Open-Ed Mic: An OER Podcast

Kevin Corcoran, Zach Claybaugh, Michael A. Mills, Brittany Dudek

Open-Ed Mic is your go-to podcast for fresh ideas, practical guidance, and inspiring stories about open education—subscribe now on your favorite podcast app and join a community committed to transforming teaching and learning through openness. Your hosts—Kevin Corcoran, Zach Claybaugh, Brittany Dudek, and Michael A. Mills—bring decades of combined expertise in digital learning, library science, student-success initiatives, and strategic leadership at state and national levels. They’ve shaped policy, driven impactful OER initiatives, and passionately championed quality, affordability, and accessibility in higher education. Tune in for candid conversations, cutting-edge research, and real-world success stories that will inspire you to champion open education in your own institution.

  1. 6h ago

    Global and Future Perspectives on Open Education

    .logo-img { filter: grayscale(100%) opacity(50%); max-width: 100%; height: auto; } .profile-card { border-radius: 20px; box-shadow: 0 4px 8px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); } .profile-img { width: 220px; height: 220px; object-fit: cover; border: 4px solid #fff; box-shadow: 0 2px 4px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); } .social-icons a { display: inline-flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; width: 40px; height: 40px; border-radius: 50%; background-color: #f8f9fa; color: #6c757d; text-decoration: none; margin: 0 5px; transition: all 0.3s ease; } .social-icons a:hover { background-color: #ffc904; color: #fff; } In this episode of Open-Ed Mic, the hosts welcome Dr. Rajiv Jhangiani for a thoughtful conversation exploring the past, present, and future of open education. Rajiv begins by sharing his personal journey into the open education movement, sharing how his experiences and commitment to equity inspired his lifelong advocacy. The discussion examines how openness has evolved over the past two decades, highlighting both opportunities and emerging challenges. Rajiv reflects on the growing influence of artificial intelligence, commercial educational platforms, and evolving open licensing models, emphasizing the importance of keeping values such as care, trust, inclusion, and social justice at the center of educational innovation. The panel’s conversation explores the tension between community-owned infrastructure and commercial ecosystems, offering practical insights into how educators can thoughtfully navigate technological disruption while maintaining learner agency and institutional integrity. Drawing on international perspectives, Rajiv also discusses why open education must extend beyond dominant Western narratives by amplifying voices from the Global South and marginalized communities. He argues that the future of openness depends on diverse participation, ethical frameworks, and collaborative approaches that prioritize people over platforms. The episode concludes on an optimistic note as Rajiv shares what continues to inspire him: educators who embrace generosity, students who challenge assumptions, and communities committed to building a more accessible, equitable future for education. Download Transcript: TXT About our Guest Dr. Rajiv Jhangiani is an internationally recognized scholar, educator, and advocate for open education. Throughout his career, he has championed equitable access to education through open educational resources (OER), open pedagogy, and ethical educational technology. His work has helped shape global conversations around openness, social justice, and student-centered learning. Rajiv continues to collaborate with institutions and organizations worldwide to advance inclusive, values-driven approaches to teaching and learning. Follow Dr. Jhangiani on X: Follow Dr. Jhangiani on LinkedIn: Dr. Rajiv Jhangiani Vice Provost of Teaching and Learning Brock University About Open-Ed Mic Explore our Open-Ed Mic podcast for practical guidance and inspiring stories about open education. Discover how to incorporate OER materials into your course while connecting with a community dedicated to transforming teaching and learning through openness. Meet Your Hosts Your hosts— Kevin Corcoran , Zach Claybaugh , Brittany Dudek , and Dr. Michael A. Mills —bring decades of combined expertise as prominent thought leaders in open educational resources (OER) within higher education. With extensive backgrounds spanning digital learning, library science, student success initiatives, and strategic leadership at state and national levels, they have collectively shaped policies, driven impactful initiatives, and advocated passionately for increased access to education. Their collaborative approach highlights their deep commitment to advancing open education practices, ensuring quality, affordability, and accessibility for learners everywhere.

  2. Jun 10

    Evolving Open Education: Access & Credentials

    .logo-img { filter: grayscale(100%) opacity(50%); max-width: 100%; height: auto; } .profile-card { border-radius: 20px; box-shadow: 0 4px 8px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); } .profile-img { width: 220px; height: 220px; object-fit: cover; border: 4px solid #fff; box-shadow: 0 2px 4px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); } .social-icons a { display: inline-flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; width: 40px; height: 40px; border-radius: 50%; background-color: #f8f9fa; color: #6c757d; text-decoration: none; margin: 0 5px; transition: all 0.3s ease; } .social-icons a:hover { background-color: #ffc904; color: #fff; } In this episode of Open-Ed Mic, the hosts sit down with Dr. Lisa Young to discuss her journey from hydrologist to open education leader. After beginning as an instructor in the 1990s, she became interested in reusable learning objects and online teaching following a server failure that erased her course materials. Young explains how international open education conferences expanded her view of openness beyond textbook affordability to include equity, collaboration and global access to knowledge. She shares examples of educators using open resources to overcome censorship and educational barriers. The conversation also examines the evolution of OpenMaricopa from a cost-savings initiative into a broader movement focused on open pedagogy, student-centered learning and institutional culture change. Young closes by discussing the future of open education through artificial intelligence, microcredentials and workforce partnerships designed to expand access and flexibility for learners. Download Transcript: TXT About our Guest Dr. Lisa C. Young is a founding leader of the Maricopa Millions initiative, now OpenMaricopa, which has supported open, low-cost and zero-textbook-cost course materials, saving students more than $269 million. She serves on the board of directors of Open Education Global and has held multiple leadership roles with the Community College Consortium for Open Educational Resources, including vice president of professional development, outreach and co-president. She is a former faculty administrator of Open Education and Innovation for the Maricopa Community Colleges, where she leads strategic efforts in open educational practices, instructional innovation and equitable access to learning. Her expertise includes open education policy, faculty development, leadership, active learning and educational innovation. Her recent work includes co-leading Maricopa’s artificial intelligence task force, advancing digital transformation and supporting districtwide microcredential initiatives aligned with workforce needs. Her work focuses on equity, innovation and learner success through scalable, student-centered systems. Follow Dr. Young on LinkedIn: Dr. Lisa Young Founding leader of the Maricopa Millions initiative, now OpenMaricopa the Maricopa Community Colleges About Open-Ed Mic Explore our Open-Ed Mic podcast for practical guidance and inspiring stories about open education. Discover how to incorporate OER materials into your course while connecting with a community dedicated to transforming teaching and learning through openness. Meet Your Hosts Your hosts— Kevin Corcoran , Zach Claybaugh , Brittany Dudek , and Dr. Michael A. Mills —bring decades of combined expertise as prominent thought leaders in open educational resources (OER) within higher education. With extensive backgrounds spanning digital learning, library science, student success initiatives, and strategic leadership at state and national levels, they have collectively shaped policies, driven impactful initiatives, and advocated passionately for increased access to education. Their collaborative approach highlights their deep commitment to advancing open education practices, ensuring quality, affordability, and accessibility for learners everywhere.

  3. May 14

    The Importance of Data in Open Education

    .logo-img { filter: grayscale(100%) opacity(50%); max-width: 100%; height: auto; } .profile-card { border-radius: 20px; box-shadow: 0 4px 8px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); } .profile-img { width: 220px; height: 220px; object-fit: cover; border: 4px solid #fff; box-shadow: 0 2px 4px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); } .social-icons a { display: inline-flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; width: 40px; height: 40px; border-radius: 50%; background-color: #f8f9fa; color: #6c757d; text-decoration: none; margin: 0 5px; transition: all 0.3s ease; } .social-icons a:hover { background-color: #ffc904; color: #fff; } In this episode of Open-Ed Mic, the hosts chat with Dr. Virginia Clinton-Lisell, associate professor of Education, Health, and Behavior at the University of North Dakota, about her research on open educational resources, digital learning and student outcomes. She explains how teaching large introductory psychology courses led her to study OER after student concerns about textbook costs and publisher pressure. Dr. Clinton-Lisell shares findings showing comparable learning outcomes between open and commercial textbooks, along with lower withdrawal rates for students using OER. The conversation highlights accessibility issues in inclusive access platforms and encourages faculty to use evidence-based approaches when selecting instructional materials. Download Transcript: TXT About our Guest Dr. Virginia Clinton-Lisell began her career in education as an ESL teacher in New York City. She then obtained her Ph.D. in Educational Psychology with a minor in Cognitive Science at the University of Minnesota where she was trained in educational research. She has published more than 60 articles in education research and teaches courses in education research, program evaluation, and psychological foundations of education. Her current research focuses on the psychology of reading comprehension and open education. She is a primary researcher for the Open Education Group, which sponsors a fellowship for early career researchers. Follow Dr. Virginia Clinton-Lisell on LinkedIn Dr. Virginia Clinton-Lisell Associate Professor of Education, Health, and Behavior University of North Dakota About Open-Ed Mic Explore our Open-Ed Mic podcast for practical guidance and inspiring stories about open education. Discover how to incorporate OER materials into your course while connecting with a community dedicated to transforming teaching and learning through openness. Meet Your Hosts Your hosts— Kevin Corcoran , Zach Claybaugh , Brittany Dudek , and Dr. Michael A. Mills —bring decades of combined expertise as prominent thought leaders in open educational resources (OER) within higher education. With extensive backgrounds spanning digital learning, library science, student success initiatives, and strategic leadership at state and national levels, they have collectively shaped policies, driven impactful initiatives, and advocated passionately for increased access to education. Their collaborative approach highlights their deep commitment to advancing open education practices, ensuring quality, affordability, and accessibility for learners everywhere.

  4. Apr 8

    Future of the Textbook 

    .logo-img { filter: grayscale(100%) opacity(50%); max-width: 100%; height: auto; } .profile-card { border-radius: 20px; box-shadow: 0 4px 8px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); } .profile-img { width: 220px; height: 220px; object-fit: cover; border: 4px solid #fff; box-shadow: 0 2px 4px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); } .social-icons a { display: inline-flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; width: 40px; height: 40px; border-radius: 50%; background-color: #f8f9fa; color: #6c757d; text-decoration: none; margin: 0 5px; transition: all 0.3s ease; } .social-icons a:hover { background-color: #ffc904; color: #fff; } In this episode of Open-Ed Mic, the hosts chat with Daniel Williamson of OpenStax, who shares his unexpected journey into open education and reflects on how the movement has evolved from modular learning objects to widely adopted open textbooks. He discusses how OpenStax has expanded access to affordable, high-quality learning materials for millions of students, while also grappling with a rapidly shifting educational landscape. From declining textbook engagement to the rise of AI and immersive technologies, Williamson highlights the growing need to rethink how course materials are designed, delivered, and experienced by today’s learners. The conversation explores the future of open education as more flexible, personalized, and engagement-driven. Williamson emphasizes the importance of trusted, high-quality content in an AI-driven world and calls for stronger collaboration and sustainability within the open education community. He also points to emerging opportunities in modular learning, workforce-aligned credentials, and reimagined general education. Ultimately, the episode underscores a central challenge—and opportunity—for open education: creating dynamic, relevant learning experiences that prioritize student success while preserving the values of openness and access. Download Transcript: TXT About our Guest Daniel Williamson is a leader in open education and currently oversees the OpenStax initiative at Rice University, one of the most widely used open educational resource (OER) programs in the world. Under Williamson’s leadership, OpenStax has grown from a small startup into a global force, providing freely available, openly licensed textbooks and learning technologies to millions of students each month while saving learners hundreds of millions of dollars in textbook costs. He has guided the organization’s strategic growth, expanded its partnerships across nonprofit and commercial sectors, and helped build a sustainable ecosystem that supports innovation in affordable learning. Williamson’s work focuses on advancing access, affordability, and innovation in education. He played a key role in securing philanthropic and legislative support for OER, including efforts that have influenced statewide adoption of open textbooks. With a background that spans technology, content development, and organizational leadership, Williamson brings a forward-looking perspective to the future of learning—championing more personalized, modular, and engaging educational experiences. His work continues to shape how open content evolves in an era defined by artificial intelligence, emerging technologies, and changing student needs. Social Media: linkedin.com/in/danielcwilliamson Daniel Williamson Leader in Open Education OpenStax initiative at Rice University About Open-Ed Mic Explore our Open-Ed Mic podcast for practical guidance and inspiring stories about open education. Discover how to incorporate OER materials into your course while connecting with a community dedicated to transforming teaching and learning through openness. Meet Your Hosts Your hosts—Kevin Corcoran, Zach Claybaugh, Brittany Dudek, and Dr. Michael A. Mills—bring decades of combined expertise as prominent thought leaders in open educational resources (OER) within higher education. With extensive backgrounds spanning digital learning, library science, student success initiatives, and strategic leadership at state and national levels, they have collectively shaped policies, driven impactful initiatives, and advocated passionately for increased access to education. Their collaborative approach highlights their deep commitment to advancing open education practices, ensuring quality, affordability, and accessibility for learners everywhere.

  5. Mar 10

    Faculty Recognition within Open

    .logo-img { filter: grayscale(100%) opacity(50%); max-width: 100%; height: auto; } .profile-card { border-radius: 20px; box-shadow: 0 4px 8px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); } .profile-img { width: 220px; height: 220px; object-fit: cover; border: 4px solid #fff; box-shadow: 0 2px 4px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); } .social-icons a { display: inline-flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; width: 40px; height: 40px; border-radius: 50%; background-color: #f8f9fa; color: #6c757d; text-decoration: none; margin: 0 5px; transition: all 0.3s ease; } .social-icons a:hover { background-color: #ffc904; color: #fff; } In this episode of Open-Ed Mic, the hosts welcome Andrew McKinney, University Director of Research and Publishing Strategies at the City University of New York (CUNY) and a leading advocate for aligning institutional policies with open education. The conversation centers on the tension between open educational practices and traditional tenure and promotion systems, which often reward research outputs more readily than innovative teaching. McKinney reflects on his work with the DOERS (Driving OER Sustainability for Student Success) community, including a project that compiled case studies demonstrating how faculty have incorporated open educational resource (OER) work into tenure and promotion portfolios. The discussion highlights how faculty interest in OER is often tempered by concerns about whether such work will be recognized or valued within existing academic reward structures. The conversation also addresses emerging pressures in higher education, particularly the growing focus on generative AI, and how faculty can navigate competing institutional priorities. McKinney encourages educators to pursue the work they believe best supports their students and their teaching values rather than chasing short-lived trends. Ultimately, he frames OER not only as a tool for reducing textbook costs but as a pathway toward open pedagogy, where students become active participants in creating knowledge. Looking ahead, McKinney imagines a future in which institutions more fully recognize teaching, openness, and student empowerment as central to the mission of higher education. Download Transcript: PDF About our Guest Andrew McKinney is the Director of Research and Publishing Strategies and Open Educational Resources (OER) Coordinator for the City University of New York (CUNY). He leads system-wide initiatives that support open education, scholarly publishing, and innovative teaching practices across CUNY’s campuses. Andrew is a recognized advocate for aligning tenure and promotion systems with open and equitable teaching, and has contributed to national conversations through his work with the DOERS (Driving OER Sustainability for Student Success) community. He holds a Ph.D. in Sociology from the CUNY Graduate Center. Social media: linkedin.com/in/andrew-mckinney-39a34b198 Andrew McKinney Director of Research and Publishing Strategies and Open Educational Resources (OER) Coordinator City University of New York (CUNY) About Open-Ed Mic Explore our Open-Ed Mic podcast for practical guidance and inspiring stories about open education. Discover how to incorporate OER materials into your course while connecting with a community dedicated to transforming teaching and learning through openness. Meet Your Hosts Your hosts—Kevin Corcoran, Zach Claybaugh, Brittany Dudek, and Dr. Michael A. Mills—bring decades of combined expertise as prominent thought leaders in open educational resources (OER) within higher education. With extensive backgrounds spanning digital learning, library science, student success initiatives, and strategic leadership at state and national levels, they have collectively shaped policies, driven impactful initiatives, and advocated passionately for increased access to education. Their collaborative approach highlights their deep commitment to advancing open education practices, ensuring quality, affordability, and accessibility for learners everywhere.

  6. Feb 11

    Navigating the Future of Open Education and AI

    .logo-img { filter: grayscale(100%) opacity(50%); max-width: 100%; height: auto; } .profile-card { border-radius: 20px; box-shadow: 0 4px 8px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); } .profile-img { width: 220px; height: 220px; object-fit: cover; border: 4px solid #fff; box-shadow: 0 2px 4px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); } .social-icons a { display: inline-flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; width: 40px; height: 40px; border-radius: 50%; background-color: #f8f9fa; color: #6c757d; text-decoration: none; margin: 0 5px; transition: all 0.3s ease; } .social-icons a:hover { background-color: #ffc904; color: #fff; } In this episode of OpenEd Mic, the hosts welcome Dr. David Wiley, a pioneer of the open education movement and creator of the Five Rs of Openness, for a thoughtful conversation about how open education and generative AI are converging. David shares his origin story, tracing his early realization in the late 1990s that digital technologies fundamentally changed how knowledge can be shared—and why open licenses were essential to making that sharing legal, scalable, and equitable. The discussion centers on how the Five Rs—retain, reuse, revise, remix, and redistribute—remain highly relevant in an AI-driven world. David explains how these principles can be applied not only to open educational resources, but also to large language models themselves, from modifying model weights to fine-tuning AI with new data. The group also tackles faculty concerns around copyright, legality, and fears of displacement, with David emphasizing that AI should support—not replace—the relational, trust-based work that sits at the heart of teaching. Looking ahead, the episode challenges educators to move beyond using AI to simply generate static, textbook-like content. Instead, David encourages a shift toward AI as a conversational learning partner that enables dialogue, exploration, and embedded assessment. The conversation ends on an optimistic note, highlighting the creativity and commitment of the open education community. Download Transcript: PDF About our Guest Dr. David Wiley is an associate professor at Marshall University, co-chair of the university’s AI Steering Committee, and a founding leader of the open education movement. His work sits at the intersection of generative AI, open education, instructional design, entrepreneurship, and student success. He is the creator of the Five Rs of Openness and a co-founder of organizations including Lumen Learning and Degreed. Dr. Wiley has received numerous national recognitions for his academic and entrepreneurial work and continues to shape the future of open and AI-enabled learning. Social Media Handles: @opencontent on Twitter, https://www.linkedin.com/in/opencontent/ on LinkedIn and @kalendar on Github. David Wiley, Ph.D. Associate Professor Marshall University About Open-Ed Mic Explore our Open-Ed Mic podcast for practical guidance and inspiring stories about open education. Discover how to incorporate OER materials into your course while connecting with a community dedicated to transforming teaching and learning through openness. Meet Your Hosts Your hosts—Kevin Corcoran, Zach Claybaugh, Brittany Dudek, and Dr. Michael A. Mills—bring decades of combined expertise as prominent thought leaders in open educational resources (OER) within higher education. With extensive backgrounds spanning digital learning, library science, student success initiatives, and strategic leadership at state and national levels, they have collectively shaped policies, driven impactful initiatives, and advocated passionately for increased access to education. Their collaborative approach highlights their deep commitment to advancing open education practices, ensuring quality, affordability, and accessibility for learners everywhere.

  7. Jan 14

    Reflections On the 2025 Open Education Conference

    .logo-img { filter: grayscale(100%) opacity(50%); max-width: 100%; height: auto; } .profile-card { border-radius: 20px; box-shadow: 0 4px 8px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); } .profile-img { width: 220px; height: 220px; object-fit: cover; border: 4px solid #fff; box-shadow: 0 2px 4px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); } .social-icons a { display: inline-flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; width: 40px; height: 40px; border-radius: 50%; background-color: #f8f9fa; color: #6c757d; text-decoration: none; margin: 0 5px; transition: all 0.3s ease; } .social-icons a:hover { background-color: #ffc904; color: #fff; } In this episode of OpenEd Mic, the hosts reflect on their experiences attending the Open Education Conference 2025 in Denver, sharing insights from sessions, hallway conversations, and reconnecting with colleagues across the open education community.  The conversation explores the benefits and challenges of the conference’s hybrid format, with thoughtful discussion around accessibility, engagement, and how in-person energy shapes collaboration. The hosts identify several recurring themes from the conference, including the growing role of artificial intelligence in open education, the shift from affordability-only narratives toward demonstrating student outcomes and impact, and an increasing focus on accessibility in response to upcoming federal requirements. They also highlight standout sessions on workforce development, data-driven storytelling, open pedagogy in STEM, and large-scale research demonstrating the impact of OER across institution types. Beyond formal sessions, the hosts emphasize the value of informal conversations—building community, sharing challenges, and welcoming new voices into the open education space. The episode concludes with reflections on what lies ahead for open education, including global collaboration, deeper integration of OER into institutional practice, and the potential for AI-supported tools to lower barriers to creation and accessibility. Together, the discussion paints an optimistic picture of a growing, evolving, and resilient open education community. Learn more about the conference at https://openeducationconference.org/2025. Download Transcript: PDF About Open-Ed Mic Explore our Open-Ed Mic podcast for practical guidance and inspiring stories about open education. Discover how to incorporate OER materials into your course while connecting with a community dedicated to transforming teaching and learning through openness. Meet Your Hosts Your hosts—Kevin Corcoran, Zach Claybaugh, Brittany Dudek, and Dr. Michael A. Mills—bring decades of combined expertise as prominent thought leaders in open educational resources (OER) within higher education. With extensive backgrounds spanning digital learning, library science, student success initiatives, and strategic leadership at state and national levels, they have collectively shaped policies, driven impactful initiatives, and advocated passionately for increased access to education. Their collaborative approach highlights their deep commitment to advancing open education practices, ensuring quality, affordability, and accessibility for learners everywhere.

  8. 12/11/2025

    Open Ed, Open Ped and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals 

    .logo-img { filter: grayscale(100%) opacity(50%); max-width: 100%; height: auto; } .profile-card { border-radius: 20px; box-shadow: 0 4px 8px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); } .profile-img { width: 220px; height: 220px; object-fit: cover; border: 4px solid #fff; box-shadow: 0 2px 4px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1); } .social-icons a { display: inline-flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; width: 40px; height: 40px; border-radius: 50%; background-color: #f8f9fa; color: #6c757d; text-decoration: none; margin: 0 5px; transition: all 0.3s ease; } .social-icons a:hover { background-color: #ffc904; color: #fff; } In this episode of Open Ed Mic, host Dr. Michael Mills is joined by co-hosts Kevin Corcoran and Zach Klebaugh to welcome special guest Shinta Hernandez, Dean of MC Online and Academic Support at Montgomery College and recent OE Global Individual Leader of the Year award recipient. Shinta shares her origin story in open education, rooted in confronting inequities she witnessed firsthand in her sociology classrooms. Her pursuit of textbook affordability eventually led her to Montgomery College’s OER and Z-Degree initiatives, where open education is framed not just as a cost-saving measure but as a commitment to social justice, student empowerment, and high-quality instructional design. The conversation explores how Montgomery College has expanded its MC Open initiative, how open pedagogy fosters agency among learners, and why interdisciplinary and cross-institutional collaboration is essential for solving global challenges. Shinta and Mike discuss the creation and rapid international growth of the UNSDG Open Pedagogy Faculty Fellowship, now spanning multiple continents and institutional partners. They highlight the program’s unique model, which pairs faculty across disciplines—and even across countries—to design renewable assignments aligned with United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. Shinta shares memorable successes from the fellowship, including student projects that gained community impact and even inspired career changes. The episode concludes with a look toward the future, examining the emerging intersection of OER and artificial intelligence, the need for continued professional development, and the importance of collaborative communities of practice prepared to navigate an evolving digital landscape. About our Guest Dr. Shinta Hernandez is the Dean of MC Online and Academic Support at Montgomery College, providing leadership in online education, open education, and the Digital Learning Center. Shinta leads efforts to advance work in open education and open pedagogy, social justice and equity, inclusive curriculum, faculty professional development, international collaborations, online education, and the social science disciplines. She leads the UNSDG Open Pedagogy Faculty Fellowship that has grown into an international collaboration across the United States and Canada. Recent partnerships have included schools in the Caribbean and in Asia. Shinta H. Hernandez, Ph.D Dean of MC Online and Academic Support Montgomery College, Rockville, MD About Open-Ed Mic Explore our Open-Ed Mic podcast for practical guidance and inspiring stories about open education. Discover how to incorporate OER materials into your course while connecting with a community dedicated to transforming teaching and learning through openness. Meet Your Hosts Your hosts—Kevin Corcoran, Zach Claybaugh, Brittany Dudek, and Dr. Michael A. Mills—bring decades of combined expertise as prominent thought leaders in open educational resources (OER) within higher education. With extensive backgrounds spanning digital learning, library science, student success initiatives, and strategic leadership at state and national levels, they have collectively shaped policies, driven impactful initiatives, and advocated passionately for increased access to education. Their collaborative approach highlights their deep commitment to advancing open education practices, ensuring quality, affordability, and accessibility for learners everywhere.

About

Open-Ed Mic is your go-to podcast for fresh ideas, practical guidance, and inspiring stories about open education—subscribe now on your favorite podcast app and join a community committed to transforming teaching and learning through openness. Your hosts—Kevin Corcoran, Zach Claybaugh, Brittany Dudek, and Michael A. Mills—bring decades of combined expertise in digital learning, library science, student-success initiatives, and strategic leadership at state and national levels. They’ve shaped policy, driven impactful OER initiatives, and passionately championed quality, affordability, and accessibility in higher education. Tune in for candid conversations, cutting-edge research, and real-world success stories that will inspire you to champion open education in your own institution.

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