Does Tenure Matter? Factors Influencing Faculty Contributions to Institutional Repositories

INTRODUCTION Institutional repositories (IRs) provide colleges and universities a way to ensure stability of access to and dissemination of digital scholarly communications. Yet, many institutions report that faculty willingness to contribute to IRs is often limited. This study investigates faculty...

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Main Author: Anne M. Casey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Iowa State University Digital Press 2012-05-01
Series:Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.7710/2162-3309.1032
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spelling doaj-eb1f49b659ae4503ad379fa325d5de612021-07-02T05:11:58ZengIowa State University Digital PressJournal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication2162-33092012-05-0111eP1032Does Tenure Matter? Factors Influencing Faculty Contributions to Institutional RepositoriesAnne M. CaseyINTRODUCTION Institutional repositories (IRs) provide colleges and universities a way to ensure stability of access to and dissemination of digital scholarly communications. Yet, many institutions report that faculty willingness to contribute to IRs is often limited. This study investigates faculty attitudes about IR contributions by tenure status and category of material. METHODS Two focus group interviews were conducted in the spring of 2009 among English department faculty at a large Midwestern university. One group consisted of tenured faculty and the other of tenure-track and adjunct faculty. RESULTS Both groups recognize the benefit of open access to research materials but expressed concern about their intellectual property rights. Untenured faculty spoke more about nonprint research. Both groups also shared concerns about contributing instructional materials, primarily in regard to plagiarism and outdated materials. In regard to faculty service, the tenured group discussed many items they would contribute, while the untenured faculty mentioned very little. DISCUSSION Some minor differences emerged related to experience and tenure status in regard to contributing research and instructional artifacts, but the major variation was the strong support tenured participants gave for contributing service items, compared to the untenured faculty, who did not view this category positively. Tenured faculty viewed the IR as a way to document their own service activities, investigate those of colleagues, and had fewer concerns about plagiarism or other negative effects in the service category. CONCLUSION Promoting faculty contribution of service-related items to an IR may be a way to encourage larger numbers to participate.http://dx.doi.org/10.7710/2162-3309.1032
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anne M. Casey
spellingShingle Anne M. Casey
Does Tenure Matter? Factors Influencing Faculty Contributions to Institutional Repositories
Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication
author_facet Anne M. Casey
author_sort Anne M. Casey
title Does Tenure Matter? Factors Influencing Faculty Contributions to Institutional Repositories
title_short Does Tenure Matter? Factors Influencing Faculty Contributions to Institutional Repositories
title_full Does Tenure Matter? Factors Influencing Faculty Contributions to Institutional Repositories
title_fullStr Does Tenure Matter? Factors Influencing Faculty Contributions to Institutional Repositories
title_full_unstemmed Does Tenure Matter? Factors Influencing Faculty Contributions to Institutional Repositories
title_sort does tenure matter? factors influencing faculty contributions to institutional repositories
publisher Iowa State University Digital Press
series Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication
issn 2162-3309
publishDate 2012-05-01
description INTRODUCTION Institutional repositories (IRs) provide colleges and universities a way to ensure stability of access to and dissemination of digital scholarly communications. Yet, many institutions report that faculty willingness to contribute to IRs is often limited. This study investigates faculty attitudes about IR contributions by tenure status and category of material. METHODS Two focus group interviews were conducted in the spring of 2009 among English department faculty at a large Midwestern university. One group consisted of tenured faculty and the other of tenure-track and adjunct faculty. RESULTS Both groups recognize the benefit of open access to research materials but expressed concern about their intellectual property rights. Untenured faculty spoke more about nonprint research. Both groups also shared concerns about contributing instructional materials, primarily in regard to plagiarism and outdated materials. In regard to faculty service, the tenured group discussed many items they would contribute, while the untenured faculty mentioned very little. DISCUSSION Some minor differences emerged related to experience and tenure status in regard to contributing research and instructional artifacts, but the major variation was the strong support tenured participants gave for contributing service items, compared to the untenured faculty, who did not view this category positively. Tenured faculty viewed the IR as a way to document their own service activities, investigate those of colleagues, and had fewer concerns about plagiarism or other negative effects in the service category. CONCLUSION Promoting faculty contribution of service-related items to an IR may be a way to encourage larger numbers to participate.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.7710/2162-3309.1032
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