Authors who are faced with a publication contract that seeks transfer of the copyright should not hesitate to negotiate new terms or at least to reserve rights to use their own work in future teaching and writing and publish their work in a repository or find a different publisher. There are resources that can help in making decisions about their copyrights.
Resources:
There are many discipline-specific as well as multi-disciplinary open access journals. Choose journals for publication with care; see "Vetting OA journals" in this guide.
Depositing works in an open access repository is a great way to openly share your research. Make sure to comply with copyright and licensing restrictions when submitting your work to a repository (see Your Copyright). A repository may be institutional, like TAMU-CC's Institutional Repository, or discipline-specific.
Data sharing is increasingly common and important, so much so that it is often mandated by funding agencies. There are many discipline-specific data repositories, many of which are open access.
This guide was created using many resources, many of them are linked throughout the guide. This guide was also built using information from Cornell University Library guide on Open Access Publishing, published under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.