Other News¶
Here are a few articles and news items dealing with open-source software and curricular materials in academics.
September 2012¶
- Finnish teachers create open-source mathematics textbook in 3 days
- 29 September 2012—A group of Finnish teachers created an open-source mathematics textbook for secondary school in a 3-day sprint. While the book is in Finnish, it is a very interesting experiment in creating textbooks. See the blog post for more.
- California will create 50 free digital textbooks
- 27 September 2012—California has passed a law to create 50 free digital textbooks targeting lower-division college courses. California also passed a law to create the California Digital Open Source Library. See the Los Angeles Times article for more details.
- Particle Physics taking all journals to open-access
- 24 September 2012—”After six years of negotiation, the Sponsoring Consortium for Open Access Publishing in Particle Physics is now close to ensuring that nearly all particle-physics articles — about 7,000 publications last year — are made immediately free on journal websites. Upfront payments from libraries will fund the access.” See the Nature article for more.
June 2012¶
- PeerJ Journal adopts “flat fee, all you can publish” model
- 12 June 2012—The PeerJ journal explores a model where authors pay a one-time fee to publish all the scientific papers they want. A Nature article talks about this and other models to reduce cost to access publications.
- MLA Journals switch to “author retains copyright”
- 05 June 2012—The journals of the Modern Language Association have adopted a policy that authors will retain copyright to their articles. This means that authors will have no trouble posting their articles to open-access websites. See more at the MLA Press Release.
May 2012¶
- UCSF Mandates Open Access
- 23 May 2012—University of California, San Francisco faculty senate voted unanimously for a policy requiring UCSF faculty to make each of their articles freely available immediately through an open-access repository. See more at the UCSF news article.
- Fair use and e-reserves
- 12 May 2012—A judge just ruled on a case between publishers and Georgia State regarding fair use of materials in an e-reserve system. Most of the judgements came in favor of the university. Read more at Inside Higher Ed and Kevin Smith’s blog. Having open-source curricular material makes these sorts of complications moot, since copying and distribution of material is encouraged.