Salo, Dorothea2006-04-132006-04-132006-04-13Salo, Dorothea. "Open access for teachers." Presented at HigherEdBlogCon, http://www.higheredblogcon.com/index.php/open-access-for-teachers/.https://hdl.handle.net/1920/818The movement for open access to the scholarly and research literature emerged as a response to the enormous, unsustainable increases in the price of journals and journal bundles for academic libraries. When the internet made possible the dissemination of information for near-zero marginal cost (over the cost to package the information in the first place), both researchers and librarians began questioning the necessity of cost barriers to access. Educators who are not themselves researchers or librarians have not been active in the open-access movement or the debates surrounding it as yet. Third-world access to research, higher impact factors, faster research dissemination, relieving overstrained library budgets while restoring selection decisions to librarians—all these concern researchers and the research libraries they use. Institutions whose primary focus is teaching can expect little change one way or the other. Or can they?180421 bytes10609892 bytes184832 bytesapplication/pdfaudio/x-mpegapplication/msworden-USOpen accessHigher educationOpen access for teachersPresentation