HAVERHILL — Northern Essex Community College announced it is one of seven colleges in the state selected to participate in the Digital Textbook and Materials Pilot program.
The state Department of Higher Education has approved a $1 million grant for the seven schools to access digital textbooks, courseware and materials on the Lumen Learning platform for free.
“In addition to reducing student textbook costs, this national movement is empowering faculty to curate their own educational materials,” NECC Provost Paul Beaudin said in a news release.
“In a very real way, this enhances faculty scholarship and has the potential of adding value to student learning,” he added. “I am so glad that NECC is a leader in Massachusetts in this work.”
Sue Tashjian, coordinator of instructional technology at NECC, is reaching out to faculty about the options on the Lumen platform.
Faculty have until June to take advantage of the grant, however, Lumen will continue to provide free use of the platform for the fall 2023 semester.
Lumen also offers a wide range of course materials that are free, and after the grant period ends, the course platform is just $25 per student.
“Lumen offers 50-plus courses in almost every academic discipline — especially those taken in the first two years of college,” Tashjian said. “Their college success course provides new students with skills they need to be successful in college, like goal setting and time management. Modules from this course could be used to complement existing courses.
“Over the past few years, Lumen’s focus has been on creating equitable courseware to improve student learning outcomes,” Tashjian added. “They received a grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation focused on improving educational outcomes for underserved students, which aligns with the DHE’s Strategic Plan for Racial Equity and the local work that is happening at NECC.”
NECC’s recent work to remove barriers includes unveiling the college’s first open textbook.
Early childhood education professors Doris Buckley and Deirdre Budzyna developed “The Whole Child: Development in the Early Years.”
This book replaces a commercial textbook that would cost students $174. NECC’s version is free for educators and students across the country.
Open textbooks are an example of Open Educational Resources. OER is free, openly licensed educational materials that faculty can adopt in place of commercially published textbooks.
Buckley and Budzyna developed their OER project through the Remixing Open Textbooks through an Equity Lens grant – a statewide project funded by the U.S. Department of Education.
NECC was an early adopter of the use of OER, the release said.
Tashjian is co-chair of the Massachusetts OER Advisory Council. She and Dean of Business and Professional Studies Jody Carson introduced OER to the college in 2014 with a textbook task force.
Since then, Tashjian estimates that free and low-cost course materials have saved more than 19,000 students $2 million on textbooks.
With the latest offering from Lumen and other open textbook projects underway at NECC, that number will continue to rise.