13. Announced 6 months ago, covers NSF, Ed, EPA, NASA, USDA,
HHS, Commerce, Interior, Defense, Energy, Trans, DHS, Ag,
State, Smithsonian
To develop implementation within 6 months, max 12 months
embargo, covers both articles and data
25. “The Open Scholar, as I'm defining this person, is
not simply someone who agrees to allow free
access and reuse of his or her traditional scholarly
articles and books; no, the Open Scholar is
someone who makes their intellectual projects
and processes digitally visible and who invites
and encourages ongoing criticism of their work
and secondary uses of any or all parts of it--at any
stage of its development.”
Gideon Burton, www.academicevolution.org
58. Being an Open Scholar
Improves the quality of your research
Increases your connections, reach, opportunities
“Flattens” the world of academia
Don’t have to do all, but try some of it!
59. How do people find you?
It takes time, but quality content gets recognized
Comment on others’ blogs, retweet or answer Tweets
Conferences, hashtags
Don’t be so afraid of putting out unfinished work
Make it possible to “follow” you
72. “One of the main points behind doing threads was
to bring the companion papers together with the
main papers. To make it work you needed to make
all of the papers open access. This could just not be
done without the papers being open access.”
73. A paper isn’t necessarily the best “unit
of organization”
76. slide by Anita de Waard
“What is inside our full-text articles, and how do we improve access to it? Or: Stories, that persuade with data.”, Anita de Ward