Today’s blog shares the work produced by Heidi Guest, another of our research assistant. Her work in education inspired her to look at Open Research from the point of view of an educational Researcher.
She developed a range of resources to demonstrate how Open Research can enhance the impact of educational research.
In her first resource she asked What can you do to make your research Open?
Her second resource looks at the benefits of making educational research Open Access.
While her final resource looks at five ways to make research open looking at methodology, data, analysis, professional connections and publications.
Contextualising and understanding how Open Research can benefit your own discipline is important. Different disciplines will be confronted to different issues and barriers when it comes to adopting Open Research.
However, what can be open should be to enable other researchers, policy makers, school leaders and teachers, parents and maybe the children themselves to engage with that research. The principles of Engaged Research might be interesting to explore in the context of Open Research. To learn more about engaged research check out the Wellcome Institute and UKRI information.
On this Friday of #OAweek, we will share the work of our fourth and final research assistant, Daniel Dunlavey. Daniel decided to consider they key benefits of Open Research.
Through a series of images and short videos (see below) for social media campaigns, he captured some of the key benefits of Open Research.
These are wide and range from breaking down barriers in research and promoting equity in the research ecosystem, to fostering collaborations and innovation, to enhancing the visibility of research. Open Research contributes to accelerating research through sharing methodology, data, research results through pre-prints (even negative ones that are often overlooked in formal publications), and publications. There is also an argument that Open Research is just research done properly and that it improves trust in research from the public.
Serendipity wants that this year International Open Access Week partly coincides with Global Media and Information Literacy Week. This seems appropriate at a time when disinformation and misinformation circulates widely. This crisis is heightened by the proliferation of AI tools, opening research is one of the mechanisms to curb this proliferation.
Have a look at some of the messages included in these short videos and think about how you could participate in Open Research. You could also read the recently adopted Open Research Statement that shows the University of Sunderland's commitment to opening research.