Publishing Literacy Series
An increase in campus requests to collect and publish undergraduate scholarship and research drives a need to address a gap in scholarly communication and information literacy instruction. This initiative brings together content experts in scholarly communication and instructional design to develop a modular and scalable series of publishing literacy educational materials. This initiative will focus on undergraduate writing programs as a pilot. At the end of this initiative, the content and delivery methods for this set of scholars will be assessed with an eye toward broadening the audience.
As this initiative progresses, In FY23 the project team will develop a template that can be expanded to areas including digital collections, data services, GIS, the Library’s Undergraduate Research Prize, Author Carpentry, undergraduate journal and paper series editors, creators of Open Educational Resources (OER) and open pedagogy.
UC San Diego Strategic Goals
Student experience
High-impact research
Diversity and access
People and purpose
Sustainable infrastructure
Pillars and Strategies
- Pillar 1: Democratization of Knowledge
- Strategy 1: Center “open” in our collection development and management work
- Pillar 2: Innovation and Inquiry
- Strategy 1: Advance our users’ abilities to critically use, evaluate and synthesize information
- Strategy 3: Anticipate evolving needs of users in delivering services and materials
- Pillar 3: Social Justice
- Strategy 1: Place the voice of our community at the center of our work
- Strategy 2: Address opportunity gaps for students and faculty through areas of library investment
- Strategy 3: Contribute to the development of social justice awareness across campus
- Pillar 4: Responsible Stewardship
- Strategy 3: Implement continuous improvement methods to reduce the burden of work, and deliver measurable positive impacts on service performance
Intended Outcomes
- Number of students reached with educational materials
- Number of educational materials created and interactions
- Impact of published OER Impact of collected student works