Scholarly Communication Institute Reports, 2004-2011

Report
Author:Rumsey, Abby SmithScholarly Communication Institute
Abstract:

With funding from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the Scholarly Communication Institute (SCI) began in 2003 with the goal of providing an opportunity for scholars and leaders in scholarly disciplines and societies, academic libraries, information technology, and higher education administration to design, test, and implement strategies that advance the humanities through the use of innovative technologies. Each Institute has explored scholarly communication through a focus on one or more of four core topics:

• scholarly practices—the research, analysis, presentation, vetting, publication, and teaching by which scholars advance knowledge and inquiry;
• organizational models—the departments, disciplines, learned societies, and humanities research centers that act as sites of scholarly practices;
• infrastructure—the human and technical capacities that support scholarship locally and among institutions; and
• modes of working—the methods of inquiry that emerge from use of new technologies, such as collaborative investigation, virtual modeling, and Web-based informal discourse; and, recursively, how these new modes affect scholarly behaviors, organizational models, and infrastructure.

From its inception, SCI has focused on cultivating leadership and encouraging and enabling the integration of new technologies into scholarship. SCI 1 assembled a group of pioneers in digital scholarly communication to review progress over the last two decades and lessons learned, and to identify strategies for continuing progress in the arts and humanities. The reflections of early participants set the stage for eight subsequent institutes. These Institutes have focused on several scholarly disciplines, the nature and potential of collaborative working structures, critical questions surrounding the use of new media technologies to advance scholarship in unique and innovative ways, and the institutional infrastructure essential to enable digital scholarly communication.

This archive preserves descriptions, programs, and materials relating to each of the preceding Scholarly Communication Institutes.

Keywords:
scholarly communication, publishing, digital humanities
Rights:
All rights reserved (no additional license for public reuse)
Language:
English
Source Citation:

Rumsey, Abby Smith. "Scholarly Communication Institute Reports, 2004-2011.".

Publisher:
University of Virginia
Published Date:
2011
Sponsoring Agency:
Andrew W. Mellon FoundationUniversity of Virginia Library
Notes:

Additional SCI materials are available at the following URLs:

Reports on Scholarly Production and Authoring: https://doi.org/10.18130/V3MB70

Scholarly Communication Institute Reports, 2004 – 2011: https://doi.org/10.18130/V3GN4Q

Reports on Rethinking Humanities Graduate Education: https://doi.org/10.18130/V3R48J

Statement on “Creating Value and Impact in the Digital Age Through Translational Humanities”: https://doi.org/10.18130/V3V75C

“Humanities Unbound”: Report, Executive Summary, and Slides on Survey on Humanities Graduate Education and Alternative Academic Careers: https://doi.org/10.18130/V3X46B

Datasets from Survey on Humanities Graduate Education and Alternative Academic Careers
Main: https://doi.org/10.18130/V3/NEPGOL
Employers: https://doi.org/10.18130/V3/HOOJSE