This article originally appeared in the . The following excerpt is republished with permission.
Using open scholarship philosophies, librarians and faculty use IU Pressbooks to publish classroom work.
Innovate. Teach. Measure. Revise. It’s a rhythm that IU librarians Sarah Hare and Julie Marie Frye used to pattern their long-term EDUC-L700 collaboration with School of ¾ÅÉ«ÊÓÆµfaculty member Beth Lewis Samuelson.
After multiple semesters all three agree the experience transformed far more than curriculum. Samuelson noted, “We were always evolving and developing – there was just this great intellectual give-and-take between the three of us.”
Initially, the idea was to use the IU Libraries Jay Information Literacy Course grant to redesign a doctoral course assignment focused on research methodologies. Completed student submissions were published as an Open Educational Resource (OER) through IU Pressbooks. This is a freely available resource that others can read, cite, and revise, thanks to university funds.
“I do a lot of work in East Africa, and I grew up in a context where people didn’t have a lot of access. I wanted my students to have a chance to think about how publishing can be more than a top-tier journal that doesn’t really make its material available,” said Samuelson.

