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Howard, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
The battle over public access to federally financed research is heating up again. The basic question is this: When taxpayers help pay for scholarly research, should those taxpayers get to see the results in the form of free access to the resulting journal articles? Actions in Washington this month highlight how far from settled the question is,…
Descriptors: Access to Information, Public Agencies, Journal Articles, Federal Aid
Howard, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Colleges are not the only enterprises interested in the possibilities of free, online courses. Publishers have begun to investigate whether so-called MOOC's, or massive open online courses, can help them reach new readers and sell more books. For the moment, providers of the classes encourage professors not to require students to buy texts, in…
Descriptors: Reading Lists, Online Courses, College Students, Textbooks
Howard, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
In metabolic terms, publishing in the humanities is more couch potato than sprinter. An idea can take years to move from light-bulb stage to manuscript to finished book. Add another year, or two or three, before an author can expect to see reviews of that book in academic journals. That slows down an already glutted system. "It's just appalling…
Descriptors: Book Reviews, Publishing Industry, Nineteenth Century Literature, Web Sites
Howard, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Senior scholars, the A-list of academic publishing, seem to submit fewer unsolicited manuscripts to traditional humanities journals than they used to. The journal has become, with very few exceptions, the place where junior and midlevel scholars are placing their work. Technology and changing habits have called into question the nature of the…
Descriptors: Periodicals, Internet, Humanities, Influence of Technology
Howard, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
The publishers' hall at the recent Association of College and Research Libraries conference, held in Seattle in mid-March, was a study in give-and-take: how much publishers such as Elsevier and Oxford University Press will give in this lousy economy, and how much budget-strapped librarians can take. Libraries are some of the biggest customers for…
Descriptors: Research Libraries, Academic Libraries, Library Administration, Library Associations
Howard, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
A life-and-death battle is going on over public access to federally financed research--life for taxpayers and many scientists, and death for publishers. Or so each side claims. That battle, whose outcome will affect many university researchers, kicked into high gear on Capitol Hill on September 11, as the combatants debated the merits of a bill…
Descriptors: Access to Information, Publishing Industry, Scientific Research, Journal Articles