Skip to main content

Open access and measuring Productivity ?

It was when I recognized the Surrey Research Insight, an open access repository, which is actually a database of open access academic papers. Surrey Research Insight is a library service which allows free access to UoS produced content and offers journal subscriptions to several scientific journals for all students and academic staff.

Recently, I submitted my first manuscript to a peer-reviewed journal, hence, I have not had much exposure in managing the Open access status of my papers. The 23 things for Research programme comes to a poignant time, as I will be able to consider seriously an immediate open access for my paper in future.

The concept of measuring the academic impact, the volume of publications using a number of variables and complicated algorithms is a contemporary trend to measure, assess and compare the PRODUCTIVITY.  Bibliometrics and Altmetrics tools are all different indicators of the volume of your publications. I would prefer to hold the positive features of these tools maximising and promoting my research work but not comparing my effort and research work with those
of other researchers in my field.



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Manage your References and Creative Commons

Sunflower by mrhayata,  September 23, 2011, Flickr,   CC BY-SA 2.0 Reference Management Software is an invaluable gift when you start with a PhD project. I had been using "Cite This For Me". However, after exploring the alternative choices I reconsider and I chose Mendeley.  Mendeley combines the best features of several other tools and it has become "my invaluable gift" in managing my vast number of references in my PhD journey. The opportunity of learning about Creative Common Licences and their use were very important for me as I love the idea of sharing my gallery content and being able to reuse online available images. CC licenses like Attribution, ShareAlike, NonComercial, and NonDerivatives can be used to free us and at the same time protect our rights as originators of our creative work. According to the task I explored Flirck to find a nice image! The above image was shared using a CC Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic (CC BY-SA 2.0) As well...

To conclude...

And now this the time to summarise all these different Things (22?) that I learned through The 23 Things for Research Programme. As a whole, I believe the programme was very insightful and I would definitely recommend it to anyone starting a PhD. Building or improving your professional online presence is the secret of the success. Maybe yes, maybe no... Who knows? Throughout this programme, I developed a cohesive and up-to-date profile in LinkedIn and Researchgate. The programme helped me to think about my personal brand, to set up Mendeley, my Reference Management tool and to recognise the importance of other tools for exploring source of information (Wikipedia), images online (Flickr, Pinterest), sharing findings (Prezi Google Public Data Explorer), disseminating research work (Open Access), maximising research impact (Bibliometrics and Altmetrics), connecting with other researchers (Webinars, Hangouts, Doodle), sharing data (Google Drive), searching for funding (Research ...