institutional repositories… publish and be damned? stephanie taylor, ukoln

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Institutional Repositories… publish and be damned? IWMW 2008 - University of Aberdeen Stephanie Taylor UKOLN

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Talk given at IWMW2008

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Page 1: Institutional Repositories… publish and be damned? Stephanie Taylor, UKOLN

Institutional Repositories… publish and be damned?

IWMW 2008 - University of Aberdeen

Stephanie Taylor

UKOLN

Page 2: Institutional Repositories… publish and be damned? Stephanie Taylor, UKOLN

A Very Short History of the Institutional Repository (1)…

Lots of interest from institutions, funding bodies and the HE ‘blue skies thinkers’

Every institution should have one!

A showcase for research

A resource for teaching and learning materials

Institutions are doing it for themselves!

Page 3: Institutional Repositories… publish and be damned? Stephanie Taylor, UKOLN

A Very Short History of the Institutional Repository (2)…

Funding follows, projects bloom, institutions start to implement

Technical infrastructure quickly settles on bought in software packages hosted in-house

Institutions start comparatively slow and steady implementation of an IR

Not all potential contributers are enthusiastic

IRs are so last year!

Page 4: Institutional Repositories… publish and be damned? Stephanie Taylor, UKOLN

When IRs met Web Managers…

Not always love at first sight (!)

In the world outside, all things Web 2.0 and social networking are happening

In comparison, IRs seem very cumbersome – • Out-of-the-box software• Hosted locally• Not dynamic in a Web 2.0 sense

Not very sexy?

Page 5: Institutional Repositories… publish and be damned? Stephanie Taylor, UKOLN

IRs – What Is The Point?

Why not store, access and share the contents of an IR online?

Why not use existing tools and services like Google suite, Flickr etc., not locally-hosted software?

Haven’t we got lots of other stuff already doing the same thing?

Do we really need an IR as part of our web presence?

IRs are so not Web 2.0!

Page 6: Institutional Repositories… publish and be damned? Stephanie Taylor, UKOLN

Irreconcilable Cultural Differences?

Who is controlling the IR content and why?

Academics and institutions – an eternal conflict? Why bother getting involved

Why not let researchers look after their own research output?

Why not let teachers manage their own learning materials?

Doesn’t open access mean self-management?

They’ll never catch on!

Page 7: Institutional Repositories… publish and be damned? Stephanie Taylor, UKOLN

And Another Thing…

Outsourcing the IR seems like the latest trend

Aren’t institutions loosing control?

Is it part of the institutional web presence or isn’t it?

How risky is it to outsource core technologies?

IR Managers – can’t live with ‘em - can’t live with ‘em…!

Page 8: Institutional Repositories… publish and be damned? Stephanie Taylor, UKOLN

Walking in the shoes of someone else...

What does an IR manager have to do to get attention around here?

How can I sell this to researchers if I have nothing to show them?

Where do I put deposits if the repository isn’t ready?

Who cares where it is and who looks after it as long as it does want I want?

It’s the content, stupid!

Page 9: Institutional Repositories… publish and be damned? Stephanie Taylor, UKOLN

What’s The Big Deal?

It isn’t the content

It isn’t the software

It isn’t the hosting options

It isn’t a single solution to any problem

It’s all about…

…changing the publishing model!

Page 10: Institutional Repositories… publish and be damned? Stephanie Taylor, UKOLN

The IR – A Quick Review

The IR has a role in the output of an institution

The IR has a role in the output of an individual researcher and teacher

The IR isn’t the single answer to any question – it is one tool that can be used effectively

It needs to be seen as part of an overall network of sharing and managing e-content

Breaking News – the IR has a useful role!

Page 11: Institutional Repositories… publish and be damned? Stephanie Taylor, UKOLN

Into The Future (1)…View the IR as one of many small

conversations you institution is having with many audiences – • Research staff & teaching staff• Students• Administrators• Prospective staff and students• Local community• Regional, national and international institutions• Funding bodies• Anyone else who knows you…

Page 12: Institutional Repositories… publish and be damned? Stephanie Taylor, UKOLN

Into The Future (2)…

Consider the IR as part of your whole web presence, not matter who manages it or where it is hosted

Think flexibility – open access may not always be appropriate for all material

Think integration – how can it be integrated into other initiatives and linked to other online tools, both Web 1.0 and Web 2.0 as well as in-house systems

Page 13: Institutional Repositories… publish and be damned? Stephanie Taylor, UKOLN

The Big News About IRs…

They are not the answer to all the problems of an institution

There is a lot of work still to be done to make them useful for contributors and users

But, the really big news is…

Page 14: Institutional Repositories… publish and be damned? Stephanie Taylor, UKOLN

The Institutional Repository…

…is actually quite useful!

Page 15: Institutional Repositories… publish and be damned? Stephanie Taylor, UKOLN

Stephanie Taylor

[email protected]

[email protected]

Questions?