OERs at StFX

A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away, students didn’t spend thousands of dollars on textbooks, for many were freely provided by the institution they attend. But wait, this isn’t a fairy-tale—for many students attending university in British Columbia, it’s reality. Since 2012, students on the West Coast have saved almost $24 million dollars as many of their courses are taught using open textbooks. It’s not just students that benefit from these open textbooks, either—hundreds of faculty members have made the switch and have a variety of free textbooks at their disposal.

What is AtlanticOER and Why Does it Matter?

Open Educational Resources (OERs) are online, freely distributed textbooks, but can also include a variety of resources such as videos and educational materials. To learn more about these OERs, I attended the virtual launch event of AtlanticOER and spoke with its lead organizer, StFX alumna Tiffany MacLennan ’19, ’20.

First, MacLennan explains, “AtlanticOER is a repository of open educational resources that are going to be available to any student in Atlantic Canada. That means that once it gets off the ground and gets building itself a little bit more, it will be a place that any professor in Atlantic Canada can put in either their textbooks, educational materials, or videos. As it grows, the aim is that students get access to free educational materials and we can ween away from the traditional textbook model.” You don’t have to convince any student about the benefits of OERs. Many of us know that textbooks can be expensive, unengaging, and unhelpful to the learning process. Many students choose not to buy textbooks for a class because for them, it is a choice between textbooks and groceries.

There are benefits for professors, too. MacLennan explains that “bringing OERs into your classroom can provide you with a new learning opportunity and can force you to have more exciting and inviting conversations with your students. Through using OER, you get to learn more yourself… and you get to play with it—it’s a fun initiative. We also have librarians who can comfortably find OERs for a classroom to remove some of the burden.”

AtlanticOER was established to eliminate some of the barriers to creating OERs, McLennan shared. First, “it gives educators the platform to start creating and sharing their own OERs,” she said. It also helps overcome the challenges that come with creating textbooks and educational materials by addressing the barriers of limited time and resources. “Creating a textbook isn’t very fast–they take a lot of work. With the AtlanticOER repository, there are grants you can apply for that compensate your time spent on OERs or to hire students to help create OERs.” The organization also places a great deal of emphasis on disseminating knowledge, helping people understand the benefits that come with OERs. For McLennan, “the end goal is that no student makes the choice not to buy a textbook based on affordability. The grad gift this year is

for student food insecurity due to an uptick in food related asks from the financial aid office. That tells us those decisions are being made more and more often.”

Students’ Union Advocacy

I also sat down with Siobhan Lacey, current Vice President Academic (VPA) of the StFX Students’ Union to find out what they’re currently doing to advocate for OER adoption. Provincially, they’re working with StudentsNS, the province’s non-profit advocacy group that represents post-secondary students, to advocate to the provincial government for OER funding, such as providing financial incentives and grants to professors. Close to home, the Students’ Union is facilitating conversations with key stakeholders such as faculty and students.

Prior to the launch of AtlanticOER, StFX did not have the on-campus resources to push for OERs; but now, Students’ Unions across the Atlantic region are undergoing training to advocate for OERs at their University Senates. Moving forward, it is important for our Students’ Union to make a bigger push on OERs, but this change can only happen if students want it. It will require students talking to their professors about OERs to create an Open Education culture on our campus.

When asked about the barriers to implementing OERs, Lacey said that “there are a couple big ones. The biggest one is obviously funding. It’s always going to be funding. But to first develop an online infrastructure that can host a variety of OERs… is going to be very expensive, maintaining that even more so. The funding [barrier] is why I think we’re seeing such communal effort around OERs, and why no separate university is developing them. It would take a big budget that I don’t think one university would be able to sustain. Another barrier we’re seeing is incentivizing faculty to develop their own OERs. Obviously, developing a textbook is time consuming and can be a lot of work for faculty. But, ultimately, we know that it’s so much more beneficial for students. So, it’s about incentivizing those folks and showing them the benefit it has to student academic success.” The final barrier Lacey identified was awareness: “trying to encourage faculty to develop OERs because students want them while the majority don’t know what they are is a little difficult to do!” Earlier this year, StudentsNS ran an awareness campaign focusing on this final barrier, and is currently putting a lot of emphasis on knowledge translation to provide students with the skills to engage in conversations with faculty about OERs.

Offering advice to future VPAs or students interested in OERs, McLennan says “not be discouraged by the slow uptake at first, because all good things take time. Starting conversations isn’t easy, especially when faculty have been teaching with these books for [several] years. Use the time it takes to build things to build things right. We need more students to know about OERs to get more students to talk about them… with our faculty, administrations, and librarians to actually push this forward.”

University Administration

The university administration can play a big role in implementing OERs. On March 5, 2021, University Academic Vice President and Provost Dr. Kevin Wamsley agreed to sit down with me for an interview. “I’m a fan of educational resources being distributed to as many people as possible,” he said. “Education is difficult, it’s hierarchical, it can favour those with more resources, and textbooks have, for the past twenty-to-twenty-five years, become very expensive. Textbook companies have become unfair in their pricing. While education has been brought onto the open market readily, the burden of this falls to the student… providing free or low-cost educational resources makes education more accessible.”

When asked about benefits for faculty, Wamsley emphasized that the role of the professor is to disseminate knowledge. “I think it’s important that professors are actively involved in producing materials for class. Professors creating and modifying OERs is an important part of the process… professors are excited to talk about their work and that’s the way it should be. Once you begin to contribute, and you see how it can be dynamic in your classroom, I think people are going to be all in,” he said.

Coming back to one barrier identified by the Students’ Union in implementing OERs, I asked Wamsley about incentivizing professors to adopt and create them. He said there are no current plans to incentivize professors to take this project on, but went on to explain that the school does have a plan: “we have a fabulous teaching and learning centre over in Mulroney Hall operated by Dr. Angie Kolen, and this presents a marvellous vessel to get the word out and provide workshops about OERs and how to get involved.” Further, he says, “professors are not getting rich selling textbooks. They’re not, they never will,” so there’s nothing standing in the way of making future publications accessible.

Varsity Athlete Charged with Human Trafficking

In an email to students on December 29th, 2020, Elizabeth Yeo, VP Students, revealed that a first-year StFX student had been charged by the York Regional Police in relation to a human trafficking investigation.

Justin Barrett, 20, of Brampton was charged by the York Regional Police with a number of offences, including Trafficking in Persons Under the Age of 18, Material Benefit from Trafficking in Persons Under the Age of 18, and Material Benefit from Sexual Services of a Person Under 18 Years. A media release by the York Regional Police stated that “the accused spent time in West Virginia, United States, and currently has ties to Nova Scotia.”

Barrett, a first-year Bachelor of Arts student was in his first year of eligibility as a goalkeeper on the StFX Men’s Varsity Soccer team. Barrett’s name no longer appears on the team roster, and his player bio has been removed from the StFX Athletics website.

In her email to students, Yeo stated “the university will be monitoring and reviewing the situation closely to ensure the safety of our community, which is always our priority. This includes attempting to gain more information from the York Regional Police about the file. Under the Sexual Violence Policy, StFX will implement immediate measures in cases of elevated risk to the StFXand/or broader Antigonish community.” 

The immediate measures described by Yeo, range from no contact orders to university suspension. The Xaverian Weekly was unable toconfirm if interim measures had been implemented against the accused. 

Representatives from the soccer team were unavailable to commentprior to publication.

The charges against Justin Barrett have not been tested in a court of law.

Two COVID-19 Cases on Campus

On Tuesday January 5th Dr. Andrew Hakin, President and Vice-Chancellor of Saint Francis Xavier University sent out an email to the StFX community to announce that there is now a positive covid-19 case on campus. The student arrived on January 3rd and had been isolating in residence.

A second email was sent out on January 9th to notify the StFX community of a second positive case. This student arrived to campus on January 5th had been isolating in residence since their arrival. Dr. Hakin wrote that the two cases appear to be unrelated. The Public Health Centre is working on contact tracing and the university has made the decision to even reach out to those considered a low-risk contact. 

Both cases are said to now be following the COVID-19 protocol in place by the university. Inside the Protocols for Isolation Handbook provided by the university to ensure a safe arrival back to campus explains that if a positive test result occurs that Public Health will take the appropriate steps to contact the student and start contact tracing, then the student will remain in the same location they are isolating in unless they share a campus apartment or bathroom. The university has set aside rooms in AC, Governor’s Hall, and International House.Individuals who test positive will have regular phone or email support from Public Health or a Health and Counselling Nurse to assess the student’s condition. 

Students are being asked to monitor their symptoms, and to get a COVID-19 test on day 6,7, or 8 of their isolation as they return from New Brunswick and outside of Atlantic Canada. Dr. Hakin in his emails to the StFX community reminds students that if they think they have symptoms you are to do a COVID-19 self-assessment or call 811 and those students who are sent for testing are to email Isolate@stfx.ca.

Music Student Returning to StFX After Years-Long Court Battle

***Content Warning: The following article contains details which may be triggering to some. There is a list of resources at the end of the article. Please do not hesitate to contact any of these resources if you find yourself struggling. 

Luke Letourneau will be returning to classes this semester after being acquitted of sexual assault in October 2020. Letourneau, who enrolled in the Department of Music at StFX in 2017, was suspended by the university’s Judicial Board in April 2018. He subsequently appealed the suspension, which was set aside and he was allowed to return to campus in September 2018 while the case was pending criminal proceedings. 

The complainant was not informed of Letourneau’s return to campus, and left StFX upon hearing that he was back. Her experience was part of a series of events inspiring student protests that made national news, and eventually led to the review of StFX’s Sexual Violence Policy. Letourneau withdrew from campus shortly after, and StFX Vice-President Finance and Administration Andrew Beckett issued a statement apologizing for how the situation was handled. Letourneau was acquitted of sexual assault on October 16, 2020 and will return to classes at the start of the Winter semester to continue his degree.

“I am looking forward to resuming my education at StFX and am pleased that the university has welcomed me back,” Letourneau said in a written statement provided exclusively to the Xaverian Weekly. “The past three years have been very difficult for me. It was a great relief to me to be completely vindicated by the judge last fall, and I would encourage anyone doubting the outcome of the case to read [Justice Denise Boudreau’s] verdict.” 

 In that decision, Justice Boudreau found him not guilty due to Crown attorney Jonathan Gavel having “not proven one of the essential elements of sexual assault beyond reasonable doubt, i.e. the lack of consent.” Most of the trial revolved around the complainant's “memory gap,” which spanned the “most crucial period of the evening.” Justice Boudreau said that the memory gap was “entirely unexplained” and concluded “that the complainant, in fact, has not forgotten. She remembers the entire evening. She has chosen, in her testimony, to say she has forgotten.” That conclusion left the Justice with “serious doubts as to the complainant’s credibility regarding the events of that evening, including her testimony that she did not consent.”

Student Outrage

Despite the Court’s findings and Letourneau’s acquittal, many students are upset that Letourneau is coming back to StFX.

The case’s complainant has expressed her disappointment with StFX’s decision to allow Letourneau to return to campus. In a written statement provided to the Xaverian Weekly, she expressed the opinion “that StFX has once again chosen their image over student safety…. {Letourneau} was supposed to be my friend. He took what he wanted then continued on with his life while I was left to live in fear. I stopped eating so I didn’t chance seeing him at meal hall. I couldn’t walk anywhere without a key between my knuckles. My chest still tightens up when I hear certain songs. I still clench my fists if I see someone drinking a PBR. I never know what seemingly normal thing will send me into a downward spiral or panic attack.” She concluded her statement with a plea to the university to “do better, please.”

Talking to students on campus and observing social media, the complainant’s disappointment is echoed. Gabe Mink, a fourth-year Music student “acknowledges the rarity of false sexual violence reports as well as the even rarer occasion of the accused to be found guilty”  and feels that the university’s current actions seem to disregard that information. “I feel for all the survivors and allies who are once again being let down by StFX,” he said. 

University is Taking Measures

 To avoid a repeat of the unrest of 2018, StFX has been reaching out to any students involved in the initial case through Zoom to inform them that Letourneau will be returning. Elizabeth Yeo, Vice President Students, shared in a statement to the Xaverian Weekly that “the specific matter involving Mr. Letourneau is one that the university has carefully reviewed, and in accordance with its policies and procedures, including the Sexual Violence Response Policy, Mr. Letourneau is eligible to return to the university to pursue his degree if he so chooses … the University has no basis for disallowing his admittance.” She also stressed that “StFX does not tolerate sexualized violence and has made considerable advances in education and prevention and its policies in recent years.”

StFX Students’ Union President Sarah Elliott told the Xaverian Weekly that “The StFX Students’ Union believes and supports survivors. Students deserve to feel safe on campus, and survivors deserve to feel heard,” she wrote.

It’s apparent that the perception of Letourneau’s return varies greatly. Many students and on-campus activists feel outraged, whereas StFX has no tenable reason to hold any odium towards Letourneau or exclude him from campus. It remains unclear how this news will affect the campus community or Letourneau himself as he continues his education. 

The following resources are available to StFX students looking for support dealing with this information:

StFX Sexual Violence Prevention and Response Advocate

902-867-5601 | Bloomfield Centre 313D 

The Antigonish Women’s Resource Centre 

902-863-6221 | 204 Kirk Place, 219 Main Street, Antigonish | Monday to Friday, 9:00 to 4:30

StFX Health and Counselling 

902-867-2263 | Bloomfield Centre 305

StFX Peer Support Program

Bloomfield 417 | Monday to Friday, 12:00 to 5:00 (Reopening January 25)

NS Mental Health Crisis Line

1-888-429-8167

Good2TalkNS

1-833-292-3698 | Text “GOOD2TALKNS” to 686868