2019 RILA Conference: “Get Informed!” May 22 and 23, 2019 Bryant University Smithfield, RI Contact: conference@rilibraries.org Deadline: February 22, 2019 Notification: March 10, 2019 F
Trang 12019 RILA Conference: “Get Informed!”
May 22 and 23, 2019
Bryant University
Smithfield, RI
Contact: conference@rilibraries.org
Deadline: February 22, 2019
Notification: March 10, 2019
Form:
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSe_0Yhs1KZ9ZYUkepR3GQ_pDBiMP-y ZH4vAZFayNSl01FDVzA/viewform
Submitted: January 10, 2019
First name
Andrée
Last name
Rathemacher
Job title
Professor Librarian
Library/institution
University Libraries, University of Rhode Island
Email address
andree@uri.edu
Mailing address
Carothers Library, 15 Lippitt Rd., Kingston, RI 02881-2011
Work phone
Trang 2401-874-5096
Speaker biography (100-300 words)
Andrée Rathemacher is Professor and Head, Acquisitions in the University Libraries at the University of Rhode Island, where she is responsible for the purchase and licensing
of library materials in all formats and the management of electronic resources An advocate of open access and scholarly communication reform, she played an
instrumental role in the passage of URI’s Open Access Policy and initiated the creation
of the URI Open Access Fund to support publication in open access journals She also coordinates the University Libraries’ support for collaborative open access initiatives and open infrastructure, including SCOAP3, Open Library of Humanities, Knowledge Unlatched, Luminos, Libraria, Open Book Publishers, ECS Plus, Reveal Digital, the DOAJ, ORCID, OAPEN, and others She earned a Certificate in Intellectual Property Management and Leadership from the Center for Intellectual Property at the
University of Maryland University College in 2013 and a Creative Commons Certificate
in 2018
Additional presenters
None
Session type
Traditional Presentation (50 minutes with 10 minutes of Q&A)
Session title
Reuse, Remix, and Create with Creative Commons Licenses
Session abstract
What are Creative Commons (CC) licenses and how do they work? What is the
difference between something that is free online and something that is truly “open”? Did you know that it is often a Creative Commons license that puts the “open” in Open Access scholarship and Open Educational Resources? As librarians, we want to be able
to help our users find and reuse open resources, and we often want to share our own work more openly than the default “all rights reserved” of copyright In this session, you will learn about Creative Commons, including the four CC license elements, the six
CC licenses, and CC0 — Creative Commons’ public domain dedication tool We will cover how to apply a CC license to your own work, how to search for openly-licensed works online, and how to reuse, remix, and properly attribute CC-licensed works created by others Whether you are new to CC licenses or you already have some
familiarity with them, you will come away from this session with an expanded
understanding of Creative Commons
Trang 3Comments or questions for the conference committee
In December 2018, I completed the Creative Commons Certificate
<https://certificates.creativecommons.org/> As a project for the course, I created a LibGuide on “Open Licensing with Creative Commons”
<https://uri.libguides.com/creativecommons> This semester I am offering two Search Savvy Seminars titled “Reuse, Remix, and Create with the Creative Commons”
<https://uri.libguides.com/sss> I am eager to advocate for Creative Commons and share my knowledge about CC licenses with broader audience, and I would love the opportunity to do so at the RILA Conference
Check all times that you are available to present The committee will attempt to take this into account when creating the conference schedule
Wednesday, May 22 | Morning
Wednesday, May 22 | Afternoon
Thursday, May 23 | Morning
Thursday, May 23 | Afternoon