The Nationwide Momentum Behind Open Education Week 2026 in Canada
From March 2 to 6, 2026, postsecondary institutions across Canada joined the global celebration of Open Education Week, a flagship event organized by Open Education Global to highlight achievements in open education. This annual observance underscores the growing adoption of Open Educational Resources (OER)—freely accessible teaching, learning, and research materials that educators can retain, reuse, revise, remix, and redistribute under open licenses like Creative Commons. In Canada, the week featured workshops, panels, and showcases emphasizing affordability, accessibility, and innovation in higher education.
Canadian universities and colleges, from coast to coast, hosted events that not only promoted OER but also demonstrated their real-world impact. British Columbia's BCcampus spearheaded multiple initiatives, while institutions like the University of British Columbia (UBC), University of Saskatchewan (USask), and Brock University offered tailored sessions. These celebrations reflect a maturing open education ecosystem in Canada, driven by provincial consortia like BCcampus and eCampusOntario, amid rising textbook costs averaging $1,200 per year per student.
Defining Open Education and OER in the Canadian Context
Open Education encompasses practices and resources that dismantle financial and access barriers to knowledge. At its core are OER, which differ from traditional textbooks by being openly licensed, allowing customization to fit diverse Canadian classrooms—from urban universities to remote Indigenous communities. The '5Rs' framework guides their use: retain (keep forever), reuse (in varied contexts), revise (adapt content), remix (combine with other materials), and redistribute (share widely).
In Canada, open education aligns with national priorities like equity, reconciliation, and digital transformation. Provincial leaders like BCcampus have granted funds for OER development since 2012, resulting in hundreds of openly licensed textbooks. This movement addresses textbook affordability crises, where commercial materials can exceed $1,000 annually, disproportionately affecting low-income and first-generation students.
A Surge of Events Igniting Campuses Nationwide
Open Education Week 2026 saw over 150 events logged globally, with Canada contributing significantly through institutional and consortia-led activities. In British Columbia, BCcampus coordinated hybrid panels and fairs; Ontario highlighted OER repositories; and Prairies institutions focused on instructor training. Niagara College celebrated the 'power of Open Education' with showcases, while Durham College promoted campus-available OER.
- University of the Fraser Valley (UFV) announced its inaugural Open Education Strategy, signaling institutional commitment.
- Fanshawe College (Ontario) featured its OER Design Studio in global spotlights.
- Hybrid formats enabled broad participation, blending in-person book fairs with virtual keynotes.
These events fostered collaboration, with librarians, faculty, and students co-creating resources tailored to Canadian curricula, including Indigenous knowledge integration.
BCcampus: Pioneering Open Education in Western Canada
BCcampus, a provincially funded non-profit, led BC's celebrations with a packed schedule aligned with UN Sustainable Development Goals. Highlights included Dr. Karen Cangialosi's keynote on 'Science Education for a Just and Sustainable World' (March 2), SFU's student survey reflections on OER affordability (March 3), and VIU's Open Education Book Fair with free snacks and Zero Textbook Cost (ZTC) pilots.
Other events: VCC's 'OER from Creation to Classroom' panel, TRU's impact showcase, and COTR's 'Flourishing Futures' stations. Douglas College offered hands-on OER creation. Since 2012, BCcampus OER have saved students over $15 million, with ongoing grants fueling adoption.Explore BCcampus events
Prairies and Ontario: Building Momentum Eastward
In Saskatchewan, USask's Gwenna Moss Centre and Library hosted a Lunch and Learn panel with instructors sharing OER success stories, plus a kickoff event. Over 11 years, USask OER saved students $11 million, boosting access and customization.
Ontario's eCampusOntario supports OER with $26 million+ in student savings. Brock University ran workshops on OER 101, Wikipedia pedagogy, H5P integration, and Pressbooks. Niagara and Durham spotlighted local resources. Province-wide, OER adoption has reached thousands of courses, enhancing equity.eCampusOntario OER tools
Photo by Andy Holmes on Unsplash
Spotlight on Leading Universities: UBC, McMaster, and More
UBC's Open UBC hosted 10+ workshops, from H5P design to accessible OER and Pressbooks publishing, emphasizing student-created content. McMaster's MacPherson Institute marked the week with awareness-raising sessions. These align with UBC's long-standing OER grants, saving thousands annually.
Emerging leaders like UFV's strategy launch position Canada as a global OER hub. For career seekers in open ed, opportunities abound in instructional design and librarianship—check higher ed jobs for roles advancing OER.
Quantifiable Impacts: Millions Saved and Growing Adoption
OER adoption in Canada yields massive savings: Ontario postsecondary students saved nearly $39 million since 2017 via OER-enabled courses. USask: $11M over 11 years; BC: $15M+; eCampusOntario: $26M+. Nationally, OER in hundreds of courses reduces barriers, with studies showing improved completion rates by 5-10% and better grades.
- 84% of students prefer OER for cost/quality.
- Adoption up 20% yearly in BC/ON.
- ZTC courses: 0 material costs vs. $200+ traditional.
These figures, from provincial reports, highlight OER's role in affordability amid rising tuition.BC OER Report
Promoting Equity: OER for Diverse Learners
Open education advances reconciliation by incorporating Indigenous perspectives openly. BCcampus VIU's ZTC pilots aid rural/Indigenous students; USask tailors OER for inclusivity. Low-income students benefit most, closing equity gaps—vital as 40% of Canadians face textbook barriers.
Open pedagogy empowers students as creators, fostering agency. Rate professors using Rate My Professor who adopt OER for real impact.
Challenges, Innovations, and Open Pedagogy Frontiers
Barriers include faculty time and discovery; solutions: consortia training, AI tools for adaptation. Innovations like Pressbooks/H5P enable interactive OER. UBC's student assignments exemplify open pedagogy, boosting engagement.
- Step 1: Find OER via BCcampus/LO portals.
- Step 2: License check (CC-BY).
- Step 3: Revise/remix locally.
Future Outlook: Canada's Open Education Leadership
With strategies like UFV's and national networks, Canada eyes 50% OER adoption by 2030. Global ties via OEGlobal amplify impact. Policymakers urge sustained funding for scalability.
Explore higher ed career advice for thriving in open ed.
Photo by Akhilesh Sharma on Unsplash
Join the Movement: Actionable Steps and Resources
Faculty: Attend BCcampus workshops, apply grants. Students: Advocate ZTC courses. Institutions: Develop OE strategies. Visit university jobs, higher ed jobs, Rate My Professor for open ed roles. Future: Postdoc/OER specialist demand rises—check postdoc jobs.





