Hi Jan,
Thank you for sharing this list. In addition to Jeroen Bosman’s requests, it would be helpful to know if EBSCO uses this title list to include OA content in their subscription databases. If so, identifying those titles along with the corresponding database would be great.
Thanks again,
Rachel
Rachel A. Erb
Director of E-Resources
Florida Virtual Campus (FLVC)
1753 West Paul Dirac Drive
Tallahassee, Florida
REPLY:
Szczepanski’s List has been one of the most useful assets utilized as input to EBSCO’s product development process for curation of content in EBSCO Discovery Service (EDS) and EBSCOhost research databases. Our research services have the goal of combining open access (OA) journals and non-open access (non-OA) journals into a single research experience for the end user. While our licensing (inclusion of full text) priorities are primarily for non-OA journals for our research databases, our curation and indexing activities are extremely active when it comes to open access journals. Once validated and certified for inclusion, these OA journals are treated with high-quality subject indexing and sophisticated, precise/accurate full-text linking. If a library subscribed to all EBSCOhost research databases, their users would be accessing the most of the journals in Szczepanski’s List, alongside non-OA journals. No single EBSCO research database covers a majority of the journals in Szczepanski’s List; however, there are some individual databases that contain 5,000+ OA journals. For example, Academic Search Ultimate (ASU), includes high-quality metadata and precise linking for more than 6,500 OA journals (most of which are in Szczepanski’s List).