Managing Etds: The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly, 2018 University of Vermont
Managing Etds: The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly, Dan Tam Do, Laura Gewissler
Charleston Library Conference
Mandating contribution of theses and dissertations (TDs) to university archives and their electronic equivalents (ETDs) to an institutional repository (IR) is common practice. Optimizing workflows for archival print copies while managing electronic copies in an IR can be challenging given such factors as embargoes and the skill sets required to ensure theses and dissertations are accessible, discoverable, and ultimately safely stashed where they belong. As rational processes were gradually developed at the University of Vermont, pitfalls and breakthroughs presented themselves. This article relates our experience launching an ETD mandate, including campus outreach initiatives and improvements to the various related processes …
Books On Demand: A New(Er) Look For Print Monographs Acquisitions, 2018 National Louis University
Books On Demand: A New(Er) Look For Print Monographs Acquisitions, Paolo P. Gujilde, Cara Huwieler, Debra Skinner
Charleston Library Conference
How do you respond to increasing library materials cost? Do you still provide enough, fewer, or more print books? How do you sustain access to library resources? In the past few years, Zach S. Henderson Library at Georgia Southern University faced these questions and more. As many libraries have done, Henderson Library responded by decreasing monograph acquisitions to allocate additional funds for serial acquisition. However, these challenges provided opportunities for the library to be creative in purchasing monographs. One of the approaches the library chose to explore was establishing a print demand-driven acquisition (pDDA) or Books on Demand program with …
Showcasing E-Book Platform Features, 2018 North Carolina State University
Showcasing E-Book Platform Features, Shaun R. Bennett, Xiaoyan Song, Danica M. Lewis
Charleston Library Conference
Faculty, students, and library staff are making increasingly nuanced use of e‐book collections, but the variance in e‐book attributes between publishers and platforms necessitates much more specific information about the various features of e‐books in order for patrons to make informed decisions. Librarians have been increasingly tasked with fielding questions ranging from the stability of links in syllabi, to the number of simultaneous users, download formats, soft ware requirements, and support for assistive technology. These new information needs have led the North Carolina State University (NCSU) Libraries to develop a public‐facing Web tool designed to help make the features, permissions, …
You May Own It . . . But Can They Find It? A Panel Discussion: Part 3 Of Panel Presentation: Collection-Level Cooperative Cataloging, 2018 Anderson University
You May Own It . . . But Can They Find It? A Panel Discussion: Part 3 Of Panel Presentation: Collection-Level Cooperative Cataloging, Jeff O. Siemon
Charleston Library Conference
Have you purchased e-book or e-journal collections where the metadata was not provided or was incomplete? Can users find all of your collections? If metadata is unavailable, researchers can’t find your materials, resulting in lower usage.
Library directors and electronic resources managers are encouraged to add metadata specialists to their e-resources teams by reassigning catalogers. Catalogers are encouraged to develop skills for cataloging collections, in addition to their skills cataloging individual items.
"Efficient" Thesis & Dissertation Workflows With Limited Resources, 2018 University of the Pacific
"Efficient" Thesis & Dissertation Workflows With Limited Resources, Michele Gibney
Michele Gibney
The University of the Pacific started an institutional repository, Scholarly Commons, at the end of 2016. Prior to this, theses/dissertations (T/Ds) had been submitted to ProQuest starting in 1960 and prior to that the University collected print copies in the Library starting in 1912. The print collection of T/Ds at Pacific was 3,188 in December 2016.
The goals starting in 2017 were as follows
- Duplicate all current ProQuest ETDs in to the IR with restricted access
- Set up the ProQuest submission form moving forwards to gain permission from students to upload to the IR
- Digitize all print copies in …
Creating Community: Drawing On Staff Expertise To Break Down Silos In Academic Libraries, 2018 University of Arkansas
Creating Community: Drawing On Staff Expertise To Break Down Silos In Academic Libraries, Lori Birrell, Marcy A. Strong
Collaborative Librarianship
A discussion of the strategies and outcomes behind a special collections and metadata collaboration effort at the University of Rochester, River Campus Libraries, to make finding aids more discoverable and interoperable. Through the use of a project charter and specific goals, the project managers sought to create buy-in and build a culture of teamwork amongst the participants, resulting in both improved finding aids and a model for collaborative work across departments.
Librarians’ Roles In Establishing A Multidisciplinary Research Institute, 2018 Colorado State University-Pueblo
Librarians’ Roles In Establishing A Multidisciplinary Research Institute, Elizabeth Christian, Kathryn Balek, Sandy Hudock, Rhonda Gonzales
Collaborative Librarianship
This article describes how four librarians contributed to the founding and first-year activities of a multidisciplinary research institute at a regional comprehensive university. The Institute of Cannabis Research (ICR) is the first multidisciplinary research institute on cannabis, an emerging and often controversial field. As faculty representatives on the institute’s steering committee and working groups, librarians were able to leverage interdisciplinary expertise to assist in organizing and disseminating cannabis research. Examples of the reciprocal benefit to both the institution and the library are shared.
Final Recommendations Of The Joint Mla/Olac 33x/34x Task Group, 2018 Minnesota State University, Mankato
Final Recommendations Of The Joint Mla/Olac 33x/34x Task Group, Joint Mla/Olac 33x/34x Task Group
OLAC Publications and Training Materials
The initial impetus for the formation of the task group came from Jay Weitz's request for input from both our groups as he was working on the OCLC-MARC update 2017, particularly in reference to the 23 additions to the Genre/Form Code and Term Source Codes list (http://www.loc.gov/standards/sourcelist/genre-form.html). This request led to the realization that best practices of both groups varied in regard to MARC 344 and 347. It seemed like a good idea to have both groups discuss these same issues together. The group considered 3 issues:
- Inconsistent treatment of RDA and non-RDA terms in MARC 344 and 347
- Consideration …
Law Library Blog (September 2018): Legal Beagle's Blog Archive, 2018 Roger Williams University
Law Library Blog (September 2018): Legal Beagle's Blog Archive, Roger Williams University School Of Law
Law Library Newsletters/Blog
No abstract provided.
Volume 38, Number 3, September 2018 Olac Newsletter, 2018 University of California, Santa Cruz
Volume 38, Number 3, September 2018 Olac Newsletter, Marcia Barrett, Debra Spidal, Richard N. Leigh, Jan Mayo, Yoko Kudo, Jay Weitz, Lisa Romano
OLAC Newsletters
Digitized September 2018 issue of the OLAC Newsletter.
Linked Data In The Library & Openrefine, 2018 University of Central Florida
Linked Data In The Library & Openrefine, Sai Deng
Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works
Session on linked data and OpenRefine in "Stay Savvy with Scholarly Communication Brown Bag Lunch" at the University of Central Florida Libraries. It covers the following topics: Why does linked data matter? How can libraries and librarians embrace linked data? Linked Data in the Library and the Web (Cases, Standards and Vocabularies); Linked Data Design Principles, Building Blocks & Creation; Current Digital Repositories and Linked Data; Data Editing Tool: OpenRefine (Features, Examples); Possible Ways to Get Involved.
A Low-Cost Framework For The Digital Preservation Of Indigenous Artwork And Languages: An Australian Case Study Review, 2018 Edith Cowan University
A Low-Cost Framework For The Digital Preservation Of Indigenous Artwork And Languages: An Australian Case Study Review, Derani N. Dissanayake, David M. Cook
Dr. David M Cook
Digital Processing Framework, 2018 University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Digital Processing Framework, Erin Faulder, Susanne Annand, Sally Debauche, Martin Gengerbach, Karla Irwin, Julie Musson, Shira Peltzman, Kate Tasker, Laura Uglean Jackson, Dorothy Waugh
Library Faculty Publications
The Digital Processing Framework suggests a minimum processing standard for digital archival content. The framework brings together archival processing practice with digital preservation activities. Ten practitioners in the field designed this framework to be practical, usable, and adaptable to local institutional settings.
Creating Dois With Datacite For Ingestion Into Bepress Digital Commons, 2018 James Madison University
Creating Dois With Datacite For Ingestion Into Bepress Digital Commons, Rebecca B. French
Libraries
This presentation provides a brief overview of a project to develop a workflow and tools for batch creation of DOIs for JMU Libraries' Digital Collections materials using the DataCite API and Python and XSLT scripts.
Musselman Library Passport: Extended First-Year Orientation Activity, 2018 Gettysburg College
Musselman Library Passport: Extended First-Year Orientation Activity, Mallory R. Jallas, Kevin Moore
All Musselman Library Staff Works
First-year students completing Musselman Library’s portion of the fall 2018 Charting Your Course (CYC) orientation received one of these passports before beginning the activity. After visiting each of the Library departments and learning about work staff members do there, students received a passport stamp in order to track their progress.
Information Outlook, July/August 2018, 2018 San Jose State University
Information Outlook, July/August 2018, Special Libraries Association
Information Outlook, 2018
Volume 22, Issue 4
Orcid Ir Integration, 2018 LYRASIS
Orcid Ir Integration, Sheila Rabun
Northwest IR User Group
ORCID US Community consortium was created to support ORCID adoption and use in the US as well as to provide affordable ORCID membership and tech/community support for US institutions. In this discussion we will focus on ORCID integration in IRs.
Oer In An Institutional Repository, 2018 Linn-Benton Community College
Oer In An Institutional Repository, Jane Sandberg
Northwest IR User Group
Finding and evaluating existing open educational resources (OER) offer particular challenges to faculty and librarians. The OER discovery process is distributed across several repositories and search engines. OER searches tend to include a variety of different learning objects presented in a wide range of formats, which can be difficult to evaluate and compare.
This lightning talk will discuss the steps that Linn-Benton Community College took to improve the discovery process for open courses in its institutional repository. It will discuss the steps we took to include these courses in a popular OER search tool and facilitate the evaluation process by …
Adapting Digital Commons To Unusual Collections, 2018 University of Idaho College of Law
Adapting Digital Commons To Unusual Collections, Emma Altman
Northwest IR User Group
The University of Idaho Law Library houses a collection of ~10,000 (and growing) digital records and briefs from the Idaho State Supreme Court, but this unique resource had a difficult time finding a user and staff friendly home. This lightning talk will address how our library has adjusted the book gallery feature of Digital Commons (DC) to house this collection in an attractive, accessible manner. Attendees will learn about our successful and less successful tweaks to the DC framework and will be encouraged to adapt our experience to their own unusual collections.
Organizing Your Organization, 2018 Providence St. Joseph Health
Organizing Your Organization, Heather Martin, Daina Dickman
Northwest IR User Group
What to do when designing a repository for an institution that doesn’t already have a predefined structure or taxonomy by which to organize or make ‘browsable’ your collections? Conference attendees who come from complex institutions without clearly set “Departments” will be interested to hear how Providence St Joseph Health (PSJH) created an organizational structure and taxonomy during the implementation of their Digital Commons IR. By considering existing classification schemes (LC and NLM), internal naming practices, and consulting small stakeholder focus groups PSJH is making their publications easily browsable by both internal and potential external users.