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Main Authors: Foster, Nancy Fried., Gibbons, Susan
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED490029
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author Foster, Nancy Fried.
Gibbons, Susan
author_facet Foster, Nancy Fried.
Gibbons, Susan
Foster, Nancy Fried.
Gibbons, Susan
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Understanding Faculty to Improve Content Recruitment for Institutional Repositories Foster, Nancy Fried. Gibbons, Susan Library Services College Faculty Academic Libraries Electronic Libraries Institutional repositories (IRs) offer many clear benefits yet faculty authors have not demonstrated much interest in depositing their content into them. Without the content, IRs will not succeed, because institutions will sustain IRs for only so long without evidence of success. A yearlong study of faculty members at the University of Rochester has revealed some of the reasons why current IR systems are more useful in theory than in practice and has resulted in modifications to the University of Rochester's implementation of the DSpace code to better align the repository with the existing work practices of faculty. The findings have also caused a complete rethinking of how to explain and promote the IR. Research supported by a National Leadership Grant from the Institute for Museum and Library Services. (Contains 11 notes and 4 figures.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED490029
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2005
record_format eric
spellingShingle Understanding Faculty to Improve Content Recruitment for Institutional Repositories
Foster, Nancy Fried.
Gibbons, Susan
Library Services
College Faculty
Academic Libraries
Electronic Libraries
Understanding Faculty to Improve Content Recruitment for Institutional Repositories Foster, Nancy Fried. Gibbons, Susan Library Services College Faculty Academic Libraries Electronic Libraries Institutional repositories (IRs) offer many clear benefits yet faculty authors have not demonstrated much interest in depositing their content into them. Without the content, IRs will not succeed, because institutions will sustain IRs for only so long without evidence of success. A yearlong study of faculty members at the University of Rochester has revealed some of the reasons why current IR systems are more useful in theory than in practice and has resulted in modifications to the University of Rochester's implementation of the DSpace code to better align the repository with the existing work practices of faculty. The findings have also caused a complete rethinking of how to explain and promote the IR. Research supported by a National Leadership Grant from the Institute for Museum and Library Services. (Contains 11 notes and 4 figures.)
title Understanding Faculty to Improve Content Recruitment for Institutional Repositories
topic Library Services
College Faculty
Academic Libraries
Electronic Libraries
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED490029