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Why should university undergraduates care about open access?

Open Access Week will be happening 22 - 28 October. At the university where I work librarians are planning a variety of events.

We want to do something for undergraduates, to tell them about open access, what it is, how it works, why it's important, what it means to them ... but in previous OA Week chats with undergrads their main concern was whether it would mean they could have free textbooks. Which in a way it does, but not in a way that's going to help them this year or next.

Why should undergraduates care about open access? Why should a second-year student who's busy with classes, has some expensive textbooks, and has a part-time job and some debt, care about OA? I am curious to know what methods people have found that speak well to this audience about open access.

wdenton

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Answer by Nancy

Here's one I've found pretty compelling for students who are actually into their studies, and/or who expect to work in fields where access to research matters:

When you graduate, you will no longer have access to the online subscription journals. Open access research will be available to you no matter what!

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Answer by dsalo

An indirect answer: Check Right to Research for swag and arguments aimed specifically at undergraduates.

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