Evidence Based Library and Information Practice 2012, 7.4 

 

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   Evidence Based Library and Information Practice  
 

 

 

Evidence Summary 
 

Doctoral Students in New Zealand Have Low Awareness of Institutional Repository 

Existence, but Positive Attitudes Toward Open Access Publication of Their Work 
 

A Review of: 

Stanton, K. V., & Liew, C. L. (2012). Open access theses in institutional repositories: An exploratory 

study of the perceptions of doctoral students. Information Research, 17(1), paper 507. Available 

from http://InformationR.net/ir/17-1/paper507.html 

 

Reviewed by: 

Theresa S. Arndt 

Associate Director for Library Resources & Administration 

Waidner-Spahr Library, Dickinson College 

Carlisle, Pennsylvania, United States of America 

Email: arndtt@dickinson.edu 

 

Received: 1 Sept. 2012     Accepted: 26 Oct. 2012 

 

 
 2012 Arndt. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative 

Commons‐Attribution‐Noncommercial‐Share Alike License 2.5 Canada 

(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by‐nc‐sa/2.5/ca/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and 

reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly attributed, not used for commercial 

purposes, and, if transformed, the resulting work is redistributed under the same or similar license to this one. 

 

 
Abstract 

 

Objective – To investigate doctoral students' 

knowledge of and attitudes toward open 

access models of scholarly communication and 

institutional repositories, and to examine their 

willingness to comply with a mandatory 

institutional repository (IR) submission policy. 

 

Design – Mixed method, sequential 

exploratory design.  

 

Setting – A large, multi-campus New Zealand 

university that mandates IR deposit of doctoral 

theses. 

 

Subjects – Two doctoral students from each of 

four university colleges were interviewed. All 

901 doctoral students were subsequently sent a 

survey, with 251 responding. 

 

Methods – Semi-structured interviews with 

eight subjects selected by purposive sampling, 

followed by a survey sent to all doctoral 

students. The authors used NVivo 8 for 

analysis of interview data, along with a two-

phase approach to coding. First, they analyzed 

transcripts from semi-structured interviews 

line-by-line to identify themes. In the second 

phase, authors employed focused coding to 

analyze the most common themes and to 

merge or drop peripheral themes. Themes 

were mapped against Rogers' diffusion of 

innovation theory and social exchange theory 

constructs to aid interpretation. The results 

were used to develop a survey with a fixed set 

file://umd-home.umd.umich.edu/mkdunawa/Private/My%20Documents/EBLIP/7(4)/arndtt@dickinson.edu
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by‐nc‐sa/2.5/ca/


Evidence Based Library and Information Practice 2012, 7.4 

 

120 

 

of response choices. Authors then analyzed 

survey results using Excel and SurveyMonkey, 

first as a single data set and then by discipline.  

 

Main Results – The authors found that general 

awareness of open access was high (62%), and 

overall support for open access publication 

was 86.3%. Awareness of IRs as a general 

concept was much lower at 48%. Those subject 

to a mandatory IR deposit policy for doctoral 

theses overwhelmingly indicated willingness 

to comply (92.6%), as did those matriculating 

prior to the policy (83.3%), although only 

77.3% of all respondents agreed that deposit 

should be mandatory. Only 17.6% of 

respondents had deposited their own work in 

an IR, while 31.7% reported directly accessing 

a repository for research. The greatest 

perceived benefits of IR participation were 

removal of cost for readers, ease of sharing 

research, increased exposure and citing of 

one's work, and professional networking. The 

greatest perceived risks were plagiarism, loss 

of ability to publish elsewhere, and less 

prestige relative to traditional publication. The 

reason most given for selecting a specific 

publication outlet was recommendation of a 

doctoral supervisor. Disciplinary differences in 

responses were not sizable. 

 

For additional interpretation, the authors 

applied Rogers’s diffusion of innovations 

theory to determine the extent to which IRs are 

effective innovations. The authors posit that 

repositories will become a more widely 

adopted innovations as awareness of IRs in 

general increases, and through increased 

awareness that IR content is discoverable 

through major search engines such as Google 

Scholar, thus improving usability and 

increasing dissemination of research. Using the 

social exchange theory framework, the authors 

found that respondents’ expressed willingness 

to deposit their work in IRs demonstrated 

altruistic motives for sharing their research 

freely with others, appreciation for the 

reciprocity of gaining access to others’ 

research, and awareness of the potential direct 

reward of having their work cited more often. 

 

Conclusion – Authors identified that lack of 

awareness, rather than resistance to deposit, as 

the main barrier to IR depository participation. 

Major benefits perceived for participating 

included the public good of knowledge 

sharing and increased exposure for one’s 

work. Concerns included copyright and 

plagiarism issues. These findings have 

implications for communication and 

marketing campaigns to promote doctoral 

students' deposit of their work in institutional 

repositories. While respondents reported low 

direct use of IRs for conducting research, the 

vast majority reported using Google Scholar, 

and so may have unknowingly accessed open 

access repository content. This finding 

suggests that attention be given to enhanced 

metadata for optimizing discoverability of IR 

content through general search engines.  

 

 

Commentary 

 

[Critical appraisal tool used: Booth & Brice 

(2003). CRiSTAL checklist for appraising a user 

study. Available from: 

http://nettingtheevidence.pbwiki.com/f/use.do

c]  

 

The authors have made a useful contribution 

to the literature on attitudes toward new 

modes of scholarly communication, and 

provide a thorough literature review of prior 

studies. Colleges and universities relying on a 

“build it and they will come” approach for IR 

participation have typically been disappointed. 

Studies of faculty have identified multiple 

barriers to participating in open access 

publication in general and IRs in particular. 

Faculty concerns about increased plagiarism, 

copyright, and tenure qualification have been 

widely reported. Prior studies have also found 

significant disciplinary differences in open 

access support. By focusing on doctoral 

students, this study sheds light on the attitudes 

of emerging researchers. It is to be expected 

that awareness and attitudes of doctoral 

students would be largely consistent with 

studies of faculty, who transmit the social 

norms of the academy to their students. 

However, the authors' unanticipated finding of 

weak disciplinary differences suggests that the 

next generation of researchers may be more 

receptive to IR participation regardless of their 



Evidence Based Library and Information Practice 2012, 7.4 

 

121 

 

disciplines' traditional form of scholarly 

communication. 

 

The objectives of the current study and the 

study population have been clearly defined. 

The mixed method approach is of benefit in 

conducting research into attitudes about 

complex concepts and practices. Eight doctoral 

students were interviewed, and criteria for 

interview subject selection, other than the 

college within the university, are not stated. 

The study would have been enriched by 

additional interview results. The overall 

survey response rate of 28% on the survey is 

also disappointing, though not uncommon in 

this type of research, and the authors do note 

the possibility of response bias. Additional 

clarity is provided by reporting both 

percentages and number of responses for 

specific questions. No tests were applied to 

determine statistical significance of the 

findings. This leaves the reader to conclude 

whether a particular result may or may not be 

meaningful. However given the consistency 

with prior studies, the findings are credible. 

Library practitioners could readily replicate 

the methodology to gauge local attitudes.  

 

As colleges and universities develop 

institutional repositories, it is important to 

understand the motivating factors and barriers 

affecting researchers' willingness to 

participate. Mandatory deposit policies may be 

useful, but cannot substitute for individual 

researcher's buy-in to both the concept and 

practice of open access publication. As the next 

generation of academic faculty, doctoral 

students' awareness and understanding of IR 

benefits and risks will be crucial in shaping 

this new form of scholarly communication. By 

understanding these attitudes, librarians and 

others involved in IR development can create 

more effective communication and marketing 

programs. The finding that doctoral supervisor 

recommendation most influenced choice of 

publication venue suggests that marketing and 

advocacy aimed at this group may greatly 

influence IR participation.  

 

[these columns are not symmetrical in length]