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Preprints 101 for authors
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Joint webinar with ASAPbio, Sumeet Pal Singh and Europe PMC

Preprints enable researchers to rapidly share their work publicly before the formal peer review process. In this webinar you will learn more about preprints and their benefits for the research community from ASAPbio (Accelerating Science and Publication in biology); will hear an author’s perspective on posting preprints from Sumeet Pal Singh, a group leader at IRIBHM, ULB; and will find out how to incorporate preprints in your literature search routine by using the preprint discovery tools developed by Europe PMC.

ASAPbio is a scientist-driven nonprofit that promotes the productive use of preprints in the life sciences. ASAPbio coordinates a global community of researchers and stakeholders interested in preprints and develops resources to advance best practices and help researchers make informed decisions about communicating their work via preprints. Iratxe Puebla, Associate Director at ASAPbio, will provide an overview of preprints and their growth in the life sciences, and cover things researchers should consider before posting a preprint.

Sumeet Pal Singh is a group leader at IRIBHM, ULB and an ASAPbio fellow. Sumeet will describe the journey of publishing his first senior author paper from a preprint to a peer-reviewed article, as well as the details related to the timing of posting a preprint and its relationship to the peer-review process. He will outline a new path provided by Review Commons that allows the authors to receive peer reviews for their manuscript prior to a journal submission, as well as post the reviewer’s comments and the authors’ response on preprint server (bioRxiv).

Europe PMC indexes over 300,000 preprints abstracts and full text COVID-19 preprints from 20 life sciences preprint servers alongside published journal articles. Preprints in Europe PMC are linked to citations, data, community peer reviews and more. In this part of the talk we will demonstrate how to find relevant preprints, cite and track preprint citations, claim preprints to ORCID, or discover relevant resources.

Who is this course for?
This webinar is suitable to any biological researchers who wish to learn more about incorporating preprints into their research. No prior knowledge is required.

Outcomes
By the end of the webinar you will be able to:

Define what a preprint is
Choose a suitable preprint server for your work
Maximise the options for publication of the preprint at a journal
Decide when to post your manuscript as a preprint
Deal with community reviews and comments
Identify how to search for relevant preprints
Find data behind the preprint
Find comments or reviews associated with a preprint
Add a preprint publication to your publication list
Cite a preprint

Subject:
Applied Science
Life Science
Material Type:
Lecture
Provider:
EMBL-EBI
Date Added:
06/21/2021
Preprints discovery 101: Tips & tricks for authors
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CC BY
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Preprints enable researchers to rapidly share their work publicly before the formal peer review process. This webinar will demonstrate how to incorporate preprints in your literature search routine by using the discovery tools developed by Europe PMC.

Europe PMC indexes preprints abstracts and full text COVID-19 preprints from many life sciences preprint servers alongside published articles. Preprints in Europe PMC are linked to data and platforms that comment on or peer review preprints. We will demonstrate how to find the data behind preprints as well as comments and reviews associated with a given preprint. We will also share useful tips for posting your pre-prints, claiming a pre-print to your ORCID and tracking your pre-prints’ citations, revisions or recommendations by readers.

To learn more about using Europe PMC in your research try our Europe PMC: Quick tour or our webinar Using Europe PMC for effective literature research.

Who is this course for?
This webinar is suitable to any biological researchers who wish to learn more about incorporating pre-prints into their research. No prior knowledge is required.

Outcomes
By the end of the webinar you will be able to:

Define what a preprint is
Identify how to search for relevant preprints
Find data behind the preprint
Find comments or reviews associated with a preprint
Demonstrate how to add a preprint publication to your publication list
Describe how to cite a preprint

Subject:
Applied Science
Life Science
Material Type:
Lecture
Provider:
EMBL-EBI
Date Added:
01/27/2021
Principles of Growth and Development
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CC BY-NC
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This is a topic in Educational Psychology that is taught to student teachers doing the Bachelor of Education Programme. The topic can be taught in different ways. This video presents a poem that is composed by the author of the OER herself in order to highlight the Principles of Growth and Development. An analysis of the poem serves to bring in clarity regarding the topic as well as aids in retention.

Subject:
Arts and Humanities
Material Type:
Interactive
Author:
Dr. Geeta Shetty
Date Added:
05/05/2020
PsyArXiv preprints in Europe PMC
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CC BY
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Psychological sciences preprints from PsyArXiv are now searchable in Europe PMC, an open database of life sciences literature. Join us for this live demo to learn how to find PsyArXiv preprints in Europe PMC, how to explore links to data, citations, comments or open peer reviews, how to claim preprints to your ORCID record, and more.

Who is this course for?
This webinar is aimed at psychology researchers.

Outcomes
By the end of the webinar you will be able to:

find PsyArXiv preprints in Europe PMC
explore links to data, citations, comments or open peer reviews
claim preprints to your ORCID record

Subject:
Applied Science
Life Science
Material Type:
Lecture
Provider:
EMBL-EBI
Date Added:
05/25/2021
Recorded lectures
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CC BY
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Lectures for Honors Intro Physics (calculus corequisite) At UT Knoxville. I recorded most lectures over Zoom for Fall 2022, but missed some near the end of the semester. Then our university bought a light board, and I am currently recording lectures for Fall 2023 using the light board. I intend to continue on to the Spring semester as well.

Subject:
Physical Science
Physics
Material Type:
Lecture
Author:
Christine Nattrass (University of Tennessee Knoxville)
Date Added:
07/09/2023
Research Approaches and Tools & Techniques for Research
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CC BY-SA
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This video is about Tools and Techniques for Qualitative and Quantitative Research Approaches.Three major tools discussed under it are:1. Data Collection Too...

Subject:
Education
Material Type:
Lecture
Author:
Dr.Deepika Kohli
Date Added:
05/27/2021
ScholCom202X: an interactive fiction game about being a scholarly communication librarian
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CC BY
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In ScholCom 202X, you'll take on the role of a new scholarly communication librarian at a small public university somewhere in the US in the "distant future" of the year 202X.

You'll be given a number of scenarios derived from activities and questions a real scholarly communication librarian might expect to receive. These scenarios fall into four general areas: copyright; publishing; institutional repositories; and open access.

The game has two versions, an interactive fiction format written in Ink (located in the "Ink source" and "playable" folders) and a static PDF version (in "printables").

In the interactive fiction version, after reading each scenario you'll be given a chance to consult your "augment," a smartphone-like device which contains a very brief annotated list of some relevant sources and a calendar that tracks how busy you are. In the PDF/print version, these sources are listed below the scenario text, and are open access whenever possible.

After you've read the scenario text and consulted these sources (or not), put yourself in the place of the librarian in the game and think about how you would respond. Would you try to help just the person you're currently talking to, or would you rather build resources and develop strategies that could make the question easier to answer the next time it comes up, and potentially even reach and educate people who don't know the questions to ask in the first place?

As you think through each scenario, ask yourself how you would balance the desire to do a good job against the threat of overwork. You're welcome to write out what you would do, or just think about it. The PDF versions of the scenarios can also be used to role play in a classroom setting, with one student taking on the role of the librarian and another the role of the person who needs their help.

Playable version at https://people.wou.edu/~bakersc/ScholCom202X/index.html. Additional background available at https://lisoer.wordpress.ncsu.edu/2021/05/18/new-to-the-scn-scholcom-202x-an-interactive-fiction-game/.

Subject:
Applied Science
Information Science
Material Type:
Game
Interactive
Simulation
Teaching/Learning Strategy
Author:
Stewart Baker
Date Added:
10/25/2021
Scholarly Communication
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CC BY-SA
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Researchers, scholars and scientists main business is scholarly communication. We communicate about our work to others, as we push the boundaries of what we know and the society knows. We question established notions and truths about science. We share our findings with others, and in a way that is popularly known as scholarly communication which emerged with the publication of first journal in 1665. However, the term gained popularity only in the 1970s, as access to peer reviewed and scholarly communication became difficult. This module has four units covering introduction to scholarly communication, peer reviewed journals, electronica journals and databases and the Serials Crisis. At the end of this module, the learner is expected to be able to:
- Explain philosophy, mission, and objectives of scholarly communication
- Describe the process of scholarly communication
- Identify different channels of scholarly communication
- Discuss the dysfunctioning of the scholarly communication
In Unit 1, Introduction to scholarly communication, we have discussed different aspects of scholarly communication – particularly its genesis, importance and ethics of academic publishing, and different communication channels available in academic publishing. Some of these channels are commonly described as primary sources as they provide first-hand testimony or direct evidence concerning a topic under investigation. Historically, scientific journals were initiated by learned societies and other scholarly communities for reporting results of concluded research works or scientific discoveries. Now many forprofit publishers have started publishing research journals.
Unit 2, Communicating with Peer Review Journals, covers two important academic publishing channels, namely peer reviewed journals, conferences and their proceedings. This Unit also highlights different methods and procedures of peer reviewing for publishing primary literature emanated from research studies. The peer reviewing is essential for validating quality of research findings conveyed by researchers, which are subject to fulfilment of ethical standards and appropriate research design, sampling and other methodological issues.
In Unit 3, Electronic journals and databases, we have discussed the emergence of electronic journals in academic and research environment due to wide proliferation of information and communication technologies (ICT) in research communications and academic publishing. Scientific communities and scientific communications from the global South are getting substantive attentions through adaptation of electronic journals and electronic academic databases in the process of research communications.
In Unit 4, the Serials Crisis, we discuss the cost of peer reviewed publications and the problems faced by researchers in developing countries. The focus of this unit is on highlighting the problems and discusses possible solutions including the emergence of open access as one of the solutions. Open access journal publishing helps in mitigating some of the problems associated with serials crisis.
This is Module One of the UNESCO's Open Access Curriculum for Researchers.
Full-Text is available at http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0023/002319/231938e.pdf

Subject:
Career and Technical Education
Education
Educational Technology
Higher Education
Material Type:
Full Course
Module
Textbook
Unit of Study
Author:
Anup Kumar Das
Date Added:
09/12/2018
Scholarly Conversations
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CC BY-NC-SA
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Jumping into research on a specific subject may feel overwhelming when faced with the vast amount of information that has been published on the subject. In this lesson, students will discover how research is like a conversation that takes place between scholars in a field and will investigate ways they can become part of the conversation over time.

Subject:
Applied Science
Information Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Assessment
Homework/Assignment
Lesson
Module
Provider:
New Literacies Alliance
Author:
Alice Anderson
Ashley Flinn
Ashley Stark
Geoff Iverson
Heather Healy
Julie Hartwell
Kate Otto
New Literacies Alliance
Rachel Vukas
Sara Kearns
Date Added:
08/20/2021
Sharing OER means...
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CC BY
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An infographic that shows all of the benefits of sharing materials for teachers who are not sure if they want to share

Subject:
Education
Material Type:
Diagram/Illustration
Provider:
COERLL
Author:
COERLL
Date Added:
09/23/2021
Sharing Your Work in Open Access
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CC BY-SA
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This is the last Module of the course on Open Access for researchers. So far you have studied about Open Access, its history, advantages, initiatives, copyrights and licensing, evaluation matrix for research – all in the context of scholarly communication. In this Module with just two units, we would like to help you share your work in Open Access though repositories and journals. At the end of this module, you are expected to be able to:
- Understand the publication process involved in dissemination of scholarly works;
- Choose appropriate Open Access journals and repositories for sharing research results;
- Use social media to promote personal research work and build reputation.
In Unit 1, we discuss the research publication process at five stages – planning stage, preparing stage, pre-publication stage, publication stage and postpublication stage. We emphasize the importance of social media in sharing and making your work visible to the target groups.
In Unit 2, we focus on sharing your research through OA repositories and Journals. First we discussed the different types of repositories to select and highlighted the steps that you may consider including deposit in your own institutional repositories or in global open repositories. We then discuss the sources of finding and deciding on OA journals. This unit also provides guidance on choosing the right OA journals, as the quality of OA journals is often questioned.
This is Module Five of the UNESCO's Open Access Curriculum for Researchers.
Full-Text is available at http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0023/002322/232211E.pdf

Subject:
Applied Science
Business and Communication
Career and Technical Education
Communication
Education
Educational Technology
Higher Education
Information Science
Material Type:
Full Course
Module
Textbook
Unit of Study
Author:
Anup Kumar Das
Sanjaya Mishra
Date Added:
09/12/2018
Siapakah Teman Kita?
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CC BY
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ini adalah cerita tentang teman kecil yang sangat berguna. Video ini juga bisa dijadikan sebagai bahan ajar pelajaran IPA SD tentang simbiosis mutualisme.

Buku Cerita :
Siapakah teman kita?, gaya caecia, https://storyweaver.org.in/stories/130097-siapakah-teman-kita, CC BY 4.0 Based on Original story: 'Who Is Our Friend?', Jade Mathieson, https://storyweaver.org.in/stories/24795-who-is-our-friend,CC BY 4.0
License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Musik Pengiring:
Monkeys Spinning Monkeys, Kevin MacLeod, https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4071-monkeys-spinning-monkeys, CC BY 4.0
License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Lisensi Video ini:
Video Cerita Siapakah teman kita?, Achmad Ghozali, CC BY 4.0 digubah dari Cerita Siapakah teman kita?, gaya caecia, https://storyweaver.org.in/stories/130097-siapakah-teman-kita, CC BY 4.0 Based on Original story: 'Who Is Our Friend?', Jade Mathieson, https://storyweaver.org.in/stories/24795-who-is-our-friend,CC BY 4.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Subject:
Early Childhood Development
Education
Elementary Education
Material Type:
Reading
Author:
Achmad Ghozali
Date Added:
11/29/2020
Social Media
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CC BY-NC
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Social Media has transformed human relationships. It has demolished all social boundaries. It is important to revive our relationships with our immediate neighbours also

Subject:
Social Science
Sociology
Material Type:
Lecture Notes
Author:
D. Jockim
Date Added:
05/03/2020