Vai al contenuto principale della pagina
| Autore: |
Bernhardt Beth R
|
| Titolo: |
The Time Has Come ... to Talk of Many Things : Charleston Conference Proceedings 2019
|
| Pubblicazione: | Purdue University Press, 2020 |
| West Lafayette, Indiana : , : Purdue University Press, , 2020 | |
| ©2020 | |
| Edizione: | 1st ed. |
| Descrizione fisica: | 1 electronic resource (434 pages) |
| Disciplina: | 020 |
| Soggetto topico: | Library & information services |
| Soggetto genere / forma: | Conference papers and proceedings. |
| Soggetto non controllato: | Library & information services |
| Altri autori: |
HindsLeah H
MeyerLars
|
| Nota di contenuto: | Cover -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Preface and Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Plenary -- The Long Arm of the Law 2019 -- Building Trust When Truth Fractures -- A Collaborative Imperative? Libraries and the Emerging Scholarly Communication Future -- Anticipating the Future of Biomedical Communications -- Collaborating to Support the Research Community: The Next Chapter -- Analytics -- Get It From the Source: Identifying Library Resources and Software Used in Faculty Research -- Making Collection Management Manageable: A Three-Phase Approach to an Annual Subscription Review -- What Are Students Saying About Their Reference Needs? -- The Time Has Come . . . To Build, Reflect, and Analyze Connections Between Qualitative and Quantitative Data -- Collections Data, Tools, and Strategy: Applying R, Tableau, and Excel to Print Assessment -- The Forest, the Trees, the Bark, the Pith: The Circulation Rates of Works of Contemporary Literature in Ten Language Areas at the University of Oregon Libraries -- New Usage Reports, New Insights! How to Use your COUNTER Data in Decision-Making Processes -- Talking of Many Things: Dashboards for Reference Services Decision-Making -- Communicating Collections: Strategies for Informing Library Stakeholders of Collections, Budget, and Management Decisions -- The Time Has Come for E-Books, or Has It? -- Reference: Product Categories in the Digital Age -- Collection Development -- Embrace the Hive Mind: Engaging ILL and Research Services in Unsubscribed and OA Content Discovery -- Tip of the Iceberg, Part 1: Choosing What Shows -- Begin at the Beginning: Revamping Collection Development Workflows -- Six Impossible Things: Moving KBART Into the Next Decade -- Primary Rights and the Inequalities of E-Book Access -- Change-Watch for the Right Time: Structuring Collections Budgets to Meet Current and Future Needs. |
| Trot So Quick: Addressing Budgetary Changes -- From Big Ideas to Real Talk: A Frontline Perspective on New Collections Roles in Times of Organizational Restructuring -- Down the Rabbit Hole We Go Again: The 19th Health Sciences Lively Lunchtime Discussion -- Wrangling Weirdness: Lessons Learned From Academic Law Library Collections -- Matching Made in Heaven: Collections and Metadata Collaboration for Print Preservation -- Something to Talk About: The Intersection of Library Assessment and Collection Diversity -- Incoming!: Surviving the Barrage of Vendor Communications -- Tangled Up in Books: Using the Lyrics of Bob Dylan to Understand the Changing Times of Collection Development -- Acquiring E-Books: Does (Should) Workflow Play a Role? -- The Time Has Come . . . to Move Many Things: Inventorying and Preparing a Collection for Offsite Storage -- Strategic Reinvestments of Journal Packages at Pennsylvania State University -- Canceling the Big Deal: Three R1 Libraries Compare Data, Communication, and Strategies -- Pain Points and Solutions: Bringing Data for Startups to Campus -- Piloting the Surge: Streaming Video and Academic Libraries -- Comparison and Review of 17 E-Book Platforms -- The Open Landscape Environment as the Expanse -- Change-Watch for the Right Time: Structuring Collections Budgets to Meet Current and Future Needs -- Resource Discovery in a Changing Content World -- When You Don't Know What You Don't Know: How Two New Collections Librarians Right-Sized a Collections Budget -- Approvals, Slips, and DDA! Oh My! The Yellow Brick Road to Collaborative Approval and DDA Profiling -- A New Synthesis: Research Resources to Research Experiences -- Legacy Missions in Times of Change: Defining and Shaping Collections in the 21st Century. | |
| Reason Minus Zero/No Limit: Trying to Bring It Back Home, a Trilogy of University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point Collection Development -- Tip of the Iceberg, Part 2: Discovering What's Hidden -- Glimpse Into the Future: Using the Curriculum Process System for Collection Development -- Library Services -- What Do Editors Want?: Assessing a Growing Library Publishing Program and Finding Creative Solutions to Unmet Needs -- Dual-Campus Subject Librarians at the University of Central Florida -- The Textbook Affordability Puzzle: Perspectives From Three of the Pieces -- Representation of Atypical Resources in the Discovery Layer: Metadata and Cataloging Aspects -- The Time Has Come . . . to Talk About Why Research Data Management Isn't Easy -- Let's Give Them Something to Talk About: Textbook Affordability and OER -- Should You Pay for the Chicken When You Can Get It for Free? No Longer Life on the Farm as We Know It -- Reconsidering Literacy -- Management -- Leading From Below: Influencing Vendors and Collection Budget Decisions as a Subject Liaison -- Great Expectations: Leading Library Staff Through the Minefield of Continuous Change -- Migrating to Alma Without an Acquisitions Staff: Evolving Acquisitions and Electronic Workflows From Their Legacy Silos -- Scholarly Communication -- The Time Has Come . . . for Next-Generation Open Access Models -- Rejuvenating Green OA for a Greener Pasture -- Maximum Dissemination: A Possible Model for Society Journals in the Humanities and Social Sciences to Support "Open" While Retaining Their Subscription Revenue -- Your IR Is Not Enough: Exploring Publishing Options in Our Increasingly Fragmented Digital World -- Falling Down the Rabbit Hole: Exploring the Unique Partnership Between Subject Librarians and Scholarly Communication -- Intriguing New Model for Improved Visibility and Access to Theses and Dissertations. | |
| Professional Learning and Inbetween Publishing: The Tasks of the Charleston Briefings -- Lessons From Ithaka S+R on Research Practices in the Disciplines: What Have We Learned? What Should We Do? -- A Proposed Framework for the Evaluation of Academic Librarian Scholarship -- MIT Press Direct and University of Michigan Press Ebook Collection: First-Year Lessons Learned and Future Prospects -- Technology and Trends -- Introducing SeamlessAccess.org: Delivering a Simpler, Privacy-Preserving Access Experience -- The Sun Shining in the Middle of the Night: How Moving Beyond IP Authentication Does Not Spoil the Fun, Ease, or Privacy of Accessing Library Resources -- Hacking for Good-Workshop Summary -- Up and Coming -- Mind the Gap: A Landscape Analysis of Open Source Publishing Tools and Platforms -- The Big Deal Is Dead! Long Live the Big Deal! -- Index. | |
| Sommario/riassunto: | Presentations from the 39th annual Charleston Library Conference (held November 4–8, 2019) are included in this annual proceedings volume. Major themes of the meeting included open educational resources, analysis and assessment of collections and library users, changes in licensing practices, virtual reality/augmented reality, journal package options, the future of print collections, and open access publishing. While the Charleston meeting remains a core one for acquisitions librarians in dialog with publishers and vendors, the breadth of coverage of this volume reflects the fact that this conference continues to be one of the major venues for leaders in the publishing and library communities to shape strategy and prepare for the future. Almost 2,000 delegates attended the 2019 meeting, ranging from the staff of small public library systems to the CEOs of major corporations. This volume provides a rich source for the latest evidence-based research and lessons from practice in a range of information science fields. The contributors are leaders in the library, publishing, and vendor communities. |
| Titolo autorizzato: | The Time Has Come ... to Talk of Many Things ![]() |
| ISBN: | 1-61249-868-X |
| Formato: | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione: | Inglese |
| Record Nr.: | 9910634054803321 |
| Lo trovi qui: | Univ. Federico II |
| Opac: | Controlla la disponibilità qui |