LIBLICENSE-L Archives

LibLicense-L Discussion Forum

LIBLICENSE-L@LISTSERV.CRL.EDU

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
LIBLICENSE <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
LibLicense-L Discussion Forum <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 17 Jun 2014 18:42:29 -0400
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (112 lines)
From: Heather Staines <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Tue, 17 Jun 2014 07:06:36 -0400

Please excuse any cross-posting.

The ALCTS CRS Education, Research, and Publications Committee (Mavis
Molto, Chair) welcomes you to:

“Discovering Open Access Articles: Maximum Access, Maximum Visibility!”

Co-sponsored by RUSA MARS MERS (Management of Electronic Reference
Services), Lindsay Johnston, Chair

Co-sponsored by ACRL Research and Scholarly Environment Committee,
Lisa A. Macklin, Chair

Saturday, June 28, 2014 from 3-4 PM, LVCC S228.

Everywhere we go, we hear about Open Access, whether it be green or
gold, embargoed or immediate, available from publishers or from
institutional repositories. This growing movement raises many
practical questions for libraries, researchers, and students.  What is
the best way to ensure discoverability of OA content in unsubscribed
journals through link resolvers? How can OA content in IRs be more
discoverable and usable for patrons? How do OA policies affect these
initiatives? What standards need to be developed and employed? Please
join us to learn more about challenges and possible solutions
involving article level content and how to make it more visible.

Mary Ann Jones (Mississippi State University) “Discovery of Open
Access Articles”

Researchers and authors have discovered that publishing an article via
an open access model can provide widespread discovery of research, but
this is only true if the article is discoverable to a wide audience.
Open URL solved this problem on the journal title level, but currently
there are no tools to resolve individual articles.  Discovery of open
access articles is a problem being discussed more and more throughout
library and publisher communities.  Libraries, publishers, and
aggregators must agree to work together to provide solutions that make
open access articles discoverable to researchers, thereby giving
authors the exposure they desire. Discussion during the presentation
will provide examples of this gap in service and offer possible
solutions for libraries and publishers to provide the widest possible
discovery of individual open access articles.

Angela Riggio, (UCLA Library) “Setting the stage for discovery and
access: definitions, process, and open access at UCLA.”

Angela will give a quick review of open access and open access
policies, with an eye to the recently adopted UC-wide policy and the
impact that it has had on the UCLA campus. She will also describe some
of the tools that the California Digital Library has created to help
with the policy’s implementation.

Nettie Lagace, (NISO) “Cross-community metadata creation and sharing:
the NISO Open Access Metadata and Indicator Recommended Practice.”

In 2013, the National Information Standards Organization (NISO) formed
a Working Group to develop metadata and indicators to provide
information on whether a specific article is openly accessible (i.e.
can be read by any user who can get to the journal website over the
Internet) and what re-use rights might be available to the reader.
Terms regarding "open access" "increased access" "public access" etc.
vary both between publishers and among publishers and in some cases,
based on the funder. A number of publishers offer hybrid options for
publications where some content is available freely and the rest
remains under subscription control.  Nettie will report on the work of
this group and the content of the Recommended Practice, now very near
publication.

Speaker Bios:

Mary Ann Jones joined the library faculty at Mississippi State
University Libraries in 2005 and has been the Coordinator of
Electronic Resources since 2008.  Mary Ann is responsible for the
day-to-day management of the libraries electronic resources and works
closely with the serials, acquisitions, and systems departments to
manage the various aspects of today’s challenging electronic content
across all areas of the library.  Responsibilities include ordering,
licensing, access management and maintenance, and assessment of
eJournals, databases, and eBooks. Mary Ann received her MLIS from
Florida State University in 2005 and her BA in Organizational
Communication from University of Central Florida in 2001.  Mary Ann’s
research interests include institutional repositories, journal
evaluation methodology, and open access adoption in academia.

Angela Riggio has been working at the UCLA Library since her
undergraduate years in the early 1980s. She received both her BA and
Master’s of Library and Information Science degrees at UCLA. She spent
over 20 years in cataloging, and is now the head of Scholarly
Communication and licensing, a unit that is responsible for much of
the Library-based outreach to students and faculty on open access,
alternate publishing options, and copyright education. She has served
on the steering group of the Digital Library Federation Electronic
Resource Management Initiative, and chaired her Library’s Electronic
Resource Management System Implementation Team.  She also completed a
certification in Copyright Management and Leadership.  Angela's career
is heavily invested in licensing, rights metadata, scholarly
communication, copyright investigation, and other intellectual
property issues challenging large academic libraries today.

Nettie Lagace is the Associate Director for Programs at NISO, where
she is responsible for facilitating the work of NISO’s topic
committees and development groups for standards and best practices, as
well as working with the community to encourage broad adoption of this
consensus work. Prior to joining NISO in 2011, Nettie worked at Ex
Libris, where she served for 11 years in a number of library and
information provider-facing roles, working on link resolver,
electronic resource management, and recommender software. She holds an
M.I.L.S. from the University of Michigan.

ATOM RSS1 RSS2