Action Alert! Tell the White House to Open Access to Federal Research
December 16th, 2009 by Kevin DonovanThe following is a guest post from Nick Shockey of SPARC.
Last Wednesday, the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy issued a Request for Information on the issue of Public Access to the Results of Federally Funded Research. Executive action stemming from this RFI could potentially open all federally funded science research to the public for free online access.
This has the exciting potential to greatly advance the goals of your Open Education Campaign. Not only could the more than $60 billion in research the US government funds annually be made available to all, but the government would also be endorsing openness as an academic ideal, sending a strong signal to publishers, universities, and various other stakeholders that this is the new standard.
With all the work Students for Free Culture has done on the issue of expanding access to educational materials, you are in a unique position to appreciate the tremendous impact executive action could have. Opening up all federally funded research to every student in the country (and world) would break down strong barriers to access that currently force students to settle for the materials their library can afford rather than what they truly need. A student’s education should be limited only by curiosity rather than the rapidly escalating journal prices that put the complete scholarly record out of reach for students at all but the most well funded institutions.
So what can you do to make public access a reality? The answer is that you can do a lot.
- First, you can take the time to respond to the questions in the RFI (the full text can be found at here) by submitting a comment to the Federal Register by January 7th (email comments to publicaccess-at-ostp-dot-gov).
- Second, there is a rotating set of questions on the Office of Science and Technology Policy Blog which changes every ten days – you can respond thoughtfully to the questions as well as other people’s comments right in the comment section of the blog (the first round ends December 20th, so don’t wait!).
- Finally, you can encourage other students and advocates to comment as well.
A strong student response in favor of a mandatory public access policy will truly help ensure that such a policy becomes a reality and that it follows SFC’s ideals of openness as closely as possible. I can’t wait to see the impact students make on this groundbreaking process and look forward to your responses!
Nick Shockey
Director of Student Advocacy, Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition

March 30th, 2010 at 7:20 am
you hold a few useful facts there in your article. I knew Yahoo are going to bring me to some unique stuff today :). Alright should search this now! Have a great time you all!
June 9th, 2010 at 11:29 pm
Cheap p90x,p90x workout,p90x DVD,Tony Horton,Insanity p90x workout,P90X is a amazing system of twelve different exercises created to give you the muscles you