The OER Knowledge Cloud makes use of cookies. By continuing, you consent to this use. More information.
Open access, megajournals, and MOOCs: On the political economy of academic unbundling
Wellen, R.

PublishedOctober 2013
JournalSAGE Open
Volume 3, Issue 4, Pages 1-16

ABSTRACT
The development of “open” academic content has been strongly embraced and promoted by many advocates, analysts, stakeholders, and reformers in the sector of higher education and academic publishing. The two most well-known developments are open access scholarly publishing and Massive Online Open Courses (MOOCs), each of which are connected to disruptive innovations enabled by new technologies. Support for these new modes of exchanging knowledge is linked to the expectation that they will promote a number of public interest benefits, including widening the impact, productivity, and format of academic work; reforming higher education and scholarly publishing markets; and relieving some of the cost pressures in academia. This article examines the rapid emergence of policy initiatives in the United Kingdom and the United States to promote open content and to bring about a new relationship between the market and the academic commons. In doing so, I examine controversial forms of academic unbundling such as open access megajournals and MOOCs and place each in the context of the heightened emphasis on productivity and impact in new regulatory regimes in the area of higher education.

Keywords academic productivity · megajournals ·  · open access · scholarly publishing

RefereedYes
Rightsby/3.0/deed.en_GB
DOI10.1177/2158244013507271
URLhttp://sgo.sagepub.com/content/3/4/2158244013507271.article-info
Other informationSAGE Open
Export optionsBibTex · EndNote · Tagged XML · Google Scholar



AVAILABLE FILES
2158244013507271.full_.pdf · 364.8KB124 downloads



Viewed by 204 distinct readers




CLOUD COMMUNITY REVIEWS

The evaluations below represent the judgements of our readers and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Cloud editors.

Click a star to be the first to rate this document


POST A COMMENT
SIMILAR RECORDS

Open Access in Higher Education–Strategies for engaging diverse student cohorts
Signor, Luisa; Moore, Catherine; Gil-Jaurena, Inés
With growth in online education, students gain tertiary qualifications through a mode more suited to their demographics such as work and life balance, learning styles and geographical accessibility. Inevitably this has ...
Match: open access

The Open Textbook Toolkit: Seeding successful partnerships for collaboration between academic libraries and university presses
Waller, Mira; Cross, William M.
Libraries and university presses coexist in a complex and increasingly consolidated scholarly communication ecosystem. Each brings different strengths, values, and viewpoints that can inform and enrich a joint project. ...
Match: open access

Recursos educativos abiertos: Repositorios y uso
Santos-Hermosa, Gema; Ferran-Ferrer, Núria; Abadal, Ernest
Resumen: Se presenta una revisión bibliográfica, estado del arte, historia, características, desarrollo, proyectos y líneas de investigación de los recursos educativos abiertos (OERs), así como su disposición en ...
Match: open access

Open access in China and its effect on academic libraries
Hu, Dehua; Luo, Aijing; Liu, Haixia; Kasper, Wendi Arant; vanDuinkerken, Wyoma
OA is to become the future of academic library exchanges in China. With the government's support and promotion of OA, more and more Chinese academic libraries have been committed to participating in OA. The rapid ...
Match: open access

Localizing OER in Afghanistan: Developing a multilingual digital library for Afghan teachers
Oates, Lauryn; Hashimi, Jamshid
The Darakht-e Danesh (‘knowledge tree’) Online Library is the first open educational resource (OER) initiative in Afghanistan, established to enhance teacher subject-area knowledge, access and use of learning ...
Match: open access

Open: The philosophy and practices that are revolutionizing education and science
Jhangiani, Rajiv; Biswas-Diener, Robert; Kwantlen Polytechnic University, CA; Noba Project
Affordable education. Transparent science. Accessible scholarship. These ideals are slowly becoming a reality thanks to the open education, open science, and open access movements. Running separate—if ...
Match: open access

The role of "open" in strategic library planning
Petrides, Lisa; Goger, Letha; Jimes, Cynthia; Petrides, Lisa; Jimes, Cynthia
Academic libraries are undergoing evolutionary change as emerging technologies and new philosophies about how information is created, distributed, and shared have disrupted traditional operations and services. ...
Match: open access

Fifty shades of open
Pomerantz, Jeffrey; Peek, Robin
Open source. Open access. Open society. Open knowledge. Open government. Even open food. The word “open” has been applied to a wide variety of words to create new terms, some of which make sense, and some not so ...
Match: open access

Why openess in education?
Wiley, David A.; Green, Cable; Oblinger, Diana. G.
In this chapter, we explore a number of ways openness affects the practices of teaching and learning and the motivations behind supporters of these emergent practices. We discuss the three principal influences of ...
Match: open access

Open access scholarly publications as OER
Anderson, Terry; McGreal, Rory; Conrad, Dianne
This article presents the rationale, common practices, challenges, and some personal anecdotes from a journal editor on the production, use, and re-use of peer-reviewed, scholarly articles as open educational resources ...
Match: open access