Dear colleagues,
As requested, a summary of responses is attached for the following questions I asked last week about archiving MFA theses.
Your generous responses were incredibly helpful in my discussions with faculty and students. I hope others find them useful as well. Thank you all so much, again!
Best,
Jenny
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Dear ARLIS/NA colleagues,
I'm the Subject Librarian for Art & Architecture at Washington University in St. Louis and I am working with our Graduate School of Art to have our MFA written theses (usually 20-40 pages) and related files
added to our institutional repository,
Open Scholarship. As I prepare to meet with the faculty, I would like to gather the experience of a other institutions. If you could answer any of the following questions I would be very appreciative. I’m happy to summarize the responses.
·
How, and in what format (print, online) are MFA theses archived at your institution?
If archived online, please answer the following questions:
·
Does the school require MFA thesis (written or exhibition files) to be deposited into your library’s institutional (or commercial) repository? If no, is there much participation?
·
What, if any, concerns do the students or faculty have with the thesis or related files being available online (plagiarism, others copying works)?
·
How are concerns with online theses addressed (for example, digital watermarking of image files)?
·
What type of restrictions or embargo, if any, are usually recommended or selected?
Jennifer Akins
Subject Librarian for Art & Architecture
Kemper Museum Building, ground floor
Washington University in St. Louis
p: 314-935-4377 |
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