Faculty And Student Perspectives On Open Education At Gettysburg College, 2021 Gettysburg College
Faculty And Student Perspectives On Open Education At Gettysburg College, Mary R. Elmquist, Janelle Wertzberger, Alice M. Brawley Newlin, Natasha J. Gownaris, Christopher C. Oechler, Ryan E. Nedrow
Friday Forum
Commercially available textbooks and course materials are often expensive for students and sometimes don’t cover topics in exactly the way you might prefer to teach. Freely available and completely adaptable open educational resources (OER) have risen in popularity in recent years, both nationwide and locally, as a way to address both issues. Join us to hear from Alice Brawley Newlin (Management), Tasha Gownaris (Environmental Studies), Chris Oechler (Spanish), and Ryan Nedrow ’22 to hear about their experiences with OER in the classroom. Panelists will talk honestly about the benefits, drawbacks, challenges, and successes associated with open course materials in order …
Open Education Week: Open Pedagogy And Student Content Creation, 2021 Portland State University
Open Education Week: Open Pedagogy And Student Content Creation, Shane Abrams, Frank Granshaw, Veronica Hotton
Open Education Week 2021
Open Pedagogy is the practice of engaging students in content creation through "renewable assignments" so that their work lives on beyond the course and has an authentic audience. In this workshop, you will learn about how to structure an Open Pedagogy assignment and will see examples from faculty who have designed their own renewable assignments.
A Review Of Grey Literature Cited By Food Loss Law And Policy Scholarship, 2021 University at Albany, State University of New York
A Review Of Grey Literature Cited By Food Loss Law And Policy Scholarship, Angela Hackstadt
University Libraries Faculty Scholarship
In the United States, state and federal programs, rules, and legislation attempt to address the social, economic, and environmental impacts of food waste. Research on the efficacy of these interventions rely on a variety of grey literature resources. Grey literature is valuable to policy research but may be overlooked because it is not published commercially and is often deemed unauthoritative. This review focuses on the use of grey literature in food waste law and policy scholarship to identify the most used sources and to determine what, if any, archiving strategies authors use. Recommendations for librarians and researchers are discussed.
Demystifying The Scholarly Publishing Landscape, 2021 University of New Hampshire, Durham
Demystifying The Scholarly Publishing Landscape, Eleta Exline, Emily Poworoznek, Patricia Condon
University Library Scholarship
The scholarly publishing landscape has grown exponentially in size, scope and complexity within the last decade. Since the number and type of publishing outlets have exploded, researchers now need to consider practical and ethical issues such as predatory journals, open access, preprints, publishing data and sponsor obligations when making publication decisions. Further, these issues may be compounded by interdisciplinary research collaborations. Presenters will provide an overview of the contemporary scholarly publishing landscape and the different components. They will also help researchers identify key questions to ask during different stages of the research process, highlight differences that may bear on interdisciplinary …
Research Metric Analysis Of The Aga Khan University Medical College, Karachi On Scopus Database 2010-2019, 2021 Associate Librarian, Faculty of Health Science Libray, The Aga Khan University, Karachi, Pakistan
Research Metric Analysis Of The Aga Khan University Medical College, Karachi On Scopus Database 2010-2019, Muhammad Yousuf Ali Mr, Peter Gatiti, Ikram Ul Haq
Library Philosophy and Practice (e-journal)
This paper analysis the research output of the faculty, staff and researchers affiliated to the Aga Khan University (AKU) Medical College, Pakistan from 1st January 2010 to 31st December 2019. The paper maps AKU research by analyzing publications by authors with Aga Khan University institutional affiliation that are indexed in Scopus, a citation database of the peer-reviewed literature. Researchers rely on data from Web of Science, Scopus and Google Scholar to assess scholarly communication. However, this study choose Scopus as it is one of largest multidisciplinary databases covering over 23000 journal titles in comparison to Web of Science which covers …
A Young Researcher’S Guide To Creating An Online Presence, 2021 University of Connecticut
A Young Researcher’S Guide To Creating An Online Presence, Edward Junhao Lim
UConn Library Presentations
Academic and social networks can help define your online presence, increase your academic visibility, as well as draw attention to your research. Creating a cohesive presence across platforms allows the public and fellow scholars better understand your digital identity and facilitates access to your research outputs and ideas.
Find out how to make use of online sites and networks like LinkedIn, Twitter, WeChat and ResearchGate to improve your online visibility, create great first impressions and highlight the information about your research that you want others to see.
Scholars' Mine Quick Facts February 2021, 2021 Missouri University of Science and Technology
Scholars' Mine Quick Facts February 2021, Nancy S. Krost
Scholars’ Mine Statistics
Scholars' Mine Quick Facts are monthly reports of downloads, page hits, and other information about works in the institutional repository of Missouri S&T. A map with downloads by region is also included.
How Does Oer Meet Our Diversity, Equity, And Inclusion Goals?, 2021 Portland State University
How Does Oer Meet Our Diversity, Equity, And Inclusion Goals?, Jenny Ceciliano, Lisa Notman, Karen Bjork, Jaime R. Wood, Scott Robison
Open Education Week 2021
Eliminating textbook costs through the use of Open Educational Resources may seem like a simple change, but it's one that can have a big impact. Research has shown that using OER in place of traditional textbooks helps to create more equitable and inclusive learning experiences for marginalized students. In this workshop, learn more about how OER is a DEI tool and how PSU faculty are using OER in their courses.
What Documents Cannot Do: Revisiting Michael Polanyi And The Tacit Knowledge Dilemma, 2021 University of Kentucky
What Documents Cannot Do: Revisiting Michael Polanyi And The Tacit Knowledge Dilemma, C. Sean Burns
Information Science Faculty Publications
Our culture is dominated by digital documents in ways that are easy to overlook. These documents have changed our worldviews about science and have raised our expectations of them as tools for knowledge justification. This article explores the complexities surrounding the digital document by revisiting Michael Polanyi’s theory of tacit knowledge—the idea that “we can know more than we can tell.” The theory presents to us a dilemma: if we can know more than we can tell, then this means that the communication of science via the document as a primary form of telling will always be incomplete. This dilemma …
Authors Alliance Partner Program (A2p2) [Product Review], 2021 University at Albany, State University of New York
Authors Alliance Partner Program (A2p2) [Product Review], Emily Kilcer, Ann C. Kearney
University Libraries Faculty Scholarship
The Authors Alliance Partner Program (A2P2; https://www.authorsalliance.org/a2p2/) is a recent addition to the educational content from the Authors Alliance. This nonprofit advocacy organization aims “to advance the interests of authors who want to serve the public good by sharing their creations broadly.” And this new initiative provides prêt-à-porter instructional material with the express purpose of supporting the scaling of rights–related programming—a goal that distinguishes A2P2 from other well-established and deeply valuable copyright-focused resources (Authors Alliance, 2020). While copyright touches nearly all we do in libraries, outreach in this area can often fall to scholarly communication or copyright librarians. As …
Introduction To Open Educational Resources, 2021 East Tennessee State University
Introduction To Open Educational Resources, Ashley Sergiadis, Philip Smith
ETSU Faculty Works
Come to this presentation to learn how you can innovate your classes while saving your students money with Open Educational Resources.
How Can Organisations Benefit From Open Access Research Knowledge?, 2021 Singapore Management University
How Can Organisations Benefit From Open Access Research Knowledge?, Aaron Tay
Research Collection Library
A talk in three parts
• Open Access where we are right now
• How to access OA articles
• Innovative tools that leverage open access and open data
Repository Additions, February 2021, 2021 Cedarville University
Repository Additions, February 2021, Cedarville University
DigitalCommons@Cedarville Monthly Reports
No abstract provided.
Digitalcommons@Cedarville Statistical Report For February 2021, 2021 Cedarville University
Digitalcommons@Cedarville Statistical Report For February 2021, Cedarville University
DigitalCommons@Cedarville Monthly Reports
No abstract provided.
Scholarly Communications Newsletter, 2021 Georgia Southern University
Scholarly Communications Newsletter, Georgia Southern University
Scholarly Communications Newsletters (2018-2022)
- Upcoming Webinars-March 2021
- SelectedWorks Profiles for Faculty
- 2021 Virtual Research Symposium
- Scholarly Communications News
Bibliodiversity At The Centre: Decolonizing Open Access, 2021 CUNY New York City College of Technology
Bibliodiversity At The Centre: Decolonizing Open Access, Monica Berger
Publications and Research
The promise of open access for the global South has not been fully met. Publishing is dominated by Northern publishers who disadvantage Southern authors through platform capitalism and open access models requiring article processing charges to publish. The South can reclaim and decolonize open access, nurturing scholarly communities, by employing bibliodiversity, a sustainable, anticolonial ethos and practice developed in Latin America. Self-determination and locality are at the core of bibliodiversity which rejects the domination of international, English-language journal publishing. As articulated by the Jussieu Call, varied scholarly community-based, non-profit, and sustainable models for open access are integral to bibliodiversity as …
The Oa Diamond Journals Study, Part 2: Recommendations, 2021 Redalyc/Amelica
The Oa Diamond Journals Study, Part 2: Recommendations, Arianna Becerril, Lars Bjørnshauge, Jeroen Bosman, Jan Erik Frantsvåg, Bianca Kramer, Pierre-Carl Langlais, Vanessa Proudman, Claire Redhead, Didier Torny, Pierre Mounier
Copyright, Fair Use, Scholarly Communication, etc.
Science Europe and cOAlition S publish an in-depth report and recommendations arising from a study of community-driven Open Access journals across the world that are free for readers and authors, usually referred to as 'OA diamond journals'.
The study examines the areas that are critical for OA diamond journals, from legal structures and governance to technical capabilities, editorial processes, and funding models. The recommendations made in the report are designed to help research funding organisations, institutions, scholarly societies, and infrastructures sustainably strengthen OA diamond journals in the context of Open Science.
The study was commissioned by cOAlition S and funded …
Is “Just Googling It” Good Enough For First-Year Students?, 2021 CUNY John Jay College
Is “Just Googling It” Good Enough For First-Year Students?, Maureen Richards
Publications and Research
This study analyzes citations by first-year students to determine what content they were citing and whether it was available through the open web or the library. Examining the role of these two places as content providers for academic work fills a gap in the literature. Most of the cited works were available through the library and the open web. As the line between content providers continues to blur, these results can help academic libraries prioritize what to teach students about information literacy, where to focus collection development efforts and how to promote the discovery of library resources.
Spark A Conversation On Metadata Inclusiveness, 2021 University of Central Florida
Spark A Conversation On Metadata Inclusiveness, Sai Deng
Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works
This session introduces the context for metadata inclusiveness and presents some of the efforts the speaker has been involved with, including helped create the Inclusive Metadata & Conscious Editing Resources List as a member of the Sunshine State Digital Network (SSDN) Metadata Working Group, and organized “Embracing Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) in Library Cataloging” for the ALA Core Interest Group Week in Spring 2021. It focuses on describing cases, examples and other resources from the SSDN Resources List, so as to give librarians and staff members in Technical Services at the University Central Florida Libraries a better understanding and …
Indonesian Journal Of Applied Linguistics: A Bibliometric Portrait Of Ten Publication Years, 2021 Institut Agama Islam Negeri Palangka Raya
Indonesian Journal Of Applied Linguistics: A Bibliometric Portrait Of Ten Publication Years, Abdul Syahid
Library Philosophy and Practice (e-journal)
Bibliometric portraits of a single journal appear to be rarely taken in the field of applied linguistics. Viewed from the angles of publication, citation, and indexation, one of the journals worth a bibliometric portrait is the Indonesian Journal of Applied Linguistics. Casting local and regional concerns on the global applied linguistics, the journal has ranked among the big five Open Access Journals in the Asiatic region since its foundation in 2011. Capturing a corpus of 426 documents by 824 authors from 144 organizations through two free bibliometric tools, i.e. Publish or Perish and VOSviewer, this study portrays the journal …