Open Access and Articles, Papers, and Reports

Recent resources tagged with Open Access and Articles, Papers, and Reports.

2 New Digital Models Promise Academic Publishing for Profit

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Title:2 New Digital Models Promise Academic Publishing for Profit (ID: CSD5528)
Author(s):Jennifer Howard (The Chronicle of Higher Education)
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (10/02/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

"Scholarly publishers are well aware that more and more readers and libraries want to get hold of monographs in electronic form. The trick has been how to deliver content digitally without going out of business. Two new models—one with an open-access component, one without—should help publishers test out ways to adapt and, maybe, thrive."

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No Brief Candle: Reconceiving Research Libraries for the 21st Century

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Title:No Brief Candle: Reconceiving Research Libraries for the 21st Century (ID: CSD5491)
Source:Council on Library & Information Resources
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (08/13/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

In February 2008, CLIR convened 25 leading librarians, publishers, faculty members, and information technology specialists to consider this question. Participants discussed the challenges and opportunities that libraries are likely to face in the next five to ten years, and how changes in scholarly communication will affect the future library. Essays by eight of the participants—Paul Courant, Andrew Dillon, Rick Luce, Stephen Nichols, Daphnée Rentfrow, Abby Smith, Kate Wittenberg, and Lee Zia—were circulated to participants in advance and provided background for the conversation. This report contains these background essays as well as a summary of the meeting.

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Ithaka’s 2006 Studies of Key Stakeholders in the Digital Transformation in Higher Education

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Title:Ithaka’s 2006 Studies of Key Stakeholders in the Digital Transformation in Higher Education (ID: CSD5490)
Author(s):Ross Housewright (Ithaka) and Roger C. Schonfeld (Ithaka)
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (08/18/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

Ithaka's 2006 survey of faculty members sought to determine their attitudes related to online resources, electronic archiving, teaching and learning and related subjects.  This study affords the opportunity to develop trend analysis of many measurements collected in the 2003 and 2000 faculty surveys. As in the past, Ithaka developed a robust set of disciplinary and other demographic analyses that have allowed them to learn more about how best to serve the needs of different types of faculty members. Findings include;

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Free digital texts begin to challenge costly college textbooks in California

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Title:Free digital texts begin to challenge costly college textbooks in California (ID: CSD5484)
Author(s):Gale Holland (Los Angeles Times)
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (08/18/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

Would-be reformers are trying to beat the high cost -- and, they say, the dumbing down -- of college materials by writing or promoting open-source, no-cost online texts.

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Fostering Learning in the Networked World: The Cyberlearning Opportunity and Challenge, A 21st Century Agenda for the National Science Foundation

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Title:Fostering Learning in the Networked World: The Cyberlearning Opportunity and Challenge, A 21st Century Agenda for the National Science Foundation (ID: CSD5476)
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (08/11/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

The National Science Foundation defines "cyberlearning" as "the use of networked computing and communications technologies to support learning." The report of the NSF Task Force on Cyberlearning, Fostering Learning in the Networked World: The Cyberlearning Opportunity and Challenge, A 21st Century Agenda for the National Science Foundation, identifies cyberlearning as having "…the potential to transform education throughout a lifetime, enabling customized interaction with diverse learning materials on any topic..."

The task force report identifies potential ways in which advanced computing and communications technologies might be leveraged to support learning, highlighting opportunities for further research. In it, the task force offers 5 recommendations for the NSF to pursue:

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Open Doors and Open Minds: What Faculty Authors Can Do to Ensure Open Access to Their Work Through Their Institution

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Title:Open Doors and Open Minds: What Faculty Authors Can Do to Ensure Open Access to Their Work Through Their Institution (ID: CSD5385)
Source:Science Commons, SPARC
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (04/24/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

Recently, on February 12, 2008, the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) at Harvard University took a landmark step.  The faculty voted to adopt a policy requiring that faculty authors send an electronic copy of their scholarly articles to the university’s digital repository and that faculty authors automatically grant copyright permission to the university to archive and to distribute these articles unless a faculty member has waived the policy for a particular article. Essentially, the faculty voted to make open access to the results of their published journal articles the default policy for the Faculty of Arts and Sciences of Harvard University.

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Open to Change: An Interview with Leaders of the Open University

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Title:Open to Change: An Interview with Leaders of the Open University (ID: ERM0823)
Author(s):Richard N. Katz (EDUCAUSE)
Origin:EDUCAUSE Review Articles (03/14/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

 “The movement toward open content forces us to really think about what value it is we bring to students who enroll at the Open University. I think that we are getting to that tipping point—rethinking the underlying pedagogy with which we have conventionally delivered distance education and open learning.”

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Open Access in 2007

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Title:Open Access in 2007 (ID: CSD5409)
Author(s):Peter Suber (Public Knowledge)
Source:Journal of Electronic Publishing
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (02/15/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

Peter Suber shares his annual review of the open access movement. The article highlights 15 categories of open access activity in 2007.

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Open Access Publishing and the Emerging Infrastructure for 21st-Century Scholarship

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Title:Open Access Publishing and the Emerging Infrastructure for 21st-Century Scholarship (ID: CSD5410)
Author(s):Donald J. Waters (The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation)
Source:Journal of Electronic Publishing
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (02/15/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

In <b>Open Access Publishing and the
Emerging Infrastructure for 21st-Century Scholarship</b>, Donald Waters asks,
ìopen access for what and for whom and how can we ensure that there is
sufficient capital for continued innovation in scholarly publishing?

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When Is Open Access Not Open Access?

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Title:When Is Open Access Not Open Access? (ID: CSD5318)
Author(s):Catriona J. MacCallum (Public Library of Science)
Source:PLoS Biology
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (10/16/2007)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

"Since 2003, when PLoS Biology was launched, there has been a spectacular growth in “open-access” journals. The Directory of Open Access Journals (http://www.doaj.org/), hosted by Lund University Libraries, lists 2,816 open-access journals as this article goes to press (and probably more by the time you read this). Authors also have various “open-access” options within existing subscription journals offered by traditional publishers (e.g., Blackwell, Springer, Oxford University Press, and many others). In return for a fee to the publisher, an author's individual article is made freely available and (sometimes) deposited in PubMed Central (PMC). But, as open access grows in prominence, so too has confusion about what open access means, particularly with regard to unrestricted use of content—which true open access allows. This confusion is being promulgated by journal publishers at the expense of authors and funding agencies wanting to support open access."

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