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Open Science for Arts, Design and Music/Guidelines/Teacher

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Why[edit]

Open Science allows you to have open workflows and materials at your disposal and it contributes to open a much broader window on your field of inquiry, or phenomenon you are passionate about.

All openly shared scholarly or educational resources contribute to a more sustainable, more connected and community-driven models of scholarly production that goes far beyond the traditional paper-based ways of doing research and as such, powerfully mitigate social, geographical, disciplinary etc. disparities in access to knowledge.

Implementing Open Access and Open Science in your work[edit]

Sustaining and openly sharing training materials[edit]

  • accredit all the contributors
  • use open formats
  • add license
  • add DOI
  • archive in a repository (usually comes with a DOI)
  • add contact info
  • add rich metadata/contextual information to capture the training (date and circumstances of delivery, notes, instructions, aim, target groups, how to cite it etc., see an example here)
  • where to make training materials available? → DARIAH Campus/Moodle/institutional website?

Using open content in your practice[edit]

Where to find open content (content you can freely use)[edit]

Open repositories[edit]

Open-access and free resources can be found in open repositories.

Repositories of research data[edit]

Repositories of art[edit]

Repositories for art works (in general)

Repositories for images

Repositories of music[edit]

Catalogs (collections of databases):

  • The MusoW database brings together openly available music and musicology resources from across the Internet. It serves as a catalogue of databases. You can browse it along different search criteria here: https://projects.dharc.unibo.it/musow/records
  • You can use the Audio, Video search of the ProQuest database
  • See a full list of music-related research data repositories here_ https://www.re3data.org/search?query=music (the search results can be further refined to countries and repository features)

Databases, collections (a small selection of MusoW resources):

Open-upon-request music resources from proprietary providers