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Closing comment

Anisa Hawes edited this page Dec 8, 2023 · 5 revisions

Publishing Tasks: Phase 6 Sustainability + Accessibility

Closing comment (all lessons)

After publication, we thank contributors, share our suggested citation, and invite participants to help circulate our social media announcements about the lesson. This step also provides an opportunity to build support for the project through our Institutional Partnership Programme.


Contents of this page:


Including EN links

[Lesson title](link) is published!

Congratulations @author / @translator!
Thank you **all** for your contributions 

---

Our suggested citation for this lesson is:

>[CITATION], https://doi.org/10.XXXX/phxxXXXX.

We appreciate your help to circulate our social media announcements about this lesson among your networks:
Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/ProgHist/status/xxxx
Mastodon: https://hcommons.social/@proghist/xxxx

---

I'd be also grateful if you might consider supporting our efforts to grow _Programming Historian_'s [community of Institutional Partners](https://programminghistorian.org/en/ipp). This is a [network of organisations](https://programminghistorian.org/en/supporters) across Europe, Canada, North America and Latin America who have invested in our success by contributing an annual membership fee in lieu of subscription.

Institutional Partnerships enable us to keep developing our model of sustainable, open-access publishing, and empower us to continue creating peer-reviewed, multilingual lessons for digital humanists around the globe.

If you think that supporting Diamond Open Access initiatives may be among the strategic priorities of the university or library where you work, please let me know.

You can email me <admin [@] programminghistorian.org>, and I can send you an information pack to share with your colleagues. Alternatively, feel free to put me in touch with the person or department you think would be best-placed to discuss this opportunity.

Sincere thanks.

Including ES links

[Lesson title](link) is published!

Congratulations @author / @translator!
Thank you **all** for your contributions 

---

Our suggested citation for this lesson is:

>[CITATION], https://doi.org/10.XXXX/phxxXXXX.

We appreciate your help to circulate our social media announcements about this lesson among your networks:
Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/ProgHist/status/xxxx
Mastodon: https://hcommons.social/@proghist/xxxx

---

I'd be also grateful if you might consider supporting our efforts to grow _Programming Historian_'s [community of Institutional Partners](https://programminghistorian.org/es/pia). This is a [network of organisations](https://programminghistorian.org/es/colaboradores) across Europe, Canada, North America and Latin America who have invested in our success by contributing an annual membership fee in lieu of subscription.

Institutional Partnerships enable us to keep developing our model of sustainable, open-access publishing, and empower us to continue creating peer-reviewed, multilingual lessons for digital humanists around the globe.

If you think that supporting Diamond Open Access initiatives may be among the strategic priorities of the university or library where you work, please let me know.

You can email me <admin [@] programminghistorian.org>, and I can send you an information pack to share with your colleagues. Alternatively, feel free to put me in touch with the person or department you think would be best-placed to discuss this opportunity.

Sincere thanks.

Including FR links

[Lesson title](link) is published!

Congratulations @author / @translator!
Thank you **all** for your contributions 

---

Our suggested citation for this lesson is:

>[CITATION], https://doi.org/10.XXXX/phxxXXXX.

We appreciate your help to circulate our social media announcements about this lesson among your networks:
Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/ProgHist/status/xxxx
Mastodon: https://hcommons.social/@proghist/xxxx

---

I'd be also grateful if you might consider supporting our efforts to grow _Programming Historian_'s [community of Institutional Partners](https://programminghistorian.org/fr/pi). This is a [network of organisations](https://programminghistorian.org/fr/nos-soutiens) across Europe, Canada, North America and Latin America who have invested in our success by contributing an annual membership fee in lieu of subscription.

Institutional Partnerships enable us to keep developing our model of sustainable, open-access publishing, and empower us to continue creating peer-reviewed, multilingual lessons for digital humanists around the globe.

If you think that supporting Diamond Open Access initiatives may be among the strategic priorities of the university or library where you work, please let me know.

You can email me <admin [@] programminghistorian.org>, and I can send you an information pack to share with your colleagues. Alternatively, feel free to put me in touch with the person or department you think would be best-placed to discuss this opportunity.

Sincere thanks.

Including PT links

[Lesson title](link) is published!

Congratulations @author / @translator!
Thank you **all** for your contributions 

---

Our suggested citation for this lesson is:

>[CITATION], https://doi.org/10.XXXX/phxxXXXX.

We appreciate your help to circulate our social media announcements about this lesson among your networks:
Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/ProgHist/status/xxxx
Mastodon: https://hcommons.social/@proghist/xxxx

---

I'd be also grateful if you might consider supporting our efforts to grow _Programming Historian_'s [community of Institutional Partners](https://programminghistorian.org/pt/ppi). This is a [network of organisations](https://programminghistorian.org/pt/apoiadores) across Europe, Canada, North America and Latin America who have invested in our success by contributing an annual membership fee in lieu of subscription.

Institutional Partnerships enable us to keep developing our model of sustainable, open-access publishing, and empower us to continue creating peer-reviewed, multilingual lessons for digital humanists around the globe.

If you think that supporting Diamond Open Access initiatives may be among the strategic priorities of the university or library where you work, please let me know.

You can email me <admin [@] programminghistorian.org>, and I can send you an information pack to share with your colleagues. Alternatively, feel free to put me in touch with the person or department you think would be best-placed to discuss this opportunity.

Sincere thanks.

New Uncyclo (in-progress)

Publishing Tasks

Phase 1 Submission

Phase 6 Sustainability Accessibility

Phase change templates

Communications

Social Media

Bulletin

Events

Call Packages

Administration and Documentation

Members

Internal records

Resource indexes

Lesson Production and Development

Language and Writing

Accessibility

Governance

ProgHist Ltd


Old Uncyclo

Training

The Ombudsperson Role

Technical Guidance

Editorial Guidance

Social Guidance

Finances

Human Resources

Project Management

Project Structure

Board of Trustees

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