Academic Library Operations Beyond Paper //jkontherun.blogs.com/jkontherun/images/sony_reader_2.jpg
Academic Library Operations
Beyond Paper
http://jkontherun.blogs.com/jkontherun/images/sony_reader_2.jpg
Speakers
Jim Dooley - Head, Collection Services, University of California, Merced
Allen McKiel - Dean of Library and Media Services, Western Oregon University
Robert Murdock - Assistant University Librarian for Collection Development & Technical Services, Brigham Young University
Carol Zsulya - Head of Collection Management,
Cleveland State University
Overview
Relevant tech trends Faculty & student e-resource usage
surveys by ebrary and Springer Panel presentations on library operation
trends in their libraries Comments & Questions
Changing Technology
E-ink - Kindle, Newspaper Prototypes I-phone, G-phone Open standards for mobile devices—i.e Android Mobile Internet Access—i.e. Wi-Max Google—scanning collections—settled lawsuits Publishers stockpiling e-book collections Open Library – 335,000 e-books, 17.6m cataloged
http://www.amazon.com/Kindle-Amazons-Wireless-Reading-Device/dp/customer-images
Survey - Faculty E-Resource Use
Usage – Faculty (906) 89% websites - .edu, .gov, .org 86% e-journals 76% databases 54% e-books
Usage – Students (3208) 81% Google 78% e-books 67% Wikipedia 65% e-journals
Source: 2007 Global Faculty E-book Survey - Sponsored by ebraryhttp://www.ebrary.com/corp/collateral/en/Survey/ebrary_faculty_survey_2007.pdf
Student and Faculty e-preference
83% of students who said they used e-books (52%) find them preferable often or very often over a print version Often or very often (51%) Sometimes (32%) Never or rarely (17%)
82% of faculty find electronic resources as useful as print or preferable to print Preferable (50%) Equally useful (32%) Prefer print (18%)
What types of resources are students using for research or class assignments?
(52% e-book users)
81% - Google (2,593) 78% - e-books (2,517) 77% - print books (2,478) 69% - e-reference (2,206) 67% - wikipedia (2,142) 65% - print textbooks (2,098) 65% - e-journals (2,080)
The following percentages pertain to the subset of students (3,208 of the 6,452) from the ebrary survey that said that they used e-books.
48% of students in ebrary survey reported never using e-books
(3132 / 6452)
57% did not know where to find e-books 17% library did not offer e-books
45% prefer print 7% too difficult to read
Survey Results
Use E-journals E-books
Encourage students to use as viable resource 68% 43%
Use articles/chapters for reading as part of course 60% 29%
Course preparation/research 48% 31%
Links in course management software 30% 17%
Don’t Use 14% 36%
Faculty use of e-journals and e-books for courses
Obvious observationsE-book integration into course content and preparation lags behind e-journalsE-book and e-journal use patterns are similar
Source: 2007 Global Faculty E-book Survey - Sponsored by ebraryhttp://www.ebrary.com/corp/collateral/en/Survey/ebrary_faculty_survey_2007.pdf
Springer – e-Books – The End User Perspective
Between 58 percent and 80 percent of respondents at each institution had used e-books at least once Centre for Mathematics and Computer Science, Amsterdam, The
Netherlands University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, United States University of Muenster, Germany University of Turku, Finland JRD Tata Memorial Library Bangalore, India (new participant in
2008)
Springer Survey – For what purposes do you usually use ebooks?
78% Research 56% Study 10% Teaching 10% Leisure 2% Other
At the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, most userssaid they use eBooks primarily for research and study, with teaching and leisure trailing far behind.
Would like to use more eBooks?
Use More Illinois - 86% Bangalore - 98% Turku - 83% CWI Amsterdam - 79% Muenster - 92%
Usage is clearly trending to online.
What is happening to library operations?
Sourece: Google term: college student and books and laptop
Changes in Library Operations?
Acquisition Organization Circulation Reference Instruction Preservation Publication
Source: http://www.wou.edu
Questions or Comments
Jim Dooley - Head, Collection Services, University of California, Merced
Allen McKiel - Dean of Library and Media Services, Western Oregon University
Robert Murdock - Assistant University Librarian for Collection Development & Technical Services, Brigham Young University
Carol Zsulya - Head of Collection Management,
Cleveland State University