Hat Tip: Clay Shirky: Open access gives preference to our academic mission not 
our current practices
<http://wp.me/p20y83-wc>

Author, consultant, and teacher Clay Shirky was the general session speaker on 
Wednesday, November 7 at the 2012 EDUCAUSE Annual Conference in Denver, 
Colorado. The session was entitled “IT as a Core Academic Competence,” and 
within it Clay Shirky described how the Internet, especially as a milieu for 
collaboration, is dramatically impacting how people learn and changing the ways 
in which knowledge is created and shared. The video of the session is available 
on the EDUCAUSE website 
<http://www.educause.edu/annual-conference/2012/it-core-academic-competence-sponsored-pearson-platinum-partner>,
 and Shirky’s presentation, which starts about 20 minutes in, is well worth a 
view.
 
The first question in the Q&A following Shirky’s presentation (at 59:40) was 
about open access journals. His response:
 
The real tension around open access journals is that institutions occasionally 
get to this moment—the moment I think our community is in—where you’re given a 
choice between conserving your mission and conserving your practices. 
Institutions tend to want to preserve the problem to which they are the 
solution. And so we have a world where trying to keep the current structure of 
journals intact has become obviously a goal of, say, Reed Elsevier, but also 
it’s just the easy slot to fall into for tenure committees if you know how to 
rank them. At the same time, we have open access journals, which are plainly 
more in line with our academic self-conception, mission, and goals. Not just 
for the generic spreading of information, but for the internal professional 
needs for wide self-criticism and conversation.
 
So the first thing I think you have to say about open access journals is: We 
have to support them. Interestingly, as the number of submissions to a journal 
goes up the quality of the submissions they can choose also goes up. … The 
other thing we can do, as some institutions have already done, is to announce 
that our institutional preference is for our mission and not our current 
practices, and that we expect faculty to expose their work widely for feedback 
and for conversation. That de facto means preferring the open access journals. 
Not as a way of intervening in the fight with Reed Elsevier, or what have you, 
but simply as a way of living up to our own stated goals.

Gary F. Daught
Omega Alpha | Open Access
Advocate for open access academic publishing in religion and theology
oa.openaccess at gmail.com | @OAopenaccess
_______________________________________________
GOAL mailing list
GOAL@eprints.org
http://mailman.ecs.soton.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/goal

Reply via email to