Publishing
Melonie Fullick wraps up her blog at UA, and looks ahead to new adventures in writing and higher-ed analysis online.
French-speaking researchers are increasingly choosing to publish their scientific articles in English.
What if scientific journal clubs discussed papers before submitting them to journals, and had a say before editors and reviewers did?
The shift towards open access is an opportunity to reform academic publishing to better serve the public interest.
More journals should invite mid-level and junior scholars to join.
The movement is also aiming to reimagine and democratize learning technologies.
The outgoing vice-provost, students, is taking up a new post at Sheridan College.
The number of predatory publishers is skyrocketing – and they’re eager to pounce on unsuspecting scholars.
The approach of Canada’s 150th anniversary, or sesquicentennial, provides an opportunity to reflect not just on where the country is heading, but also on where it’s been. To that effect, we decided to take a look back in the pages of University Affairs circa 1964 to 1967 to see what was preoccupying universities in the […]
Twenty-five years and just over 60 percent complete, the Dictionary of Old English is a labour of love for U of T scholars.
Ingenuity’s the key when you’re one of Canada’s smaller university presses.