Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Institutional Repositories: Content and Advocacy Cokie Anderson, Associate Professor Electronic Publishing Center Oklahoma State University Stillwater,

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Institutional Repositories: Content and Advocacy Cokie Anderson, Associate Professor Electronic Publishing Center Oklahoma State University Stillwater,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Institutional Repositories: Content and Advocacy Cokie Anderson, Associate Professor Electronic Publishing Center Oklahoma State University Stillwater, OK USA cokie.anderson@okstate.edu

2 The #1 Challenge for IR’s  2006 ARL Survey found that getting content was the biggest problem for those implementing IR’s. 40% of respondents found it “difficult” 23% found it “very difficult” Two of the top 3 challenges: “building content” and “faculty engagement”

3 But IR’s are brilliant! Why won’t the faculty use it?  Afraid it will interfere with formal publication or patentability  Concern over ownership rights Will their work become the property of the university? Will their work be stolen?  Don’t want to bother Already feel overworked and underpaid

4 How can we get them to participate?  Make it mandatory Controversial method  Use anthropology (U of Rochester NY) Hire someone to observe faculty in their natural habitat and determine where IR could fit into their workflow  Advocacy (or in the US, Marketing) Educate and persuade

5 IR Advocacy Techniques  Educate faculty about the advantages of an IR  Identify opinion leader(s) to be early adopter and champion  Make it easy for them!  Harvest citations and issue invitations

6 Advantages of Participation  Increased citation of their work (one study found 300% increase)  Articles can be found by Google®  They maintain ownership of works  No personal website maintenance  No broken URLs  Preservation, back-up and migration of files (just say “WordStar”)

7 Making it easy  Offer authoring tools, user-friendly submission interfaces, help line  Do most of the work on the library side Faculty submits work in any format Library staff prepares submissions for deposit in IR  Let them know it’s working E-mail citation stats

8 Outreach Efforts  Mass e-mails to faculty  Library subject specialists liaisons  Peer-to-peer  Surveys  Presentations/Symposia  Follow up

9 Resources  Bailey, C. W. et al. (2006) ARL SPEC Kit 292: Institutional Repositories. Online: http://www.arl.org http://www.arl.org  Branschofsky, M. (2004) Using Marketing Techniques to Encourage Growth of DSpace at MIT. Online: http://sparc.org http://sparc.org  Gibbons, S. (2004 ) Aligning Content Recruitment Strategies with Faculty Work Practices. Online: http://sparc.orghttp://sparc.org

10 Resources  Jones, R., Andrew, T., MacColl, J. (2006) The Institutional Repository. Oxford: Chandos Publishing  Ober, J. (2004) IR Content & Service Expansion: the Case of eScholarship. Online: http://sparc.orghttp://sparc.org


Download ppt "Institutional Repositories: Content and Advocacy Cokie Anderson, Associate Professor Electronic Publishing Center Oklahoma State University Stillwater,"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google