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Autore principale: Foster, Andrea L.
Natura: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: 2008
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ790381
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author Foster, Andrea L.
author_facet Foster, Andrea L.
Foster, Andrea L.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents U. of Iowa Writing Students Quash Planned Open Access Foster, Andrea L. Graduate Students Copyrights Degree Requirements Writing (Composition) Access to Information Information Policy Higher Education The University of Iowa has reversed course on a plan to make some students' theses freely available online, following protests from students in the university's writing programs. The students said the plan could have threatened the potential commercial value of their novels, plays, and other creative works. The controversy began in late winter, when graduating students in the writing programs noticed new language in a form required for all students depositing their theses with the Graduate College. The document informed students that the University of Iowa Library would scan the hard-copy theses as part of the degree requirement and then "make them open-access documents," which the form defined as freely available over the Internet and retrievable "via search engines such as Google." The form has since been removed from the Web, and it has been revised to remove the open-access language. After meeting with students, professors, and librarians, the university provost said a consensus emerged that the thesis-deposit form for students in graduate writing programs will include a statement saying that the theses cannot be scanned or distributed without the authors' consent. Students are also being advised to attach pages to their theses that reaffirm their copyrights to their works. Students and professors in the writing program said they were pleased by the provost's quick response. Unlike graduate students in sciences who frequently prefer to have their theses and dissertations widely disseminated online because it can lead to more citations of their research, other colleges are also facing opposition from creative-writing students over open-access publishing of theses.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ790381
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2008
record_format eric
spellingShingle U. of Iowa Writing Students Quash Planned Open Access
Foster, Andrea L.
Graduate Students
Copyrights
Degree Requirements
Writing (Composition)
Access to Information
Information Policy
Higher Education
U. of Iowa Writing Students Quash Planned Open Access Foster, Andrea L. Graduate Students Copyrights Degree Requirements Writing (Composition) Access to Information Information Policy Higher Education The University of Iowa has reversed course on a plan to make some students' theses freely available online, following protests from students in the university's writing programs. The students said the plan could have threatened the potential commercial value of their novels, plays, and other creative works. The controversy began in late winter, when graduating students in the writing programs noticed new language in a form required for all students depositing their theses with the Graduate College. The document informed students that the University of Iowa Library would scan the hard-copy theses as part of the degree requirement and then "make them open-access documents," which the form defined as freely available over the Internet and retrievable "via search engines such as Google." The form has since been removed from the Web, and it has been revised to remove the open-access language. After meeting with students, professors, and librarians, the university provost said a consensus emerged that the thesis-deposit form for students in graduate writing programs will include a statement saying that the theses cannot be scanned or distributed without the authors' consent. Students are also being advised to attach pages to their theses that reaffirm their copyrights to their works. Students and professors in the writing program said they were pleased by the provost's quick response. Unlike graduate students in sciences who frequently prefer to have their theses and dissertations widely disseminated online because it can lead to more citations of their research, other colleges are also facing opposition from creative-writing students over open-access publishing of theses.
title U. of Iowa Writing Students Quash Planned Open Access
topic Graduate Students
Copyrights
Degree Requirements
Writing (Composition)
Access to Information
Information Policy
Higher Education
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ790381