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Welcome to the OSU Libraries News and Events page!

The OSU Libraries Fall 2012 Grad Student & Faculty Workshop series offers free sessions on Data Management (Oct 30th) and Web of Science (Nov 1st).  Register for these and upcoming sessions  at:  http://bit.ly/graduate_workshops.

 Questions?  Contact hannah [dot] rempel [at] oregonstate [dot] edu

 

Taylor & Francis Online will be undergoing maintenance on Monday 29th October 2012, starting at 7:00 AM PST and finishing by 12:00 PM PST. The platform will be unavailable during this time. We apologize for any inconvenience caused by this scheduled development work.

Most of the research data currently produced by graduate students in the course of conducting the research associated with their thesis or dissertation is lost to the university upon graduation. At best, it is stored on hard drives or servers without metadata or other information to describe what the data consists of, how it is structured, or how one might use it. It is therefore unavailable for validation and reuse by other scientists via the internet. This year, the Center for Digital Scholarship and Services (CDSS) at OSU Libraries interviewed graduate students from a variety of disciplines in order to learn more about their research data, to promote better data management practices among these and future students, and to improve data management workshops that the library offers.

 

Data management refers to the active management of research data for preservation and access. The Libraries and the Graduate School share a goal to improve data management practices of graduate students and post-docs. Many students already make their data more visible by depositing it alongside their thesis or dissertation; in the ScholarsArchive@OSU open access repository; students are required to deposit a PDF of their thesis or dissertation to the repository. Long term, the Graduate School and Libraries would like to work with graduate students to either deposit their research data alongside the thesis or dissertation in ScholarsArchive@OSU, describe and link to the data from the ScholarsArchive@OSU thesis/dissertation metadata record if the data is available in a disciplinary repository, or provide a description of the data and where it lives.

 

Among the benefits: students and faculty would have a well-organized set of their data and the ability to access it in the future. In many cases, the data associated with the thesis or dissertation is part of a grant. PIs and Co-PIs may be required to produce or otherwise have access to the data after the student graduates. Student research data that is organized, able to be understood by other scientists, and available with a unique and persistent identifier can be reused and built upon, reducing duplication of effort and enhancing scientific inquiry. Finally, student research data is an output of the teaching, learning and research that is conducted at OSU. The data should be valued as such, retained and made available to other researchers here and around the world.

Data management services at OSU, provided by faculty in the Center for Digital Scholarship and Services (CDSS), include providing assistance with writing NSF, NEH and other data management plans; providing individual consultation about metadata, data organization, preservation and sharing; generating and maintaining digital object identifiers for OSU-affiliated data files as a member of EZID; providing training through workshops; and depositing datasets in the ScholarsArchive@OSU open access repository.  For more information: http://cdss.library.oregonstate.edu/data-services or contact the Libraries’ data management specialist, Amanda Whitmire @ Amanda [dot] whitmire [at] oregonstate [dot] edu.

In the context of open access, an embargo period is the time between publication and when an article is viewable to the public on an open access repository like the ScholarsArchive@OSU. Publishers specify these embargo periods when an author transfers copyright.   Other things being equal, the most common is an infinite embargo on posting the published PDF imposed by so many of the for-profit publishers (Elsevier, Springer, Wiley, Taylor & Francis, Sage etc.).   An author’s accepted manuscript can be a highly desirable alternative in these cases:  Elsevier places no embargo on these, but several publishers impose an embargo of 6 to 18 months on their use, and a few, notably Wiley retain the infinite embargo on this version as well. 

Prior to publication, an author can negotiate his/her rights when transferring copyright to the publisher.  Items with embargo periods added to the ScholarsArchive@OSU are not be viewable until the end of that period.  

The theme of this year’s International Open Access Week 2012 is “set the default to open.”  This means as soon as an author makes the final corrections to an article it would be published in a way that anyone with access to the internet could read it free.  Further, perhaps the data behind that article would also be available.   Setting the default to open doesn’t mean you lose control of your copyright privileges or that people can use your work without crediting you, it just means they will have access to it sooner than later. 

Join OSU Libraries on October 22, 2012 as we kickoff and participate in a weeklong global celebration on Open Access. We have many exciting events planned for the week which includes an OA traveling tables that will be setup at several key locations throughout campus to reach out to an audience outside the library, OA 101 video streaming, OA t-shirts give away to encourage wider participation, and our signature event with guest speaker Cable Green, Director of Global Learning and Creative Commons. Follow the news links each day on the OSU Libraries’ homepage for more detail and participate in the OA activities at OSU. Here’s a snap shot on what’s happening: Monday, October 22, 10:30am-12:30pm Open Access Table --Linus Pauling Institute.  Here is chance to talk with library faculty about OA. Bring questions and learn how you might want to be involved. Tuesday, October 23, 11:00am – 1:00pm Open Access Table --Market Place West. Here is chance for undergraduates as well as faculty to learn more about OA and also the Open Educational Resources (OER) movement. Wednesday, October 24, 11:30-1pm Open Access Week Webinar - Willamette Room East at the Valley Library. The copyright language that spells out whether the public will have access to specific material can be buried and cryptic. Copyright authority Kenneth D. Crews, shows you how you to facilitate access to your work by being proactive. From 11am-1pm, Open Access Table - Java 2 in the OSU Libraries. Talk with a librarian about the ScholarsArchive@OSU and any questions you may have about open access and how it affects you. Thursday, October 25: All Day Come by the library in the main foyer to view several short videos on Open Access. Friday, October 26, 1:30pm -3:00pm Cable Green Lecture: Expanding the open agenda: From open access to an open education (2nd Floor Library Rotunda). Dr. Cable Green is Director of Global Learning for Creative Commons. He is responsible for setting strategic direction and priorities to build a global movement that will enable robust practices and policies for the free sharing of education and learning assets.As part of this program we will also announce our 2012 Open Access Hall of Fame inductees. To view the live streaming lecture visit: http://live.oregonstate.edu/
OSU Libraries & Press Civility CampaignThe Civility Campaign now have a blog.  Please give us your feedback and/or experiences!

OSU Libraries celebrates a weeklong international celebration to help raise awareness, deepen understanding, celebrate the progress, share experiences, and inspire wider participation for Open Access. In a recent OA week kickoff webcast, Heather Joseph, Executive Director of SPARC, sums up this year’s theme “Set the Default to Open” as the continuing efforts surrounding open access and making open access the norm in science and scholarship. 

For more information and to learn about Open Access visit:

Open Access @ OSU The Scholarly Publishing & Academic Resources Coalition (SPARC)Open Access Overview by Peter Suber who writes for SPARC News letter
OSU Libraries and Press celebrates International Open Access week and invites you to participate in an exciting lecture by Dr. Cable Green on the topic of “Expanding the open agenda: From open access to an open education” on Friday, October 26th, 1:30pm -3:00pm, in the library Main Rotunda. The event is made possible with sponsorship from Extended Campus and Information Services.  Dr. Cable Green is the Director of Global Learning for Creative Commons and an expert in Open Educational Resources and Open Policy. He holds a BS in International Affairs from Lewis and Clark College, MPC from Westminster College, and an MA in communication and PhD in educational psychology from Ohio State University. As the Director of Global Learning at Creative Commons, Cable is responsible for setting strategic direction and priorities to build a global movement that will enable robust and vibrant practices and policies for free sharing of education and learning assets. He is a strong advocate for open policies that ensure publicly funded education materials are freely and openly available to the public that paid for them. To view the live streaming lecture visit: http://live.oregonstate.edu/ For more information about this and other OA week events: http://osulibrary.oregonstate.edu/counting-down-international-open-access-week-october-22-26-2012