Society for Scholarly Publishing

The Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP) is a professional society, founded in 1978, dedicated to promoting and advancing communication and networking among all sectors of the scholarly communications community. It has approximately 1,100 members from 24 countries including publishers, service providers, librarians, researchers, and consultants.[1][2]

Society for Scholarly Publishing
SSP updated its visual identity in 2017
AbbreviationSSP
HeadquartersMount Laurel, NJ
Websitesspnet.org

SSP is organized as a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt educational society.[3]

Scope

The Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP), founded in 1978, is a nonprofit organization formed to promote and advance communication among all sectors of the scholarly publication community through networking, information dissemination, and facilitation of new developments in the field.

SSP members represent all aspects of scholarly publishing — including publishers, printers, e-products developers, technical service providers, librarians, and editors. SSP members come from a wide range of large and small commercial and nonprofit organizations. They meet at SSP’s annual meetings, educational seminars, webinars, and Focus Groups to hear the latest trends from respected colleagues and to discuss common and mutual (and sometimes divergent) goals and viewpoints.[4]

SSP is also unique among scholarly communications associations in that it does not take positions on political issues.[5] It is also one of the few scholarly communications societies and associations that allows members to join as individuals. It offers a variety of membership types.

Activities

Educational meetings and events

SSP has held an annual meeting since its formation, bringing together many participants in scholarly publishing including librarians, publishers, scholarly societies, funders and service providers. It also holds additional educational seminars, webinars, focus groups and regional events during the year.

Professional development programs

In addition to educational meeting and events, SSP offers a Fellowship Program to students and early career professionals. Students of publishing, librarianship, and information science, together with early-career professionals in the first four years of employment in the scholarly communications industry, are invited to apply for one of approximately a dozen Fellowships awarded each year. Centered on the SSP Annual Meeting, the Fellowship program supports and nurtures students and early-career professionals who are eager to develop their skills and learning experiences within the scholarly publishing community.

The society also offers a Mentorship Program. The Mentorship Program is designed to provide an opportunity for professionals at all career levels to develop new relationships, share experiences, and learn from others outside their organizations by connecting with a mentor. It enables established professionals to give back to the industry and pay forward the support and guidance they received during the development of their career by serving as mentors. The program aims to connect members of SSP for the purposes of professional development, information exchange, networking, personal growth, and career advancement.

Social media

SSP maintains an active social media presence on LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube. SSP maintains an RSS newsfeed as well. The LinkedIn Group is open to the public upon approval and has more than 8600 followers.

The Scholarly Kitchen

The Scholarly Kitchen (TSK or "the Kitchen") is a blog published by the SSP.[6] Contributors include senior professionals in scholarly communications. Topics cover journals, textbooks, open access, metrics, and research libraries.[6][7] The blog was founded in 2008 by Kent Anderson, who served as the editor-in-chief until 2013 when he became president of SSP. Since then, David Crotty has been the executive editor.[8]

The Scholarly Kitchen was a 2010 nominee for the Webby "Blog-Business" award.[9]

It has been an important site within academia for discussion of the open access movement.[10]

The Society for Scholarly Publishing established The Scholarly Kitchen in February 2008 to:[10]

  1. Keep SSP members and interested parties aware of new developments in publishing
  2. Point to research reports and projects
  3. Interpret the significance of relevant research in a balanced way (or occasionally in a provocative way)
  4. Suggest areas that need more input by identifying gaps in knowledge
  5. Translate findings from related endeavors (publishing outside STM, online business, user trends)
  6. Attract the community of STM information experts interested in these things and give them a place to contribute

The Chefs

The Kitchen's 20 or so volunteer bloggers are called "Chefs". They work for diverse organizations in scholarly communications. Their affiliations include society publishers, government agencies, academic libraries, and commercial publishers. Several TSK Chefs are independent consultants. The authors represent their own views, and do not claim to speak for their employers or the SSP.[6]

In addition to contributing their blog posts, a number of the Chefs have represented the blog as featured speakers at scholarly communications conferences, including the SSP Annual Meeting,[11][12][13] the Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers Annual Meeting,[14] the International Association of Scientific, Technical, and Medical Publishers (STM) Frankfurt Conference,[15] and the European Association of Science Editors (EASE)/International Society of Managing and Technical Editors (ISMTE) joint meeting.[16]

Podcast

In 2013, Chef Stewart Wills launched the Scholarly Kitchen Podcast, with assistance from the American Association for the Advancement of Science. The podcast features interviews with individuals of note in scholarly communications.[17]

Learned Publishing

Learned Publishing is a journal published by the Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers[18] in collaboration with SSP. Learned Publishing's readers are "not-for-profit and commercial publishers worldwide and members of other professions involved with scholarly publishing – librarians, academic authors and teachers, and subscription agents – as well as printers and other suppliers of services to book and journal publishers."[19] SSP appoints the North American Editor of Learned Publishing.

Resources

SSP maintains a library[20] of presentations from past events from 2009 to the present. SSP makes an online directory of members and services available to its members. The SSP website contains information for students and professionals considering a career in scholarly publishing as well as information about publishing and library programs. An active Job Board lists career opportunities within the industry.

Governance

SSP is a volunteer-led organization governed by an unpaid board of directors and committees. All volunteers must be SSP members in good standing. The organization has a full-time executive director, a part-time program director and contracts with a professional management company for accounting, meeting planning, database management, and other services.

Lawsuit threat

In March of 2013, Edwin Mellen Press threatened to sue SSP for material critical of the press hosted on Scholarly Kitchen. The blog posts in question were temporarily removed and the threats published. As Kent Anderson, editor-in-chief at the time explained, "the feeling was that the best way to respond to the threats was to comply with them but also show people what the threats were." Later, the posts were reinstated by the SSP board.[5][21]

gollark: ++magic py 5
gollark: <@&765993652912652306>
gollark: No, bee you, "dbot".
gollark: BEE.
gollark: You didn't do that before?

References

  1. "About SSP". Society for Scholarly Publishing.
  2. "SSP Membership Statistics" (PDF). SSP website. SSP. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 16, 2014. Retrieved January 16, 2014.
  3. "SSP 990 IRS Return" (PDF). SSP 2012 990. GuideStar. Retrieved January 16, 2014.
  4. "Home - SSP Society for Scholarly Publishing". SSP Society for Scholarly Publishing. Retrieved 2017-06-26.
  5. Meyer, Carol Anne. "SSP Board Decides to Reinstate Removed Posts". The Scholarly Kitchen.
  6. "About the SSP's Scholarly Kitchen". Scholarly Kitchen.
  7. Fitzpatrick, J. J. (2013). "Let's Gather in the Kitchen (the Scholarly Kitchen, That Is)". Nursing Education Perspectives. 34 (1): 7–15. doi:10.5480/1536-5026-34.1.7. PMID 23586197.
  8. Anderson, Kent. "A new head chef in the Kitchen". Scholarly Kitchen.
  9. "The Webby Awards Gallery and Archive". The Webby Awards.
  10. Roy, Michael D. (November 2013). "The Scholarly Kitchen: What's Hot and Cooking in Scholarly Publishing". Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry. 52 (11): 1218–1219. doi:10.1016/j.jaac.2013.08.016.
  11. Wills, Stewart. "Live Blogging the Food Fight". Scholarly Kitchen. Society for Scholarly Publishing. Retrieved January 24, 2014.
  12. Wills, Stewart. "Second Course: Liveblogging the 2012 SSP Closing Session". Scholarly Kitchen. Society for Scholarly Publishing. Retrieved January 24, 2014.
  13. Hawkins, Donald T. "Selections from The Scholarly Kitchen's Dessert Cart". ATG News Channel. Against the Grain. Retrieved January 24, 2014.
  14. Haynes, John. "Director's Matters". AIP Matters. American Institute of Physics. Archived from the original on February 1, 2014. Retrieved January 24, 2014.
  15. "STM Frankfurt Conference 2012". STM Web site. STM. Retrieved January 24, 2014.
  16. "EASE / ISMTE Joint Meeting Programme". EASE Web site. EASE. Retrieved January 24, 2014.
  17. Anderson, Kent. "Announcing the Scholarly Kitchen Podcast". Scholarly Kitchen. Retrieved January 24, 2014.
  18. "Learned Publishing". The Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers. Retrieved January 16, 2014.
  19. "About Learned Publishing". ALPSP web site. ALPSP. Retrieved January 16, 2014.
  20. "SSP Library". SSP Website. SSP. Retrieved January 16, 2014.
  21. New, Jake (March 29, 2013). "Edwin Mellen Press Threatens to Sue Society for Scholarly Publishing". The Chronicle of Higher Education.
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