
<p>Regarding 2 (and 3) - You have phrased it as a positive suggestion: "you're using CC, why not tag as OER"? I guess there's nothing wrong with this, though perhaps we'd want to limit it to sites where the purpose is 'Teaching', since there are plenty of cases where you might want a CC license but you would hesitate to call your content OER. More important, I think, is a warning about <strong>incompatibility</strong>. In the case of the license picker, this would be "You have selected a non-open license, but your site is currently tagged as OER..."</p> CUNY Academic Commons - Feature #17101: OER tag and CC licensing notification systemhttps://redmine.gc.cuny.edu/issues/17101?journal_id=786162023-04-13T16:54:54ZBoone Gorgesboone@gorg.es
<ul><li><strong>Target version</strong> set to <i>2.2.0</i></li></ul> CUNY Academic Commons - Feature #17101: OER tag and CC licensing notification systemhttps://redmine.gc.cuny.edu/issues/17101?journal_id=828982023-10-17T14:38:01ZBoone Gorgesboone@gorg.es
<ul><li><strong>Target version</strong> changed from <i>2.2.0</i> to <i>2.3.0</i></li></ul> CUNY Academic Commons - Feature #17101: OER tag and CC licensing notification systemhttps://redmine.gc.cuny.edu/issues/17101?journal_id=849322024-01-16T19:41:39ZBoone Gorgesboone@gorg.es
<ul><li><strong>Target version</strong> changed from <i>2.3.0</i> to <i>2.4.0</i></li></ul>