Publishing your journal articles online – your rights
To get one manuscript published in a top journal requires years of hard work. It involves gathering research, collecting and analyzing data and facing the peer-review process. It is a process that I appreciate to become a better researcher.
To further research, I would like to share my work beyond publication in a journal. A friend noticed that Neil Thurman published preprint versions of his work. In an email, he told me that most journals allow researchers to publish preprint versions of their articles. He said preprints are the version of the manuscript that was initially submitted to the journal without the amendments required by the peer review process.
Taylor and Francis, a publisher of many journals including Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, Communication Methods and Measures, and Mass Communication and Society, says that authors have the right to publish their preprint work on their home page or institutional Web site. Based on my reading of an author’s rights, it can also be published on another site if the information provided adjacent to the article links to the finished published journal article to the journal’s Web page.
Authors are also able to link to the finished journal article on their home page or institution’s Web page after an 18 month period following publication in Social Sciences & Humanities journals. However, the author must fully reference the publisher and link their article to the journal’s Web page. However, an individual must pay if they want access to the author’s article.
Creating an online resume in just a few weeks
I teach Online Media to journalism and public relations students at the Cronkite School. This semester I spent 1/3 of my semester on social media, 1/3 on visual communication, and the last 1/3 web page creation and design. Over just a few weeks, my students created some lovely and creative portfolios that I would like to share with you. The sites were created using HTML/CSS, Photoshop, and Dreamweaver. During this exercise, students are given the freedom to express their creativity by designing their own sites and producing their own content for their online resumes.
Online Media 1:30-3:30
Maxine Park
Jonathan Cooper
Maria Polletta
Taryn Brady
Chris Piel
Channing Turner
Tessa Muggeridge
Megan Thomas
Carleen McGillick
Melanie Kiser
Nicole Stewart
Samantha Shomaker
Online Media 4:30-6:30
Michelle Price
Allison Filbert
Daria Del Colliano
Jake Repko
Theresa Dillon
Britney Ihrig
Nancy Flores
Emily Brakovich
Jesus Ledezma
Desiree Dietiker
Mark Crudup
Ashley Goelitz
Ashley Lange
Jessica Lutjemeyer
Cammie Sammartino
Nicholas Smith
Megan Kelly
Site Purpose
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- Social Media Assignment: Free Metric and Measurement Tools
- Use twitter to find jobs – journalism, social media, pr, etc.
- Fall 2009 Online Media students complete their portfolios
- SYLLABI: Teaching Online Journalism and Communication
- Bringing structure to the grading of blog posts
- Teaching the value of Twitter
- Investment in video at newspapers not significant
- Developing a personal brand statement
- Look who’s back
- Publishing your journal articles online – your rights
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