Athabasca University Press offers publishing program for open educational resources

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Remix publishes open access resources by AU academics

Athabasca University Press offers a publishing program that expands on the university's commitment to open access.

Remix publishes open educational resources (OER) written or adapted by AU faculty for use in the university's courses. The imprint is part of the university's learning resource strategy.

Athabasca University open access Remix logo"As an open university, Athabasca University's mission is to remove barriers to higher education. Remix enhances that commitment by making learning resources more affordable and convenient for students," said Kyle Flemmer, OER project coordinator with AU Press.

Remix benefits from the publishing expertise of AU Press, which was founded in 2007.

Titles are published under a Creative Commons licence and are freely available from AU Press's website and through OER repositories. They can also be available in print on demand.

Remix publications differ from traditional university press titles as they do not go through standard peer review. They are developed through the university's OER publishing support program, ensuring resources align with AU quality standards.

"Remix builds on AU's commitment to excellence, open access, and knowledge dissemination, and showcases AU Press's innovative approaches to digital publishing," Flemmer said.

Remix launched with an initial three open-access titles by AU academics:

The next Remix publication is coming in November 2025:

Cost, convenience, community part of the appeal of OERs

Rodier, an associate professor of philosophy in the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, co-wrote an OER with University of Saskatchewan colleague Dr. Eric Dayton. Rodier said she was interested in creating an OER to help offset the rising costs of education. It also helped solve a problem because there's no "one-size-fits-all textbook" for her courses.

Dr. Kristin Rodier
Dr. Kristin Rodier

"Academics put so much work into developing our teaching materials," she explained. "Having something where you can take the chapters that you need and look elsewhere for other chapters is extremely useful from an instructor's perspective."

Being able to share the material with a wider audience—and potentially gain more feedback—were other positives.

So too is the convenient format, which Rodier notes can be read on the bus during the commute to work. It's also possible to listen with an e-reader.

"When you don't have to log in or pay for access, it really offers students more open doors to higher education."

Addressing urgent need for critical thinking skills

Rodier said she wants her students to freely share the text with people in their lives and start conversations. In doing so, it creates opportunities to build relationships and connect to communities.

"We're told over and over again that critical thinking is of urgent importance in our work lives, for thinking about the environment, or solving geopolitical problems, but how are we really mobilizing our knowledge into communities so that they can access high-quality academically sound materials that will help reach these goals?" Rodier said.

"Access to open educational resources is one piece of this puzzle. Having Athabasca University at the forefront of this in Canada just makes sense. Here's to more remixing!"

Learn more about Remix on the AU Press website

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