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Too much is not enough! : Charleston Conference proceedings, 2013 /

"Almost one hundred presentations from the thirty-third annual Charleston Library Conference (held November 6-9, 2013) are included in this annual proceedings volume. Major themes of the meeting included open access publishing, demand-driven acquisition, the future of university presses, and da...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor Corporativo: Charleston Conference Charleston, S.C.
Otros Autores: Bernhardt, Beth R. (Editor ), Hinds, Leah H. (Editor ), Strauch, Katina P., 1946- (Editor )
Formato: Electrónico Congresos, conferencias eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: [Charleston, South Carolina] : Against the Grain Press, LLC, [2014]
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Introduction / Beth R. Bernhardt and Leah Hinds – Plenary sessions – Librarians in the postdigital information era: reclaiming our rights and responsibilities / Jenica Rogers – Discovery or displacement? A large-scale longitudinal study of the effect of discovery systems on online journal usage / Michael Levine-Clark, Jason Price and John McDonald – Scholarly societies, publishing, and the new information ecology / Robert Kieft, Kathleen Fitzpatrick, Brandon Nordin and Steven C. Wheatley – “Lifelong learning” in 60 minutes / John Dove – If the university is in the computer, where does that leave the library? MOOCs discovered / Meredith Schwartz, Lynn Sutton, Rick Anderson and Meg White – Collection are for collisions: let us design it into the experience / Steven J. Bell – What provosts think librarians should know / Jeanine Stewart, Elizabeth Paul, John Vaughn and James J. O’Donnell – Content, services, and space: the future of the library as lines blur / David Parker, Rick Anderson, Stephen Rhind-Tutt, Nancy Gibbs and Heather Staines – Do not be an invisible library! / Rick Burke, Matt Goldner, Glenn Johnson-Grau and Franny Lee – Open access, public access: policies, implementation, developments, and the future of U.S.-published research / Alicia Wise, Amy Friedlander, Howard Ratner, Judy Ruttenberg and John Wilbanks – Plato’s cave revisited / Bruce Heterick – The British national approach to scholarly communication / Lorraine Estelle – University presses and academic libraries demystified: a conversation / Leila Salisbury, Peter Berkery, Angela Carreño, Ellen Faran and Fred Heath – The long arm of the law / Ann Okerson, William Hannay, Bruce Strauch, Georgia Harper and Madelyn Wessel – Hyde Park corner debate: resolved: the current system of scholarly publishing, whereby publishers receive content for free and then sell it back to libraries at a high price, must fundamentally change / Elizabeth Chapman, Rick Anderson and Jean-Claude Guédon – I hear the train a comin’ / Greg Tananbaum, William Gunn and Lorraine Haricombe –
  • Collection development – 120 to 12: reducing days to shelf with vendor services, catalog on receipt, and automated bibliographic overlay process / Sherle Abramson-Bluhm – Data to decisions: shared print retention in Maine / Becky Albitz and Deb Rollins – Imagine more space in your library! Weeding bound periodicals / Susan M. Andrews and Sandra K. Hayes – Developing a statewide print repository in Florida: the UCF experience with FLARE / Michael Arthur and Ying Zhang – Acquisitions for newbies / Jeff Bailey, Linda Creibaum and Kirk Gordon – An evolving model for consortial print and e-book collections: Triangle Research Libraries Network, Oxford University Press, YBP Library Services pilot / Ann-Marie Breaux, Lisa Croucher, Teddy Gray, Cotina Jones, Rebecca Seger and Luke Swindler – Is the library ready for an emerging field? The case of veterans studies / Marc D. Brodsky and Bruce E. Pencek – The women’s library moves: deeds not words / Elizabeth A. Chapman – Creating a new allocations model for these changing times: challenges, opportunities, and data / Gregory A. Crawford and Lisa German – Shared print on the move: collocating collections / Rebecca D. Crist and Sherri L. Michaels – E-books down under / Tony Davies and Michelle Morgan – This ain’t your papa’s allocation formula! Team-based approaches to monograph collection budgets / Scott A. Gillies and Helen Salmon – Acquiring unique collections: collaborative approaches to metadata / Kira Homo – All hands on deck: creating subject guidelines / Maureen James and Donna Rose – Is there a future for collection development librarians? / Thomas A. Karel – From crisis to opportunity: a licensing audit how-to / Teresa Lee, Max King and Danielle Watters Westbrook – Revising a collection development manual: challenges and opportunities / Joshua M. Lupkin, Tony Bremholm and Eric Wedig – Collection development policies for the twenty-first-century academic library: creating a new model / Steve Alleman and Daniel C. Mack – Too little is not enough / Susan Mitchell, Janet G. Padway and Wisconsin-Joan Robb – Less is more: origins of University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point collection assessment plan / Tom Reich – Transforming a print collection / Brian Schoolar and Fred Rowland – The City University of New York: 24 colleges, 5 boroughs, 1 collection / Curtis Kendrick, Angela Sidman and Susan Vaughn – Managing journals by committee / Edith M. Starbuck, Sharon A. Purtee, Charles P. Kishman, Kristen L. Burgess and Leslie C. Schick – Navigating the flow of value streams to the seas of collection management, acquisitions, and preservation / Greg W. Voelker, Richard J.W. Zwiercan and Michael Frazier –
  • End users – Incorporating usability into the database review process: new lessons and possibilities / Ilana R. Barnes – The quest for the holy grail: too many ERM systems are not enough! / Stephanie P. Hess, Caryl Ward, Margo M. Duncan and Tiffany M. LeMaistre – “Eat yourself full, leave your plate empty”: or why student and faculty appetite for data is like an offensive lineman at a buffet / Mega M. Hurst, Eleanor I. Cook, J. Michael Lindsay and Martha F. Earl – It is not just a document: using government data in teaching and research / Catherine Johnson, Marianne Ryan and Melissa Oakes – E-browsing: serendipity and questions of access and discovery / Kate M. Joranson, Steven I. VanTuyl and Nina Clements – Engaging students through social media / Beth L. McGough and Danielle Salomon – Beyond COUNTER: using IP data to evaluate our users / Timothy R. Morton – Nuanced and timely: capturing collections feedback at point of use / Jane M. Nichols, Richard A. Stoddart and Terry Reese – Meeting user needs and expectations: a library’s quest for discovery / Elyse L. Profera and Jackie Shieh – Discovery of e-resources and media: what will it take? / Carlen Ruschoff –
  • Management and administration – A guided tour of issues and trends: the thirteenth Annual Health Science Lively Lunch / Wendy Bahnsen, Deborah D. Blecic, Robin Champieux, Elizabeth Ketterman, Ramune K. Kubilius, Marysue Schaffer, Anneliese Taylor and Andrea Twiss-Brooks – Working better together: library, publisher, and vendor perspectives / Maria D. Collins, Mary M. Somerville, Nicole Pelsinsky and Aaron Wood – Questions about academic librarians: influencing our academic identity / Shin Freedman – Rebranding the library: generating visibility in the virtual age / Jeremy Frumkin and Rachel Kessler – Rompiendo barreras: reorganizing technical and digital services in a small academic library / Jonathan H. Harwell and Sharon P. Williams – Changing operations of academic libraries / Allen McKiel, Jim Dooley and Robert Murdoch – Proving the value of library collections part II: an interdisciplinary study using citation analysis / Amalia Monroe-Gulick and Lea Hill Currie – It can be done! Planning and process for successful collection management projects / Fran Rosen, Pamela Grudzien, W. Lee Hisle and Patricia A. Tully – Doing more with less: exploring batch processing and outsourcing in academic libraries / Patrick J. Roth and Jeffrey D. Daniels – Pitch perfect: selling to libraries and selling libraries to nonusers / Mark Sandler, David Celano, Melissa Loy-Oakes and Marianne Ryan – Bitter coffee and watered-down bourbon: lessons for libraries from Chase and Sanborn Coffee and Maker’s Mark / Corey Seeman – How is that going to work? Rethinking acquisitions in a next-generation ILS / Kathleen Spring, Megan Drake and Siôn Romaine – Electronic resource management: functional integration in technical services / George Stachokas – You cannot have too much electronic resources staffing / Shade Aladebumoye, Nadine P. Ellero and Paula Sullenger – Resolved, every librarian a subject librarian: implementing subject librarianship across a research library / Steven E. Smith, Deborah L. Thomas and Alan H. Wallace – Venturing from the “back room”: do technical services have a role in information literacy? / Laura Turner and Alejandra Nann – The magic of (a)ffective management / Ryan Weir
  • Patron-driven acquisitions and interlibrary loan – Individual article purchase: catching the wave of the future, or getting pounded on the reef / Douglas K. Bates – Four years of unmediated demand-driven acquisitions and 5,000 e-books later: we gave ‘em what they wanted / Karen S. Fischer and Chris Diaz – Is ILL enough? Examining ILL demand after journal cancellations at three North Carolina universities / Kristin Calvert, William Gee, Janet Malliet and Rachel Fleming – “Access versus ownership” revisited: the Quinnipiac University Libraries short-term loan project / Charles Getchell, David Swords and June DeGennaro – Creating a richer patron-driven acquisitions experience for your users: how the University of Arizona forced three PDA programs to play nicely together / Teresa C. Hazen – Rebuilding the plane while flying: library/vendor strategies for approval plan revision (in a DDA world) / Charles Hillen, Glenn Johnson-Grau and Joan Thompson – Adding PDA for print? Consider your options for implementation / Teri Koch, Andrew Welch and Lisa McDonald – Too much data? Never enough! Cost-efficient collections acquisitions decision making through data analysis / Jaimie Miller, Kat McGrath and Eva Gavaris – “To mediate, or not mediate, that is the question”: setting up Get It Now at Furman University Libraries / Janet Nazar and Tim Bowen – A demand-driven-preferred approval plan / Ann Roll – Are midsize academic libraries on the right e-book train? / Allan Scherlen and John P. Abbott – Collective collection building and DDA / Kerry Scott, Jim Dooley and Martha Hruska – Redesigning workflows and implementing demand-drive acquisition at Virginia Tech: one year later / Connie Stovall, Edward Lener and Tracy Gilmore – Beyond demand driven: incorporating multiple tools in a consortial collection strategy / Karen H. Wilhoit
  • Scholarly communication – 3-D printing, copyright, and fair use: what should we know? / Posie Aagaard and Michael Kolitsky – Support when it counts: library roles in public access to federally funded research / Kristine M. Alpi, William M. Cross and Hilary M. Davis – Subject librarian initiative at the University of Central Florida Libraries: collaboration amongst research and information services, acquisitions and collections services, and the office of scholarly communication / Barbara G. Tierney and Michael Arthur – Modeling a shared national cross digital repository / Jean-Gabriel Bankier – A foray into library digital publishing: the British Virginia Project at Virginia Commonwealth University / Kevin Farley – Metadata and open access: reliably finding content and finding reliable content / Sommer Browning, Jean-Claude Guédon and Laurie Kaplan – Herding e-cats: emerging standards in electronic book and journal publishing and management / Betty Landesman – SelfPub 2.0 / Mitchell Davis [and others] – Publarians and lubishers: role bending in the new scholarly communications ecosystem / Nancy Maron, Sylvia Miller, Charles Watkinson and Anne Kenney – Increasing the discoverability of institutional video: a survey of current trends and best practices / Robert Murdoch – Opportunities and challenges of data publications: a case from Purdue / David Scherer, Lisa Zilinski and Courtney Matthews
  • Techie issues – Experiencing “iPads for all”: results from a library-wide mobile technology program / Michelle Armstrong and Peggy S. Cooper – From digits to diagrams: using infographics to inform database retention and cancellation decisions / Calida A. Barboza – Alma in the cloud: implementation through the eyes of acquisitions / Denise Branch – Awash in e-journal data: what it is, where it is, and what can be done with it (is it “too much” or “not enough?”) / David P. Brennan and Nancy J. Butkovich – Publishers and libraries: sharing metadata between communities / Michelle Durocher – An alternative mechanism for the delivery of scholarly journal articles: ReadCube access at the University of Utah / Phill Jones and Mark M. England – Contemplating e-scores: open ruminations on the e-score, the patron, the library, and the publisher / Lisa Hooper – Excelling with Excel: advanced Excel functions for collection analysis / Denise Pan and Gabrielle Wiersma – Using augmented reality as a discovery tool / Jolanda-Pieta van Arnhem and Jerry M. Spiller.