good morning! pic.twitter.com/DLg9JEIIhH
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144153175311704067
we start into the 2nd day of #LIBER2019 with the keynote "in #transition to #openscience — a perspective from a president's point of view" by Astrid Söderbergh Widding, president of @Stockholm_Uni, https://t.co/7pPCfZmGXc. her blog can be found at https://t.co/WvlyH2cXkX.
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
there is no powerpoint presentation for the talk — but live #graphicrecording! a very interesting idea. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/xWx6Cqc7Sg
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
#openaccess is the question of #democracy
President Astrid Söderbergh .@Stockholm_Uni #LIBER2019 .@LIBERconference— Maral Dadvar (@MaralDadvar) June 27, 2019
Astrid Soederbergh, President of Stockholm University chose to use simple language when discussing #OpenScience so key stakeholders and colleagues didn’t feel excluded from the conversation. #LIBER2019
— Amina Shah (@AminaTShah) June 27, 2019
”#openscience is a matter for university leadership, in close contact with the expertise from university libraries”, says Astrid Söderberg Widding, President of @Stockholm_Uni in the morning keynote at #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/njNCLri1Nj
— StockholmUniLib (@StockholmUniLib) June 27, 2019
I encourage all delegates planning to ask a question at this morning's keynote to limber up in preparation for the catchbox #liber2019 #staysafe pic.twitter.com/1DFpXu4FXA
— Peter Dudley (@lib_dudley) June 27, 2019
We're ready to go with this morning's keynote speaker, Astrid Söderbergh Widding of @Stockholms_univ 'In Transition to Open Science – A Perspective from a President’s Point of View'. Watch live at https://t.co/z5RgfCKWBg. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/aIldjD4Yty
— conul (@conulireland) June 27, 2019
"We don't know everything about the future of open research, but we do know for sure there is no way back" Astrid Widding, President of Stockholm University #LIBER2019
— Ed Fay (@digitalfay) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144157755252649984
If only all event hashtags were so clearly advertised 🙂 #LIBER2019 https://t.co/kSBfLVqxqp
— Simon Bains (@simonjbains) June 27, 2019
Astrid suggesting that publishers benefit from lack of strategic alignment on scholarly comms within universities (eg funders, researchers, libraries, senior management) which makes it possible to continue incoherent and unjustifiable business models #LIBER2019
— Ed Fay (@digitalfay) June 27, 2019
Astrid Soderbergh: There is only one solution: dialogue, dialogue and dialogue again. #LIBER2019
— Amina Shah (@AminaTShah) June 27, 2019
#liber2019 Astrid Söderbergh Widding – If university presidents take the lead in journal negotiations it doesn’t imply lack of confidence in librarians. It is a matter of different strategic roles. Librarians’ expertise is still vital.
— Patricia Killiard (@p_killiard) June 27, 2019
Current publishing system has "reached its end" says AS Widding, but we shouldn't conflate the move to open with research assessment. Structural problems in research assessment need to be addressed for the sake of quality science, not to support open research #liber2019
— Vicky Williams (@Emerald_VW) June 27, 2019
The solution to this is is addressing research culture and ethics, by transforming the ways in which research quality and impact are assessed, this takes place at a meta-level beyond articles, journals, subscriptions, and publishers #LIBER2019
— Ed Fay (@digitalfay) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144161275041210368
"Everyone should be able to drink freely from the pool of knowledge" Vannevar Bush #LIBER2019
— Ed Fay (@digitalfay) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144161777132986368
We can promote quality of research by actually reading the research & assessing it rather than counting number of publications & looking at the h-index
President Astrid Söderbergh Widding .@Stockholm_Uni #openscience #LIBER2019#openaccess #alternativemetrices .@LIBERconference— Maral Dadvar (@MaralDadvar) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144162635413372929
I like the expression "housekeeping notes" for organisational information given at #LIBER2019. 🙂 #offtopic
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
Different models of scholarly communications affect researchers differently, depending on discipline, stage in career, etc. #liber2019
— The Library of Trinity College Dublin (@tcdlibrary) June 27, 2019
I am in this session now. the room is packed! #LIBER2019 https://t.co/Vu3vPfWxvT
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
we start with "Consequences of Sweden Cancelling Elsevier" with @lisaols61111150. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144167838166503424
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144168508651114497
Demande d'un accord Read and Publish, refus d'Elsevier, rupture des accès au 1er juillet. Six mois sans contact avec l'éditeur. Reprise de la négociation en mai 2019. #liber2019
— Jean-François Lutz @jflutz@mastodon.social (@jflutz) June 27, 2019
Love this example of a workflow visualization – @Rsspringer1 and I collect them! Our thoughts in @scholarlykitchn on some of the key patterns we've observed in these kinds of images here: https://t.co/Ge8KJo4Jq9 #liber2019 https://t.co/bs9Y2ElWvD
— Danielle Miriam Cooper (she/her) (@dm_cooper) June 27, 2019
there had been two surveys, one among institutions, one among individuals. here are the main results. they seem to be the same as in Germany: e.g. no increase of ILL, spend the money for something else, access articles via alternatives. #Elsevier #cancellation #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/4UReLTFbWY
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
La somme économisée par le désabonnement Elsevier en Suède est de 13 M€ sur une année. 45% des institutions ont réinvesti une partie des économies dans l'open access. #liber2019
— Jean-François Lutz @jflutz@mastodon.social (@jflutz) June 27, 2019
Really interesting finding: 75% of end users in Elsevier cancellation impact survey did not have an OA plugin installed #liber2019 pic.twitter.com/OW3Ny1bJSD
— Jo Hare (@maybe_sparrow) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144171203931856896
some more results. I would have expected differences of "being affected" in research areas, but it's interesting to see this graph for the "ranking". #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/Ypk7WyC1Az
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
these are the main results for the end users and the overall conclusions. the cancellation has been "efficient" regarding the discussion on #openaccess and #costs of #publishing. #Elsevier #cancellation #Sweden #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/MSnW9AaD94
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144172901509357569
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144173115351752706
Very interesting outcomes of the survey @kungbib conducted after cancelling @ElsevierConnect deal.
Has this been shared with Elsevier yet?#liber2019https://t.co/rm4XKLfgTb
— Jeroen Sondervan (@jeroenson) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144173310097465344
#offtopic: a "classic" shoutout to all speakers at #liber2019 and all other conferences around the world: would you PLEASE prepare your talk according to the given time limitations? thank you. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
now it's @Di_Pieper from @ub_bi about "The Impact of Springer Compact Agreements on OA Transformation from a Data Analysis Perspective". he starts with presenting the @oa_intact #openAPC project: https://t.co/IeLlviByVh #openaccess #transformation #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
comparing and ranking costs per articles. #APCs #Wiley #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/EO0luodE0Q
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
All current Dutch @deVSNU #openaccess agreements have been added to the ESAC registry recently: https://t.co/NXKi15bd2e #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/FgwkH5Pr3T
— Jeroen Sondervan (@jeroenson) June 27, 2019
.@Di_Pieper assumes that #journals in the field of medicine will be the first to #flip to #openaccess. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
.@Di_has run a "springer deal simulation". one of his conclusions: funders need real cost information to evaluate their strategies. and @Di_Pieper reminds us of the 2016 amsterdam call for action on #openscience. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/lrxl105Yz7
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
here's the full Amsterdam Call for Action on #OpenScience: https://t.co/qlvqN3hk9n #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
now we are looking at "an alternative to spend our money", as the chair put it: "The Open Library of Humanities: a Sustainable Scholar-led Model for OA without Publication Fees". here's the @openlibhums website: https://t.co/eK3QwITAcF #OLH #OpenAccess #APCs #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
"imagine that there are 100 people in a room for a talk." in interesting comparison of the subscription / closed access, OA APC and OA consortial logic approaches. #LIBER2019 #openaccess #closedaccess #APCs pic.twitter.com/jBh8L4PN4A
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
and please think about the audience that will listen to your talk: are they new to the field? or are they professionals looking for something new to learn? #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
We all know how this broken model works but it never hurts (except it does) to remind us #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/o7vYpLTO6R
— Cathal McCauley (@cathalmccauley) June 27, 2019
"Commercial goals do not align with scholarly goals." Sums it up perfectly! @Paula_C_Vega #LIBER2019 @LIBERconference
— Amandine Texier (@Amandine_Texier) June 27, 2019
what can I do to support @openlibhums? @Paula_C_Vega: refer a friend, join the OLH, stand up for the humanities. and how can the #OLH support you? resources, learn about #OA in the #humanities, join the debate. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/0fk4Q0iBTa
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
"power to the librarian, power to the scholar, power to the humanities"! 🙂 #LIBER2019 #OLH #poster pic.twitter.com/YBpz46vnXj
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
I very much like the way Paula Clemente Vega presents & popularises the economics of scholarly publishing. This is a presentation that I don't have to translate to our stakeholders. #LIBER2019
— Heli Kautonen (@helimuori) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144183109686050816
and now "how to not spend our money": "How can Research Libraries Deal with Predatory Publishing?" by Jasmin Schmitz from @ZB_MED. #LIBER2019 #predatorypublishing
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
two "nice" examples of #predatoryjournals. #LIBER2019 #predatorypublishing pic.twitter.com/j299DEmAha
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
an overview over the business practises of #predatoryjournals. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/U2fj7qf3GM
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
why can #predatorypublishing be considered as a problem? well, there's a lot of reasons … #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/rr5ZW6tyvN
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
why is #predatorypublishing an issue for libraries? they have a self-interest in that! #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/YfyGEa7fGJ
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
These can be hilarious… unless they creep into our library catalogues. #LIBER2019 https://t.co/T0IbgEMcRu
— Heli Kautonen (@helimuori) June 27, 2019
approaches: blacklists, whitelists, neutral lists — and an awareness for the huge grey area! #predatorypublishing #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/FBzBSZAlEo
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
lessons learned about #criteria for #predatory publishing from a workshop done by @ZB_MED. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/nG1omrF0Gv
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
potential services offered by research libraries: e.g. awareness campaigns, information on the website, lists of criteria. #predatorypublishing #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/Qkwo1DHpye
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144188372585537536
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144188456052154368
good remark during the discussion: are we not making too much fuss about "predatory" journals? there are also many problems with "normal"/subscription journals! #LIBER2019 #openaccess #publishing #goodandbad
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
but now: #coffeebreak! 🙂 #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
#seagullcontent @tcddublin. 🙂 #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/ZHp0qiFsSw
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
here's some #blueskycontent to take with you to the dark lecture halls! 🙂 #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/STKp804co5
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144194526740930560
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144194544982007809
I would say, APCs don't work anyway, because they are per se exclusive! #DiamondOA #LIBER2019 https://t.co/KsRah0m1on
— Andreⓐs Ferus aka @ferli90@openbiblio.social (@ferli90) June 27, 2019
Very interesting and thorough presentation by Jasmin Schmitz on the "predatory publishers" issue and how libraries can help in raising awareness. I tend to prefer "questionable-" or "low quality publishers". Predators in academic publishing are elsewhere… #liber2019
— Jean-François Lutz @jflutz@mastodon.social (@jflutz) June 27, 2019
Don’t miss the #LIBER2019 Poster Session at 11:40 – poster authors have 1 min each to explain their poster. You can vote for your fave poster by getting a form at the @LIBEREurope stand. Good luck @supprian representing us in @tcddublin!
— The Library of Trinity College Dublin (@tcdlibrary) June 27, 2019
the authors of the #LIBER2019 #posters line up for the #posterslam. but the first one is presented via a short video — interesting idea. pic.twitter.com/jqGhf80V6H
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
a colleague from @ub_bi on #openaccess, one poster on #scholcom, one on #GOFAIR etcetc. — see the posters online: https://t.co/OQnEKYZ1Yx #LIBER2019 #posters pic.twitter.com/BGXDXrBA1w
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
moving collections, sentiment analysis, https://t.co/pkJ4l5uCNe, access to e-resources, SSHOC, HAL, OpenUP, web archiving, French OA Barometer, DH, copyright & plagiarism in non text resources, preprints, games for OS, indicators — interesting mix! #posters #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
if you want to have the cool @openlibhums posters: here's the link to download! #liber2019 #OLH #openaccess https://t.co/Wo2qhQWiKO
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
#lunchtime at #liber2019 in the a-bit-unpractical-for-eating 🙂 but impressive dining hall of @tcddublin. pic.twitter.com/mmyMVfSu21
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
input from vanessa proudman from @SPARC_EU and then a panel discussion with her, ignasi labastida (barcelona), and daan van loon (utrecht) about "#openscience meets #openeducation", chaired by @jeroenson. #liber2019 pic.twitter.com/Vy31HtcrVy
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
Why libraries are natural partners for change in open education #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/G74iErE3W6
— oa2020-de (@oa2020de) June 27, 2019
@jeroenson asks who is taking a leadership role in #OpenEducation in their institutions. Proud to be able to put my hand up representing @partridh & @OpenKuroko #liber2019
— Clare Thorpe (@thorpe_clare) June 27, 2019
Good summary of why libraries are ideal partners in Open Education #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/GqdkVeojW4
— Peter Hickey (@PeterHickeyIRL) June 27, 2019
Libraries can take a lead on the road to Open Education – easily for about 20 reasons, e.g.: trusted partners, expertise in open access, expertise in copyright and licencing, experience in challenging publishing business models #liber2019
— The Library of Trinity College Dublin (@tcdlibrary) June 27, 2019
Open Education matrix #liber2019 pic.twitter.com/Kljdpx4Tcg
— The Library of Trinity College Dublin (@tcdlibrary) June 27, 2019
So glad that @SPARC_EU and @jeroenson pick up the topic of #openeducation at #liber2019. It is important to use the lessons learned with #openscience and apply to this additional paradigm. Pilot going on at @Stockholm_Uni with this #OER database https://t.co/IWPZs5GwnP
— Sofie Wennström (@SofieWennstrom) June 27, 2019
Questions from Proudman of @SPARC_EU. Want to know more and invites librarians to get involved. Email oer@sparceurope.org #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/jniHM0YzzE
— berniefolan (@berniefolan) June 27, 2019
#liber2019 Expanding the European #openeducation Librarian Network https://t.co/58lmMIQTgV
— LIBER Conference (@LIBERconference) June 27, 2019
@UniUtrechtLib well represented at #LIBER2019: panel discussion on ‘Open science meets open education’ @jeroenson @Daan_vanloon pic.twitter.com/kVEWbM8D6t
— Martine Pronk (@martine_pronk) June 27, 2019
Uni of Edinburgh has a wikimedian-in-residence who works with academics & students to develop skills for digital life. #liber2019
— Clare Thorpe (@thorpe_clare) June 27, 2019
.@EdUniLibraries hosts a wikipedian in residence to create open education material. Impressive how many students and staff have been involved already. #LIBER2019
— Patricia Herterich (@PHerterich) June 27, 2019
Dispatch from the Eurolibrary conference scene: interest in open educational resources is just emerging in contrast to stronger uptake in the US/Canada #LIBER2019 https://t.co/EJoYeye88X
— Danielle Miriam Cooper (she/her) (@dm_cooper) June 27, 2019
“We must have an open agenda” not just open for research or science but also open for educational objects/learning. Ignasi Labastida Uni of Barcelona #LIBER2019
— Clare Thorpe (@thorpe_clare) June 27, 2019
"It doesn't make sense to confine 'open' to access and research… it should apply to education, resources, everything" #liber2019
— Vicky Williams (@Emerald_VW) June 27, 2019
Why? Some suspect it is because there is relatively less financial pressure on students in many parts of Europe Vs the US #LIBER2019
— Danielle Miriam Cooper (she/her) (@dm_cooper) June 27, 2019
And trust that your material is good enough – for your students and everyone says @ignasi #LIBER2019 https://t.co/LNJhhIyAZi
— Patricia Herterich (@PHerterich) June 27, 2019
one example: at @EdinburghUni there is a "lecture capture" service called "media hopper replay" now: https://t.co/DZOfYbmfgc and there is a lecture recording policy: https://t.co/67EXvHFThv #LIBER2019 #OER #OEd
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
The goal with this #LIBER2019 session is to make the connection between the already strong support for open research and open science and the potential for open education, but here OERs seem to be just one part of that
— Danielle Miriam Cooper (she/her) (@dm_cooper) June 27, 2019
Ediburgh Uni have found that implementing lecture capture has driven uptake of, and interest in, Open Education as academics are prompted to consider copyright materials etc. – @klingstadt #LIBER2019
— Rosie Higman (@RosieHLib) June 27, 2019
important for #OER: give a licence to the material! ideally a @creativecommons one, of course. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
Ownership and copyright is a big question. Who owns content and can grant e.g. permission for commercial use? We have most of this hidden in University policies but academics and staff are rarely aware… #LIBER2019
— Patricia Herterich (@PHerterich) June 27, 2019
Technology changes is often a useful driver for Open Education #liber2019
— The Library of Trinity College Dublin (@tcdlibrary) June 27, 2019
Timothy Savage of @tcddublin points out that the question of ownership of educational resources has practical, legal, and moral implications/components. Who owns this stuff? #LIBER2019 #openeducation #openscience #openaccess
— berniefolan (@berniefolan) June 27, 2019
In the US we've begun tracking faculty interest and uptake of open educational resources in the @IthakaSR faculty survey #LIBER2019 https://t.co/k4FJvt5hck
— Danielle Miriam Cooper (she/her) (@dm_cooper) June 27, 2019
Anyone else noticing shocking gender bias in the live sketch of this panel session at #liber2019? Almost nothing the sole female on the panel says is picked up & the stick woman in the picture apparently needs a man to show her where to start.
— Alexandra Eveleigh (@ammeveleigh) June 27, 2019
Ownership and licencing of educational resources is a challenging area; legalistic, moralistic, and pragmatic approaches are possible. Differences in law and institutional structures between countries add further complexity. #OpenEducation #liber2019
— The Library of Trinity College Dublin (@tcdlibrary) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144233087221620737
Open educational material is deposited in various places Youtube, Flickr, Zenodo, institution's own platforms. So finding open material can be challenging. #liber2019
— Anne Karhapää (@AnneKarhap) June 27, 2019
‘Sometimes, what counts can’t be counted and what is counted doesn’t count.’ Fascinating panel discussion @LIBERconference #LIBER2019
— Amina Shah (@AminaTShah) June 27, 2019
Open Education IS NOT the same as Open Education Resources (useful clarification by Tim Savage, @tcddublin) #liber2019
— The Library of Trinity College Dublin (@tcdlibrary) June 27, 2019
.@jeroenson has set up a google docs document where the discussion can go on. the link will be added here later, I hope. 🙂 #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
#liber2019 Another excellent example of #OER and #openeducation is @OpenEdEdinburgh See their work here: https://t.co/WwyjWFkF2p
— Sofie Wennström (@SofieWennstrom) June 27, 2019
Question around digital preservation (archiving) of Open Education resources.
Utrecht/Barcelona: yes, using proper repository infrastrucutre, persistent identifiers, etc. -but challenges include versioning, published v. unpublished #liber2019— The Library of Trinity College Dublin (@tcdlibrary) June 27, 2019
I wonder if #museum libraries can learn from research & academic libraries to foster digital literacy for curators & educational reuse for communities of users. #liber2019 #artseducation #visualliteracy #openeducation
— anarchivist (@museologeek) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144234355784638465
a #sponsorupdate by @EBSCO now: "Collaboration and Engagement: A Framework for Library Futures and Vendor Partnerships". abstract: https://t.co/xeqbICGIY2 #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144236532812996608
Nice. @EBSCO pointing out that libraries will outlive corporations (damn right we will!) open mitigates risk, by ensuring independence and choice of service provider. Open source comes with open standards and open communities, and foregrounds UX and data portability #LIBER2019
— Ed Fay (@digitalfay) June 27, 2019
Great question from the audience at #liber2019 about whether the impact of Open Education Resources can be measured. This @NLWales+@MenterMon project used the Europeana Impact Playbook to assess impact of open content and Wiki platforms in schools: https://t.co/NlzZeS2oho pic.twitter.com/wjFTvZflgw
— Dafydd Tudur (@dafydd_tudur) June 27, 2019
Open Education Panel Session: go to the Google Doc, set up by @jeroenson to continue the conversation #liber2019 https://t.co/Xb53bH0ywX
— LIBER Conference (@LIBERconference) June 27, 2019
… and here's the link: https://t.co/DqGvsUa6Ud — join the discussion on #openscience and #OER #resources! #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144238960190861316
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144247189356593154
now it's time for the first ever @LIBERconference "feeding forward" session: "from pre-conference to plenary: feeding forward the results of the pre-conference workshops". there have been 12 workshops with over 350 participants. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
Two-thirds of the way through #liber2019 and soon we'll be looking for your tips to take forward to next year. What do you want to see again at #liber2020? What should we change, keep or add?
— LIBER Europe (@LIBEReurope) June 27, 2019
In Finland a solution for this is coming, national OER service. In @UniEastFinland we recommend using this service for depositing OER or descriptive metadata of the material https://t.co/0yCDkwlZ8x #liber2019
— Anne Karhapää (@AnneKarhap) June 27, 2019
these are the question the chair has prepared for the organizers of the first four workshops. a good idea for "feeding forward" the #workshop's results, I think. #liber2019 pic.twitter.com/egJmO08CWt
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
Library conferences used to focus on service, then we shifted to talk about ourselves as partners. Amazing to hear speaker after speaker @LIBERconference talk about libraries taking leadership roles #LIBER2019
— Monica Crump (@monzc) June 27, 2019
Novel session: feed forward from the workshops! #liber2019 pic.twitter.com/C6pToIFtUg
— The Library of Trinity College Dublin (@tcdlibrary) June 27, 2019
Hearing lots about LIBER working groups at #liber2019 in the Feed Forward session. They each have a page on the website, if you want to know more or get involved: https://t.co/FdRTNZ1ziN
— LIBER Europe (@LIBEReurope) June 27, 2019
… the questions for the organizers of the next four #preconference #workshops … #liber2019 pic.twitter.com/FJ6FHIdPkr
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
As we discuss LIBER Working Groups and all their efforts, don't forget our brand new #citizenscience group – so new, it's website pages aren't ready yet but lots of details in this blog post https://t.co/cel3jb812m #liber2019
— LIBER Europe (@LIBEReurope) June 27, 2019
… and the questions for the next four. #liber2019 pic.twitter.com/Eo3rf21Hhl
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
a good advise a colleague got in the @LIBERconference #newcomer session: "find your tribe! and then: loose your tribe!" 🙂 I think this holds true for every conference, doesn't it? #liber2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
now there's a short survey on the workshops using https://t.co/V8ovPiaSoT: do you attend the workshops? what did you expect from the workshops? what topics @LIBEReurope should address in the future? #liber2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
What topics would you like LIBER to address? #liber2019 pic.twitter.com/oON8vFsoIz
— LIBER Conference (@LIBERconference) June 27, 2019
What topics should LIBER address in pre-conference workshops? Audience says: #openscience – digital preservation – #skills – #openaccess – data curation – #digitalhumanities – information literacy and about 50 other topics! Love your enthusiasm ❤️ #liber2019
— LIBER Europe (@LIBEReurope) June 27, 2019
We needed a controlled vocabulary for #LIBER2019 menti-meter question 3 😉
— Masud Khokhar (@mkhokhar) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144258317474287617
I would like to see some attention on "basic"/routine library services and how we could improve them. like subject/liaison services or collection management. it's not only "open x" or only "shiny innovations" in our everyday work "at home". #liber2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
Over 4,000 #liber2019 tweets so far! Explore them all here: https://t.co/SzVpVgt8xM
— LIBER Europe (@LIBEReurope) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144261428712529920
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144263292782862337
We could think/talk about practices to include open content in collection management strategies, for example based on Rieger, O. Y. (2019, June 6). What’s a Collection Anyway? https://t.co/zOy9GPtHoE #liber2019
— Andreⓐs Ferus aka @ferli90@openbiblio.social (@ferli90) June 27, 2019
Really like the liber conference, but yes, THIS! Emerging and evolving front-end services still an important part of research libraries. https://t.co/K28Wj1yatC
— Alan Carbery (@acarbery) June 27, 2019
Good point! The show still goes on while we attempt transformation. #LIBER2019 https://t.co/7lKWFj0cbr
— Monica Crump (@monzc) June 27, 2019
Maybe of interest for (some) #liber2019 attendees!? @LIBEReurope @LIBERconference https://t.co/KKlvCOWZWO
— Andreⓐs Ferus aka @ferli90@openbiblio.social (@ferli90) June 27, 2019
What do librarians do during a librarian conference? They visit libraries of course!
Like the wonderful Chester Beatty @CBL_Dublin with extraordinary collections from Near-, Middle- and Far-East #liber2019 pic.twitter.com/MDW7R6Gzav— Jean-François Lutz @jflutz@mastodon.social (@jflutz) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144297845375283205
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144309511383068672
and now: the #LIBER2019 #welcomereception in the nice Dining Hall of @tcddublin. [a bit weird to have the *welcome* reception after the gala dinner, but it's nice anyway. :)] pic.twitter.com/RTay8Lg3t2
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
Huge crowd to hear Mary Robinson speak at the #liber2019 conference reception. pic.twitter.com/NZN6B7FyJz
— LIBER Europe (@LIBEReurope) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144310653940838400
Fan girl time. Hearing from Mary Robinson. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/hx9j3y1gZ2
— Clare Thorpe (@thorpe_clare) June 27, 2019
Dr. Mary Robinson talking to #LIBER2019 delegates about challenges of society, particularly climate change and nuclear race. pic.twitter.com/VXgVUhifTt
— Masud Khokhar (@mkhokhar) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144310837932384256
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144310934258769921
One of the tours currently underway in The Book of Kells exhibition / The Long Room – with our guide Justice#LIBER2019 @LIBERconference @tcddublin #bookofkells pic.twitter.com/HJJbbXCmcH
— CONUL Conference (@CONULconf) June 27, 2019
The Long Room @tcddublin #LIBER2019 @LIBERconference a few more pictures, just in case you couldn't make the tour #amazing #history pic.twitter.com/bDRem8xFht
— CONUL Conference (@CONULconf) June 27, 2019
And two more pictures – The Long Room ❤️@tcdlibrary #LIBER2019 @LIBERconference pic.twitter.com/wImkk8SiH8
— CONUL Conference (@CONULconf) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144311281245143051
The first female chancellor of @tcddublin and former (seventh) President of Ireland (the first woman to hold this office), and also served as United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights from 1997 to 2002 of Ireland, Dr Mary Robinson @LIBERconference #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/Y0t0Rr3yqS
— CONUL Conference (@CONULconf) June 27, 2019
THIS!!! #InvestInOpen #LIBER2019 https://t.co/LVt0jAzPyP
— Andreⓐs Ferus aka @ferli90@openbiblio.social (@ferli90) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144313271723409409
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144313840416546817
Make small personal changes; Get angry and get active; imagine the new world and work towards it with 2030 agenda – Mary Robinson #LIBER2019
— kirsty lingstadt (@klingstadt) June 27, 2019
Dr Mary Robinson – 3 steps that 'we' need to take
1. Make climate change personal in our life
2. Get angry and get active -use our voice/vote
3. Imagine the world that we're rushing towards, not doom & gloom but healthier, fairer & better#liber2019 @LIBERconference #2020agenda— CONUL Conference (@CONULconf) June 27, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144356994490519552
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144358270867390464
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144358727778275331
Trying to fit 500 librarians in a picture #fun #photography #liber2019 pic.twitter.com/TXpqY6kXn9
— anarchivist (@museologeek) June 27, 2019
in case you are looking for a nice pub during your remaining #liber2019 stay in dublin: this one is nice: o'donoghues's in suffolk street, https://t.co/xxsoUTs7WA & @PubODonoghues. pic.twitter.com/AtMD1gskOI
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
good night everyboday! pic.twitter.com/5OXXyah22G
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 27, 2019
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