[Open Scholarship in Practice]<https://open.ubc.ca/osip2020/>
Open Scholarship in Practice 2020
Join us November 2–6 for a week of free webinars and workshops exploring the practice of
open scholarship — from new tools that can increase the reproducibility of research, to
new pedagogies that become possible when students and faculty members become co-creators
engaged in meaningful, generative knowledge creation. Hear from UBC colleagues who are
incorporating “openness” in innovative ways to enhance teaching, research, and public
impact.
Explore the full event calendar <https://open.ubc.ca/osip2020/>
here<https://libcal.library.ubc.ca/calendar?cid=7544&t=g&d=0000-00-00&cal=7544&ct=34318&inc=0>,
or browse the sessions below.
Here is a highlight of a few of the sessions!
Working in Public: Generosity and the Knowledge Commons
Date: Tuesday, November 3, 2020
Time: 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm
Location: A Zoom video conferencing link will be provided prior to the event to all who
are confirmed to participate.
Featured Keynote: Kathleen Fitzpatrick, Director of Digital Humanities and Professor of
English Michigan State University
Working in public, and with the public, can enable scholars to build vital, sustainable
research communities, both within their fields, with other scholars in different fields,
and with folks off-campus who care about the kinds of work that we do. By finding ways to
connect with a broad range of publics, in a range of different registers, and in ways that
allow for meaningful response, we can create the possibilities for far more substantial
public participation in and engagement with the humanities, and with the academy more
broadly. This talk explores the ideas in Professor Fitzpatrick’s influential book,
Generous Thinking, and will focus on the challenges posed by working in public and the
skills required to develop more publicly engaged scholarship.
Co-sponsored by the UBC Library and the UBC Public Humanities Hub.
Register Here<https://libcal.library.ubc.ca/event/3585287>
Emerging Perspectives in Open Access Book Publishing
Date: Wednesday, November 4, 2020
Time: 10:00 am – 11:00 am
Location: A Zoom video conferencing link will be provided prior to the event to all who
are confirmed to participate.
Open Access monograph publishing is a rapidly expanding and evolving strategy for making
scholarly work globally accessible. Universities, academic publishers, libraries, and
scholarly organizations are developing new initiatives, partnerships, services, and
business models to support open access options for authors of scholarly monographs,
textbooks, and academic books. This event will explore the opportunities, challenges, and
experiences of OA book publishing from the perspective of authors, series editors and
publishers. You are invited to join a panel discussion of UBC faculty and publishers that
will address their motivations for “going open”, as well as the processes, impacts, and
changes that OA is bringing to academic book publishing.
Panellists
* Katherine Bowers, Katherine Bowers, Associate Professor of Slavic Studies, UBC
Department of Central, Eastern, and Northern European Studies
* Megan Brand, Production Editor, UBC Press
* Rupert Gatti, Co-founder and Director of Open Book Publishers; Fellow of Trinity
College, Cambridge, Director of Studies in Economics
* Mark Turin, Associate Professor, UBC Institute for Critical Indigenous Studies &
Department of Anthropology
Register Here<https://libcal.library.ubc.ca/event/3584443>
Publishing As Open Pedagogy: OJS & Pressbooks
Date: Wednesday, November 4, 2020
Time: 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Location: A Zoom video conferencing link will be provided prior to the event to all who
are confirmed to participate.
As open education continues to gain traction in higher education, many are looking for
ways to expand their integration of open approaches beyond merely the inclusion of open
materials. Open publishing is beginning to emerge as one pathway towards greater
engagement in openness in the classroom. This panel will introduce participants to five
people working in various capacities to support student publishing through Open Journal
Systems and PressBooks, two open source publishing platforms that allow for open
dissemination of student-created, instructor-supported content.
Register Here<https://libcal.library.ubc.ca/event/3585292>
<https://libcal.library.ubc.ca/event/3585292>
<https://libcal.library.ubc.ca/event/3585292>
<https://libcal.library.ubc.ca/event/3580860>
Erin M.E. Fields BA, BEd, MLIS (She, Her,
Hers<https://equity.ubc.ca/resources/gender-diversity/pronouns/>)
Open Education and Scholarly Communications Librarian
UBC Library | Scholarly Communications and Copyright Office
The University of British Columbia | Walter C. Koerner Library | Musqueam Traditional
Territory
1958 Main Mall | Vancouver BC | V6T 1Z2 Canada
Phone 604 822 0977
erin.fields@ubc.ca<mailto:erin.fields@ubc.ca> |
Emefie<http://twitter.com/Emefie>
https://www.library.ubc.ca/ |
https://scholcomm.ubc.ca/
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