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Scholarly Communications

Scholarly Communications. Issues for BYU. Presented to the Scholarly Communications Committee March 11, 2005 Presented to the HBLL Faculty Library Council March 18, 2005 Gideon O. Burton College of Humanities Brigham Young University. Scholarly Communication .

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Scholarly Communications

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  1. Scholarly Communications Issues for BYU Presented to the Scholarly Communications CommitteeMarch 11, 2005 Presented to the HBLL Faculty Library CouncilMarch 18, 2005Gideon O. BurtonCollege of HumanitiesBrigham Young University

  2. Scholarly Communication “The system through which research and other scholarly writings are created, evaluated for quality, disseminated to the scholarly community, and preserved for future use.” (American Library Assoc.)

  3. As the scriptorium yielded to the printing press…

  4. …so the printing press is yielding to the digital realm

  5. “And no man putteth new wine into old bottles: else the new wine doth burst the bottles, and the wine is spilled, and the bottles will be marred: but new wine must be put into new bottles.” –Mark 2:22

  6. The Age of Digital ScholarshipThe age of digital scholarship is upon us, and we must accommodate both the new “wine” (knowledge) and the new “bottles” (forms it is taking).

  7. Risk to Academic MissionIf universities insist that scholarship continue only within established print models of publication, they do so at the hazard of their academic mission.

  8. Risk to Academic Mission “As with individuals, universities also quickly face obsolescence when they fail to continue to change, grow, and adapt to their new and often rapidly different environments.” –Pres. Cecil Samuelson (“A More Excellent Way: A Changing BYU in a Changing World” 8/24/04)

  9. Risk to Academic Mission • Escalating costs for print materials, especially academic journals →Libraries unable to service research • Diminishing academic presses →Scholars less able to publish, be retained or advanced

  10. Risk to Academic Mission • Not keep pace with peer institutions, or directions in digital work within disciplines → Accreditation consequences→ Hiring and retention difficulties

  11. LDS Perspectives • LDS leaders optimistic (not just cautious) about uses of media • LDS Church has pioneered the use of new media

  12. LDS Perspectives • Mormonism itself is a new “medium” for Christianity • Unafraid of innovating forms • Global and eternal points of view • Anchored amidst change and chaos

  13. BYU Perspectives • BYU Institutional Objectives all enhanced via technology and media: • Educate the minds and spirits of students • Advance truth and knowledge • Extend the blessings of learning • Develop friends for the University and Church • BYU infrastructure fully committed to the electronic age

  14. BYU Perspectives • BYU Libraries are evolving to accommodate digital scholarship • Robust catalog and online research tools • Electronic theses • Scholarly database subscriptions • Digital collections • Web hosting of local digital scholarship

  15. BYU Perspectives • Superior media support for teaching • Computer labs • Technology-enhanced classrooms • Software training for faculty/staff • Center for Instructional Design / Instructional Media Center • Web-based instruction / distance learning • Grants for technology and media products

  16. BYU Challenges • Resource Issues • Costs of print journals, database subscriptions • Costs to develop and maintain electronic resources • Capital equipment / software • Support staff

  17. BYU Challenges • Intellectual Property Issues • Electronic reserve • Fair use • Protection of BYU digital products • Creative and scholarly works as marketable commodities

  18. BYU Challenges • Faculty issues • Untrained in new electronic research tools • Untrained in media development tools • Mixed messages regarding media use: • Teaching: yes! Scholarship: no! • Retention/Advancement: Rank and Status committees not recognizing digital scholarship • Hiring: do we attract digital scholars?

  19. Four Key Changes in the Digital Age • To academic libraries • To scholarly publishing • To scholarly production • To scholarly evaluation

  20. (1) Changes to Academic Libraries • Brokers of digital knowledge, not just curators of the printed scholarly record • “Institutional Repository” • Collaborative alliances • With academic consortia • With faculty scholars

  21. (1) Changes to Academic Libraries • Access issues, patron training, and development of digital research tools • Integrating the digital scholarly world: • Electronic library catalog • Third-party and discipline-specific databases • Local digital projects, collections, archives • Federated searching / metadata (within university and across academia)

  22. (2) Changes to Scholarly Publishing • Increased amount • New forms of scholarship • New access to conventional scholarship • Reference and full-text databases • Search engines • New methods of delivery • Online journals • Institutional web hosting

  23. (2) Changes to Scholarly Publishing • New objects of study • More multi-media and data files • “Born digital” materials (hypertext, etc.) • New roles for scholars, for librarians, for institutions, for presses

  24. (3) Changes to Scholarly Production • Faster (from concept to publication) • More interactive editorial procedure • Pre-publication and Self-publication (electronic)

  25. (3) Changes to Scholarly Production • Independence from scholarly presses • Dependence upon technology infrastructure • More collaborative work

  26. (3) Changes to Scholarly Production • Multipurposing creative/scholarly work • Closer relationship between teaching, research, and publishing

  27. (4) Changes to Scholarly Evaluation • Peer review of new forms of scholarship • Assessing potential faculty • Assessing faculty within tenure evaluation • How does the institution formally value scholarship? (collecting, generating, promoting, maintaining, rewarding digital scholarship)

  28. Institutional inconsistencies • Creating an environment where media is encouraged or expected for teaching, but discounted as scholarship. • “Of course we promote digital scholarship; we just don’t promote digital scholars.”

  29. Taking Action • The University • Scholarly Communications Committee • Review initiatives at other institutions • Support the library in its emerging role • Support faculty doing digital publishing (resources, rewards)

  30. Taking Action • The Library • Publicize both problems and opportunities in scholarly communication • Identify, evaluate, and acquire appropriate resources for digital scholarship (research & publication) • Work closely with faculty • Collections policies; serials decisions • Developing digital resources • Archiving and publishing faculty scholarship through BYU’s institutional repository • Coordinate media development and archiving across campus

  31. Taking Action • The Faculty • Investigate how digital scholarship is reshaping specific disciplines • Use and contribute to institutional repositories, electronic journals, and open access initiatives • Promote collaboration with the library • Update rank and status documents and procedures • Promote “born-digital” scholarship

  32. Digital scholarship within disciplines

  33. University of WashingtonDigital Scholarship Project

  34. Association of Research Libraries

  35. Scholarly Communication in Transition

  36. “And no man putteth new wine into old bottles: else the new wine doth burst the bottles, and the wine is spilled, and the bottles will be marred: but new wine must be put into new bottles.” –Mark 2:22

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