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Jon Tennant

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Jon Tennant, in Mexico

Jonathan Tennant (6 May 1988 – 9 April 2020[1]) was an English paleontologist who was also active in science communication. He was an outspoken open science advocate, including publishing research on the topic.[2][1]

Early life

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Tennant was born in 1988 in Kirby Muxloe, Leicestershire. His first 18 years were in Leicester with his parents and two sisters, Rebecca and Sarah. Jon attended Granby Primary School, Bushloe High School and then Beauchamp College.[citation needed] He obtained a PhD from Imperial College London in 2017.[2]

He later lived in Berlin, Paris, and Bali, where he died from a motorbike accident at age 31.[1] As a science communicator, Jon was a regular contributor to Discover on paleontology.[3]

Open Science movement

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A key advocate, speaker and activist in the Open Science movement, he was a supporter of open access to knowledge and cultural change within the scientific community. He was an Editor for the PLOS Paleo Community, executive editor for Geoscience Communication, part of the Mozilla Open Leadership Cohort, and worked as Communications Director for ScienceOpen.[1][2] With Jennifer Beamer, Jeroen Bosman, Björn Brembs, Neo Christopher Chung, Gail Clement, and others, he wrote an influential guide and strategy on open access and open research.[4]

He was a panelist and keynote speaker at various academic and scholarly publishing conferences worldwide.[5] Among his talks are

  • "Open science is just good science",[6] 2018 DARIAH Annual Event on Open Science (keynote)[7]
  • "Have we started a fire?",[8] 2019 Open Science Fellows Program from Wikimedia Deutschland (closing event)
  • "Reproducibility: Or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Open Science", 2018 IEEE Conference Evaluation and Beyond – Methodological Approaches for Visualization (invited talk).[9]
  • Invited panelist at the international conference held in 2018 to celebrate the 20th anniversary of SciELO.[10]

In 2014, Tennant and open access advocates drafted an open letter to American Association for the Advancement of Science expressing concerns about the journal Science Advances. They cited issues with reuse restrictions, failure to meet Budapest Open Access Initiative standards, and high publication fees.[11]

Institutional initiatives

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He was a founder of the Open Science MOOC and the preprint service PaleorXiv.[1]


References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "Jon Tennant (May 6th, 1988– April 9th, 2020)". The Systematics Association. Retrieved 2023-03-30.
  2. ^ a b c "Obituary: Jonathan Tennant (1988–2020)". European Geosciences Union (EGU). Retrieved 2023-03-30. [third-party source needed]
  3. ^ "Jon Tennant | Discover Magazine". www.discovermagazine.com. Retrieved 2023-03-31.
  4. ^ Tennant, Jonathan; Beamer, Jennifer Elizabeth; Bosman, Jeroen; Brembs, Björn; Chung, Neo Christopher; Clement, Gail; Crick, Tom; Dugan, Jonathan; Dunning, Alastair (2019-01-30). Foundations for Open Scholarship Strategy Development (Report). MetaArXiv. doi:10.31222/osf.io/b4v8p.
  5. ^ "Open Scholarship". Green Tea and Velociraptors. Archived from the original on 2022-09-26. Retrieved 2021-04-11.
  6. ^ Tennant, Jon (2019-08-16). "Open Science is Just Good Science". DARIAH-Campus.
  7. ^ "In memoriam of Jon Tennant | DARIAH". Retrieved 2023-03-30.
  8. ^ "Open Science Fellows: "Have we started a fire? – Yes. The fire rises." Jon Tennant – Wikimedia Deutschland Blog" (in German). 4 June 2019. Retrieved 2023-03-30.
  9. ^ "Reproducibility: Or, how I learned to stop worrying and love open science [Invited talk]". 2018 IEEE Evaluation and Beyond - Methodological Approaches for Visualization (BELIV). 2018-10-21. pp. i. doi:10.1109/BELIV.2018.8634081. ISBN 978-1-5386-6884-9. S2CID 240114870.
  10. ^ "Panelists - Jonathan Tennant". International Conference for the 20th anniversary of SciELO (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2023-03-30.
  11. ^ "Opinion: OA Advocates Slam Science Advances". The Scientist Magazine®. Retrieved 2021-04-10.
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