Abstract:
The scholarly community is now dealing with a serious issue with
predatory journals. It might be difficult for authors to identify predatory
publications apart from reputable ones. The purpose of this study is to
investigate the academic staff members of the Faculty of Management Studies
and Commerce, University of Jaffna, Sri Lanka on awareness of predatory
publications and open access. The research methodology used in this study to
gauge participants' knowledge of "open access" and "predatory publishing"
was a questionnaire survey. Data collection involved the use of a pretested
questionnaire. The permanent academic staff members affiliated with the
Faculty of Management Studies and Commerce, university of Jaffna
comprised the study's population. A link to an online survey was shared with
every one of the faculty's fifty-two academic staff members. The response rate
of the study was 67.30 %. MS Excel was used for the data analysis to describe
the data in frequencies, percentages and rank orders of responses.Socio demographic details shows that, highest number of respondents are
female (57.14%), completed master/MPhil (51.42%), senior lecturer (57.14%)
and interested in marketing (28.57%) as their research discipline. Respondents
expressed their priority order for the factors considered to select journal to
submit manuscript for publications, journal indexing is the highest priority.
All the respondents have an idea about the open access publishing system.
Respondents are expected to publish in open access journals because of high
visibility, increasing citation number, prestigious journals and fast publication
process in a frequency order. The result of the survey shows that, 97.15% of
the respondents are knowledgeable about predatory publishing. Majority of
the respondents are characterized, the predatory journals are, no insufficient
peer review process, and Beall’s list of predatory journals used by the high
number of respondents to differentiate legitimate journals from predatory
journals. More than half of the respondents are satisfied with the services
provided by the library to avoid publishing in predatory journals. Responses
are summarized for each of the 8 statements about the impact of publishing in
predatory journals. Almost all the statements are agreed by the respondents
other than the statement of “Articles published in predatory journals are poor
in quality”. Highest agreement found for the statement 3 which is “Predatory
publications are not considered for any academic reward” in which 14out of
35 were strongly agreed and followed by the statement 2 “many researchers
published articles due to lack of awareness about predatory publication” (13
out of 35). Finally respondents are suggested to organize more awareness
session on open access publishing and journal selection to avoid predatory
publishing.