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Veteran reporter Debra Viadero has written more than 1,400 stories for Education Week and most of them have been about research. Not bored yet, she translates, shares, and dissects research findings on schools and learning, along with news about education research, for audiences that extend far beyond the Ivory Tower.

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July 4, 2009

IssueLab: Free Research from the Nonprofit World

I wrote in this space last week about the Harvard Graduate School of Education's decision to make the research that its faculty members produce openly available to the public.

Well, here's another resource that you can credit to the growing "open access" movement. It's a Web site called IssueLab. Based in Chicago, IssueLab offers an open repository for social science research produced by foundations, charitable groups, and other nonprofits.

Here's what it accepts: policy analysis reports, white papers, case studies, data sets, fact sheets, and legislative testimony. Here's what it doesn't: newspaper articles, editorials, and organization brochures.

The site this week features a collection of evaluations and case studies for arts education programs. Thanks to Claire Reeder, an editorial intern at IssueLab, for cluing me in to the site.

And happy July 4th, too!

June 16, 2009

Harvard Ed School Joins the 'Open Access' Movement

THIS JUST IN: The Harvard Graduate School of Education announced today that its faculty has voted "overwhelmingly" to join the burgeoning "open access" movement in academia.

According to the press release, the ed school is the fourth of Harvard's 10 schools to agree to make faculty members' scholarly articles freely available online. The faculties at the law school, the school of arts and sciences, and the Kennedy School of Government all voted in recent months to do the same.

For the education field, the move is significant. That's because, outside of a handful of electronic journals, most education studies can only be accessed by subscribers of pricey academic journals.

But, as influential as Harvard's new policy is bound to be, the ed school isn't the first to jump feet first into "open access" publishing. Stanford University's ed school broke that ground in July. For details on Stanford's plans, and on the advantages and disadvantages of making academic content available to the public for free, see this EdWeek article I wrote last year.

DebbieViadero

Debbie Viadero
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