Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 20 of 20

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Disappearing Databases, Carol Tenopir Dec 2002

Disappearing Databases, Carol Tenopir

School of Information Sciences -- Faculty Publications and Other Works

JUST BEFORE MIDNIGHT, September 30, 2002, 19 databases disappeared without a trace from the Dialog online system. The reason? CSA (Cambridge Scientific Abstracts) and Dialog had failed to reach a renewal agreement. On October 1, Dialog searchers received a message "file does not exist" when they entered a CSA file number. A logon message listed the file numbers that were removed. (Admittedly, a notice was sent to subscribers, and a logon warning message ran for a couple of weeks prior to October 1.) This is just the latest case in a disturbing trend of disappearing databases.


Oldies But Goodies, Carol Tenopir Nov 2002

Oldies But Goodies, Carol Tenopir

School of Information Sciences -- Faculty Publications and Other Works

COMMON WISDOM says that currency is what is valued in online databases. With the exception of genealogists and historians, it is assumed that readers don't want old materials. From the publisher's side, it just isn't cost effective to convert older bibliographic or full-text articles to digital form. For those who want older material, print--at least until recently--was thought to be the medium of choice.

This common wisdom is being proved not so wise, as readers are accessing both new and older information when it is available online, and publishers are rushing to digitize long runs of magazine and journal articles …


Electronic Journal Use: A Glimpse Into The Future With Information From The Past And Present, Carol Tenopir, Donald W. King Nov 2002

Electronic Journal Use: A Glimpse Into The Future With Information From The Past And Present, Carol Tenopir, Donald W. King

School of Information Sciences -- Faculty Publications and Other Works

No abstract provided.


Online Serials Heat Up, Carol Tenopir Oct 2002

Online Serials Heat Up, Carol Tenopir

School of Information Sciences -- Faculty Publications and Other Works

SERIALS LIBRARIANSHIP is hot. It wasn't too long ago that library schools were eliminating serials management courses while libraries were merging serials departments into acquisitions and cataloging. Now, in the era of electronic journals and magazines, serials is the hottest topic in the library.


The Age Of Online Instruction, Carol Tenopir Sep 2002

The Age Of Online Instruction, Carol Tenopir

School of Information Sciences -- Faculty Publications and Other Works

Discussion of academic library instruction focuses on helping users learn online resources. Topics include science instruction; integrating short, subject-specific online instruction into the classroom; virtual tours; long-term approaches; integrating online modules into undergraduate courses; corporate librarians' efforts; and vendors' Web-based instruction modules. (LRW)


The Way Forward: An Overall Perspective, Carol Tenopir Sep 2002

The Way Forward: An Overall Perspective, Carol Tenopir

School of Information Sciences -- Faculty Publications and Other Works

No abstract provided.


Educating Tomorrow’S Information Professionals Today, Carol Tenopir Jul 2002

Educating Tomorrow’S Information Professionals Today, Carol Tenopir

School of Information Sciences -- Faculty Publications and Other Works

Information skills are easily and frequently taught in school. Positive attitudes about selling yourself, recognizing the needs of the organization, and building customer loyalty are not as common in LIS schools-- nor as easily taught. Business schools have traditionally been more successful in instilling these types of attitudes, but not just because of a course or two.


Electronic Or Print: Are Scholarly Journals Still Important?, Carol Tenopir Jul 2002

Electronic Or Print: Are Scholarly Journals Still Important?, Carol Tenopir

School of Information Sciences -- Faculty Publications and Other Works

The author's work in collaboration with Donald King has encompassed many studies over a 25-year period that have provided a wealth of data on the usage of scholarly journal articles by scientists. She uses the data to arrive at some major conclusions about scientists' behaviour: they read a lot, the material from journals is essential to them, they use different ways to get hold of the material, they use electronic sources when convenient, and journals in many fields divide into core and peripheral titles - core titles obtained on subscription and peripheral material as separates.


The Web: Searchable, Hidden, And Deceitful., Carol Tenopir Jul 2002

The Web: Searchable, Hidden, And Deceitful., Carol Tenopir

School of Information Sciences -- Faculty Publications and Other Works

THE BLURRING OF LINES among special librarians and other information professionals makes the tracks that some conferences use seem artificial. After all, many librarians work as online experts, knowledge managers, and builders of electronic libraries--often all in one day. This became clear at the recent Information Today (IT) meetings in New York in May, which combined three previously separate shows: National Online, KnowledgeNets, and E-Libraries (see also InfoTech, LJ 6/15/02, p. 23). While there were plenty of redundancies, there were several useful sessions on web searching and electronic publishing.


Trends From The Industry Perspective, Carol Tenopir Jun 2002

Trends From The Industry Perspective, Carol Tenopir

School of Information Sciences -- Faculty Publications and Other Works

FOR THE ANNUAL Database Marketplace Survey (see LJ 5/15/02, p. 42ff.) company representatives were asked what major issues or trends will impact database availability and distribution in the next year. While budget woes are clearly the major issue for libraries and vendors alike, other trends are also expected to shape online information services.


Interface, June 2002, School Of Information Sciences Jun 2002

Interface, June 2002, School Of Information Sciences

Interface Newsletter

Academic 2001-2002 has just ended, so it seems a good time to recap some of the events of this year for our alumni. Importantly, our accreditation program presentation and visit went well, and we are grateful for all the support from you. Nearly 100 people joined the faculty and staff for the reception and briefing on April 7, and the external review panel seemed pleased to be able to visit with so many constituents of our program. You can still review the program presentation on the Web at http://www.sis.utk.edu/ admin/coa/index.htm, and there is a wealth of information about the School …


The Database Marketplace 2002: The Database Universe, Carol Tenopir, Gayle Baker, William Robinson May 2002

The Database Marketplace 2002: The Database Universe, Carol Tenopir, Gayle Baker, William Robinson

School of Information Sciences -- Faculty Publications and Other Works

After acquiring the UnCover document delivery service in 2000, Ingenta developed a new Library Gateway service for document delivery. Users search one of two databases. One contains online full-text articles from 5400+ titles. The other database, for traditional document delivery, has citations from 20,000+ periodical titles, with articles supplied by the British Library Document Supply Centre and the Canada Institute for Scientific and Technical Information.


E-Journals And Print Journals: Similarities And Differences In Reader Behavior, Carol Tenopir, Donald W. King May 2002

E-Journals And Print Journals: Similarities And Differences In Reader Behavior, Carol Tenopir, Donald W. King

School of Information Sciences -- Faculty Publications and Other Works

Research from three decades shows that scientists read widely from scholarly journals, with the readings per person per year increasing in the last decade. Many of these readings now come from electronic journals, e-prints, and other separate copies. A greater percentage of readings are now of new articles and readings from electronic journals are more likely to be of current articles. A majority of scientists in a discipline now use electronic journals at least part of the time, although there are considerable variation among disciplines .On the average, our studies show that between one-third and 80% of journal article readings …


Sorting Through Online Systems, Carol Tenopir May 2002

Sorting Through Online Systems, Carol Tenopir

School of Information Sciences -- Faculty Publications and Other Works

Librarians often ask if there's a simple way to keep online systems straight in order to help users and conduct efficient searches. Although there is danger in oversimplifying the complexities and contrasts among the hundreds of online systems and databases to which libraries provide access, all but full-time online searchers should practice a simple coping mechanism. First recognize the similarities rather than the differences (today's commercial online services are more alike than not) and then focus on the few important differences that make each system stand out.


Ingenta Grows In The U.S. Market, Carol Tenopir Apr 2002

Ingenta Grows In The U.S. Market, Carol Tenopir

School of Information Sciences -- Faculty Publications and Other Works

The Ingenta-InfoTrac databasesInfoTrac OneFile Plus and Expanded Academic Plus-will be available this summer as InfoTrac Plus. In the meantime, InfoTrac Web provides links to Ingenta journal articles for current InfoTrac customers. When fully implemented, the system will provide integrated searching of the InfoTrac and Ingenta content through the InfoTrac Web interface.


A Decade Of Digital Reference: 1991-2001., Carol Tenopir, Lisa Ennis Apr 2002

A Decade Of Digital Reference: 1991-2001., Carol Tenopir, Lisa Ennis

School of Information Sciences -- Faculty Publications and Other Works

Four surveys conducted over a decade provide insights about changes that have occurred in academic library reference services due to new and rapidly evolving technologies. Surveys were sent to the academic members of the Association of Research Libraries four times during the past decade: 1991, 1995, 1997, and 2000. The surveys contained both open-ended questions to gather opinions and factual questions to measure what libraries offer. Libraries adopted digital information sources and services at an increasingly accelerated rate in the 1990s due to the availability of the Internet, in particular the World Wide Web. Digital sources have brought about changes …


Interface, March 2002, School Of Information Sciences Mar 2002

Interface, March 2002, School Of Information Sciences

Interface Newsletter

Greetings and welcome to the revised and renewed Interface. Please share your copy with others in the information and library science community, for many items will be of interest beyond our own School's alumni. In this quarter's column, I am inviting you to participate in two exciting events in the life of our School: SIS Accreditation Activities and the 30th Anniversary Celebration & $30,000 for 30 Years Campaign.


Information Today Stands Alone, Carol Tenopir Mar 2002

Information Today Stands Alone, Carol Tenopir

School of Information Sciences -- Faculty Publications and Other Works

MORE THAN A DECADE ago I wrote about three family-owned publishers that served online information professionals (see "The Database Press," LJ 3/1/89, p. 56-57). Online Inc., Meckler-Media, and Learned Information Inc. each focused on the online community through conferences, journals, books, and other publications.

Now, just a decade later, only Information Today Inc. (the name of Learned Information Inc. since 1995) has stuck totally with the online information professional. In fact, Information Today (see www.infotoday.com) has purchased many of the information professional products from its former competitors, while Online Inc. and MecklerMedia have gone in other directions.


Online In London, At 25, Carol Tenopir Feb 2002

Online In London, At 25, Carol Tenopir

School of Information Sciences -- Faculty Publications and Other Works

IT'S BEEN SEVERAL years since I last attended the Online Information Meeting in London, so I was especially looking forward to the 25th-anniversary meeting this past December. Although some Americans chose to cancel, many Europeans attended. In 2000, about half of the attendees were librarians, and I suspect the proportion was similar this time.


The Center For Children's And Young Adult Literature: A Partnership For Literacy, Ken Wise Jan 2002

The Center For Children's And Young Adult Literature: A Partnership For Literacy, Ken Wise

Other Library Publications and Works

No abstract provided.