Month: October 2016

The Intersections Between Open Access, Open Educational Resources, & Author Rights : Open Access Week 2016

Open Access Week

A Celebration of Open Access Week

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

12:00 – 3:30pm

Homer Babbidge Library, Class of 1947 Conference Room

Remote streaming will be available through UConn WebEx @ https://goo.gl/vuNKmJ

 

12-1:15pm
Empowering Authors through Publication Agreements
Maximize control, impact and discoverability of your scholarly output.
Open Access Flavors
What are the different types of open access and why do they matter?
OA? OER? What’s the Difference?
Two different movements with a lot in common. How do they support each other?
1:30- 3:15pm
ORCID IDs
This digital identifier distinguishes you from every other researcher. Learn about the ID and how to use it.
Entering the Creative Commons
What are open licenses and how do they add value to scholarly and creative work?
Managing Your Scholarly ID Online
Make your scholarly author identity visible and available for citation.
UConn’s Research Data Repository
Learn how UConn can help make your data publicly available.

 

 

View and download the flyer for this event.

Streaming during the Event

Join the event remotely in WebEx for the presentation.  Attendees aren’t required to register. Attendee login:

https://goo.gl/vuNKmJ

– or –

https://uconn-cmr.webex.com/uconn-cmr/onstage/g.php?MTID=ef4778b87dc3a13f33f6c8651703ae9d6

On joining the meeting, you will be asked to enter your name and email. If you haven’t used WebEx before, you will need to download the small Cisco.exe file. More instructions can be found at https://help.webex.com/docs/DOC-5441. Attendees will be muted upon joining the event. Attendees will need to “Connect to audio” via their computer or phone. A survey will appear for attendees after the event.


Open Access Week 2016 Links

Open @ UConn  http://open.uconn.edu/

Open Access

SPARC Open: http://sparcopen.org/
Directory of Open Access Journals: https://doaj.org/
SHERPA/RoMEO: http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/index.php

Open Data:

Contact us: researchdata@uconn.eduUConn Library Research Data Archive: http://lib.uconn.edu/services/research-data/archiving/
Registry of Research Data Repositories: http://service.re3data.org/search

Open Authors:

 

 

Editing Wikipedia : a great way to experience OER and add more knowledge to the world

Students use Wikipedia all the time. Librarians do, too. It’s a great starting place if you know nothing or very little about something — anything, just about. We’d like to know how many professors here at UConn are using this great public good as a way for students to add better information to the world as part of their class assignments. Instead of just retrieving information, students can become powerful communicators adding better knowledge and improving the quality for all people.

The L.A. Times reported on 10/3/2016 in their article College students take to Wikipedia to rewrite the wrongs of Internet science thatWikipedia Editing Guides

So far this year, 240 college science classrooms in the U.S. and Canada have improved the content of more than 2,500 articles and created 247 new ones, he said. All told, these Web pages have been viewed more than 81 million times. The foundation’s goal is to double these numbers by the end of 2016, which it has dubbed the Year of Science.

Eryk Savaggio of the Wiki Education Foundation says

“Wikipedia has great coverage of military history, for example, but it doesn’t have great coverage of women’s health. Those are the types of gaps where students can go in — they have academic resources, they have textbooks, they have access to their library, to medical journals, academic journals — and contribute something that makes a difference in these more difficult-to-write aspects on Wikipedia.”

Wikipedia has lots of online tutorials and help for editing as well as a set of standards that aims to keep the information unbiased and understandable to the public. It’s a way for students to develop their voices and take learning and pay it forward.

Let us know if you are doing anything like this with your students. And if you are interested in pursuing this track, we have help for you here at the library. Just email open@uconn.edu