A Practice and Value Proposal for Doctoral Dissertation Data Curation

The preparation and publication of dissertations can be viewed as a subsystem of scholarly communication, and the treatment of data that support doctoral research can be mapped in a very controlled manner to the data curation lifecycle. Dissertation datasets represent “low-hanging fruit†for univ...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: W. Aaron Collie, Michael Witt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2011-07-01
Series:International Journal of Digital Curation
Online Access:http://129.215.67.233:80/ijdc/article/view/194
Description
Summary:The preparation and publication of dissertations can be viewed as a subsystem of scholarly communication, and the treatment of data that support doctoral research can be mapped in a very controlled manner to the data curation lifecycle. Dissertation datasets represent “low-hanging fruit†for universities who are developing institutional data collections. The current workflow for processing electronic theses and dissertations (ETD) at a typical American university is presented, and a new practice is proposed that includes datasets in the process of formulating, awarding, and disseminating dissertations in a way that enables them to be linked and curated together. The value proposition and new roles for the university and its student-authors, faculty, graduate programs and librarians are explored.
ISSN:1746-8256