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Information Literacy & Open Access for Physics and Astronomy Graduate Students Jackie Werner, Science Librarian Georgia State University

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Presentation on theme: "Information Literacy & Open Access for Physics and Astronomy Graduate Students Jackie Werner, Science Librarian Georgia State University"— Presentation transcript:

1 Information Literacy & Open Access for Physics and Astronomy Graduate Students Jackie Werner, Science Librarian Georgia State University jwerner3@gsu.edu

2 Outline  Background  Open Access & SCOAP 3  Open Access in Physics & Astronomy  Faculty and Open Access  Graduate Students and Library Research  Methodology  Results  Discussion

3 Introduction

4 Open Access & SCOAP 3

5

6 SCOAP 3  Sponsoring Committee for Open Access Publishing in Particle Physics  High-Energy Physics partnership  Negotiated with top ten HEP journals to pay fees to make all articles green open access  4,280 articles published as green OA in 2014, “comprising the majority of the high-quality peer-reviewed literature in the field of High-Energy Physics”

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8 OA in Physics & Astronomy  arXiv  Founded in 1991  Preprints and OA articles  Multiple disciplines  Most HEP articles appear on arXiv

9 OA in Physics & Astronomy  Astrophysics Data System (ADS)  Founded in 1992  Abstract database including arXiv & traditional journals  Includes OA and non  Digitizes older publications

10 OA in Physics & Astronomy  INSPIRE-HEP  Replaced SPIRES in 2012  Searches arXiv & HEP resources  Curated content in HEP  Includes OA and non

11 OA in Physics & Astronomy  CERN Document Server (CDS)  Covers all CERN publications  Searches arXiv & other HEP publications  Includes OA and non

12 OA in Physics & Astronomy  Google Scholar  Not technically OA, but…

13 Faculty and Open Access  HEP researchers support open access  Scientists are aware of open access  Faculty & graduate students recognize what is open access

14 Graduate Students and Library Research  Graduate students turn to faculty advisors and lab group for literature searches  …if they receive instruction at all  Are graduate students aware of open access ?

15 My Research

16 Methodology  Conducted at Georgia Institute of Technology and Georgia State University  Interviewed graduate coordinator for Physics and Astronomy program  Sent survey to all Physics & Astronomy graduate students

17 Results  Current responses:  1 graduate coordinator interview  16 complete graduate student surveys  0-1 years in program: 4  1-2 years: 3  2-3 years: 3  3-4 years: 3  4+ years: 3

18 Q8. Have you ever received training or asked for help on how to search for physics articles in graduate school? No Yes, in graduate courses Yes, by advisor Yes, by a librarian speaking to a group Yes, but only after asking a professor/librarian Yes, somewhere else

19 Information Literacy Instruction – Faculty  Graduate students given practice with oral presentation and published papers  Information literacy instruction and practice depends on graduate advisors  No library orientation for graduate students?

20 Information Literacy Instruction – Graduate Students

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22 Q6. Are you aware of open access (OA)? 1.Never heard of it 2.Heard the term, but don’t know what it means 3.Yes, somewhat aware 4.Yes, very aware 5.Yes, and I keep up with news and developments in open access

23 Open Access – Faculty  Library faculty advisory board spent year educating campus on open access  Official stance open access publication is encouraged, but not required  Students may not know which resources library is paying for

24 Open Access – Graduate Students

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26 Q9. Have you published a peer- reviewed article while in graduate school? Q10. How many peer-reviewed articles have you published while in graduate school? Q11. How many peer-reviewed articles have you submitted while in graduate school, but are not yet published? Q12. Where is your article(s) currently available?

27 Publication – Faculty  Some faculty “take it as their responsibility” to have students write papers, others don’t  Publication is not required for graduation

28 Publication – Graduate Students

29 Number of Publications

30 Availability of Publications

31 Q5. Are you aware of these resources and do you use them to find physics and/or astronomy articles? 1.Never heard of 2.Aware of but don’t use/use rarely 3.Aware of and use 4.Use frequently

32 Resources Used – Faculty  “Everybody uses [ arXiv ] without fail.”  Many faculty don’t use journals and don’t care about final publication

33 Resources Used – Graduate Students

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36 Q13. How do you keep up with new developments and publications in your field?

37 Keeping Up – Faculty  “Everybody uses [ arXiv ] without fail.”  Faculty get Table of Contents from journals  Students mostly use Google Scholar—” as good as any search engine we pay for ”  Faculty and students encouraged to keep up in person (conferences, etc.)

38 Keeping Up – Graduate Students

39 Q14. How do you think methods of keeping up with new developments and /or publications in your field will change in the next five years?

40 Changes in Five Years  No “ dramatic changes ”  Aggregation  “Scientific community similar to LinkedIn”  Improvements to existing resources  “Wider recognition of open access journals ”

41 Takeaways  We don’t know how graduate students do research  Open access resources may serve students’ needs  …but students don’t know what library resources do  Many questions still to ask

42 References  Catalano, A. (2011). Patterns of graduate students' information seeking behavior: A meta-synthesis of the literature. Journal of Documentation, 69(2): 243-274.  George, C., Bright, A., Hurlbert, T., Linke, E.C., St. Clair, G., & Stein, J. (2006). Scholarly use of information: Graduate students' information seeking behaviour. Information Research, 11(4): paper 272. Retrieved from http://InformationR.net/ir/11-4/paper272.html.  Gentil-Beccot, A., Mele, S., & Brooks, T.C. (2009). Citing and reading behaviours in high-energy physics: How a community stopped worrying about journals and learned to love repositories. Scientometrics, 84(2), 345-355.  Ginsparg, P. (1994). First steps towards electronic research communication. Computers in Physics, 8(2), 390-396.  Hemminger, B.M., Lu, D., Vaughan, K.T.L., Adams, S.J. (2007). Information seeking behavior of academic students. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 58(14): 2205-2225.

43 References  Jamali, H.R. & Nicholas, D. (2006). Communication and information-seeking behaviour of research students in physicist and astronomy. ASIST Annual Conference, 3-8 November 2006, Austin, Texas.  Larivière, V., Sugimoto, C. R., Bergeron, P. (2013). In their own image? A comparison of doctoral students' and faculty members' referencing behavior. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 64(5): 1045-1054.  Park, J. (2007). Motivations for web-based scholarly publishing: Do scientists recognize open availability as an advantage? Journal of Scholarly Publishing, 40(4): 343-369.  Suber, P. (2013). Open Access Overview. Retrieved from http://legacy.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/overview.htm (June 22, 2015).

44 Any Questions? Jackie Werner (jwerner3@gsu.edu)


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