In defending Jeffrey Beall, Michael Schwartz writes:

"Gratuitous insulting comments about [] character are inappropriate, to say the 
least.”

I assume that Michael hasn’t read much of Mr Beall’s writings.  Or is he being 
ironic?

David


On 14 May 2015, at 15:14, Michael Schwartz 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Jean-Claude Guédon's comment on Jeffrey Beall's Blog is "totally mean 
spirited....small."

The many ongoing changes, consolidations, and innovations associated with open 
access require vigorous, open, and respectful debate. Presently in today's OA, 
we see the good...the bad...and the ugly. There is no "slam dunk" here. And, 
sadly, there is precious little debate. I wonder why...

Critics such as Jeffrey Beall should be welcomed, not shamed. Gratuitous 
insulting comments about their character are inappropriate, to say the least. 
And the more powerful and influential the bully the more inappropriate.

As long as powerful partisan's hammer away from their bully pulpit - without 
reproach, a really vigorous and open debate - which MUST occur for all sorts of 
reasons - cannot and will not happen. How sad....

Michael Schwartz

Michael Schwartz, MD
Clinical Professor of Psychiatry
Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine
Founding Editor, Philosophy, Ethics and Humanities in Medicine

Sent from my iPhone

On May 14, 2015, at 8:12 AM, Jean-Claude Guédon 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

In his blog, Jeffrey Beall writes:

"I am not too surprised to find a journal that advertises fake impact factors 
and does a four-day peer review included in DOAJ:.."

This is totally mean spirited. This is small.

DOAJ relies on all of us, and in fact regularly asks for people to review the 
quality of journals. If Mr. Beall devoted a small fraction of his admirable 
energy to helping DOAJ weed out bad journals, rather than bask in total 
negativism, we would all be better off.

Jean-Claude Guédon

--

Jean-Claude Guédon
Professeur titulaire
Littérature comparée
Université de Montréal




Le mardi 12 mai 2015 à 21:17 +0000, Beall, Jeffrey a écrit :

In the interest of presenting different viewpoints on this topic, I too would 
like to share the blog post I published today. My blog post is about a gold 
open-access journal that claims it has no article processing charges but, when 
you read the fine print, you will discover that it demands a "maintenance fee" 
from authors whose work is accepted for publication.

The blog post is here: 
http://scholarlyoa.com/2015/05/12/low-quality-no-author-fee-oa-journal-has-hidden-charges/

Also, the journal promises to carry out peer review in 3-4 days. It's included 
in DOAJ, which incorrectly reports that the journal does not charge any author 
fees.

The journal also boldly displays fake impact factors from six different 
companies.

I believe that this journal will also be of interest to historians, 
anthropologists, and other social scientists.


Jeffrey Beall, MA, MSLS, Associate Professor
Auraria Library
University of Colorado Denver
1100 Lawrence St.
Denver, Colo.  80204 USA

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Heather Morrison
Sent: Tuesday, May 12, 2015 2:39 PM
To: Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)
Subject: [GOAL] Has the OA movement over-reacted to challenges on peer review?

In the early days as many on this list will no doubt remember, open access 
advocates spent a lot of time defending OA from the ludicrous argument that 
peer review somehow was dependent on subscription-based publishing. Have we 
over-reacted, and are we now placing far too much emphasis on the 
technicalities of peer review?

This post draws on an example of a journal that is now fully open access and 
peer reviewed, which emerged from a conference a few decades ago after a 5-year 
stint as a newsletter, and asks whether we have gone too far in separating the 
peer-reviewed article from the broader scholarly communication / community of 
which the article logically forms just one part:
http://sustainingknowledgecommons.org/2015/05/12/from-conference-to-newsletter-to-journal-a-challenge-to-the-emphasis-on-peer-review/

I've added two sections to the Research Questions page in the Open Access 
Directory:
http://oad.simmons.edu/oadwiki/Research_questions

Open access in the context of scholarly communication and community flows from 
the challenge to narrow emphasis on peer review described above. There are 
questions here that might interest historians, anthropologists, or other social 
scientists.

The open versus private section may engage scholars from a variety of 
humanities and social sciences; there are interesting theoretical and empirical 
questions in relation to all of the open movements.

best,

--
Dr. Heather Morrison
Assistant Professor
École des sciences de l'information / School of Information Studies University 
of Ottawa http://www.sis.uottawa.ca/faculty/hmorrison.html
Sustaining the Knowledge Commons http://sustainingknowledgecommons.org/
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>



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