Scholarly
We're off for the US holiday on Monday, so here's a musical interlude for those heading to the SSP Meeting next week. The post Off for Memorial Day and Off to Chicago for SSP appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Earlier this month we asked the community which organizations they volunteer for and why. Today it's the Chefs' turn! The post Ask the Chefs: Which Organizations Do You Volunteer For And Why? appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Conclusions and responses taken to last year's Scholarly Kitchen reader survey. The post The Scholarly Kitchen Readership Survey One Year On appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
With CRediT now formalized as a standard, Alice Meadows interviews Liz Allen, Simon Kerridge, and Alison McGonagle O'Connell (cochairs of the working group) about what's next for the taxonomy The post Next Steps for CRediT – An Interview with the Co-Chairs appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
A lesson in publishing's past is provided by George Gissing's Victorian Era novel. The post The Ghost of Publishing Past: George Gissing’s “New Grub Street” appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
The tenth episode of SSP’s Early Career Development Podcast serves as a primer on the sales role within scholarly publishing- what sales professionals do, how they operate as relationship managers, and the role of their interactions from end user to publisher. Andy Douglas, Vice President of Commercial Partnerships and Strategic Business Development at Springer Nature,…
Grant-funded initiatives eventually need a permanent home; here are some lessons learned from Educopia's Katherine Skinner and Christina Drummond. The post The Quest for Home: Transforming from Grant-funded Project to Sustainable Operation appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
An interview with principals of the Scholarly Publishing Roundtable, whose work significantly shaped the Holdren Memo on public access to federally-funded research. The post 10 Years of Public Access to the Results of Federally Funded Research: An Interview with the Scholarly Publishing Roundtable (Part 2) appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
An interview with principals of the Scholarly Publishing Roundtable, whose work significantly shaped the Holdren Memo on public access to federally-funded research. The post 10 Years of Public Access to the Results of Federally Funded Research: An Interview with the Scholarly Publishing Roundtable (Part 1) appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Marco Marabelli reports on the results of a study looking at the benefits and problems of remote and hybrid conferences, and what the changes in recent years will mean for meetings going forward. The post Guest Post — Hybrid Versus In-person: What Will Be the Future of Academic Conferences? appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.