Introduction to Open Textbooks at Douglas College

Territorial Acknowledgment

We recognize and acknowledge the QayQayt (Ki-Kite) and the Kwikwetlem First Nation, as well as all Coast Salish Peoples, on whose traditional and unceded territories we live, we learn, we play, and we do our work.

Welcome pole - wooden carving of woman with arms held up and open
The welcome Pole at Douglas College. She faces up river and her arms are raised in welcome. Photo credit: Jennifer Kirkey CC0

Open Textbooks

Open textbooks became a cause of mine, Jennifer Kirkey,  as I found more and more of my students could not afford the “required” textbook.   BCcampus organized an Open Textbook Summit in 2015 and the keynote speaker, Rajiv Jhangiani from Kwantlen Polytechnic University was so inspiring that I became a BCcampus Faculty Fellow as an Advocate for Open Textbooks in 2016.  I do wish to thank BCcampus for their work with open educational resources such as this textbook, and for the opportunities they have given me.    You can learn more about them by visiting    https://bccampus.ca/

You can find a list of open textbooks at the BCcampus webpage at https://open.bccampus.ca/find-open-textbooks/  

Being able to modify a textbook so that it better matched our courses was the next logical step.  This book is the start of the process.

Books for sale.
Student Bulletin Board Covered with Books for Sale Posters at Douglas College Photo Credit Jennifer Kirkey 2016 CC-BY

Here is a picture I took at the start of the semester in September 2016.   This bulletin board is located outside Douglas College’s bookstore.   Students who clearly did not need their old textbooks, or who needed the money to buy new ones, put up posters in an attempt to sell their old books.  I do hope that you find this textbook useful and worth keeping.  Please tell us what worked for you in this book, and what did not.  We have the legal ability to change the book and your feedback will help us.

Who Am I and How Did I get here?

Looking up at the sky as a child, I was fascinated by the stars.   The local library supplied a book on the constellations, and that led to a book explaining why the stars were different colours, and that led to a book on physics.    I kept asking questions and that led me to a Bachelor of Science degree in Physics from Trent University in Peterborough, Ontario, Canada and then to a Master’s degree in Physics from Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada.

I have been working at Douglas College in New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada for more than twenty-five years.   I teach a first year course in astronomy to liberal arts majors and physics to people whose background is no physics in high school to those who want to be engineers.  I also teach in a post-graduate program for Elementary School Teachers.

I volunteer with our local science centre, Science World at Telus World of Science in Vancouver, B.C., doing outreach visits to elementary and secondary schools, as well as being active with the local branch of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada.

Jennifer Kirkey 2016 Photo credit: Jennifer Kirkey CC-BY

 

License

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Douglas College Physics 1104 Copyright © by OpenStax is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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