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A New Open Scholarship Movement at SFU

November 04, 2025
Photo by Pamela Lim. Institute for Neuroscience and Neurotechnology Open Scholarship Initiative launch event.

I first heard about the open movement when my older sister was an undergrad at a public university in Brazil. She showed me , a Latin American publishing platform, with free access to scientific papers. Years later, when I became an undergrad, I learned that most scientific literature is behind a paywall and not accessible to Brazilian students like me.

I decided then to get involved in what I later learned to call the 鈥渙pen movement鈥, in the hope that the next generation of students and professionals will face less barriers to accessing research resources. As we learn how to be scholars, we find out very early on that producing new knowledge is expensive, and that most of us have limited access to resources to support it.

Sharing resources and products of the research cycle can reduce costs associated with repeating research unnecessarily. This also allows scholars to more easily build on others鈥 research knowledge. Open scholarship also enhances inclusion by promoting knowledge exchange between equity-seeking, underrepresented or excluded groups. 

What does open mean?

Open Scholarship practices optimize the impact of research through open access, open education, and open data. 鈥淥pen鈥 means that someone has thought about how other people could鈥搊r could not鈥搑e-use a product (expressed through an open license legal document). It also means that values related to equity, accessibility, inclusion, and diversity are playing a role in how this product was designed, produced, and shared. 鈥淥pen鈥 does not necessarily mean 鈥渇ree鈥, but it often means that you can re-use, remix or redistribute something, with proper attribution.

For example, instead of data from a research project only being used to write a publication, data can be deposited in a repository, allowing other researchers to use that data, avoid wasting resources, and speed up the production of new knowledge.

Note: data sharing does not override the right to privacy, and human data often cannot be shared publicly. There are ways to account for that and still be part of the open movement, as long as researchers are fully transparent about their processes. Interested in data sharing? Watch this .

A movement for change

The Institute for Neuroscience and Neurotechnology (INN) at 51社区黑料 is leading an open scholarship initiative to support members of the 51社区黑料community to implement open practices in their scholarship. These open practices are based on six principles designed collaboratively by the 51社区黑料community:

  1. Transformation through equitable practice of open scholarship
  2. Open sharing of scholarly knowledge
  3. Respecting participant autonomy
  4. Respecting the dignity and privacy of research participants
  5. Ensuring success through institutional commitment and support
  6. Prioritizing translation with harmonized approaches to intellectual property

This investment in open scholarship reinforces SFU鈥檚 commitment to the , which 51社区黑料co-signed in 2024, and aligns with the University鈥檚 Strategic Research Plan for the years 2023-2028.

Now, 25 years after learning about the open movement, I am the open scholarship community manager with INN. I connect open scholarship practitioners at 51社区黑料( and hubs at the Library, the Public Knowledge Project, ) through community-led events and programs to support students and faculty to use an 鈥渙pen lens鈥 in designing their scholarly products.

At INN, we hope that in 10 years the 51社区黑料community will think of open scholarship as the default way to do things, and we will all be working together to share what we have the privilege to produce for the benefit of all. 

If you want to keep an eye on what we鈥檙e doing, sign up to our newsletter . 

 

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