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Anything Goes : Charleston Conference Proceedings 2010 / / edited by Beth R. Bernhardt and Leah H. Hinds
Anything Goes : Charleston Conference Proceedings 2010 / / edited by Beth R. Bernhardt and Leah H. Hinds
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Purdue University Press, 2011
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (426 pages) : illustrations ;
Altri autori (Persone) HindsLeah H
BernhardtBeth R
Collana Charleston Conference Proceedings Series.
Soggetto topico Library science
Library cooperation
Libraries and electronic publishing
Collection management (Libraries)
Acquisitions (Libraries)
Cooperation entre bibliotheques
Bibliotheques et edition electronique
Sources d'information electroniques - Gestion
Acquisitions (Bibliotheques)
Gestion des collections (Bibliotheques)
Bibliotheconomie
Electronic information resources - Management
Library science - United States
Soggetto genere / forma Conference papers and proceedings.
ISBN 1-61249-872-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Let them eat ... everything: embracing a patron-driven future / Rick Anderson. -- A consortium for sharing primary materials / Joseph J. Esposito. -- Who do we trust? The meaning of brand in scholarly publishing and academic librarianship / Anthony Watkinson, Kent Anderson, Dean Smith, Hazel Woodword, Allen Renear. -- Charleston Conference observatory: are social media impacting in research? / David Nicholas, Ian Rowlands, Deanna Wamae. -- The tower and the free web--the role of reference / John Dove, Phoebe Ayers, Casper Grathwohl, Jason B. Phillips, Michael Sweet. -- Full-spectrum stewardship of the record of scholarly and scientific research / Brian E.C. Schottlaender. -- Executives' roundtable / T. Scott Plutchak, Youngsuk (YS) Chi, Kent Anderson. -- When rubber meets the road: rethinking your library collections / Roger Schonfeld, Sue Woodson. -- What can our readers teach us? / John Sack. -- "I hear the train a comin' -- LIVE / Greg Tananbaum, Joseph J. Esposito. -- Creating a trillion-field catalog: metadata in Google Books / Jon Orwant. -- Efficient and effective funding of open access 'books' / Frances Pinter. -- The long arm of the law / Ann Okerson, William Hannay, Lauren K. Schoenthaler. -- E-everything, putting it all together / Peter McCracken. -- Innovative practices in electronic resources and acquisition management / Ryan Weir, Geoffrey P. Timms, Kelly A. Smith, Regina Koury, Denise Pan. -- What do those collection numbers in resources for college libraries really mean? / Susan K. Beidler. -- What's in your aggregator?: context, currency, and stability of full-text databases / Mary Beth Chambers, Mariyam Thohira, Nancy Sprague. -- Taking a step back, to move forward / Stephen Dew, Michael Crumpton. -- Collection intelligence: using data driven decision making in collection management / Annette Day, Hilary Davis. -- Disaster mental health: building a research level collection / Ardis Hanson, Claudia J. Dold. -- From monks to mutopia: changing landscape in sheet music publishing / Ana Dubnjakovic. -- Deselecting the monographs collection: one library's adventure in weeding / Margaret Foote, Betina Gardner. -- OARS: toward automating the ongoing subscription review / Geoffrey P. Timms, Jonathan H. Harwell. -- Wherefore are thou, RoMEO? -- a review of open access-public access definitions and policies / Betty Landesman. -- Consensus-based assessment for re-envisioning a reference collection / Michael A. Matos, Patricia J. West. -- Moving from print to electronic journals: a study of college and university libraries in Indiana / Jo McClamroch. -- Weeding with robots: managing collections in an automated retrieval system / Patricia Bravender, Robert Kelly, Linda Masselink, Hazel McClure. -- Looking forward by looking back: books at the end of the book / Darby Orcutt, Genya O'Gara. -- The GIST gifts & de-selection manager: redesigning gift and weeding workflow in the library / Kate Pitcher. -- Chinese scientific journals: an assessment of the need at Cornell / Jinxia Huang, Marty Schlabach. -- Patron driven acquisitions: the future of collection development? / Rebecca Schroeder, Tom Wright, Robert Murdoch. -- How to evaluate cultural authenticity and stereotypical generalizations that exist in Asian-American children's books / Tadayuki Suzuki. -- Changes in print paper during the 19th century / AJ Valente. -- The other side of the coin: de-selecting material from a research library's storage facility / Suzanne M. Ward. -- Issues in determining cost for cost per use calculations / Virginia Kay "Ginger" Williams. -- Core resources on time series analysis for academic libraries: a selected, annotated bibliography / Sarah H. Jeong. -- Using DASH! for digital repositories: a case study of the East Texas Baptist University Library / Cynthia L. Peterson. -- Library connections: a non-linear approach to planning, marketing and creating the positive user experience / Leah M. Dunn. -- E-paper, LED, OLED, and the strategic positioning of hardware vendors and publishers: what it means to libraries / Stephen Patton. -- From my library to our library: changing a culture in tough times / Robert Alan, Lisa German. -- The "Get It" department: Oregon State University's strategic realignment of collection services / Faye A. Chadwell, Jane Nichols. -- Jumping into the new waters of librarian promotion and appointment: how we dove in and survived / Bridget Euliano, Carmel Yurochko. -- Coping with the short goodbye: handling unanticipated change / Elisabeth Knight, Nancy Richey, Roxanne Spencer. -- Academic libraries without print / Allen McKiel, Jim Dooley, Robert Murdock, Carol Zsulya. -- Getting to go: strategic use of external expertise in leveraging change / Alison Nussbaumer, Wendy Merkley, Brenda Mathenia. -- Open researcher and contributor identification (ORCID) / Michael J. Foley, David L. Kochalko. -- (Almost) no code Web 2.0: bringing library collections to your users where they live / Carolyn Klatt, Kevin Hatfield, Kim Meeks. -- Pay-per-view isn't all wet: providing articles can save the budget / Barbara MacAlpine. -- From normalizing serials to normalizing ships: improving access to all types of digitized resources / Peter McCracken. -- How do you spell PDA!? Patron driven acquisitions local to consortium print to e pilots to programs: there's a model for everyone! / Lynn Wiley, Tina E. Chrzastowski. -- NISO's IOTA working group: creating an index for measuring the quality of open URL links / Rafal Kasprowski, Susan Marcin. -- License management: making it fun and flexible with CORAL / Andrea Langhurst, Xan Arch. -- Analysis of claiming print journals at the University of Manitoba libraries / Lisa O'Hara, Pat Milne. -- Making do: ERM alternatives / Fran Rosen, Jennifer Dean.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910634056303321
Purdue University Press, 2011
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Necessity Is the Mother of Invention : Charleston Conference Proceedings 2009
Necessity Is the Mother of Invention : Charleston Conference Proceedings 2009
Autore Strauch Katina P. <1946->
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Purdue University Press, 2010
Descrizione fisica 1 electronic resource (663 pages)
Altri autori (Persone) HindsLeah H
Collana Charleston Conference Proceedings Series.
Soggetto topico Libraries
ISBN 1-61249-871-X
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover -- Charleston Conference Proceedings 2009 -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Preface and Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Plenary Sessions -- New Librarianship -- Pricing Digital Journals -- "Raising Spirits in This Tough Economy": Results from CIBER's Global Library Survey -- I Hear the Train a-Comin': Switches, Cars, the Academy and the Web Train Network -- "It's the Economy, Stupid": Dealing with High Acquisition Goals in Low Economic Times -- Discovery versus Disintermediation -- Our Common Future -- The Google Settlement One Year Later -- Open Access: Readership and Citations -- Hyperlinked Library Service: Trends, Tools, Transparency -- Lightning in a Bottle: Libraries, Technology and the Changing System of Scholarly Communications -- Preconferences -- Ebrarians: Meeting the Challenges of E-resources Head on! New Professionals Discuss the Management of Electronic Resources -- Budget -- "Ten More Accounting Text Books!: Turning Those Unwanted Gift Books into Good Donor Relations" -- Library Acquisitions Accounting -- Never Let a Serials Crisis Go to Waste: Building Support for Library Collections at Virginia Tech -- Streamlining the Materials Ledger to Reflect the Realities of Campus Demographics, Collection Use, and the Increase in E-Resource Expenditures -- Tightening the Core: Using Circulation and Cost History to Reduce Spending on a Research Library's Central Approval Plan -- Tying Information Literacy Learning Goals to a Library Materials Budget: Repackaging the Formula to Meet Learning Goals -- Collaboration -- Cooperative Collection Development: Sharing Funds, Resources, and Responsibilities Across Libraries: A Pilot Program in Nursing -- Sharing the Load: Alternatives to Buying What Users Need.
The Evolution of Business Sources: An Environmental Look at Information Providers and a Prediction for the Future or "It's really not so bad, and it's gonna get better!" -- Content Development -- Are They Being Indexed II? A Follow-Up to Tracking the Indexing and Abstracting of Open Access Journals -- Beguiled by Bananas: A Retrospective Study of the Usage & -- Breadth of Patron vs. Librarian Acquired Ebook Collections -- Cost/Benefit Analysis of BioMedCentral Membership at a Large Research Institution -- Grappling with Changing Realities -- Is Good Enough, Really Good Enough? Does algorithmic metadata search replace the need for discipline-oriented databases? -- It's Raining Cats and Citation Analyses: New uses and audiences for the results of evidence-based collection evaluation -- Moving to a Virtual Approval Plan: How an ARL Library is Leveraging Funds and Streamlining Workflow -- Reconfiguring Collection Development: A Faculty Print Serials Review -- The Digitization of the "Michigan Pioneer and Historical Collections:" A Case Study -- Tools you can use: LibX as an Assistant for Collection Development -- The Future of the "Book" in Light of the Present Rise in "E" Publications -- Uniqueness and Collection Overlap in Academic Libraries -- Using Access to Create a Serials Review Database -- Education -- Collection Management 101: Developing and Implementing a Workshop Series -- Discover the Profession's Best-kept Secret . . . and Protect Your Investment in Collections -- Using iClickers in Library Instruction to Improve Student Engagement -- End Users / Use Statistics -- A Novel Approach to Relating Resource Expenditures to Academic Units -- Impact Factors, Post-Publication Peer Review and Other Metrics -- Let the Data Speak: Use Statistics and Collection Management -- Making the most of the Center for Research Libraries: A Members Roundtable.
The Semantic Web: What You Need to Know and Why It Is Important For Your User Community -- Usage Statistics: The Perks, Perils and Pitfalls -- What Counts? Assessing the Value of Non-Text Resources -- What We Learned From Users: Lessons Learned From Our Student Users -- Format -- e-Duke Books: What Have We Learned? -- Good Enough: The New Face of Reference -- Let Me See That eBook: Managing Cataloguing and Access through Collaboration -- Microforms in a Digital World -- Open Access Collections: What Is Your Number? -- Towards Resolving Chaos in the e-Book Supply Chain -- Management -- Blogs, Wikis, and Drives Oh-my! Achieving Knowledge Management for Acquisitions & -- Collection Development with Web 2.0 Technologies -- Collegiality Matters: How Do We Work with Others? -- Communication and Collection Accountability through Clusters: Case Studies from Two Institutions -- Growing Your Own: Developing New Acquisitions and Collection Development Librarians From Within -- How Are We Doing? Implementing Acquisitions Metrics in Pursuit of Improved Service -- How 'Necessity' Has Changed the Way Acquisitions is Done at One Academic Library -- It Takes a Village to Raise an E-Journal: Collaboration through Necessity -- The Out-of-Print Book Market and the Theft of Library Materials -- Tracking Electronic Resource Acquisitions: Using a Helpdesk System to Succeed Where Your ERMS Failed -- Transformational Change: The 9th Annual Health Science Lively Lunch -- Weeding with a Repurpose -- Out of the Box Thinking -- Delivering the Goods: Understanding the Academic Library Supply Chain -- Digital Curation and E-Publishing: Libraries Make the Connection -- Disrupting Libraries: The Potential for New Services -- Getting It System Toolkit (GIST): The GIST of Making Informed Decisions and Workflow of Buying, Borrowing, Downloading or Viewing.
Interactive Online Reference -- Law Libraries: "Our Perspective on Necessity is the Mother of Invention" -- Learning to Love Gifts: How One Library Has Increased Efficiency in Processing, and Realized the Benefits of Gift Materials -- Leveraging Assets: How BCR, Bibliolife and Ingram Came Together to Help Libraries through the Shelf2Life Program -- Publishing Data Alongside Analysis, Books and Journals -- Rethinking Monographic Acquisition: Developing a Demand-Driven Purchase Model -- (R)Evolution in the Information Industry: What the Information Industry Can Learn from the Music Industry -- Success Strategies for Thesis Students: Creating a Video Toolbox -- The Changing Roles of Acquisitions Librarians and the eBook Acquisitions Landscape for Academic Libraries -- The Chicago Collaborative: Facing the Grand Challenges of Scholarly Communication -- Two for One: Linking Cooperative Collection Development with Demand-Driven Collection Strategies -- Will POD (Print on Demand) Spell DOA for OP? -- Techie Issues -- A Necessity: Outsourcing the Issues of Print Serials -- Academic Libraries without Print -- Copyright on Campus: Coordinating the Confusion -- From Pilot to Production: Video Streaming at Indiana University -- NextGen Acquisitions: A Paradigm Shift for a New Era -- Populating and Synchronizing Serials Solutions Resource Manager 360 with SFX data: Experiences from the Field -- We Need All the Help We Can Get! - Standards That Assist in Electronic Resources Management -- INDEX.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910634055503321
Strauch Katina P. <1946->  
Purdue University Press, 2010
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Roll with the Times, or the Times Roll Over You : Charleston Conference Proceedings, 2016 / / edited by Beth R. Bernhardt, Leah H. Hinds, and Katina P. Strauch
Roll with the Times, or the Times Roll Over You : Charleston Conference Proceedings, 2016 / / edited by Beth R. Bernhardt, Leah H. Hinds, and Katina P. Strauch
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa [Charleston, South Carolina], : Against the Grain Press, LLC., [2017]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource
Disciplina 020
Collana Charleston Conference Proceedings Series
Soggetto topico Library & information services
Soggetto non controllato Library & information services
ISBN 1-941269-12-5
1-941269-11-7
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Preface and Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Plenary Sessions -- Access to Freely Available Journal Articles: Gold, Green, and Rogue Open Access Across the Disciplines -- Building the Knowledge School -- The Evolution of E-Books -- Hyde Park Debate Resolved: APC-Funded Open Access Is Antithetical to the Values of Librarianship -- Working in Partnership to Support Quality Research -- Libraries as Convener, Enabler, Distributor, Advocate, and Archive in the Future Knowledge Economy -- The Devil Is in the Details: Challenges of Collaborative Collecting -- Reimagining Our World at Planetary Scale: The Big Data Future of Our Libraries -- The Long Arm of the Law -- Update on Industry Trends and Issues -- Who's Faster, a Pirate or a Librarian? -- You Can't Preserve What You Don't Have-Or Can You? Libraries as Infrastructure for Perpetual Access to Intellectual Output -- The Long Arm of the Law -- Is a Gold Open Access World Viable for Research Universities? -- Budget/Fundraising/Allocation Formulas -- Stretching Your Dollars: Saving on Online Content -- Budgeting in an Academic Library: A Lively Lunch Discussion -- Where Is the Library Budget Going? Using ILS Fund Codes and Reports for Fiscal Accountability -- How a New Library System Changed the Way We Think about Acquisitions and Collection Development -- Collection Development-Analysis and Assessment -- Efficient Deselection and Other Stories: A Fellowship at UNC Charlotte -- Time to Take New Measures: Developing a Cost-Per-Cited-Reference Metric for the Assessment of E-Journal Collections -- An Infographic Is Worth a Thousand Words: Using Data Visualization to Engage Faculty in Collection Strategies -- Rolling Out a Database Review: Initiating a Comprehensive Database Review at the University of Maryland Libraries.
Valuing Consortial Resources: A Framework for Assessment -- Assessing the Books We Didn't Buy (the Sequel) -- Keeping Up Accessibility Practices and How It Relates to Purchasing and Collection Development in Academic Libraries: A Case Study at the College of Staten Island Library -- Collection Dashboards for Selectors -- Apples to Oranges: Comparing Streaming Video Platforms -- Rolling With a Purpose -- Extreme Makeover: How We Decreased Our Collection by 40% and Simultaneously Increased It by 50% in 10 Months -- Rolling the Dice and Playing With Numbers: Statistical Realities and Responses -- Albatross: Rolling on a Sea of Data -- Housing Diversity in Children's Literature -- To Buy or Not to Buy: Rolling Into the Future With ILLiad -- A Tale of Two Serials Cancellations -- Mapping Change: An Examination of Curricular Shifts and Collection Impact -- Book Usage Is Rollin' Down: Multifaceted Assessment of Monograph Collection Performance to Optimize Purchase Decisions -- The Librarian's Survival Guide to the "Big Deal": Tools for Unbundling -- Do We Approve? New Models for Assessing Approval Plans -- Collection Development-Discovery of Collections -- Rolling With the Wheels of Commerce: The Challenges of Business and Industry-Based Resources -- Adding and Slashing Serials -- From the Concept to Results: A Case Study on the Collection Development for the ODC-Opening Day Collection at Qatar National Library -- Implications of BIBFRAME and Linked Data for Libraries and Publishers -- Tower of Babel: New Realities in Foreign Language Acquisitions -- Preserve Local and Institution-Specific Data During Migration to a Network Cataloging Environment -- The World of ISSN-Standards Revisions and Related Projects -- "We'll Do It Live": Building Access to Video Content Based on Freedoms of Use -- Collection Development-Demand-Driven Acquisitions.
Boom or Bust: Short-Term Loans Five Years Later -- Rolling with PDA and DDA: How Academic Libraries Can Use Patron-Driven and Demand-Driven Acquisition Techniques to Build Library Collections With Minimal Management and Budget -- A Model for Patron-Driven Acquisition of Print Music Scores: From Conception to Reality -- DDA Management With Predictive Modeling -- Collection Development-E-Books -- Open Access, Open Access, How Does Your Catalog Grow? With Selection, Access, and Usage All in a Virtual Row! -- Nobody Knows and Nobody Is Responsible: Issues in E-Books Workflow and Access -- Post-Acquisition Management and the Issue of Inaccessibility -- Ordering E-Books From a Print Book Vendor -- We're on a Roll: Transforming E-Book Acquisitions in a Shifting Budget Landscape -- The Odd Couple: Teaming Up to Reduce Textbook Costs for Students -- Digital Scholarship -- Scholarly Needs for Text Analysis Resources: A User Assessment Study for the HathiTrust Research Center -- End Users/Use Statistics -- Moving the Library: Bringing Resources to Students (Using a Learning Management System) -- Liaison Librarians in the Know: Methods for Discovering Faculty Research and Teaching Needs -- Strengthening Regional Collections One Request at a Time: Using Resource Sharing Technology to Facilitate Coordinated Collection Development -- Management/Leadership -- An Electronic Resources Workflow Is Worth a Thousand Words -- Stay Calm and Cover Your Assessment: Creating a Culture of Assessment on a Shoestring -- Bridging the Divide: Collaborating Across Departments to Improve Communication and Collections -- Out of the Box/Entrepreneurship -- Improving Student Success: Arkansas State's Partnership With Credo and Regional High Schools -- Catching Their Attention! Using Nonformal Information Sources to Captivate and Motivate Undergraduates During Library Sessions.
Project Management Office to the Rescue: Aligning Workforce and Resources with Library Vision and Delivering Results -- Lifting All Boats: Fostering a Community of Practice for Student Publishers -- Professional Development -- Change It Up: Growing Your Career in a Wildly Different Organization -- A Tale of Two Liaison Programs: University of Central Florida Libraries and Louisiana State University Libraries Partnering for Subject Librarian Excellence -- The Nuts and Bolts of Supporting Change and Transformation for Research Librarians -- What Are Subject Liaisons When "Collections" and "Subjects" Don't Matter? -- Scholarly Communication -- Humanities Collaborations and Research Practices: Investigating New Modes of Collaborative Humanities Scholarship -- COUNTER: Consistency, Clarity, Simplification, and Continuous Maintenance -- Is Small Beautiful? The Position of Independent Scholarly Publishers in an Environment of Rapid Industry Consolidation -- Social Scholarship? Academic Communications in the Digital Age -- The Sky's the Limit: Scholarly Communication, Digital Initiatives, Institutional Repositories, and Subject Librarians -- Wrangling Services Contracts in Libraries -- Supporting Research Information Management in the Research University: Partnerships, Challenges, and Possibilities -- Technology and Trends -- Wrangle Your Data Like a Pro With the Data Processing Power of Python -- Head in the Clouds: Will a Next-Generation Library Management System Bring Clear Vision? -- A Tale of Two Campuses: Open Educational Resources in Florida and California Academic Institutions -- Finding the Right Fit for Article Delivery: Using Resource Sharing Technology to Provide Enhanced Access -- Moving From Reclaiming to Reclaimed: The Big Picture and a Case Study of a Trending Initiative -- Index.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910433157703321
[Charleston, South Carolina], : Against the Grain Press, LLC., [2017]
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Something's Gotta Give : Charleston Conference Proceedings, 2011 / / edited by Beth R. Bernhardt, Leah H. Hinds, and Katina P. Strauch
Something's Gotta Give : Charleston Conference Proceedings, 2011 / / edited by Beth R. Bernhardt, Leah H. Hinds, and Katina P. Strauch
Autore Strauch Katina P
Pubbl/distr/stampa West Lafayette, Indiana, : Against the Grain Press, [2012]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (642 p.)
Disciplina 020.973
Altri autori (Persone) StrauchKatina P. <1946->
HindsLeah H
BernhardtBeth R
Soggetto topico LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Library & Information Science / Administration & Management
LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Library & Information Science / Collection Development
LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Library & Information Science / General
Serials librarianship
Libraries - Information technology
Libraries and electronic publishing
Electronic information resources - Management
Acquisitions (Libraries)
Collection management (Libraries)
Library science - United States
Library science
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
Soggetto non controllato Library & information services
ISBN 0-9834043-3-X
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto ""Cover""; ""Copyright""; ""Contents""; ""Preface""; ""Introduction""; ""Plenary Sessions""; ""The Semantic Web for Publishers and Libraries""; ""Data Papers in the Network Era""; ""Everything We See Hides Another: Coping with Hidden Collections in the 21st Century Library""; ""The Digital Public Library of America: The Idea and Its Implementation""; ""New Initiatives in Open Research""; ""Executives' Roundtable: The Boundaries are Getting Blurred""; ""I Hear the Train A Comin""; ""The Long Arm of the Law""; ""The Future of Online Newspapers""; ""The Status Quo Has Got to Go""
""Hyde Park Corner""""Acquisitions/Collection Development""; ""Downsizing from the Big Deal: What's Education Got to do With It?""; ""Reducing Unintentional Duplication: Adventures and Opportunities in Cooperative Collection Development""; ""Collaborating with Course Pages: Strategies for Curriculum-based Development and Assessment""; ""Free is the Best Price: Building Your Collection of Primary Sources with Free, Online, Digital Collections""; ""It's Not You, It's Me: Breaking Up with Perpetual Access""
""From Backlog to Workflow: American University's Approach for Handling Preservation Books and Missing Serials Issues""""Don't Forget the Little Publishers""; ""Something's Gotta Give: Is There a Future for the Collection Development Policy?""; ""Offline E-book Access: ebrary Survey of Librarians""; ""2011 Global Student E-book Survey""; ""Let's Get the Dialogue Started: Keeping E-books Current""; ""Kent State University Libraries Develops a New System for Resource Selection""; ""Academic Libraries Without Print""; ""BIP 4 CD=LW""; ""The Charging of Technical Services at UNC Charlotte""
""New Subjects, New Communities, New Formats: The Library Collection in the Digital World""""Best Practices for Presentation of E-Journals""; ""Acquisitions Business in a Middle East Context""; ""New Tricks for Old Data Sources: Mashups, Visualizations, & Questions Your ILS Has Been Afraid to Answer""; ""SERU 2.0: It's Not Just for Journals""; ""Improving ERM: Critical Work Flow and Operations Solutions""; ""A First-Year Librarian's Weeding Project Management Experience from Start to (Planned) Finish""; ""Weeding One STEPP at a Time""; ""Selection for Non-Remote Storage""
""Transfer 2.0 and Beyond! An Update""""Virginia Tech's Participation in ASERL's Cooperative Print Journal Retention Project""; ""Speed Weed: How We Weeded More Than 70,000 Items in Three Months""; ""Let's Go and Haul!: A Square-Rigger's Guide to Weeding ""Age of Sail"" Collections in the 21st Century""; ""Administration/Management""; ""Looking for Money in All the Right Places: How One Academic Library is Making Good Use of Grant Funds""; ""Using Your Library's Annual Report to Market Library Services""
""What Gives? Evaluating Bound Journals for Transitioning to Electronic and Developing an Electronic Collection Development Policy""
Record Nr. UNINA-9910433158003321
Strauch Katina P  
West Lafayette, Indiana, : Against the Grain Press, [2012]
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The Time Has Come ... to Talk of Many Things : Charleston Conference Proceedings 2019
The Time Has Come ... to Talk of Many Things : Charleston Conference Proceedings 2019
Autore Bernhardt Beth R
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Purdue University Press, 2020
Descrizione fisica 1 electronic resource (434 pages)
Disciplina 020
Altri autori (Persone) HindsLeah H
MeyerLars
Collana Charleston Conference Proceedings Series
Soggetto topico Library & information services
Soggetto genere / forma Conference papers and proceedings.
Soggetto non controllato Library & information services
ISBN 1-61249-868-X
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
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.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910634054803321
Bernhardt Beth R  
Purdue University Press, 2020
Materiale a stampa
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What’s Past is Prologue : Charleston Conference Proceedings, 2017
What’s Past is Prologue : Charleston Conference Proceedings, 2017
Autore Strauch Katina P. <1946->
Pubbl/distr/stampa Purdue University Press, 2018
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (xi, 313 pages) : illustrations
Disciplina 020.973
Altri autori (Persone) MeyerLars
HindsLeah H
BernhardtBeth R
Collana Charleston Conference Proceedings
Soggetto topico Library science
Collection management (Libraries)
Acquisitions (Libraries)
Library science - United States
Soggetto genere / forma Conference papers and proceedings.
ISBN 1-941269-34-6
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto AnalyticsTaking the Long View: A Case Study of E-Book Usage at a Comprehensive Research University; "Money Doesn't Grow on Trees": Using a Data-Driven Review Process to Add New Resources With No Budget Increases; Where Are We? Providing Information for the Clinical Enterprise (17th Health Sciences Lively Lunch); Statistical Analysis, Data Visualization, and Business Intelligence Tools for Electronic Resources in Academic Libraries; Prologue to Perfectly Parsing Proxy Patterns; Reviewing A & Is and Aggregators in a Large Research Library Collection; Up & Comers.
O Brave New Print Collection, That Has Such Data Science Books in It!EBA in Practice: Facilitating Evidence-Driven E-Book Programs in Both Consortium and Individual Library Settings; Technology Lending: Just Like Any Other Collection, Sort Of; Comparing DDA E-Book Program Variances of Eight Large Academic Libraries; Assessing Large E-Book Collections: Is the Past a Roadmap for Developing Collections of the Future?; What's Past Is Possible: Opportunities and Perspectives for Library Alumni Resources; The Digital Monograph and Primary Source Databases: Agenda Toward a Unified Conversation.
The Print Book Purging Predicament: Qualitative Techniques for a Balanced CollectionIs the Past Really Prologue? The Effect of a University's Consolidation on Its JSTOR Subscription; One Root, Many Trees: Reviving Collections Practices; Books on Demand: A New(er) Look for Print Monographs Acquisitions; Are E-Book Packages Overwhelming and Redefining Your Collection?; Is It Really "Not Applicable?" Zoom In to Understand E-Book Accessibility; Critical Business Collections: Examining Key Issues Using a Social Justice Lens; Beyond Cost Per Use: Exploring Multivariable E-Resource Assessment.
All About Predatory Publishing: Need for Librarians and Publishers to Better Inform AuthorsYes, the Library Can Help You With That Too; Long Arm of the Law: Google and ReDigi; Preprints, Institutional Repositories, and the Version of Record; Budget/Fundraising/Allocation Formulas; Developing a Weighted Collection Development Allocation Formula; Collection Development; You May Own It ... But Can They Find It? A Panel Discussion: Part 3 of Panel Presentation: Collection-Level Cooperative Cataloging; Showcasing E-Book Platform Features.
Cover; Copyright; Contents; Preface and Acknowledgments; Introduction; Plenary Sessions; 21st Century Academic Library: The Promise, the Plan, a Response; The Future of Print in Open Stacks: A Proposal; Technology and Platforms: What's on the Horizon; Bringing Your Physical Books to Digital Learners via the Open Library Project; All the Robots Are Coming! The Promise and the Peril of AI; The Long Arm of the Law; Publication Ethics, Today's Challenges: Navigating and Combating Questionable Practices; A Simpler Path to Public Access Compliance.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910597134803321
Strauch Katina P. <1946->  
Purdue University Press, 2018
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui