grey literature in australian education

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Grey literature in Australian education Principal Research Fellow Digital Education Research Network Dr Gerald White (Gerry) http ://dern2.acer.edu.au

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Presentation by Dr Gerald White, Principal Research Fellow, Australian Council for Educational Research, at the Where is the evidence conference, National Library of Australia, 10 October 2012

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Page 1: Grey literature in Australian education

Grey literature inAustralian education

Principal Research Fellow

Digital Education Research Network

Dr Gerald White

(Gerry)

http://dern2.acer.edu.au

Page 2: Grey literature in Australian education

ARC research grantGrey Literature, policy innovation and access to knowledge:

realising the value of informal publishing

UniversitiesSwinburne University (Administration)- Institute for Social ResearchVictoria University

Partner Organisations• Eidos Institute• Australian Council for

Educational Research• National Library Australia• National and State Libraries

Australasia

Chief InvestigatorsProfessor Julian ThomasProfessor John Houghton

Key InformantDr Gerald White

Research AssociatesAmanda LawrenceDr Paul Weldon

Page 3: Grey literature in Australian education

Overview

• Grey literature• My EdNA story• Things changed• Information abundance• Lost information• Integrators/curators• The Tyndall framework

Page 4: Grey literature in Australian education

Grey literatureDefinitions 1997, 2004

Traditionally• Non-commercial• Published (semi)• Non-publishing bodies

Today• Electronic information (ephemeral)• Openly accessible eg OER• Current• Quality variable

.... but

Page 5: Grey literature in Australian education

My StoryEducation Network Australia

Page 6: Grey literature in Australian education

EdNA’s life

1. Antecedent OLTC (1993-1997)2. EdNA development commenced 19953. Life 1997-2011 (14 years)

Collaboration• 8 State departments schools

(65%)• Catholic education (23%)• Independent education (12%)• 8 Training departments• 38 Universities• Commonwealth education• Agencies – technology &

resources

AICTEC

Page 7: Grey literature in Australian education

EdNA usageResource database (search and browse)Total database items = 41,368, ( resources, 871 events, 803 news items)Resource items accessible by distributed search = excess of digital resources

Memberships (Shared Information Services)35,349 members have self-registered with any edna registered service via single sign on (i.e. Groups, Lists administration, me.edu.au or any combination)23,205 edna Groups (Moodle) members14,729 me.edu.au members123,928 edna List email subscribers

Groups (EdNA Groups)Groups member growth over 2 year period Jan 2007-December 2008 = 113%Growth in number of communities for same period = 100%Growth in single sign-on (i.e. all member services) for same period = 127%Growth in email List subscribers for same period = 65%.

(Education.au, 2009b, pp. 19-20)

39,6943 million

Page 8: Grey literature in Australian education

Why?

1. Share information• (mostly open and

grey literature)2. Re-use resources to

avoid duplication• (mostly grey

literature)3. Collaborate nationally

• (on how to handle grey literature)

• Curriculum documents

• Reports• Lesson plans• Implementation

strategies• Research• Newsletters• Policy

statements• Annual reports• White papers• .......

Page 9: Grey literature in Australian education

Things changed96% 9-16 year olds access the internet often using mobile devices (60%)

ACMA. (2011). Communications report 2010–11 series: Report 3—The emerging mobile telecommunications service market in Australia. ACMA: Canberra, Australia. Retrieved December 20, 2011, from http://www.acma.gov.au/WEB/STANDARD/pc=PC_410225.

Page 10: Grey literature in Australian education

ChangedTextbook to Apps

Page 11: Grey literature in Australian education

Changed - eBooks

Johnson, D. (2011). Are we asking the wrong question about e-books? In The Blue Skunk Blog. Retrieved October 27, 2011, from http://doug-johnson.squarespace.com/blue-skunk-blog/2011/10/24/are-we-asking-the-wrong-question-about-e-books.html

Page 12: Grey literature in Australian education

Education and abundance

3.5 million AustraliansAnnual budget ~ $80 bn

Page 13: Grey literature in Australian education

Abundance – blogsinformally published

NM Incite. (2012). Number of blogs tracked by NM Incite. Retrieved march 14, 2012, from http://www.nmincite.com/?page_id=210.

Page 14: Grey literature in Australian education

Abundance

• Information is more accessible• More written information• More published• Increase in grey literature• Information overload

Education has a problem with an abundance of information much of which becomes lost or inaccessible

Page 15: Grey literature in Australian education

Lost information

Conference papersDissertationsNewslettersResearch projectsPolicy statementsAnnual reportsWorking papersWhite papersBulletinsFact sheetsBlogs

Technical reportsMemorandaMeeting minutesSpeechesStatisticsDirectoriesPrograms & projectsMemorandaGuidelinesSurveysBibliographies

LostWhy?

Not archived

Page 16: Grey literature in Australian education

Integrators/Curators

Digital Education Research Network (DERN)

http://dern2.acer.edu.au

• Research reviews• Research news• Research briefs• Research database• Archives• Email alerts

Page 17: Grey literature in Australian education

Tyndall framework

• Authority• Accuracy• Coverage• Objectivity• Date• Significance

ACCODSGovt reports

Blogs

Conferences

Open resources

National bodies

International bodies

Projects

Research reports

Newsletters

... to systematically build a search schema for a discipline

Tyndall, J. (2008). How low can you go?: Toward a hierarchy of grey literature. Retrieved September 8, 2012, from http://dspace.flinders.edu.au/dspace.

Page 18: Grey literature in Australian education

Where have we been?

• Grey literature• My EdNA story• Things changed• Information abundance• Lost information• Integrators/curators• The Tyndall framework

Born digital

Page 19: Grey literature in Australian education

Principal Research Fellow

Gerry White

[email protected]

Digital Education Research Networkhttp://dern2.acer.edu.au