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  • University of Tennessee
Privacy and Safety in Online Learning
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Short Description:
This collection features essays, case studies, and pedagogical approaches that explore how educators managed the privacy, security, and safety concerns that rushed into our lives as we shifted into emergency remote learning in 2020. While the COVID-19 pandemic brought this concern into focus, privacy issues with online learning continue to exist alongside us and our students. This book provides readers insight into the current state of privacy issues, describes the challenges and rewards of developing more privacy-focused learning environments, and presents several resources and tools that readers can bring to their own teaching practices.Representing a variety of perspectives from K-12, higher education, and libraries, contributors describe the challenges they encountered and offer solutions to help ensure the safekeeping of students’ online lives. How do we navigate these online environments, who collects our data, and how can we protect our most vulnerable populations?

Long Description:
This collection features essays, case studies, and pedagogical approaches that explore how educators managed the privacy, security, and safety concerns that rushed into our lives as we shifted into emergency remote learning in 2020. While the COVID-19 pandemic brought this concern into focus, privacy issues with online learning continue to exist alongside us and our students.

This book provides readers insight into the current state of privacy issues, describes the challenges and rewards of developing more privacy-focused learning environments, and presents several resources and tools that readers can bring to their own teaching practices.

Representing a variety of perspectives from K-12, higher education, and libraries, contributors describe the challenges they encountered and offer solutions to help ensure the safekeeping of students’ online lives. How do we navigate these online environments, who collects our data, and how can we protect our most vulnerable populations?

This platform is the Web book. For PDF and print copies, https://openpress.mtsu.edu/index.php/mtop/catalog/book/onlinelearning.

Word Count: 83213

ISBN: 979-8-9871721-0-0

(Note: This resource's metadata has been created automatically by reformatting and/or combining the information that the author initially provided as part of a bulk import process.)

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Education
Educational Technology
Health, Medicine and Nursing
Information Science
Material Type:
Textbook
Provider:
Middle Tennessee State University
Date Added:
01/31/2023
Quantitative Research Methods for Political Science, Public Policy and Public Administration for Undergraduates: 1st Edition With Applications in Excel
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CC BY
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Quantitative Research Methods for Political Science, Public Policy and Public Administration for Undergraduates: 1st Edition With Applications in Excel is an adaption of Quantitative Research Methods for Political Science, Public Policy and Public Administration (With Applications in R). The focus of this book is on using quantitative research methods to test hypotheses and build theory in political science, public policy and public administration. This new version is designed specifically for undergraduate courses. It omits large portions of the original text that focused on calculus and linear algebra, expands and reorganizes the content on the software system by shifting to Excel and includes guided study questions at the end of each chapter.

Subject:
Political Science
Social Science
Material Type:
Textbook
Provider:
East Tennessee State University
Author:
Aaron Fister
Gary Copeland
Hank Jenkins-Smith
Joseph Ripberger
Josie Davis
Matthew Nowlin
Tracey Bark
Tyler Hughes
Wehde Wesley
Date Added:
07/02/2020
Quantitative Research Methods for Political Science, Public Policy and Public Administration for Undergraduates: 1st Edition With Applications in R
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CC BY
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Quantitative Research Methods for Political Science, Public Policy and Public Administration for Undergraduates: 1st Edition With Applications in R is an adaption of Quantitative Research Methods for Political Science, Public Policy and Public Administration (With Applications in R). The focus of this book is on using quantitative research methods to test hypotheses and build theory in political science, public policy and public administration. This new version of the text omits large portions of the original text that focused on calculus and linear algebra, expands and reorganizes the content on the software system R and includes guided study questions at the end of each chapter.

Subject:
Political Science
Social Science
Material Type:
Textbook
Provider:
East Tennessee State University
Author:
Aaron Fister
Gary Copeland
Hank Jenkins-Smith
Joseph Ripberger
Josie Davis
Matthew Nowlin
Tyler Hughes
Wehde Wesley
Date Added:
07/02/2020
Shaping Cultural Understanding through pre-Columbian Artistic Heritage and Modeling Techniques learning module
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Students will learn about the process of making pre-Columbian ceramics and the history surrounding the collection that this lesson plan is based on. Students will also create their ceramics which will bridge the gap between basic understanding while incorporating a hands-on activity. The purpose of this lesson is to teach the students about a different culture that they would have otherwise not been exposed to at a young age. By examining pre-Columbian ceramics and creating their own ceramics, students will develop skills on how to appreciate and better understand the traditions of cultures besides their own while learning about fields of study that may be of interest to them in the future.

Subject:
Ancient History
Archaeology
Art History
Arts and Humanities
History
Social Science
World History
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Lecture Notes
Primary Source
Provider:
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Author:
Mallory Crook
Date Added:
07/19/2021
Social Studies Education in a Multicultural Society (Elementary Education)
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The materials in this OER collection are designed to complement the course, Social Studies Education in a Multicultural Society. This course, designed for senior-level students in an elementary education teacher preparation program, explores the foundations, themes, content, and pedagogies of elementary social studies education in a multicultural society. Presented as a series of video episodes, each episode focuses on a foundational element of social studies teaching and learning. From curriculum frameworks to national social studies publications to historical thinking to geographic awareness, each episode is meant to support the development of the elementary social studies teacher.

Subject:
Education
Elementary Education
Material Type:
Lecture
Provider:
East Tennessee State University
Author:
Lori Meier
Date Added:
02/08/2022
Strategies for Early Learners
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CC BY
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Welcome to learning about how to effectively plan curriculum for young children. This textbook will address: • Developing curriculum through the planning cycle • Theories that inform what we know about how children learn and the best ways for teachers to support learning • The three components of developmentally appropriate practice • Importance and value of play and intentional teaching • Different models of curriculum • Process of lesson planning (documenting planned experiences for children) • Physical, temporal, and social environments that set the stage for children’s learning • Appropriate guidance techniques to support children’s behaviors as the self-regulation abilities mature. • Planning for preschool-aged children in specific domains including o Physical development o Language and literacy o Math o Science o Creative (the visual and performing arts) o Diversity (social science and history) o Health and safety • Making children’s learning visible through documentation and assessment

Acknowledgements
This book is a work in progress. My goal is to adapt an open textbook on strategies for young learners for students in the state of Tennessee. This book began as a remix of the open textbook Introduction to Curriculum for Early Childhood Education (2018) by Jennifer Paris, Kristin Beeve, and Clint Springer of the College of the Canyons. This text forms the primary “skeleton” that this text was organized by, although this had to be modified to fit with state of Tennessee early learning developmental standards. The open textbook Introduction to Curriculum for Early Childhood Education (2018) is freely available here: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/11An_WtG1dioTbe6bSXdGquADVjYT91Ha and here: https://www.open.umn.edu/opentextbooks/textbooks/introduction-to-curriculum-for-early-childhood-education I have sought to make this text consistent with the State of Tennessee Early Learning Developmental Standards, available here: https://www.tn.gov/education/instruction/academic-standards/early-learning-development-standards.html In addition to my original content this textbook uses open source content. My goal is to give credit and proper citation to any material used in this text.

Subject:
Early Childhood Development
Education
Material Type:
Textbook
Provider:
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Author:
D.R. Meece
Date Added:
07/18/2022
Teacher's guide to using literature to promote inclusion of people with disabilities
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The Teacher’s Guide to Using Literature to Promote Inclusion of People with Disabilities has been designed to assist teachers who wish to use literature to promote inclusion of people with disabilities in all aspects of life. The Guide consists of two parts. Part 1 is a rubric for evaluating how short stories, books, poems, TV programs, movies, digital media, and other forms of literature portray characters with disabilities. Part 2 of the Teacher’s Guide to Using Literature to Promote Inclusion of People with Disabilities is a curriculum guide with learning objectives, lesson activities, and strategies for outcome evaluation. The curriculum guide is a resource for teachers who wish to design lessons using literature to teach about disabilities.

Subject:
Education
Special Education
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Teaching/Learning Strategy
Provider:
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Author:
Bruce Menchetti
Date Added:
07/19/2021
Teaching Early and Elementary STEM
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This Open Access Educational textbook, "Teaching Early and Elementary STEM", was written to support pre-service early childhood and elementary teachers in their journey to become facilitators of science, technology, engineering, and math, or “STEM,” and "integrated STEM" in their future classrooms. Students who read and use this text will deepen their understanding of “STEM” and “integrated STEM,” learn what early childhood and elementary students need to know and be able to do in relation to STEM, and understand ways to create activity plans and implement current research-based approaches to teaching and pedagogy. This text arose out of our Early/Elementary STEM Collaboration project, which started in 2017 with the intention of increasing the quality of teacher preparation in STEM across early childhood and elementary education. The team is composed of math and science education professors, classroom in-service teachers, and pre-service teachers in pre-school through fifth grade. We are driven by the values of collaboration, strengths-based approaches to teaching and learning, constructivist philosophy of teaching and learning, and applied STEM experiences to increase access and equity. Our model of preparing pre-service teachers has been published elsewhere in more detail (Robertson, Nivens, & Lange, 2019). We built this open access product to include the following: 1) completely new content that includes input from our team as well as examples of integrated STEM learning experiences; 2) adaptations of existing resources, and; 3) compilations of existing free resources (e.g., Next Generation Science Standards).

Subject:
Early Childhood Development
Education
Elementary Education
Material Type:
Textbook
Provider:
East Tennessee State University
Author:
Alissa A. Lange
Amie Craven
Jamie Price
Laura Robertson
Date Added:
02/08/2022
Theatre Drawing & Rendering Techniques and Scenic Design Videos
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Collection of videos created for THEA 4540 (Theatre Drawing and Rendering Techniques) and THEA 3330 (Scenic Design). The majority of the videos provide tutorials on using Vectorworks.

Subject:
Arts and Humanities
Performing Arts
Material Type:
Lecture
Provider:
East Tennessee State University
Author:
Jonathan Taylor
Date Added:
11/30/2022
Twenty First Century World: Crises and Solutions
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How do you teach world current events? From history textbooks? From the internet? From watching the news? The 21st Century World: Crises and Solutions, aims to remedy a scarcity of comprehensive analysis of world events. It recollects the recent past, analyzes the factors that destabilize and threaten human life, and examines sustainable and fair solutions. The chapters are organized in four parts: sustainability, demographics, literacy, and freedoms. Coverage includes the sustainability of land and water use, poverty-induced issues such as health, hunger, and homelessness, the global economy, population distribution and location, migrations and refugees, education and information and issues of violence that find outlets in oppression, protests, war, and terrorism.

Subject:
Social Science
Material Type:
Textbook
Provider:
University of Tennessee at Martin
Author:
Alice-Catherine Carls
Casey S. Ruggiero
Christina M.L Henry
Damon C. Thurman
Emmalea N. Rogers
Lilly A. Slipher
Luke M. Curtis
Madeline R. Hart
William C. Ramage
William M. Morris
Date Added:
05/29/2023
Using Teams to Facilitate Organizational Development
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Using Teams to Facilitate Organizational Development is a compilation of resources, information, and readings from open education resources gathered and produced in one location for the students of Middle Tennessee State University through resources from the James E. Walker Library and Embracing Equity through Open Educational Resources. Portions of this book are adapted from an edition of Human Resource Management and Organizational Behavior, both produced by the University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing through the eLearning Support Initiative and distributed under a Creative Commons license (CC BY-NC-SA). This adaptation has reformatted the original text, and replaced some images and figures to make the resulting whole more shareable. This adaptation has not significantly altered or updated the original. This work is made available under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license. Additional portions were adapted from Organizational Change, originally adapted from Saylor Academy for the Open Textbook Network under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 License without attribution as requested by the work’s original creator or licensor.

Subject:
Business and Communication
Management
Material Type:
Textbook
Provider:
Middle Tennessee State University Pressbooks Network
Author:
Kim Godwin
Meredith Anne Higgs
Mike Boyle
Date Added:
08/17/2021
Using local primary sources to explore the impact of inventions and innovations of the Industrial Revolution : part I
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Instructional materials on local history topics developed by students at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga for use in secondary education classrooms.

This is part one of a two-day lesson plan which covers the impact of the major inventors and innovators of the Industrial Revolution. The purpose of this lesson is to build upon students’ prior knowledge of analyzing primary sources, the Industrial Revolution, and Chattanooga history. Using primary sources, students will identify major figures of the Industrial Revolution and describe their impact on Chattanooga and United States history.

Subject:
History
U.S. History
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Author:
Dockery Annie
Date Added:
07/19/2021
Using local primary sources to explore the impact of inventions and innovations of the Industrial Revolution : part II
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Instructional materials on local history topics developed by students at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga for use in secondary education classrooms.

This is part two of a two-day lesson plan which covers the impact of the major inventors and innovators of the Industrial Revolution. The purpose of this lesson is to build upon students’ prior knowledge of analyzing primary sources, the Industrial Revolution, and Chattanooga history. Using primary sources, students will identify major figures of the Industrial Revolution and describe their impact on Chattanooga and United States history.

Subject:
History
U.S. History
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Lesson Plan
Provider:
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Author:
Dockery Annie
Date Added:
07/19/2021
Using local primary sources to explore the movement of people from rural to urban areas
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Instructional materials on local history topics developed by students at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga for use in secondary education classrooms.

The purpose of this lesson is to build upon students’ prior knowledge of analyzing primary sources, the Industrial Revolution, and Chattanooga history. Students will learn to identify major industrial centers in America and use primary sources to determine causes of rural to urban migration during the industrial revolution, using Chattanooga as a case study. By the end of the case study, students should be able to describe how industrialization influenced the movement of people from rural to urban areas. This lesson will also serve to encourage critical literacy and engagement with the community.

Subject:
Applied Science
Architecture and Design
History
U.S. History
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Primary Source
Provider:
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Author:
Dockery Annie
Date Added:
07/19/2021
Using local primary sources to study school desegregation in Chattanooga lesson plan and workbook
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Instructional materials on local history topics developed by students at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga for use in secondary education classrooms.

This lesson plan examines school desegregation in Chattanooga after the Brown v. Board of Education decision. The purpose of this lesson is for students to gain an understanding of Chattanooga’s complex and prolonged process of school desegregation through reading critically and analyzing primary sources. Students will develop the skills necessary to analyze primary sources and synthesize different perspectives as well as link them to other course materials.

Subject:
History
U.S. History
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Lesson Plan
Primary Source
Provider:
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Author:
Tiarra Hill
Date Added:
07/19/2021
Using local primary source to explore major milestones of desegregation and the integration of the University of Chattanooga lesson plan and workbook
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Instructional materials on local history topics developed by students at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga for use in secondary education classrooms.

This is a one-day 60-minute lesson plan that covers the impact of integration at a local level by focusing on the decision and responses to desegregate the University of Chattanooga. The purpose of this lesson is to expand students’ knowledge of Chattanooga’s history through analysis of primary sources. Students will identify major milestones of post-secondary institutional desegregation and describe the impact it had on Chattanooga and its university community in the 100 years following the ratification of the Emancipation Proclamation.

Ninth grade students will work together to examine the primary source excerpts in order to understand desegregation of the University of Chattanooga as a process. This understanding will allow students to more fully grasp the necessity of action to attain implementation. Students will develop an understanding of how cooperation on varied levels and involvement from individuals
and groups with diverse interests result in the attainment of a desired goal. Additionally, having access to primary sources will help students learn to deconstruct different arguments in favor of and opposed to integration. This primary source analysis will also illustrate how multi-faceted a source can be. Students will learn how to mine information, while also appreciating that primary sources can be ambiguous.

Subject:
History
U.S. History
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Lesson Plan
Primary Source
Provider:
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Author:
Adams Jhedienne
Caitlin King
Jhedienne Adams
Kiandra Franklin
Date Added:
07/19/2021
"We Demand an End to Racism!": The Civil Rights Movement in Chattanooga
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Material created for an exhibition curated by the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Special Collections.

Series of five posters describing various aspects of the Civil Rights Movement in Chattanooga Tennessee, including reproductions of primary source materials.
Chattanooga Divided: The Fight for School Desegregation
“Protest for Dignity”: Black Power in Chattanooga
Recovering Perspectives: Desegregation of the University of Chattanooga
White Opposition to a Changing Chattanooga
Chattanooga Youth Activism: How Howard Students Impacted the Civil Rights Movement

Subject:
History
U.S. History
Material Type:
Diagram/Illustration
Primary Source
Provider:
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Author:
Susan Eckelmann Berghel
Date Added:
07/19/2021
What Can I do with a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology?
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CC BY
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This poster presents a list of common job titles for students who have graduated with a bachelor's degree in psychology. The original poster dimensions are 48"x36"

Subject:
Psychology
Social Science
Material Type:
Diagram/Illustration
Provider:
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Author:
Drew C Appleby
Ruth Walker
Date Added:
07/18/2022
World History Since 1500: An Open and Free Textbook
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CC BY
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World History Since 1500: An Open and Free Textbook is designed to cover world history from 1500 to the present in 15 chapters. The OER-supported textbook can be downloaded as a pdf or viewed online. The textbook serves to weave insights from many perspectives into stories and narratives that will help students develop a framework to organize and connect ideas, geographical locations, and timelines allowing them to think critically and broadly about the world around them. In addition to helping students master the sequence and scope of world history from 1500, the textbook helps develop empathy for people who live and lived in different parts of the world and during different historical times leading to the creation of empathic and knowledgeable global citizens who are aware of and concerned about the world around them.

Subject:
History
World History
Material Type:
Textbook
Provider:
East Tennessee State University
Author:
Constanze Weise
John Rankin
Date Added:
01/12/2023
The campus library: supporting research and scholarship since 1886
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Material created for an exhibition curated by the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Special Collections.

Since 1886, there has been a library serving the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga campus and metropolitan area. As the campus has grown and changed over the years, so too has the library, responding to the needs of the university. Although many of the library resources available to current students, faculty, staff, and community members look different than those of years past, this exhibition celebrates the library’s commitment to supporting information discovery and providing infrastructure for learning that have been a part of its mission from day one.

Subject:
Applied Science
Architecture and Design
History
U.S. History
Material Type:
Diagram/Illustration
Provider:
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Date Added:
07/19/2021