Millionth Download from Digital Commons at Andrews

   Campus News | Posted on August 29, 2018

August 29, 2018, marked the millionth download from Digital Commons at Andrews University.

“For the number of documents in the repository, and the size of our university, achieving this milestone in just over three years is remarkable. It says something wonderful about our students and our faculty and the relevance of our scholarly work in the global marketplace,” says Terry Robertson, associate dean of libraries and repository librarian at the James White Library.

Digital Commons (DC) at Andrews University is an innovative institutional repository provided by the University’s libraries. Research and creative scholarship included on the website have been selected and deposited by individuals and University departments and centers. DC was launched June 1, 2015, and since that time more than 12,260 pieces have been archived in the collection. Just over 50 percent of the downloads are from student scholarship, and 35 percent are from the six journals available in the DC.

“We worked a lot through the provost’s office, key faculty members and deans council. From there it expanded until most faculty have gotten excited about this,” says Larry Onsager, dean of libraries.

Digital Commons seeks to provide both the faculty and students of Andrews with a voice in global conversations through their research and creative scholarship. Additionally, it aids in telling the Andrews story through the digital archiving of campus publications, public documents and images. DC also helps share the unique teaching resources of Andrews for the benefit of the global community.

“We have a rich heritage of research here, and we’re starting to share that heritage around the world in a digital way. We’re starting to see our name pop up in some cool places as a result,” says Robertson.

Digital Commons also provides a record of faculty scholarship. This scholarship record is organized by year on a department page and by discipline in an Expert Gallery. Each faculty member with citations has a personal SelectedWorks page featuring their contributions. In addition, the DC allows all its authors to see where in the world their research has been downloaded and what institutions have accessed it.

Eventually DC would like to have archives of images as a display, particularly archaeological items or images of all the trees since the University is an arboretum.

“In the last 30-day period, visitors from 191 countries downloaded a document from the library website. This is typical and shows a global impact,” says Robertson. “We can also track downloads to institutions, and it is appreciated how many sister Seventh-day Adventist universities from around the world are discovering and using our content. Ten of the top 20 users are Adventist universities, including representatives from North America, Africa, South America and Australia.”



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