Thursday, July 16, 2015

Honors theses and embargos

Given the recent decisions by the Department of Biology, and the Department of Environmental Science and Biology to embargo their Master Thesis collections, I decided I should check with the advisers of those departments regarding some 2015 Senior Honor Theses I am trying to post. Here is the email I sent and the individual responses I got:

Dear Huey, Rey and Chris,
I am getting ready to contact this year’s group of Honors students for permission to post their theses in Digital Commons. Given the embargo request for Master’s theses for your departments, I wanted to check with the three of you first since you were each an adviser for one of the students. Here are the students in question:
Kendra Andrew - Hing
Amber Altrieth – Sia
Sara Grillo – Norment
If you wish, I will wait to contact these students until a future date (2017). Please advise.
Thanks,

Kim

Hi Kim - As far as I am concerned, there does not normally need to be an embargo on senior honors theses, as they usually are not publishable. So - you can post Sara's thesis if she gives the go-ahead.
Thanks,
Chris (ESB)


Hi Kim,
It is fine to post Amber Altrieth's thesis. Thank you for asking.

Rey A. Sia, Ph.D.


Dear Kim,

Please do not post the thesis of Kendra Andrew on Digital Commons, as we are still carrying out additional experiments on her project.

Also, please do not post the thesis of Noah Reger, a Master student who recently graduated from Biology.

Best,
Huey Hing

Friday, June 26, 2015

Oral History Project upload instructions

Charlie has a number of mp3 files of various quality ready to be uploaded. Ken has agreed to clean them up a bit. Here are the instructions for uploading them to Kaltura.

Download the mp3 from the Digital Commons FC2 (KW - Oral History - Fixed) folder to the desktop. Sign into kmc.kaltura.com using brockport email and special password.

Click on content - upload from desktop - browse for and upload the file. Depending on the size, this may take a while.

Click on Name - Preview in Player - Audio only - Advanced Options (Delivery Type - HTTP Progressive Download, Embed Type - Auto Embed)

Copy the tiny URL generated at the bottom - paste into the appropriate metadata field. Choose other Rich Media for streaming media choice.

Kaltura Links:

Mabel Webster: http://www.kaltura.com/tiny/m99nw

Links go in the Streaming Media field, and the Media Format is “Other rich media”
You can add up to 2 files on one metadata page, so for Bruce Lee, the links would go into the Streaming Media and Additional Streaming Media fields. Make sure to update the format for both.

A good thing to go into the comments field might be a line that tells that the transcript is the downloadable file.

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Summer Projects - updated 9/2/2015

It seems like my summer is filled with projects in various stages of completion, which I dabble in simultaneously.

Currently the list includes:
  1. Moving items from the Library Angel instance into the Library FC2 drive. Status: nearly complete (75%). Completed 6/25/2015 - report sent to MJO (cc:RC)
  2. Brockport Bookshelf URL update - on hold until Ken hears back from ProQuest, or until 7/31, whichever comes first. Completed 8/4/2015
  3. The creation of a post-conference slide share for SURC,  using the bepress batch upload feature. This will be a new experience for me, specifically using Google Drive to house the files in a publicly accessible area and using a script that automatically gathers the URL for use on the bepress upload spreadsheet. I found instructions on how to do this here: http://opus.govst.edu/faculty/30/  but there seems to be an issue that we are trying to work through right now. I never was able to get this to work.
  4. Uploading the remainder of the Philosophic Exchange articles.There are 3 people involved in this enterprise, each with a different degree of completion. First, Kristen has to get them scanned and OCR'd, then I create the journal, add metadata and upload them, and finally Gordon Barnes tweaks the disciplines and adds any email addresses he has. There were about 14 volumes online when we began, Kristen has completed 19 more, and I have uploaded 10 of those. I haven't heard from Gordon at all this summer, so much awaits him. We made a lot of progress this summer, but the project did not reach completion due to backlog in Philosophy.
  5. Another long term project has been creating and uploading Charlie's Oral History collection. He and I have worked together to massage the metadata, and I am working with Bob and Ken to tweak the audio component. Charlie has a series of .wav files dating back from the 1990's of interviews with alumni and emeriti. We will be putting together a community with images, transcripts and audio files. Ken is working on cleaning up some of the audio files, and Bob and I are trying to figure out (I think we have) how to use Kaltura to house the files. The three that CC had files and transcripts for are now online, and more are waiting transcripts.
  6. Final projects include completing the Publishing in Libraries conference site and creating a conference site for the 2011 IAPS Conference. Publishing in Libraries completed in August (see http://digitalcommons.brockport.edu/pubinlib/). IAPS did not get done, due to lack of clerical assistance.

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Update on Biology Thesis project

May 20, 2015: Also anything 3+ years old can go up on Digital Commons. (RAS)

From Rey Sia on May 8, 2015:
Biology has decided to go with one year embargo on Biology theses, and would like to know who retains the copyright.

Reply on May 9, 2015:


I have been working with bepress to get this set up over the past week. We have never handled theses this way before, but I think we have a process set up that will work.

The student will retain copyright to the thesis. What they agree to is a nonexclusive right (for the College) to distribute their submission ("the Work") over the Internet and make it part of the Digital Commons @Brockport.

The student should be directed to http://digitalcommons.brockport.edu/bio_theses/, where they will find links in the sidebar to formatting guidelines, uploading instructions, and a link to submit their research. As part of the submission process, they click through an agreement verifying their ownership of the information. For more specific wording, see page 2 of http://digitalcommons.brockport.edu/thesis_guidelines.pdf. The student then uploads their thesis and metadata, and the system notifies me. I send an email to the adviser listed by the student, asking them to review the thesis, and give me their decision. When approval is granted by the adviser, I add the thesis with a one year embargo, and a note to the record that will generate a reminder email to be sent to the adviser at the end of the year. If the adviser replies they would like to renew the embargo, the process is repeated. (Was there an agreement about how many times it can be renewed? To keep the process manageable, it would be helpful to me if we could keep the maximum number of times the embargo could be renewed to two. Do you think that would work for your faculty?)
We have never approached the approval process this way before, so there may be a little bit of tweaking needed in the beginning. The submission form is open now, so students can start submitting anytime, but I will be at a conference on Monday and Tuesday of next week, so any faculty notifications will have to wait until after that.
In order to help the process go smoothly I will be happy to answer any questions that come up, or walk through the process with the advisers.

Reply from Rey Sia regarding embargo on 5/11/2015:


The maximum number of embargoes as two should be fine. Thank you.

Rey A. Sia, Ph.D.

 

Monday, April 27, 2015

Meeting with Biology department faculty (4/24/2015)



Attendees:
Laurie Cook
Craig Lending
Bernardo Ortega
Michel Pelletier
Adam Rich
Rongkun Shen
Rey Sia
Stuart Tsubota
 

The Biology department had serious concerns about student work appearing in Digital Commons. Their primary concern is that the work contained data belonging to them, and that by having it Open Access, their research and data might get "scooped". They (specifically Laurie Cook) expressed surprise when they Googled their name and found theses written by students that had advised in Digital Commons, as well as some Senior Honor Theses.

Question 1: How and why is this type of work in Digital Commons?
Answer: all documents in both series were vetted by faculty (in the paper form), and the theses are posted with permission of the student.

Question 2: Are we required to post theses in Digital Commons?
Answer: Yes, according to College Senate Resolution #03 2013-2014, signed by Dr. Halstead on 11/22/13, "If an academic department requires graduate students to submit master's theses or capstone projects to The College at Brockport's Deake Library, they need to do so electronically to Digital Commons, Brockport's online repository. This will increase the visibility of graduate student scholarship and make it available online for broad public and archival access." This was submitted by James Spiller, Dean of the Graduate School in 10/2013.

Position (Tsubota and Rich): Why don't we just not submit the thesis then until we have published our research, whether in 2 or 5 years time?
Counter (Sia, Chair): This is too long a time, and places a burden on the faculty to follow through. What if you leave before then?
Question (Tsubota): What if we place it in multiple drives - faculty adviser, dept chair, grad chair?
Counter (Sia): Too dispersed, and no guarantee it will be followed through on.

Question (??): I've heard that ESB has placed an embargo on their theses, is this something we can do?
Answer: The embargo for ESB is one year from date of acceptance with automatic open access at the end of this. This is something we could do for you, as well.

Question (Tsubota, et al): We want a 5 year embargo.
Position (Sia): Is this really necessary?
Answer (Myers): This is something that would have to be approved at a college level.

Position (Cook): Before, when theses were just in paper, you had to go to the library catalog to find them, and to the library to read them. This did not concern us. We are concerned with even having the titles and abstracts online.
Comment (Myers): In recent years, World Cat has become searchable online, as well.

Further discussion ensued, including the rights of the graduate student to showcase their thesis; their desire to be able to use it as an example of their research skills, add it to their LinkedIn profile, or put a link on a resume or grad school application. In the end, Rey Sia and Michel Pelletier seemed to be in favor of making theses Open Access as soon as possible, with the remainder of the faculty leaning the other way.

Proposed solution (Myers): Open the Biology thesis collection to student submission, with faculty adviser approval required before posting. Investigate possibility of one year embargo, with the ability of the faculty member to extend it on an annual basis for up to a number of years not to exceed 5, if this is acceptable to college administration. 

Thoughts: Is this a win or a loss? Considering their desire to stop publishing their theses altogether, or indefinitely, I think it is the first step to a compromise solution. I felt like I was well received by the faculty, and what they thought would be a quick 30 minute discussion, went on for an hour when I summed up what we had discussed, and told them that I wanted to be respectful of their time on a Friday afternoon, and I'd be happy to come back and discuss it further, after I have more information. They invited me back, so I feel like the meeting was a success.

Interestingly, I walked to my car with Adam Rich, and he commented on the lack of consideration in general given to the graduate student's point of view in the discussion. I also talked to him about JOVE and visual experiments and he expressed an interest in finding out more about putting those online, as well as having a robust Spectrum journal (he mentioned Laurie Cook as a potential member of the board), and said there has to be some sort of incentive to get faculty to participate.


Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Working with Provost Zuckerman

I was asked to look into adding two of the Provost's articles to Digital Commons.


Here is what I have found out about the permissions associated with the Provost’s articles.

Mary Ellen Zuckerman, (2013) "Martha Van Rensselaer and the Delineator's homemaking department", Journal of Historical Research in Marketing, Vol. 5 Iss: 3, pp.370 – 384
Of note, this is not freely available through any of our library databases at this time. If the Provost has her final accepted version (pre journal formatting), we are happy to add it to the repository.

Emerald supports authors' voluntary deposit of their own work. Once an article has been published by Emerald, an author may voluntarily post their own version of the article that was submitted to the journal (pre-print) or the version of the article that has been accepted for publication (post-print) onto their own personal website or into their own institutional repository with no payment or embargo period. Authors may also use their own version of the paper (pre-print or post-print) for their own teaching purposes.

Concerning the article in American Periodicals, they do not publicize their permission information, so I have contacted the journal’s editor directly.

I will update you when I have more information regarding this one, but in the meantime, could you check with the Provost to see if she kept a (pre-publication) copy of her article?

Monday, April 20, 2015

More on Sokol Literary Contest



Good morning, Kim,
Permission forms went out with the congratulations letters. I asked that they return them signed on the day of the event, and I will have blanks available for them to complete on the spot if they forgot their form. I don’t believe we will receive them before the event.
Could you put the URL on and link it afterward? I could get you the text the next day.

Rebecca Fuss

From: Myers, Kim [mailto:kmyers@brockport.edu]
Sent: Thursday, April 16, 2015 3:28 PM
To: Fuss, Rebecca
Subject: RE: Sokol Contest

Hi Rebecca,
I wanted to check with you about where we were in the process of student submission. I believe you were going to work on getting permission, signed off by both student and parent. I would love to have the work available in Digital Commons prior to the ceremony, so I could include the URL on the certificate. Do you think this is possible?
Thanks,
Kim

From: Fuss, Rebecca [mailto:Rebecca.Fuss@libraryweb.org]
Sent: Monday, April 06, 2015 2:33 PM
To: Myers, Kim
Subject: RE: Sokol Contest

Hi Kim,
Here are the names of the 2015 Sokol High School Literary Awards Contest winners, if you are still interested in making certificates:

Poetry: 
First Place - Grace Gorman Keller, School of the Arts, grade 11 
Second Place - Molly Brind'Amour, Irondequoit High School, grade 12 
Third Place - Olivia Spenard, School of the Arts, grade 10 

 
Prose: 
First Place - Zoe Hodge, School of the Arts, grade 11 
Second Place - Jeannie Hirsch, Webster Schroeder High School, grade 10 
Third Place - Madison Pelkey, Pittsford Mendon High School, grade 10 

 
Performance: 
Special Prize - Cassidy Bertram, Fairport High School, grade 12 


Rebecca Fuss

From: Myers, Kim [mailto:kmyers@brockport.edu]
Sent: Wednesday, April 01, 2015 1:39 PM
To: Fuss, Rebecca
Subject: RE: Sokol Contest

It is on my calendar and I am looking forward to it. Kim

From: Fuss, Rebecca [mailto:Rebecca.Fuss@libraryweb.org]
Sent: Wednesday, April 01, 2015 1:19 PM
To: Myers, Kim
Subject: RE: Sokol Contest

Hi Kim,
The Sokol winners have just been selected, so we will move ahead with getting permission for their work to appear on Digital Commons.
I hope you can make it to the ceremony here at Central Library on Thursday, April 30 at 4pm. You will be receiving an invitation in the mail in the next couple of weeks.

Rebecca Fuss


From: Myers, Kim [mailto:kmyers@brockport.edu]
Sent: Monday, January 05, 2015 12:13 PM
To: Fuss, Rebecca
Subject: RE: Sokol Contest

Hi Rebecca,
I am very excited to work with you on this! I am attaching a draft permission document, for your feedback. If you have something else in mind to use to get their permission, that is fine, we just need to have their informed consent. Also, as far as metadata for the collection, I was thinking of having their name, email, school name, grade level, title and type of submission. Do you see any problem with displaying any of this information? We could collect the email addresses, but not have them visible if you wish. We would be happy to be mentioned at the awards ceremony, and would like to provide the winners with a certificate of some kind with the URL of their submission on it, if that would be all right with the committee.

Kim L Myers
Digital Repository Specialist
2014 bepress IR All Star
44K, Drake Memorial Library
The College at Brockport, State University of New York
585-395-2742