Scholarly Communication Education Initiatives · 41
TOPICS: N
Benefits and examples of open
access journals
13 8
(62%)
2
(15%)
1
(8%)
1
(8%)
2
(15%)
3
(23%)
Author rights management 13 11
(85%)
1
(8%)
1
(8%)
1
(8%)
1
(8%)
1
(8%)
Contributing to digital repositories 13 10
(77%)
1
(8%)
1
(8%)
1
(8%)
1
(8%)
2
(15%)
Economics of scholarly publishing 12 9
(75%)
2
(17%)
1
(8%)
1
(8%)
2
(17%)
1
(8%)
Author activism (e.g., refusing to
publish in expensive journals)
12 8
(67%)
1
(8%)
1
(8%)
1
(8%)
1
(8%)
3
(25%)
Future of scholarly society
publishing
12 8
(67%)
2
(17%)
1
(8%)
1
(8%)
2
(17%)
2
(17%)
National/international public access
developments such as Federal
Research Public Access Act of 2006,
NIH policy, etc.
12 7
(58%)
2
(17%)
1
(8%)
1
(8%)
2
(17%)
3
(25%)
Implications for teaching of giving
away copyright
11 9
(82%)
1
(9%)
2
(18%)
Future of the scholarly monograph 11 4
(36%)
1
(9%)
3
(27%)
1
(9%)
4
(36%)
Impact of new models on peer
review, promotion and tenure, etc.
11 7
(64%)
2
(18%)
1
(9%)
1
(9%)
2
(18%)
2
(18%)
Editor activism (e.g., working
within scholarly societies to
improve open access to articles)
10 5
(50%)
2
(20%)
1
(10%)
1
(10%)
2
(20%)
3
(30%)
Disciplinary differences in
communication practices
10 5
(50%)
1
(10%)
1
(10%)
1
(10%)
1
(10%)
4
(40%)
Other topic 2 1
(50%)
1
(50%)
Please describe other topic(s). N=1
“Benefit of institutional repositories.”
All
non-faculty researchers Science/Engineering
Social
Sciences Humanities
Health
Sciences
Law Other
discipline
Not
addressed
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