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Library and Information Science Commons

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

Eastern Illinois University

2010

Library and Information Science

Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Library and Information Science

Digital Collections Manual (Version 1.0), Ellen Corrigan Dec 2010

Digital Collections Manual (Version 1.0), Ellen Corrigan

Ellen K. Corrigan

No abstract provided.


Digital Collections Manual (Version 1.0), Ellen Kathryn Corrigan, Booth Library Subcommittee On Digital Resources, Eastern Illinois University Dec 2010

Digital Collections Manual (Version 1.0), Ellen Kathryn Corrigan, Booth Library Subcommittee On Digital Resources, Eastern Illinois University

Faculty Research & Creative Activity

No abstract provided.


What Is A Metadata Librarian?, Karen Miller, Kristin Martin, Ellen Corrigan Nov 2010

What Is A Metadata Librarian?, Karen Miller, Kristin Martin, Ellen Corrigan

Ellen K. Corrigan

Panel discussion on the role of the metadata librarian in academic libraries. Drawing from their own experiences, three Illinois academic librarians address topics including the training and skills needed, as well as the duties and challenges of the position. Part of the DCUG "Metadata Matters" webinar series.Webinar recording available via http://www.carli.illinois.edu/mem-serv/mem-train/10falldcug.html. Presentation was recorded on: Tuesday, November 9, 2010, 10:00am – 11:00am


What Is A Metadata Librarian?, Karen Miller, Kristin Martin, Ellen Kathryn Corrigan Nov 2010

What Is A Metadata Librarian?, Karen Miller, Kristin Martin, Ellen Kathryn Corrigan

Faculty Research & Creative Activity

Panel discussion on the role of the metadata librarian in academic libraries. Drawing from their own experiences, three Illinois academic librarians address topics including the training and skills needed, as well as the duties and challenges of the position. Part of the DCUG "Metadata Matters" webinar series.

Webinar recording available via http://www.carli.illinois.edu/mem-serv/mem-train/10falldcug.html. Presentation was recorded on: Tuesday, November 9, 2010, 10:00am – 11:00am


Approval Plans, Discipline Change, And The Importance Of Human Mediated Book Selection, John Steven Brantley Mar 2010

Approval Plans, Discipline Change, And The Importance Of Human Mediated Book Selection, John Steven Brantley

Faculty Research & Creative Activity

This study examines holdings of 21 members of the Association of Research Libraries for books reviewed in American Historical Review. The study asserts that approval plans are inadequate for collecting from small publishers or from scholarship that crosses disciplinary boundaries. Although approval plans increase efficiency in collection development, the need for expert selection cannot be overstated. Results indicated that small publisher’s books were less likely to be in libraries than university press publisher’s books, and that history monographs are frequently classified outside disciplinary boundaries, and are therefore invisible to approval plans that define disciplines based on classification systems.


Approval Plans, Discipline Change, And The Importance Of Human Mediated Book Selection, John Steven Brantley Mar 2010

Approval Plans, Discipline Change, And The Importance Of Human Mediated Book Selection, John Steven Brantley

Steve Brantley

This study examines holdings of 21 members of the Association of Research Libraries for books reviewed in American Historical Review. The study asserts that approval plans are inadequate for collecting from small publishers or from scholarship that crosses disciplinary boundaries. Although approval plans increase efficiency in collection development, the need for expert selection cannot be overstated. Results indicated that small publisher’s books were less likely to be in libraries than university press publisher’s books, and that history monographs are frequently classified outside disciplinary boundaries, and are therefore invisible to approval plans that define disciplines based on classification systems.


Exploring Library 2.0 On The Social Web, Steve Brantley Jan 2010

Exploring Library 2.0 On The Social Web, Steve Brantley

Steve Brantley

Library 2.0 literature has described many of the possibilities Web 2.0 technologies offer libraries. Case studies have assessed local use, but no studies have measured the Library 2.0 phenomenon by searching public social networking sites. This study used library-specific terms to search public social networking sites, blog search engines, and social bookmarking sites for activity associated with librarians and library users. Blog search data about the recentness of activity or the popularity of a blog post indicate Library 2.0 technology has many early adopters but provide less evidence of sustained use. The results follow a curve resembling the 80 / …