
29:57
I love the way you provide stages of practice here.

30:44
Thanks, Anna!

33:34
What's the link to the book please?

33:56
https://human.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Languages/English_as_a_Foreign_Language/Reading_Writing_Research_and_Reasoning%3A_An_Advanced_ESL_Text

36:23
Thank you.

36:32
Thank you Marit, Elizabeth, and Gabe. This was an excellent presentation of the text.

36:56
Thanks. Very interesting & helpful

37:04
This is a great text I can see as useful for both ESL and English courses. Love the organization and content.

37:38
Thanks, Lynn and Becky!

38:31
Yes, working on OER with my campus helped me to see how unique each discipline's challenges are.

38:33
Thanks--this looks wonderful. I will definitely look at it to understand your approach to some of the same material I write about. Nice visual layout and intuitive presentation of the content.

43:44
Wow, the open pedagogy is a really important aspect! Thanks for talking about that!

44:12
I’m having bad connections. I’ll try to reconnect.

45:54
Congratulations!

49:06
This looks great! I really appreciate the struggle to simplify.

53:45
It's really well organized. I can see that this took a LOT of work and research and passion to make something that is accessible to students and teachers. The case studies are awesome.

55:20
https://socialsci.libretexts.org/Sandboxes/Team%3A_Comparative_Government_and_Politics

55:33
Looks great!

55:59
That link doesn't actually take us to the book.

56:11
Ok, I'll keep looking for the right link

59:21
The Comparative Government book link should work now

59:33
Thank you!

59:46
👍

01:00:23
Julia, I just checked out the student resources page and it reminds of a "language toolkit" from our book. Really cool.

01:01:34
Thank you all.