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115 results

SOU-CCJ230 Introduction to the American Criminal Justice System

CC BY-SA (Attribution ShareAlike)   English

Author(s): Alison S. Burke, David Carter, Brian Fedorek, Tiffany Morey, Lore Rutz-Burri, Shanell Sanchez

Subject(s): Legal aspects of criminology

Publisher: Open Oregon Educational Resources

Last updated: 2025-12-13

For the current edition of this book, visit https://openoregon.pressbooks.pub/crimjustsysintro1e.

This OER covers law enforcement, criminal courts, sentencing, penal institutions, and community-based sanctions. It also includes historical and contemporary perspectives on components of the criminal justice system, as well as the legal and constitutional frameworks in which they operate.

Learning Objectives:

  • Students will increase the breadth of their knowledge and understanding of the American Criminal Justice System.
  • Students will enhance their critical thinking skills via writing, reading, and discussion.
  • Students will learn the history, functions, responsibilities, processes, and importance of each component of the criminal justice system.
  • Students will become familiar with research and its relationship to criminal justice policy.
  • Students will use the foundations learned about the American criminal justice system in future CCJ courses.
Additionally, myths and controversies are incorporated in the course covering the above-noted content areas in the American criminal justice system. In our experience, this tends to be the most exciting part of the class. It also helps students build all learning outcomes through assignments, readings, and materials covered in class. The primary goal when writing this book was to make it easy to read, with fun examples, thought-provoking discussion questions, and is accessible to all to ensure that students would read. The content level targeted first-year students who are taking their first course in Criminology and Criminal Justice, but also as a general education course for those that may not intend to major. In order to ensure each area has accessible materials for the course and meets our learning objectives and goals, we have conducted preliminary research in order to determine our best option is moving forward.

Order a print copy: http://www.lulu.com/shop/alison-s-burke-and-david-carter-and-brian-fedorek-and-tiffany-morey/introduction-to-the-american-criminal-justice-system/paperback/product-24027992.html

Histology and Embryology for Dental Hygiene

CC BY-NC-SA (Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike)  13 H5P Activities    English

Author(s): Laird C Sheldahl, Ph.D.

Editor(s): Amen Mohammed

Subject(s): Embryology, Histology, Dentistry and related oral medicines

Last updated: 2025-12-12

This eBook makes use of animated images to focus on concepts in histology and embryology, as well as hyperlinks to promote non-linear reading and learning. It is aimed at college students in a dental hygiene program.

Difference, Power, and Discrimination in Film and Media: Student Essays

CC BY-NC (Attribution NonCommercial)   English

Author(s): Students at Linn-Benton Community College

Subject(s): Media studies, Film history, theory or criticism, Media studies: TV and society

Publisher: Linn-Benton Community College

Last updated: 2025-12-11

An open pedagogy project of student-authored essays to help readers, particularly high school and college students interested in movies and television, develop a better understanding of the ways that narrative media like movies and television represent issues of difference, power, and discrimination in American culture, both today and in the past. Authors are students in English 223: Difference, Power, and Discrimination in Film course at Linn-Benton Community College in Albany, Oregon taught by Dr. Stephen Rust.

Conventions 101

CC BY-NC (Attribution NonCommercial)   English

Author(s): Chauna Ramsey

Subject(s): Usage and grammar guides

Publisher: Open Oregon Educational Resources

Last updated: 2025-12-11

This is a collection of cumulative units of study for conventional errors common in student writing. It’s flexible, functional, and zeroes in problems typically seen in writing of all types, from the eternal “there/they’re/their” struggle to correct colon use. Units are organized from most simple to most challenging.

Oregon’s History: People of the Northwest in the Land of Eden

CC BY (Attribution)   English

Author(s): Athanasios Michaels

Editor(s): Kaitlin Hakanson

Subject(s): History of other geographical groupings and regions or specific cultures / societies / groups / peoples

Last updated: 2025-12-11

This “open textbook” is a social and cultural history of the people of Oregon representing powerful figures from the dominant Euro-American culture, the marginalized and oppressed, and social and political reformers who shaped the historical legacy of the state. It is a story of the diverse array of immigrants who helped build the state and strengthen it. The title is a recollection of the racial fantasies that European-American settlers created in their expansionist vision of the West and the state of Oregon. Initially the Oregon Territory was built on intolerance and racial exclusivity, but eventually Oregon embraces its diversity, but not without struggle and heartache. Our journey through the past starts with an essential question, “Who are the people of Oregon?”

Environmental Biology

CC BY (Attribution)   English

Author(s): Matthew R. Fisher

Editor(s): Matthew R. Fisher

Subject(s): Biology, life sciences

Publisher: Open Oregon Educational Resources

Last updated: 2025-12-11

This open textbook covers the most salient environmental issues, from a biological perspective. The text is designed for an introductory-level college science course. Topics include the fundamentals of ecology, biodiversity, pollution,  climate change, food production, and human population growth.

Order a print copy: https://www.lulu.com/shop/matthew-fisher/environmental-biology/paperback/product-15vm78v6.html?q=Environmental+Biology&page=1&pageSize=4

Troubleshooting Motors and Controls

CC BY-SA (Attribution ShareAlike)   English

Author(s): Ken Dickson-Self

Subject(s): Electric motors

Last updated: 2025-12-11

This course is designed to teach students about induction motors and the methods used to control and troubleshoot them. Order a Print Copy.

The Word on College Reading and Writing

CC BY-NC (Attribution NonCommercial)   English

Author(s): Carol Burnell, Jaime Wood, Monique Babin, Susan Pesznecker, Nicole Rosevear

Subject(s): Writing and editing guides

Publisher: Open Oregon Educational Resources

Last updated: 2025-12-11

Written by five college reading and writing instructors, this interactive, multimedia text draws from decades of experience teaching students who are entering the college reading and writing environment for the first time. It includes examples, exercises, and definitions for just about every reading- and writing-related topic students will encounter in their college courses.

Order a print copy at this link!

Ecology of Place

CC BY-NC-SA (Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike)   English

Author(s): Ana Zalyubovskiy

Editor(s): Ana Zalyubovskiy

Subject(s): Writing and editing guides, English

Publisher: Openoregon Pressbooks

Publication date: 2021-01-08

Last updated: 2025-12-10

The Culture of Science

CC BY-NC-SA (Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike)   English

Author(s): Steve Rust, Jenée Wilde

Subject(s): Writing and editing guides

Last updated: 2025-12-10

The casebook offers five reading units organized thematically around significant questions at issue. Reading Unit 1 grounds students in contemporary questions of science and its boundaries, offering a blend of dense and approachable readings intended to spark class conversations on the topic of scientific culture. Units 2 and 3 extend discourses on scientific culture into areas of critical analysis such as gender, race and ethnicity, religion, ethics, and colonialism, as well as examining issues of language and perception. Unit 4 focuses on basic questions of fact, definition, and interpretation by exploring the discourse surrounding anomalies, pseudoscience, and skepticism, making it particularly useful for reviewing and extending students’ understanding of skills learned in Writing 121. Finally, Unit 5 offers a case study on Frankenstein as a techno-moral lesson on overreaching ambition and how it applies to scientific culture today. While the Table of Contents is organized thematically, many readings have cross-unit (and cross-disciplinary) connections and relevance. We encourage instructors to make use of the Alternative Table of Contents and to feel welcome to assign the entire casebook in your courses and/or to use individual readings or units as launching points for individual and team research projects. Supplementary teaching resources can be found in the casebook bibliography.