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Cover: Advanced Legal Research: Process and Practice by Megan Austin | Law Instruction Librarian University of Oregon John E. Jaqua Law Library. Image of computer and legal notepad.

Written for students and instructors, this Advanced Legal Research text by Law Instruction Librarian Megan Austin uses the steps of the legal research process to facilitate skills practice, collaboration, and reflection.

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This proposes a hypothetical as a basis for practicing the research process steps and encourages students and instructors to contribute other hypotheticals. The text also includes sample assignments, demonstration videos, and discussion and reflection questions, with opportunities for students and instructors to contribute additional questions. This text uses an approach that emphasizes student reflection on the development of research skills, with the benefit of repeated and consistent formative feedback.

Author Biography

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Megan Austin specializes in legal research and analysis, legal instruction and pedagogy.  At the Jaqua Law Library, she is the law instruction librarian.  She is also a member of the Undergraduate Advisory Committee and the Social Activism ARC Workgroup. Prior to coming to the University of Oregon, Megan was a Library Fellow at the University of Arizona College of Law, Cracchiolo Law Library and taught legal research and writing in the Master of Legal Studies and Undergraduate Law programs. Megan received her B.A. from the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, and her J.D. and M.A. from the University of Arizona.

For more information about Megan, please see her UO Libraries faculty page.

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16 results

Learning How to Learn Languages

CC BY (Attribution)  44 H5P Activities    English

Author(s): Keli Yerian, Bibi Halima, Faith Adler, Logan Fisher, Cameron Keaton, Addy Orsi, Abhay Pawar

Editor(s): Bibi Halima, Keli Yerian

Subject(s): Language and Linguistics, Language acquisition, Language teaching theory and methods, Language teaching and learning: second or additional languages, Language learning: grammar, vocabulary and pronunciation, Language self-study, Language learning: specific skills, Language learning: speaking skills, Language learning: listening skills, Language learning: reading skills, Language learning: writing skills, Educational: Modern (non-native or second) languages, Educational: Modern (non-native or second) languages: Language learning

Institution(s): University of Oregon

Last updated: 09/10/2025

Learning How to Learn Languages is a student-developed, interactive, open-source online textbook. It is a collaborative effort of five undergraduate students, one graduate student, and a faculty member at the University of Oregon. It offers a comprehensive view of second language learning in one place, providing conceptual perspectives on language learning through a practical lens. This how-to guide is useful for learners of all levels and can be used in various ways: as a complete textbook for a course, as supplemental chapters in language courses, or as self-study. It contains ten chapters: five chapters on different foundational aspects of language learning followed by five additional chapters on language skills and their integration with practical strategies and example stories from learners. This OER incorporates various visual elements such as illustrations, student-created videos, authors’ stories, and H5P activities with built-in feedback for learners to engage independently.

Small Business Management

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

Author(s): Jason Anderson

Editor(s): Scott Day

Subject(s): Business and Management

Last updated: 09/10/2025

A general introduction to managing a small business. An abridged adaptation of Small Business Management by Jason Anderson.

Introduction to Neurobiology

CC BY-NC-SA (Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike)  47 H5P Activities    English

Author(s): Avinash Singh

Subject(s): Neurosciences

Institution(s): University of Oregon

Publisher: University of Oregon Libraries

Last updated: 08/10/2025

Introduction to Neurobiology is aimed at undergraduate students new to the field of neuroscience. The first edition specifically targets students enrolled in BI360 Neurobiology at the University of Oregon and primarily contains topics covered in that course. Future editions will continue to expand on topics, details, and primary literature citations.

This OER is unique in its presentation of neurobiology content. The text is divided into short, easily digestible chapters that focus on one concept. Pairing the text with images, animations, and videos provides students with multiple ways of learning the content. The text is written with the undergraduate student that is new to neuroscience in mind. Neuroscience terminology is introduced in an easy-to-understand manner, and supporting content is clear and concise to minimize cognitive load not associated with understanding new material

Each chapter ends with an interactive quiz for student self-evaluation of the content. Quiz questions provide feedback, so students can self-check their understanding at the end of each concept and receive immediate feedback about their learning.

Science and Culture: Readings for Writers

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

Author(s): Jenée Wilde, Stephen Rust

Editor(s): Jenée Wilde, Stephen Rust

Subject(s): Writing and editing guides

Institution(s): University of Oregon

Last updated: 07/10/2025

Science and Culture is a resource intended for college and secondary students to engage with scientific concepts, facts, and history as they relate to society in the United States and globally. The multimodality, diversity of voices, and range of topics should appeal to anyone interested in exploring these particular knowledge debates across natural and social sciences, humanities, and creative arts. The themes in this volume have been cultivated to engage readers not merely as receptors of information but as active participants in this ongoing process of knowledge building.

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

Last updated: 07/10/2025

The Politics of Sports

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

Author(s): Anna Carroll, Eleanor Wakefield

Subject(s): Writing and editing guides

Last updated: 07/10/2025

Editors Carroll and Eleanor Wakefield draw on their experience guiding students to investigate sports critically and develop rich, complex research questions and related writing projects. The result is an introduction to the politics of sports as an area of inquiry that prompts students to engage with topics that may already seem familiar (and, for some students, some that are entirely new) to develop critical thinking and writing skills. When students read interesting articles, have engaging conversations, and are invited to question their assumptions about sports, they learn to think critically, write better papers, and actively engage the rhetorical concepts that will prepare them for future academic writing.

Advanced Legal Research: Process and Practice

CC BY (Attribution)   English

Author(s): Megan Austin

Subject(s): Legal profession / practice of law: general

Institution(s): University of Oregon

Last updated: 07/10/2025

Written for students and instructors in an advanced legal research course, this book uses the steps of the legal research process to facilitate skills practice, collaboration, and reflection. It proposes a hypothetical as a basis for practicing the research process steps and encourages students and instructors to contribute other hypotheticals. The text also includes sample assignments, demonstration videos, and discussion and reflection questions, with opportunities for students and instructors to contribute additional questions. This text uses an approach that emphasizes student reflection on the development of research skills, with the benefit of repeated and consistent formative feedback.

Introduction to Arabic: Egyptian Arabic for first-year students

CC BY-NC (Attribution NonCommercial)  83 H5P Activities    English

Author(s): David Hollenberg, Amira Ghazy, Abdulrahman Eissa, Hanan Elsherif, Benjamin Loy, Kerlos Rizk

Subject(s): Language teaching and learning material and coursework

Institution(s): University of Oregon

Last updated: 07/10/2025

This book presents materials for mastering the Arabic alphabet and the student's first steps in Egyptian Arabic.

Writing as Inquiry

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

Author(s): Kara Clevinger, Stephen Rust

Subject(s): Writing and editing guides

Institution(s): University of Oregon

Last updated: 07/10/2025

Welcome to our creative commons OER (open educational resource) for Writing 121 at the University of Oregon. This resource is designed for students to be a zero-cost, high-quality guide to academic writing, with the goal of preparing you for success in college and beyond.

Introduction to the Nonprofit Sector

CC BY-NC (Attribution NonCommercial)   English

Author(s): Dyana P. Mason

Subject(s): Non-profitmaking organizations

Institution(s): University of Oregon

Last updated: 07/10/2025

Nonprofit organizations are on the front lines in communities, providing an important foundation for the social safety net in the United States and around the world.  They also provide places where people can gather, share ideas and build community.  They often accomplish amazing feats with few resources.   This book was designed to be used in an undergraduate-level introductory course in the nonprofit sector.   It provides an overview of the vocabulary used in defining the work of nonprofit organizations, topics of interest to nonprofit managers,  and describes the primary roles nonprofits play in American (and to a lesser extent international) communities.  The book also considers the growing numbers and influence of social enterprises and other “social innovation” organizations. Throughout, it brings in leading themes of accountability, ethics and obligations facing many nonprofit organizations as they go about their work – challenges that should be well understood by anyone interested in becoming a leader in the nonprofit sector.