The Importance of Being Earnest
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616 pages
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Description

Over one hundred presentations from the thirty-fourth Charleston Library Conference (held November 5-8, 2014) are included in this annual proceedings volume. Major themes of the meeting included patron-driven acquisitions versus librarian-driven acquisitions; marketing library resources to faculty and students to increase use; measuring and demonstrating the library's role and impact in the retention of students and faculty; the desirability of textbook purchasing by the library; changes in workflows necessitated by the move to virtual collections; the importance of self-publishing and open access publishing as a collection strategy; the hybrid publisher and the hybrid author; the library's role in the collection of data, datasets, and data curation; and data-driven decision making. While the Charleston meeting remains a core one for acquisitions, serials, and collection development librarians in dialog with publishers and vendors, the breadth of coverage of this volume reflects the fact that the Charleston Conference is now one of the major venues for leaders in the information community to shape strategy and prepare for the future. Over 1,600 delegates attended the 2014 meeting, ranging from the staff of small public library systems to CEOs of major corporations. This fully indexed, copyedited 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.
Preface and Acknowledgments

Introduction

Plenary Sessions

What's the Big Idea? Mellon, ARL, AAU, University Presses, and the Future of Scholarly Communication, by Leila Salisbury, Raym Crow, Helen Cullyer, Barbara Kline Pope, and Charles Watkinson

The Punishment for Dreamers: Big Data, Retention, and Academic Libraries, by Adam L. Murray

Let's Talk: Bringing Many Threads Together to Weave the Scholarly Information Ecosystem, by Laurie Goodman, Howard Ratner, Greg Tananbaum, John Vaughn, and T. Scott Plutchak

Being Earnest in the New Normal, by Anthea Stratigos

The Long Arm of the Law, by William Hannay, Laura Quilter, and Ann Okerson

Budgets, Services, and Technology Driving Change: How Librarians, Publishers, and Vendors Are Moving Forward, by Kittie Henderson and Meg White

What Faculty Want Librarians to Know, by Christine Fair, Timothy Johnson, Phil Richerme, and Jim O’Donnell

We Sincerely Regret to Inform You That the Material You Have Requested Is Unavailable via Interlibrary Loan, by Jennifer Duncan, Carol Kochan, and Lars Leon

From Course Reserves . . . to Course Reversed?: The Library's Changing Role in Providing Textbook Content, by Nicole Allen, Charles Lyons, and Bob Nardini

Hyde Park Debate—Resolved: Wherever Possible, Library Collections Should Be Shaped by Patrons, Instead of by Librarians, by Rick Anderson, David Magier, John G. Dove, Tim Spalding, Scott Johnson, and Ilana Stonebreaker

Science Education Gone Wilde: Creating Science References That Work, by John Rennie

Online Learning, MOOCs, and More, by Franny Lee, Deanna Marcum, and Ann Okerson

To Boldly Go Beyond Downloads: How Are Journal Articles Shared and Used?, by Carol Tenopir, Gabriel Hughes, Lisa Christian, Suzie Allard, David Nicholas, Anthony Watkinson, Hazel Woodward, Peter Shepherd, and Robert Anderson

Driving Discovery: Do You Have the Keys to Fair Linking?: (It's About Knowledge and Library Control), by Todd Carpenter, Bruce Heterick, and Scott Bernier

DRM: A Publisher‐Imposed Impediment to Progress, or a Legitimate Defense of Publisher/Author Intellectual Property Rights, by Adam Chesler, Jim Dooley, David Parker, and Zac Rolnik

Collection Development

Taming the Wilde: Collaborating With Expertise for Faster, Better, Smarter Collection Analysis, by Jacqueline Bronicki, Cherie Turner, Shawn Vaillancourt, and Frederick Young

Collecting and Acquiring in Earnest (The 14th Annual Health Sciences Lively Lunch), by Wendy Bahnsen, Yumin Jiang, Ramune K. Kubilius, Emma O'Hagan, and Andrea Twiss‐Brooks

The Buck Stops Here: Assessing the Value of E‐Book Subscriptions at the Columbia University Libraries, by Melissa J. Goertzen and Krystie Klahn

E‐Book Rights: Advocacy in Action, by Katy Gabrio and Whitney Murphy

Are E‐Book Big Deal Bundles Still Valuable?, by Aaron K. Shrimplin, and Jennifer W. Bazeley

Collection Development, E‐Resources, and Meeting the Needs of People With Disabilities, by Axel Schmetzke, Cheryl Pruitt, and Michele Bruno

Keeping It Real: A Comprehensive and Transparent Evaluation of Electronic Resources, by Karen R. Harker, Laurel Crawford, and Todd Enoch

Successful E‐Resource Acquisitions: Looking Beyond Selecting, Ordering, Paying, and Receiving to Discovery and Access, by Denise Branch

Moving Librarian Collecting from Good to Great: Results from the First Year of a Librarian Liaison Collaborative Monographic Purchasing Project, by Genya O'Gara, Carolyn Schubert, Lara Sapp, and Michael Mungin

It's Not Just About Weeding: Using Collaborative Collection Analysis to Develop Consortial Collections, by Anne Osterman, Genya O'Gara, and Leslie O'Brien

Cooperative Collection Development Requires Access: SALToC—A Low‐Tech, High‐Value Distributed Online Project for Article‐Level Discovery in Foreign‐Language Print‐Only Journals, by Aruna P. Magier

Wilde About Weeding: An Earnest Effort in Collection Development, by Melissa Johnson

Staring Into the Whale’s Mouth: Large‐Scale Journal Deaccession at a Small University, by Jennifer Dean, Renee Bracey, and Peggy Hlavka

Adios to Paper Journals—Removed and Recycled—One Mile Long and 75 Tons, by John P. Abbott and Mary R. Jordan

Condition Considerations: An Inquiry Into Recording Conditions in Consortial Collections for the Purpose of Selecting (and Deselecting) Shared Print Copies, by Mike Garabedian

Shelf Ready Doesn't Always Mean Ready for the Shelf, by Stacey Marien and Alayne Mundt

Digital and Physical: Coevolving Formats in Today's Research Libraries, by Cynthia Sorrell

Good Things Come in Small Packages: Getting the Most From Shared Print Retention and Cooperative Collection Development With a Small Group of Libraries, by Teri Koch, Cyd Dyer, and Pam Rees

Changing Library Operations, by Allen McKiel, Jim Dooley, Robert Murdoch, and Carol Zsulya

Library of Congress Recommended Format Specifications: Encouraging Preservation Without Discouraging Creation, by Ted Westervelt and Donna Scanlon

Breaking It Down: Electronic Resource Workflow Documentation, by Alexandra Hamlett

Do Libraries’ Needs Still Match Publisher Offerings? “The Truth Is Rarely Pure and Never Simple”, by John Banionis, Nadia Lalla, and Don West

No Crystal Ball: Planning for Certain Future Cuts When the Future Is Uncertain, by Paoshan W. Yue, University of Nevada, Gail F. Stanton, Karen S. Grigg, and Beth Bernhardt

The Challenge of Evaluating and Developing an Interdisciplinary Collection: The East Asian Collection at the Public College, by Ewa Dzurak, Kerry Falloon, and Jonathan Cope

Don’t Leave the Faculty at the Station: Introducing Faculty to Collection Development Grants, by Don J. Welsh, Martha E. Higgins, and Stephen D. Clark

End Users

Gift‐Gaining: Ideas for Effective Gift Processing, by Mark Henley

Share Those Stats! Collaborating With Faculty to Make Evidence‐Based Serials Collection Development Decisions, by Alana Verminski

Return on Investment: New Strategies for Marketing Digital Resources to Academic Faculty and Students From Three Perspectives: Publisher, Collection Development, and Research Services, by Elyse Profera, Michael A. Arthur, and Barbara G. Tierney

How Users’ Perceptions of E‐Books Have Changed—Or Not: Comparing Parallel Survey Responses, by Tara T. Cataldo, Trey Shelton, Steven Carrico, and Cecilia Botero

Implications of Online Media on Academic Library Collections, by Kirstin M. Dougan

"Punctuality Is the Thief of Time”: The Earnest Pursuit of Social Media in the Library, by Elyse L. Profera and Maria Atilano

Thinking the Unthinkable: A Library Without a Public Catalog, by Coen Wilders

Discovery, a New Way of Searching (Thinking): The Challenges, Trials, and Tribulations, by Margaret M. Kain

Evolution of Mobile Device Use in Clinical Settings, by Robert Brooks and Jeannine Creazzo

The Ethereal Library: Thinking Creatively When You Have No Space to Think, by Corey Seeman

How Do Librarians Prefer to Access Collections?, by Julie Petr and Lea Currie

Mobile Access—What the Library Wants: Mobiles as Discovery Enhancers, by Laura Horton and Stacy Sieck

Management and Administration

Cost Impact in Managing the Transition to an Open Access Model, by Gayle R. Chan

Serious Savings With Short‐Term Loans, by Erin L. Crane

Earnestly Finding the Fun in Fund Codes, by Leslie O’Brien, Tracy Gilmore, and Connie Stovall

I’ll Be Back: Post‐Purchase Activities and ROI, by Michael Arthur, Tim Bucknall, Stephanie Kaelin, Sarah Schulman, and Kristi Showers

Employing a Use Factor to Distribute Monographic Funds, by Cindy D. Shirkey and Lisa Sheets Barricella

Developing a Weighted Collection Development Allocation Formula, by Jeff Bailey and Linda Creibaum

How Is That Going to Work? Part II—Acquisitions Challenges and Opportunities in a Shared ILS, by Kathleen Spring, Damon Campbell, Carol Drost, and Siôn Romaine

Doing Things Differently in the Cloud: Streamlining Library Workflows to Maximize Efficiency, by Vanessa A. Garofalo

The Devil Is in the Details: Managing the Growth of Streaming Media in Library Collections, by Jesse Koennecke, Susan Marcin, and Matthew Pavlick

Streamlined Licensing Through Institutional Master Agreements: A Success Story, by Corey S. Halaychik

Relax, Be Earnest: Marketing a Serials Deselection Project, by Stephanie J. Spratt

From Collection Development to Content Development: Organization and Staffing for the 21st Century, by Sara E. Morris and Lea Currie

Remote Storage: Leveraging Technology to Maximize Efficiency and Minimize Investments, by Eric C. Parker

The Big Shift: How VCU Libraries Moved 1.5 Million Volumes to Prepare for the Construction of a New Library, by Ibironke Lawal, Patricia Selinger, and Barbara Anderson

Recovering Wet Materials: Disaster Plans and Recovery Workflows, by Joshua Lupkin, Sally Krash, and Eric Wedig

Patron‐Driven Acquisitions and Interlibrary Loan

Patron‐Driven Acquisition: What Do We Know About Our Patrons?, by Monique A. Teubner and Henk G. J. Zonneveld

Turning a Crisis Into an Opportunity: DDA and PDA at UTA Libraries, by Peter Zhang

We’re E‐Preferred. Why Did We Get That Book in Print?, by Ann Roll

Earnestly Seeking Greater Flexibility: The Pros and Cons of Pay‐Per‐View Journal Access, by Marija Markovic and Steve Oberg

Supporting Rapidly Growing Online Programs in Times of Change, by Mary Ann Mercante and Ying Lin

What You Need to Know About Moving Collections and Acquisitions Into an E‐Dominant Model!, by Gerri Foudy, Lila A. Ohler, and Lenore A. England

An Evaluation of ReadCube as an Interlibrary Loan Alternative, by Elizabeth J. Weisbrod

ILL as Acquisitions: Implementing and Integrating POD in a Research Library, by Edward F. Lener and Ladd Brown

Scholarly Communication

Engrossed, Enraged, Engaged: Empowering Faculty in Transforming Scholarly Communication, by Jen Waller and Jennifer W. Bazeley

Peeling Apart the Layers: Library Services to Online Education Consortia, by Amy D. Coughenour

Libraries Leading the Way on the Textbook Problem, by Marilyn Billings, William M. Cross, Brendan O’Connell, Greg Raschke, and Charlotte Roh

Building Capacity in Your Library for Research Data Management Support (Or What We Learned From Offering to Review DMPs), by William M. Cross and Hilary M. Davis

SELF‐e 101: A Lesson for Academic Libraries in Connecting Self‐Published Authors and Readers, by Corrie Marsh, Mitchell Davis, Meredith Schwartz, Etta Verma, and Eleanor Cook

Techie Issues

Realizing Potential: Innovation Beyond the Cliché, by Howard Burton and Christine Fischer

You've Licensed It. Now What?, by Sarah E. McCleskey, Christine M. Fischer, Steven D. Milewski, and Jim Davis

Metadata Challenges in Library Discovery Systems, by Pascal Calarco, Lettie Conrad, Rachel Kessler, and Michael Vandenburg

“Happiness Is . . . Library Automation”: The Rhetoric of Early Library Automation and the Future of Discovery and Academic Libraries, by Lauren Kosrow and Lisa Hinchliffe

Collection Development and Data Visualization: How Interactive Graphic Displays are Transforming Collection Development Decisions, by Paulina Borrego and Rachel Lewellen

Recycling Database Records, by Lars‐Håkan Herbertsson, Marie Widigson, Rolf Johansson, and Lari Kovanen

Student Workers as Library Programmers: A Case Study in Automated Overlap Analysis, by Matthew W. Goddard

Advanced Data Analysis: From Excel PivotTables to Microsoft Access, by Christopher C. Brown, Denise Pan, and Gabrielle Wiersma

Streamlining and Advancing Collection Development With GOBI: Bringing Your Collection Into the 21st Century, by Christa E. Poparad, Lindsay H. Barnett, and Sarah Hoke

Bringing GOKb to Life: Data, Integrations, and Development, by Kristen B. Wilson

Collection Data Visualization: Seeing the Forest Through the Treemap, by Geoffrey P. Timms and Jeremy M. Brown

Index

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 15 octobre 2015
Nombre de lectures 1
EAN13 9781941269046
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 2 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0005€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

The Importance of Being Earnest
Charleston Conference Proceedings 2014
Edited by Beth R. Bernhardt, Leah H. Hinds, and Katina P. Strauch
Compilation Copyright 2015 Against the Grain Press, LLC.
Individual contributions are copyright of their respective authors.
Cataloging-in-Publication Data on file at the Library of Congress.
An electronic version of the proceedings is available at http://docs.lib.purdue.edu/charleston/
Contents
Preface and Acknowledgments
Introduction
Plenary Sessions
What’s the Big Idea? Mellon, ARL, AAU, University Presses, and the Future of Scholarly Communication
Leila Salisbury, University Press of Mississippi
Raym Crow, SPARC
Helen Cullyer, The Andrew W Mellon Foundation
Barbara Kline Pope, The National Academies
Charles Watkinson, University of Michigan Press/University of Michigan Library
The Punishment for Dreamers: Big Data, Retention, and Academic Libraries
Adam L. Murray, Murray State University Libraries
Let’s Talk: Bringing Many Threads Together to Weave the Scholarly Information Ecosystem
Laurie Goodman, GigaScience
Howard Ratner, CHORUS
Greg Tananbaum, ScholarNext Consulting
John Vaughn, Association of American Universities
T. Scott Plutchak, Lister Hill Library of Health Sciences, University of Alabama at Birmingham
Being Earnest in the New Normal
Anthea Stratigos, Outsell
The Long Arm of the Law
William Hannay, Schiff Hardin LLC
Laura Quilter, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Ann Okerson, Center for Research Libraries
Budgets, Services, and Technology Driving Change: How Librarians, Publishers, and Vendors Are Moving Forward
Kittie Henderson, EBSCO Information Services
Meg White, Rittenhouse Book Distributors
What Faculty Want Librarians to Know
Christine Fair, Georgetown University
Timothy Johnson, College of Charleston
Phil Richerme, Joint Quantum Institute
Jim O’Donnell, Georgetown University
We Sincerely Regret to Inform You That the Material You Have Requested Is Unavailable via Interlibrary Loan
Jennifer Duncan, Utah State University
Carol Kochan, Utah State University
Lars Leon, University of Kansas
From Course Reserves … to Course Reversed? The Library’s Changing Role in Providing Textbook Content
Nicole Allen, SPARC
Charles Lyons, SUNY University of Buffalo
Bob Nardini, Ingram Library Services
Hyde Park Debate—Resolved: Wherever Possible, Library Collections Should Be Shaped by Patrons, Instead of by Librarians
Rick Anderson, University of Utah
David Magier, Princeton University
Crowd Sourcing of Reference and User Services
John G. Dove, Former CEO
Tim Spalding, LibraryThing
Scott Johnson, ChiliFresh
Ilana Stonebreaker, Purdue University
Science Education Gone Wilde: Creating Science References That Work
John Rennie, McGraw-Hill Professional
Online Learning, MOOCs, and More
Franny Lee, SIPX
Deanna Marcum, Ithaka S+R
Ann Okerson, CRL
To Boldly Go Beyond Downloads: How Are Journal Articles Shared and Used?
Carol Tenopir, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Gabriel Hughes, Elsevier
Lisa Christian, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Suzie Allard, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
David Nicholas, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Anthony Watkinson, CIBER
Hazel Woodward, Project COUNTER
Peter Shepherd, Project COUNTER
Robert Anderson, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Driving Discovery: Do You Have the Keys to Fair Linking? (It’s About Knowledge and Library Control)
Todd Carpenter, NISO
Bruce Heterick, JSTOR/Portico
Scott Bernier, EBSCO Information Services
DRM: A Publisher-Imposed Impediment to Progress, or a Legitimate Defense of Publisher/Author Intellectual Property Rights
Adam Chesler, Business Expert Press/Momentum Press
Jim Dooley, University of California/Merced
David Parker, Alexander Street Press
Zac Rolnik, NOW Publishers
Collection Development
Taming the Wilde: Collaborating With Expertise for Faster, Better, Smarter Collection Analysis
Jacqueline Bronicki, University of Houston Libraries
Cherie Turner, University of Houston Libraries
Shawn Vaillancourt, University of Houston Libraries
Frederick Young, University of Houston Libraries
Collecting and Acquiring in Earnest (The 14th Annual Health Sciences Lively Lunch)
Wendy Bahnsen, Rittenhouse Book Distributors
Yumin Jiang, University of Colorado Health Sciences Library
Ramune K. Kubilius, Northwestern University
Emma O’Hagan, Western Michigan University School of Medicine
Andrea Twiss-Brooks, University of Chicago
The Buck Stops Here: Assessing the Value of E-Book Subscriptions at the Columbia University Libraries
Melissa J. Goertzen, Columbia University
Krystie Klahn, Columbia University
E-Book Rights: Advocacy in Action
Katy Gabrio, Macalester College
Whitney Murphy, MyiLibrary/Ingram Content Group
Are E-Book Big Deal Bundles Still Valuable?
Aaron K. Shrimplin, Miami University Libraries
Jennifer W. Bazeley, Miami University Libraries
Collection Development, E-Resources, and Meeting the Needs of People With Disabilities
Axel Schmetzke, University of Wisconsin – Stevens Point
Cheryl Pruitt, California State University
Michele Bruno, Cengage Learning
Keeping It Real: A Comprehensive and Transparent Evaluation of Electronic Resources
Karen R. Harker, University of North Texas Libraries
Laurel Crawford, University of North Texas Libraries
Todd Enoch, University of North Texas Libraries
Successful E-Resource Acquisitions: Looking Beyond Selecting, Ordering, Paying, and Receiving to Discovery and Access
Denise Branch, Virginia Commonwealth University
Moving Librarian Collecting from Good to Great: Results from the First Year of a Librarian Liaison Collaborative Monographic Purchasing Project
Genya O’Gara, James Madison University
Carolyn Schubert, James Madison University
Lara Sapp, James Madison University
Michael Mungin, James Madison University
It’s Not Just About Weeding: Using Collaborative Collection Analysis to Develop Consortial Collections
Anne Osterman, Virtual Library of Virginia
Genya O’Gara, James Madison University
Leslie O’Brien, Virginia Tech
Cooperative Collection Development Requires Access: SALToC—A Low-Tech, High-Value Distributed Online Project for Article-Level Discovery in Foreign-Language Print-Only Journals
Aruna P. Magier, South Asia Librarian, New York University
Wilde About Weeding: An Earnest Effort in Collection Development
Melissa Johnson, Georgia Regents University
Staring Into the Whale’s Mouth: Large-Scale Journal Deaccession at a Small University
Jennifer Dean, Siena Heights University
Renee Bracey, Siena Heights University
Peggy Hlavka, Siena Heights University
Adios to Paper Journals—Removed and Recycled—One Mile Long and 75 Tons
John P. Abbott, Appalachian State University
Mary R. Jordan, Appalachian State University
Condition Considerations: An Inquiry Into Recording Conditions in Consortial Collections for the Purpose of Selecting (and Deselecting) Shared Print Copies
Mike Garabedian, Whittier College
Shelf Ready Doesn’t Always Mean Ready for the Shelf
Stacey Marien, American University Library
Alayne Mundt, American University Library
Digital and Physical: Coevolving Formats in Today’s Research Libraries
Cynthia Sorrell, University of Maryland Libraries
Good Things Come in Small Packages: Getting the Most From Shared Print Retention and Cooperative Collection Development With a Small Group of Libraries
Teri Koch, Drake University
Cyd Dyer, Simpson College
Pam Rees, Grand View University
Changing Library Operations
Allen McKiel, Western Oregon University
Jim Dooley, University of California Merced
Robert Murdoch, Brigham Young University – Utah
Carol Zsulya, Cleveland State University
Library of Congress Recommended Format Specifications: Encouraging Preservation Without Discouraging Creation
Ted Westervelt, Library of Congress
Donna Scanlon, Library of Congress
Breaking It Down: Electronic Resource Workflow Documentation
Alexandra Hamlett, CUNY
Do Libraries’ Needs Still Match Publisher Offerings? “The Truth Is Rarely Pure and Never Simple” (Oscar Wilde)
John Banionis, Future Science Group
Nadia Lalla, University of Michigan
Don West, ACCUCOMS
No Crystal Ball: Planning for Certain Future Cuts When the Future Is Uncertain
Paoshan W. Yue, University of Nevada, Reno Libraries
Gail F. Stanton, University of Nevada, Reno Libraries
Karen S. Grigg, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Beth Bernhardt, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
The Challenge of Evaluating and Developing an Interdisciplinary Collection: The East Asian Collection at the Public College
Ewa Dzurak, College of Staten Island/CUNY
Kerry Falloon, College of Staten Island/CUNY
Jonathan Cope, College of Staten Island/CUNY
Don’t Leave the Faculty at the Station: Introducing Faculty to Collection Development Grants
Don J. Wel

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