Editorial: New Form of Scholarship and Open Access Journals | Czerkawski | Issues and Trends in Educational Technology

abernard102@gmail.com 2014-05-16

Summary:

" ... If you have attended any major educational technology conference in the last few years you may have noticed a significant drop in attendance compared to prior years. This stems from a variety of causes: recent budget cuts, decreased institutional support for faculty and graduate student travel expenses, and new administrative models based on private business practices. But are these the only reasons? An increasing number of conferences accept virtual participation, which requires only online submission of scholarly work. Many also offer live blogs that provide constant updates of conference events. These are new forms of participation that were not available even a few years ago. While virtual conference participation is a welcome development, the expansion of high-quality open access journals and libraries is even more striking. In some cases print journals are losing their 'first tier' status to their online peers. This is largely a by-product of cycle time: It can take almost two years for a research study submitted to a print journal to make it through the peer-review process, revisions and finally, the printing process itself. The same sequence can take less than a year for an online journal. Additionally, the content of online journals can be made available to students and faculty at almost any time and at a distance –greatly reducing the prior (time-consuming) process of repeated trips to the university library. Open access journals also open the door to scholarship that previously had difficulty finding an audience. Graduate students and independent scholars now have access to publishing platforms that are usually not less –and quite often equal, or even superior– in quality to traditional print outlets. Graduate students are no longer encapsulated in their departments and faculty conversations can extend outside the realm of annual conferences. A wider range of research topics and formats is becoming available to a larger audience at greater speed and lower cost ..."

Link:

https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/itet/article/view/18155/17890

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.comment oa.publishing oa.social_media oa.social_networks oa.publishers oa.business_models

Date tagged:

05/16/2014, 17:40

Date published:

05/16/2014, 13:40