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- Collaboration (5)
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- Consortia (2)
- Education (2)
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- : Ebooks; Funding models; Publisher relations; Library consortia; Collaboration (1)
- Academic library (1)
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- Bibliometrics; Collaborative librarianship; Publication analysis; Authorship patterns; Degree of collaboration; Research trends (1)
- Black Panthers; Mass incarceration; Art exhibits; Criminal justice (1)
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- Book raider; Texas Tech University; Library apps; Interlibrary loan (1)
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- Communication; Virtual Reference; Job Satisfaction (1)
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- Community of practice; Academic library; School library; Public library; Special library (1)
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- E-books (1)
- ESL (English as a Second Language); Information literacy; Metaphor (1)
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Articles 1 - 30 of 37
Full-Text Articles in Library and Information Science
The Liaison Connection Issue 8, University Of Denver, University Libraries
The Liaison Connection Issue 8, University Of Denver, University Libraries
The Liaison Connection
Fall 2015 issue of the Library Liaison Advisory Group newsletter from the University of Denver, University Libraries. The newsletter provides information about library collections, services, and research instruction.
How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bits: Archival Motivation In The Digital Age, Heather Ryan, Jane Nelson
How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bits: Archival Motivation In The Digital Age, Heather Ryan, Jane Nelson
Library and Information Science: Student Scholarship
Why do people become archivists? Historically (and anecdotally) it was a deep love of musty, old records that drew people to the profession. While there have been many other motivating forces that inspired would-be archivists, it is most often that one hears of people seeking jobs in archives for love of “the stuff,” as evidenced in Kate Thiemer’s blog post, Honest tips for wannabe archivists (2012).
As a result of the continually advancing presence of digitized and born digital archival collections, the physical nature of archival “stuff” is changing. While there remains the physical imprint of digital information on floppy …
E-Book Usage On A Global Scale: Patterns, Trends, And Opportunities, Michael Levine-Clark
E-Book Usage On A Global Scale: Patterns, Trends, And Opportunities, Michael Levine-Clark
University Libraries: Faculty Scholarship
This study examines worldwide usage of over 600,000 e-books from Ebook Library (EBL) and ebrary. Using multiple modes of analysis, the study shows that there are variations in usage by geographic region as well as by subject. The study examines usage in relation to availability of titles, different types of usage per session, usage of the top ten percent of titles, and intensive and extensive use. These patterns can be used for benchmarking and as a model for local e-book studies.
Library And Information Science Education And Escience: The Current State Of Ala Accredited Mls/Mlis Programs In Preparing Librarians And Information Professionals For Escience Needs, Hanna Schmillen
Library and Information Science: Capstone Projects
The purpose of this study is multifaceted: 1) to describe eScience research in acomprehensive way; 2) to help library and information specialists understand the realm of eScience research and the information needs of the community and demonstrate the importance of LIS professionals within the eScience domain; 3) and to explore the current state of curricular content of ALA accredited MLS/MLIS programs to understand the extent to which they prepare new professionals within eScience librarianship. The literature review focuses heavily on eScientists and other data-driven researchers’ information service needs in addition to demonstrating how and why librarians and information specialists can …
Librarians And The Institutional Review Board (Irb): Relationships Matter, Laureen Cantwell, Doris Van Kampen-Breit
Librarians And The Institutional Review Board (Irb): Relationships Matter, Laureen Cantwell, Doris Van Kampen-Breit
Collaborative Librarianship
Libraries and librarians have a variety of relationships with Institutional Review Boards (IRBs). These relationships differ by the institution type, engagement level with the IRB, and the type of library within which a librarian works. What roles, then, might a librarian fill with regard to an institution’s IRB? This article provides a short history and an overview of the purpose of the IRB, and proposes three possible roles for librarians: that of the lead investigator in their own research, that of a reviewer for the IRB, and that of an ex-officio member or research liaison serving as an information consultant …
Cross Collaborations: Librarians Stepping Out Of The Box To Serve Students, Denelle Eads, Rebecca Freeman, Valerie A. Freeman
Cross Collaborations: Librarians Stepping Out Of The Box To Serve Students, Denelle Eads, Rebecca Freeman, Valerie A. Freeman
Collaborative Librarianship
Despite declarations that libraries are the heart of the institution, they are frequently overlooked or taken for granted. Collaborations are a way librarians can more fully participate in the culture of the institutions they serve. A review of the literature finds an emphasis on collaboration with faculty members, both full-time and adjunct, but there is less emphasis on the many departments in academia that do not have faculty members. As academic librarians position themselves at the heart of their institutions, it is vital to work with all departments and not focus solely on faculty-based departments. This article highlights the literature …
Does Virtual Communication Equal Virtual Collaboration? The Influence Of Technology On Job Satisfaction And Collaboration, Kathy Butler, Michael Perini
Does Virtual Communication Equal Virtual Collaboration? The Influence Of Technology On Job Satisfaction And Collaboration, Kathy Butler, Michael Perini
Collaborative Librarianship
Library professionals are facing the same increasing pervasiveness of technology as other professions. Technology gives librarians positive new tools for managing and delivering information, but also changes modes of communication and collaboration with our patrons. This qualitative study explores the connection between the influx of virtual communication and its impact on collaboration and job satisfaction among academic librarians.
Who’S Out There? The Power Of Spatial Data, Lori Bowen Ayre
Who’S Out There? The Power Of Spatial Data, Lori Bowen Ayre
Collaborative Librarianship
No abstract provided.
Scholarship As A Conversation: A Metaphor For Librarian-Esl Instructor Collaboration, Karen Bordonaro
Scholarship As A Conversation: A Metaphor For Librarian-Esl Instructor Collaboration, Karen Bordonaro
Collaborative Librarianship
Invoking the metaphor of scholarship as a conversation offers academic librarians an excellent way to connect information literacy to university ESL (English as a second language) classes. This article describes how this particular metaphor has appeared in the literature of librarianship, and it suggests that this metaphor offers a deeper way to understand and promote information literacy to ESL students. It connects this deeper understanding of information literacy to ESL writing and speaking instructional approaches. These approaches include understanding scholarship as both a formal written end product and as a writing process in the creation, production and dissemination of knowledge. …
Finding Joy In Our Profession: John F. Helmer On Library Consortia, John F. Helmer, Valerie Horton
Finding Joy In Our Profession: John F. Helmer On Library Consortia, John F. Helmer, Valerie Horton
Collaborative Librarianship
John F. Helmer, executive director of the Orbis Cascade Alliance, has had an amazing career. In this interview with Valerie Horton, Helmer shares his insights, humor, and deep understanding of our profession. John sees the best of library collaborations as “entrepreneurial, spirited, ambitious,” and leading to the development of critically important working relationships. John offers many nuggets of wisdom for collaborative leaders in this interview. His insights into failure should be required reading in our profession. He argues that if you aren’t failing, you aren’t trying hard enough.
Utah Accessible Tutorials: Creating A Collaborative Project Between A Public And Academic Library, Carrie Rogers-Whitehead, Lorelei Rutledge, Jacob Reed
Utah Accessible Tutorials: Creating A Collaborative Project Between A Public And Academic Library, Carrie Rogers-Whitehead, Lorelei Rutledge, Jacob Reed
Collaborative Librarianship
This article describes collaboration between a research librarian and application developer at the University of Utah with a teen services librarian at Salt Lake County Libraries. Our group came together as part of the Innovative Librarians Explore, Apply, and Discover-Utah (ILEAD Utah) program. We discuss how we worked together to create and develop a project, the opportunities and difficulties we faced, and offer suggestions for how to build similar partnerships successfully.
Conceptualizing Classified Staff As Collaborative Partners, Michael Perini
Conceptualizing Classified Staff As Collaborative Partners, Michael Perini
Collaborative Librarianship
Academic librarians have varied roles within the higher education community and librarian perceptions of these duties establish their professional identity. Applying Whitchurch’s “blended professional” model of professional identity, the findings of this case study of librarian perceptions of their roles and functions suggest that academic librarians fail to consider all of the collaborative partnerships available to them due to institutional restrictions or perceived structural and hierarchical constraints. This discussion analyzes the effect of these impediments on academic librarians and advocates utilizing classified staff in a more substantive manner.
Cohort-Based Technology Training: A Collaboration With Faculty Grounded In Diffusion Of Innovation And Faculty Learning Community Theories, Gretel Stock-Kupperman
Cohort-Based Technology Training: A Collaboration With Faculty Grounded In Diffusion Of Innovation And Faculty Learning Community Theories, Gretel Stock-Kupperman
Collaborative Librarianship
Librarians excel at teaching patrons how to use resources for their research and learning needs. Librarians can introduce these skills into faculty technology training since faculty research needs often intersect with their technology interest, be it mobile devices, technology-enhanced teaching strategies, or tools that support their research. The purpose of this paper is to explore a framework for collaboration in technology training through the lens of a “faculty learning community” and a “diffusion of innovation theory.” This will be examined through a case study of the author’s library, where a multi-year intentional and systematic collaboration with instructional design and Information …
The Holy Grail Of Library Automation: The Shared Library System, Lori Bowen Ayre
The Holy Grail Of Library Automation: The Shared Library System, Lori Bowen Ayre
Collaborative Librarianship
No abstract provided.
Review Of Library Consortia: Models For Collaboration And Sustainability, Anne Slaughter
Review Of Library Consortia: Models For Collaboration And Sustainability, Anne Slaughter
Collaborative Librarianship
No abstract provided.
Bottling The “Collaboration Thing”, George Needham
Bottling The “Collaboration Thing”, George Needham
Collaborative Librarianship
No abstract provided.
Communication In Library Consortia, Matt Lee, Valerie Horton
Communication In Library Consortia, Matt Lee, Valerie Horton
Collaborative Librarianship
The authors interviewed ten library consortia leaders and studied the communication tools used by a number of consortia. Library consortia employ a broad range of communication tools to share information with their libraries. Different methods are used for different purposes, but a hierarchy of utility emerged from our study. Certain communication vehicles anchored nearly every communication message, some provided secondary support, and others suited highly specialized needs. This paper reviews shared communication methods, highlights communication best practices, and shares unique communication ideas employed by library consortia.
Occam’S Reader: The First Library-Developed Ebook Interlibrary Loan System, Ryan Litsey Litsey, Kenny Ketner Ketner
Occam’S Reader: The First Library-Developed Ebook Interlibrary Loan System, Ryan Litsey Litsey, Kenny Ketner Ketner
Collaborative Librarianship
An ebook interlibrary loan system called “Occam’s Reader” was developed through collaboration among libraries of the Greater Western Library Alliance. The first of its kind, Occam’s Reader has proved to be a great success due in no small measure to thorough planning, testing, implementation and development through 2012 to 2104. A new version of the system, Occam’s Reader 2.0 is planned for later in 2015. As libraries band together to accomplish a collaborative goal, there really is nothing that can hold them back
Home Grown Ebooks: North Carolina’S Collaborative Ebook Pilot Project, Jill Morris
Home Grown Ebooks: North Carolina’S Collaborative Ebook Pilot Project, Jill Morris
Collaborative Librarianship
This article describes how NC LIVE, a large, statewide, multi-type library consortium piloted new models for funding and purchasing a shared ebook collection that concentrated on books published by local publishers. Although the pilot is still being evaluated, the consortium counts the project as a success in that 200 libraries statewide gained unlimited simultaneous user access to more than 1,200 titles not previously available in libraries. NC LIVE is now working with publishers and a platform provider to move the ebook pilot into its next phase as a full-fledged ebook program. The aim of this article is to describe the …
Consortial Ebook Platforms: An Update And Good News, Greg Pronevitz
Consortial Ebook Platforms: An Update And Good News, Greg Pronevitz
Collaborative Librarianship
No abstract provided.
Integrating Communities Of Practice Into Library Services, Jong-Ae Kim
Integrating Communities Of Practice Into Library Services, Jong-Ae Kim
Collaborative Librarianship
Since the notion of community of practice was introduced in the early 1990s, it has been popular in various organizations with the recognition that knowledge sharing is important for organizational learning. It has emerged as a strategic approach to knowledge sharing and an innovative way to foster learning. Considering that the notion of community of practice can provide an intriguing framework for library services, this study explores the implications that community of practice suggests for libraries and the roles that librarians can take to foster communities of practice
Liberated From The Circulation Desk – Now What?, Lori Bowen Ayre
Liberated From The Circulation Desk – Now What?, Lori Bowen Ayre
Collaborative Librarianship
No abstract provided.
Time To Re-Professionalize The Profession, Lori Bowen Ayre
Time To Re-Professionalize The Profession, Lori Bowen Ayre
Collaborative Librarianship
No abstract provided.
Collaborative Librarianship: A Historical Sketch, An Appreciation And Thanks, Ivan Gaetz
Collaborative Librarianship: A Historical Sketch, An Appreciation And Thanks, Ivan Gaetz
Collaborative Librarianship
Collaborative Librarianship moves to its next phase of development as new editors take the helm and the publishing platform moves from Open Journal Systems to the publishing suite of Digital Commons. The new home for management of the journal will be the University of Denver. Thus far, the journal has followed a path of development that has seen steady, impressive growth in readership and, while the geographical focus of the publication remains on the United States, participation of authors and readers has become world-wide. Following a historical sketch of the formation and early development of the journal, members of the …
Book Raider: Connecting Patrons Of Texas Tech University Libraries With Resources Anytime, Anywhere, Ryan Cassidy, Kenny Ketner Ketner, Ryan Litsey Litsey, Matthew Mceniry
Book Raider: Connecting Patrons Of Texas Tech University Libraries With Resources Anytime, Anywhere, Ryan Cassidy, Kenny Ketner Ketner, Ryan Litsey Litsey, Matthew Mceniry
Collaborative Librarianship
Given the mandate of Texas Tech University to expand its research mission, Texas Tech University Libraries developed new library services through the Book Raider project that allows patrons to use mobile apps to check library holdings and to order materials through interlibrary loan. Library literature shows an increasing desire among patrons to use this type of technology and suggests an open door exists for librarians to create these new modes of access and delivery. Book Raider, a collaborative project of several departments of Texas Tech University Libraries, involved the development of various types of apps across several technology platforms, a …
Special Issue On Consortia, Valerie Horton
Special Issue On Consortia, Valerie Horton
Collaborative Librarianship
No abstract provided.
Promoting Innovation: The Wils Model, Andrea Coffin, Stefanie Morrill
Promoting Innovation: The Wils Model, Andrea Coffin, Stefanie Morrill
Collaborative Librarianship
WiLS, a membership organization of over 600 libraries of all types in Wisconsin and beyond, has developed a model to help its member libraries turn their good ideas into innovative services and projects. This paper details what it means to innovate in the current library climate and describes the model, its critical facets, how it promotes innovation, how WiLS has implemented it internally, and ways WiLS has worked to broaden the impact of the model.
Tom Sanville In Conversation, Kathy A. Perry
Tom Sanville In Conversation, Kathy A. Perry
Collaborative Librarianship
Kathy Perry, Director of VIVA (The Virtual Library of Virginia), discusses with Tom Sanville, on the occasion of his retirement in December, 2014, his noted career serving libraries. This includes Sanville’s entrée into the library world through industry, the beginnings of ICOLC, its operations and accomplishments, the ICOLC “grilles,” the world of electronic content licensing, and more.
The Idea Of “Community Of Practice” As Paradigmatic In Library Collaboration, Ivan Gaetz
The Idea Of “Community Of Practice” As Paradigmatic In Library Collaboration, Ivan Gaetz
Collaborative Librarianship
No abstract provided.
A Study Of Authorship Patterns And Collaborative Research In Collaborative Librarianship, 2009-2014, Kotti Thavamani
A Study Of Authorship Patterns And Collaborative Research In Collaborative Librarianship, 2009-2014, Kotti Thavamani
Collaborative Librarianship
This paper presents a bibliometric study of Collaborative Librarianship (CL) during the period of 2009-2014. A total of 223 research contributions and 343 authors were examined by growth of contributions by year and volume, authorship patterns by year and volume, growth of authors by year, authorship patterns, author productivity, authorship patterns by global, most prolific contributors and degree of collaboration. Average number of authors per paper is 1.538. The highest number of author productivity i.e., 0.650. The average degree of author collaboration in the Collaborative Librarianship is 0.354, which clearly indicates its dominance upon single authored contributions.