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RE: Cornell: Scholarship on Demand
- To: "'liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu'" <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: RE: Cornell: Scholarship on Demand
- From: "Sloan, Bernie" <bernies@uillinois.edu>
- Date: Wed, 3 Mar 2004 18:25:28 EST
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
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"One of the press's main challenges, Mr. Cooke says, is convincing faculty members that the Internet model of publishing is just as valuable as publishing in established journals." I'd imagine that would be a huge challenge... Bernie Sloan -----Original Message----- From: Ann Okerson [mailto:ann.okerson@yale.edu] Sent: Tuesday, March 02, 2004 9:20 PM To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu Subject: Cornell: Scholarship on Demand Of possible interest; this article is on the password protected part of the Chronicle site: <http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v50/i26/26a02901.htm> Cornell Tries a New Publishing Model: Scholarship on Demand By SCOTT CARLSON Cornell University has started a publishing venture that will provide scholarly publications online free, offering readers the option to pay for a printed copy. Officials at Cornell hope that the publishing model will be one that other colleges will adopt, reducing their dependence on costly journals and trimming the need for storage space. The project, called the Internet-First University Press, is one of the first to utilize DSpace, a free software tool designed by programmers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to archive scholarly works. [SNIP] Cornell is not the only institution toying with the idea of Internet publishing. Columbia University and the University of Rochester are working on similar Internet-publishing projects. And Jerome Yavarkovsky, university librarian at Boston College, is leading an effort to start an online press there. "There is a convergence of opportunity and need" in scholarly publishing at the moment, he says. Internet-First press is open to publishing the work of scholars from other institutions, Mr. Cooke says. But he has greater hopes for passing along programming and strategic help to other colleges and getting them to start their own online presses. Prices Needed Cornell's project is still a work in progress, with some vital details not settled. The price of the print-on-demand services, for one thing, has not been determined. "We're still trying to sort that out," Mr. Cooke says. Nor will he divulge the cost of the project. [SNIP] One of the press's main challenges, Mr. Cooke says, is convincing faculty members that the Internet model of publishing is just as valuable as publishing in established journals. All of the professors who have signed on so far are tenured, Mr. Cooke says, adding that he used his status as a former dean of the faculty to win them over. SNIP_________________
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