Think globally, service locally az la_open access_part 3
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Transcript of Think globally, service locally az la_open access_part 3
Think Globally, Service Locally: Helping Foreign Students and Faculty
FOREIGN STUDENTS AND FACULTY IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Alexandra Houzouri Humphreys
Instruction Librarian
Arizona State University Libraries
Foreign Students and Faculty in Developing Countries
A. International students and visiting scholars—after leaving ASU
B. Potential ASU international students and visiting scholars in developing countries
Foreign Students and Faculty in Developing Countries
Summer 2010:
A. Macedonia: presentation (graduate students)
B. Serbia: conference presentation (faculty, students, and other participants)
C. Kosovo: workshop and presentation (undergraduate and graduate students)
Foreign Students and Faculty in Developing Countries
Serbia:
University Library in Belgrade http://www.unilib.bg.ac.rs/e_izdanja/elektronske_baze_podataka/lista_baza.php
Between 1883 and 1929 more than 2,500 libraries were built with money ($50 mil.) donated by the American businessman/philanthropist Andrew Carnegie. 1,689 of the libraries were built in the United States. The Belgrade University Library is a Carnegie library.
University Library in Nishttp://www.ubnt.ni.ac.rs/
Databases: http://kobson.nb.rs/pitanja_i_odgovori/pitanja_i_odgovori.660.html
Foreign Students and Faculty in Developing Countries
Open Access (OA) research literature (variety of definitions):
1. Free of charge for users
2. Online
3. Free of most copyright and licensing restrictions
Foreign Students and Faculty in Developing Countries
Selected events in OA development
1997 Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition
(SPARC) was founded by the Association of Research Libraries.
“SPARC is an international alliance of academic and research libraries working to correct imbalances in the scholarly publishing system.”
http://www.arl.org/sparc/about/index.shtml
Foreign Students and Faculty in Developing Countries
2001 The Open Society Institute convened a meeting where the
"Budapest Open Access Initiative” (BOAI) was signed. Its definition of open access (OA), while refined by subsequent documents, remains the most influential one to this day:
“The literature that should be freely accessible online is that which scholars give to the world without expectation of payment.”
http://www.soros.org/openaccess/read.shtml
Foreign Students and Faculty in Developing Countries
2001 "An Open Letter to Scientific Publishers” was signed by 34,000 scholars and led to the establishment of the Public Library of Service (PLoS), an advocacy organization. The document calls for "the establishment of an online public library that would provide the full contents of the published record of research and scholarly discourse in medicine and the life sciences in a freely accessible, fully searchable, interlinked form.”
http://www.plos.org/about/letter.php
Foreign Students and Faculty in Developing Countries
Open Access LibGuide: A guide to OA resources.
http://libguides.asu.edu/openaccess
Foreign Students and Faculty in Developing Countries
Foreign Students and Faculty in Developing Countries
Foreign Students and Faculty in Developing Countries
Foreign Students and Faculty in Developing Countries
Foreign Students and Faculty in Developing Countries
Foreign Students and Faculty in Developing Countries
Foreign Students and Faculty in Developing Countries
Foreign Students and Faculty in Developing Countries
Open Access video:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y9Jh_GffRPU&feature=player_embedded