Evidence Summary
Some LIS Faculty
Indicate Reservations about Open Access
A Review of:
Peekhaus, W.,
& Proferes, N. (2015). How library and information science faculty perceive
and engage with open access. Journal of
Information Science, 41(5), 640-661. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0165551515587855
Reviewed by:
Richard
Hayman
Assistant
Professor & Digital Initiatives Librarian
Mount
Royal University
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Email: rhayman@mtroyal.ca
Received: 29 May 2016 Accepted: 6 Aug.
2016
2016 Hayman.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative
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International (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/),
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium,
provided the original work is properly attributed, not used for commercial
purposes, and, if transformed, the resulting work is redistributed under the
same or similar license to this one.
Abstract
Objective – To examine the awareness of, attitudes
toward, and engagement with open access (OA) publishing, based on rank and
tenure status among library and information science (LIS) faculty in North
America.
Design – Web-based
survey distributed via email.
Setting – Accredited library and information
science (LIS) programs in North America.
Subjects –
276 professors and professors emeriti.
Methods –
Researchers collected email addresses for 1,017 tenure-track, tenured, and
emeriti professors from the public websites of the LIS programs. Researchers
sent an email invitation to participate in the survey by accessing a URL, with
the survey itself delivered using Qualtrics software. The survey included 51
total questions, some with additional sub-questions, and most items used
Likert-type rating scale. The researchers analysed the data using SPSS
software, and indicated using chi-square tests to measure significance, with a
stated intent to get beyond the descriptive statistics commonly seen in other
publications.
Main Results – This study’s results draw on 276
completed responses, for a response rate of 27%. Researchers reported that 53%
of respondents had some experience with publishing in a peer-reviewed OA
format. When asked whether they agreed that scholarly articles should be free
to access for everyone, pre-tenure assistant professors were most likely to
agree (74%), followed by tenured associate professors (62%), full professors
(59%) and then emeriti professors (8%). However, they found less likelihood
that associate professors would have actually published in an OA format,
highlighting a “disconnect between beliefs about accessibility of research and
actual practice with open access” (p. 646). Researchers also discovered a
connection between faculty awareness of institutional and disciplinary
repositories and faculty publishing in OA journals, though a relatively low
number (35%) had deposited their output in a repository within the previous
year. That increases to 50% of respondents when timeframe is ignored.
Faculty who had never published in OA
journals ranked several barriers to doing so, barriers common across
disciplinary boundaries. These include objections to paying OA fees;
perceptions of slow time to publish, low research impact, and venue prestige
when compared to traditional subscription journals; an inability to identify an
appropriate OA journal; and an inability to pay OA fees. However, the
researchers note that a majority of these respondents who had never published
in an OA format would do so if these barriers were removed. Those participants
who had some previous experience with OA were more likely to have positive
perceptions of OA journal quality and impact, as well as the overall publishing
experience, as compared to publishing in traditional journals.
As in other disciplines, LIS faculty are
conscious of the connection between OA and tenure and promotion processes. For
example, this study reveals that non-tenured faculty are more likely to agree
that publishing in OA venues may affect their career progress. Researchers
report uncertainty about OA even among tenured LIS faculty. Of all respondents,
only 34% agreed that a tenure or promotion committee might consider an OA
publication on par with a traditional publication, while 44% of respondents
were of the opinion that an OA publication would be treated less favourably
than a traditional journal. A mere 1% of respondents believed that an OA
publication would be treated more favourably within the tenure and promotion
process. Despite this unfavourable perception of OA, the researchers report
that 38% of respondents planned to publish in an OA journal regardless of
whether their tenure and promotion committees might treat that OA publication
unfavourably.
Conclusion – The
researchers report a connection between publishing in an OA journal and
academic rank, with full professors more likely to publish OA or to have
previous experience in publishing in an OA journal as compared to assistant
professor colleagues, who perceive publishing in OA as a potential impediment
to career progress. The researchers note that there is significant opportunity
for LIS faculty involved in tenure and promotion committees to consider and
clarify how OA publications are treated, and the impact of OA publishing with
regard to career progress. Moreover, given the levels of uncertainty and
equivocacy among faculty respondents as a whole regarding certain aspects of
OA, the perceptions around quality and rigour, there is room for further
research into LIS professors’ perceptions and attitudes toward open access, and
how these change over time.
Commentary
As a descriptive analysis, this study adds
new knowledge to the conversation about OA engagement. By including their
survey instrument as an appendix, alongside their coding key for collapsing
certain Likert-like response categories, the authors have contributed a new
tool for measuring OA engagement by faculty that can be further adapted for
future research. The tool could be improved by providing justification or
rationale for collapsing the Likert scale in the manner as done in this study.
To aid instrument validity (Glynn, 2006), the authors have pre-trialled and
adjusted their survey tool before distribution to participants, and the tool
itself was adapted from an instrument used in previous research. However, the
researchers do not describe if or how the instrument may have been tested for
reliability or internal consistency (e.g., Cronbach’s alpha).
The researchers state their intent to move
beyond descriptive statistics toward inferential analysis, but their design and
analysis may be problematic. They acknowledge using a non-random (i.e.,
non-probability) sample, but the authors do not define their intended sampling
approach except to state they surveyed “all North American faculty members
(excluding Puerto Rico)” and excluding adjunct professors (p. 644). While they
discuss the representativeness of participant characteristics within the
response rate and their “overall sample” (p. 647), it is unclear whether they
intended to achieve a census given the population of LIS faculty invited to
participate, and it appears that this research instead draws on a
non-probability sample (e.g., convenience sampling). Ultimately the researchers
do not clearly identify the survey sampling method, and identifying the
specific type of probability or non-probability sample used would have been
valuable.
Moving into results analysis, while there
is still debate in the literature regarding best practices, it is generally
understood that inferential analysis requires a random sample to ensure that
the population being studied is properly represented (López, X., Valenzuela,
J., Nussbaum, M., & Tsai, 2015). Further, though the researchers indicate
that the distribution of participants from the subgroups of assistant,
associate, full professors matches “fairly closely” to their distribution among
the larger population, there are discrepancies here that require more detail.
As Lopez et al note, “if the conclusions of the study involve generalising for
subgroups, then the sample size should be representative at the subgroup
level”, and also that confidence intervals for calculating these should be
explicitly stated (p. 107). Given the low response rate, and the lack of
probability sampling, this study is open to self-selection sampling bias and
should not be treated as generalizable. Thus, while the descriptive analysis
provided is interesting, the inferential results are problematic, leading this
author to focus solely on the implications of the descriptive rather than the
inferential results.
Takeaways from this study highlight that
LIS faculty who participated in the survey reflect similar attitudes toward and
engagement with open access as their faculty colleagues from other disciplines.
This is important as these attitudes and perceived constraints may affect
uptake of OA within the LIS discipline and beyond. The participants from
ALA-accredited graduate programs in North America are the educators responsible
for instructing new librarians on the fundamental principles and practices of
information access and availability. If these educators have reservations about
the benefits, challenges, and impacts of open access, this could affect those
responsible for encouraging OA practice for colleagues both within and beyond
LIS. This suggests that ongoing study of researchers’ attitudes and perceptions
toward open access, both within and beyond the discipline, is necessary.
References
Glynn, L. (2006). A critical appraisal tool for library and
information research. Library Hi Tech, 24(3), 387-399. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/07378830610692154
López,
X., Valenzuela, J., Nussbaum, M., & Tsai, C. (2015). Some recommendations
for the reporting of quantitative studies. Computers &
Education, 91, 106-110. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.compedu.2015.09.010