Over one hundred presentations from the 36th annual Charleston Library Conference (held November 1-5, 2016) are included in this annual proceedings volume. Major themes of the meeting included data visualization, streaming video, analysis and assessment, demand-driven acquisition, and open access publishing. While the Charleston meeting remains a core one for acquisitions librarians in dialog with publishers and vendors, the breadth of coverage of this volume reflects the fact that this conference is now one of the major venues for leaders in the publishing and library communities to shape strategy and prepare for the future. Almost 2, 000 delegates attended the 2016 meeting, ranging from the staff of small public library systems to the CEOs of major corporations. This fully indexed, copyedited volume provides a rich source for the latest evidence-based research and lessons from practice in a range of information science fields. Contributors comprise leaders in the library, publishing, and vendor communities.
Jadual kandungan
Plenary Sessions
Access to Freely Available Journal Articles: Gold, Green, and Rogue Open Access Across the Disciplines, by Michael Levine-Clark, John Mc Donald, and Jason Price
Building the Knowledge School, by R. David Lankes
The Evolution of E-Books, by Mitchell Davis, David Durant, and James O’Donnell
Hyde Park Debate Resolved: APC-Funded Open Access Is Antithetical to the Values of Librarianship, by Rick Anderson, Alison Scott, Michael Levine-Clark
Working in Partnership to Support Quality Research, by Jayne Marks
Libraries as Convener, Enabler, Distributor, Advocate, and Archive in the Future Knowledge Economy, by James G. Neal
The Devil Is in the Details: Challenges of Collaborative Collecting, by Judith Russell
Reimagining Our World at Planetary Scale: The Big Data Future of Our Libraries, by Kalev Leetaru
The Long Arm of the Law, by Ann Okerson, Mark Seeley, and Bill Hannay
Update on Industry Trends and Issues, by Gary Price, Rick Anderson, Maria Bonn
Who’s Faster, a Pirate or a Librarian?, by Adam Chesler, Scott Ahlberg, Carolyn Caffrey Gardner, Georgios Papadopoulos, and Heather Wilson
You Can’t Preserve What You Don’t Have—Or Can You? Libraries as Infrastructure for Perpetual Access to Intellectual Output, by Anja Smit
The Long Arm of the Law, by Bill Hannay
Is a Gold Open Access World Viable for Research Universities?, by Greg Tananbaum, Carol Tenopir, and Ivy Anderson
Budget/Fundraising/Allocation Formulas
Stretching Your Dollars: Saving on Online Content, by Linda Creibaum and Jeff Bailey
Budgeting in an Academic Library: A Lively Lunch Discussion, by Karin Wikoff
Where Is the Library Budget Going? Using ILS Fund Codes and Reports for Fiscal Accountability, by Debbi A. Smith
How a New Library System Changed the Way We Think About Acquisitions and Collection Development, by Thomas A. Karel and Bonnie Powers
Collection Development—Analysis and Assessment
Efficient Deselection and Other Stories: A Fellowship at UNC Charlotte, by Stephen G. Krueger
Time to Take New Measures: Developing a Cost-Per-Cited-Reference Metric for the Assessment of E-Journal Collections, by Megan G. Kilb, Virginia B. Martin, and Tessa L. Minchew
An Infographic Is Worth a Thousand Words: Using Data Visualization to Engage Faculty in Collection Strategies, by Beth D. Bohstedt
Rolling Out a Database Review: Initiating a Comprehensive Database Review at the University of Maryland Libraries, by Leigh Ann De Pope and Margaret Z. Saponaro
Valuing Consortial Resources: A Framework for Assessment, by Genya O’Gara, Madeline Kelly, Julie Kane, Anne Osterman, Cheryl Duncan, Crystal Newell, and Beth Blanton-Kent
Assessing the Books We Didn’t Buy (the Sequel), by Erika L. Johnson, Glenn Johnson-Grau, and Rice Majors
Keeping Up Accessibility Practices and How It Relates to Purchasing and Collection Development in Academic Libraries: A Case Study at the College of Staten Island Library, by Kerry A. Falloon
Collection Dashboards for Selectors, by Lindsay A. Cronk and Wenli Gao
Apples to Oranges: Comparing Streaming Video Platforms, by Steven Milewski and Monique Threatt
Rolling With a Purpose, by Ramune K. Kubilius, Deborah Blecic, Greg Randall Watts, Susan B. Clark, Elizabeth Hinton, David Parker, and Taney Shondel
Extreme Makeover: How We Decreased Our Collection by 40% and Simultaneously Increased It by 50% in 10 Months, by Lydia A. Sampson, Amy Thurlow, and Del Hornbuckle
Rolling the Dice and Playing With Numbers: Statistical Realities and Responses, by Natasha Cooper, Kimberly Nolan, Mike Poulin, Nancy Turner
Albatross: Rolling on a Sea of Data, by Annette Bailey, Tracy Gilmore, Leslie O’Brien, Anthony D. Wright de Hernandez
Housing Diversity in Children’s Literature, by Carla Earhart
To Buy or Not to Buy: Rolling Into the Future With ILLiad, by Alison E. Lampley
A Tale of Two Serials Cancellations, by Mike Olson, David Killian, Debbie Bezanson, Robin Kinder
Mapping Change: An Examination of Curricular Shifts and Collection Impact, by Michael A. Matos and Jenise R. Overmier
Book Usage Is Rollin’ Down: Multifaceted Assessment of Monograph Collection Performance to Optimize Purchase Decisions, by Tricia L. Clayton and Skye C. Hardesty
The Librarian’s Survival Guide to the “Big Deal”: Tools for Unbundling, by Samuel Cassady, Doug Lynch, Leanne Olson, Alie Visser
Do We Approve? New Models for Assessing Approval Plans, by Sarah Tudesco, Julie Linden, and Daniel Dollar
Collection Development—Discovery of Collections
Rolling With the Wheels of Commerce: The Challenges of Business and Industry-Based Resources, by Natasha Cooper, Peter Mc Cracken, Darby Orcutt, and Ellen Rotenberg
Adding and Slashing Serial, by Zebulin Evelhoch
From the Concept to Results: A Case Study on the Collection Development for the ODC—Opening Day Collection at Qatar National Library, by Henry Owino and Katarzyna Helena Dudek
Implications of BIBFRAME and Linked Data for Libraries and Publishers, by Michele Casalini
Tower of Babel: New Realities in Foreign Language Acquisitions, by Michele Casalini
Preserve Local and Institution-Specific Data During Migration to a Network Cataloging Environment, by Li Ma, Rod Bustos, Sandra Bandy, Melissa Johnson
The World of ISSN—Standards Revisions and Related Projects, by Laurie Kaplan and Regina Romano Reynolds
“We’ll Do It Live”: Building Access to Video Content Based on Freedoms of Use, by Christine Fruin, Trey Shelton, Aimee Barrett, Allison Jai O’Dell
Collection Development—Demand-Driven Acquisitions
Boom or Bust: Short-Term Loans Five Years Later, by Sherri Brown, Lea Currie, and Andi Back
Rolling with PDA and DDA: How Academic Libraries Can Use Patron-Driven and Demand-Driven Acquisition Techniques to Build Library Collections With Minimal Management and Budget, by Kerry A. Falloon
A Model for Patron-Driven Acquisition of Print Music Scores: From Conception to Reality, by Alan Asher, Trey Shelton, Jason Heckathorn, Aimee Barrett
DDA Management With Predictive Modeling, by John Vickery
Collection Development—E-Books
Open Access, Open Access, How Does Your Catalog Grow? Access and Usage All in a Virtual Row!, by David W. Schuster and Susan J. Martin
Nobody Knows and Nobody Is Responsible: Issues in E-Books Workflow and Access, by Tina M. Adams and Paromita Biswas
Post-Acquisition Management and the Issue of Inaccessibility, by Beth Caruso
Ordering E-Books From a Print Book Vendor, by Jennifer R. Culley and Cindy Human
We’re on a Roll: Transforming E-Book Acquisitions in a Shifting Budget Landscape, by Sheldon D. Armstrong, Ellen E. George, Arielle R. Lomness and Sally J. Taylor
The Odd Couple: Teaming Up to Reduce Textbook Costs for Students, by Teresa C. Hazen and Niamh A. Wallace
Digital Scholarship
Scholarly Needs for Text Analysis Resources: A User Assessment Study for the Hathi Trust Research Center, by Harriett E. Green, Eleanor F. Dickson, Leanne R. Nay, Ewa Zegler-Poleska
End Users/Use Statistics
Moving the Library: Bringing Resources to Students (Using a Learning Management System), by Karen Venturella Malnati, Steven Shapiro, Sara Tarpley
Liaison Librarians in the Know: Methods for Discovering Faculty Research and Teaching Needs, by Nora B. Wood and Melanie Griffin
Strengthening Regional Collections One Request at a Time: Using Resource Sharing Technology to Facilitate Coordinated Collection Development, by Shannon Pritting and Kate Ross
Management/Leadership
An Electronic Resources Workflow Is Worth a Thousand Words, by Christine Davidian and Lauren Orner
Stay Calm and Cover Your Assessment: Creating a Culture of Assessment on a Shoestring, by Audrey Powers, Susan Silver, and Matthew C. Torrence
Bridging the Divide: Collaborating Across Departments to Improve Communication and Collections, by Nancy Fawley and Laura Gewissler
Out of the Box/Entrepreneurship
Improving Student Success: Arkansas State’s Partnership With Credo and Regional High Schools, by Jeff Bailey, April Sheppard, and Ian Singer
Catching Their Attention! Using Nonformal Information Sources to Captivate and Motivate Undergraduates During Library Sessions, by Jacqueline Howell Nash
Project Management Office to the Rescue: Aligning Workforce and Resources With Library Vision and Delivering Results, by Anastasia Guimaraes and Zheng (John) Wang
Lifting All Boats: Fostering a Community of Practice for Student Publishers, by Laura Leichum, Kate Dohe, Gillian Berchowitz, Marc Blanc
Professional Development
Change It Up: Growing Your Career in a Wildly Different Organization, by Betsy Appleton, Tina Herman Buck, and Carol Seiler
Tale of Two Liaison Programs: University of Central Florida Libraries and Louisiana State University Libraries Partnering for Subject Librarian Excellence, by Barbara G. Tierney and Lois Kuyper-Rushing
The Nuts and Bolts of Supporting Change and Transformation for Research Librarians, by Mira Waller and Heidi J. Tebbe
What Are Subject Liaisons When “Collections” and “Subjects” Don’t Matter?, by Darby Orcutt, Mira Waller, Scott A. Warren
Scholarly Communication
Humanities Collaborations and Research Practices: Investigating New Modes of Collaborative Humanities Scholarship, by Harriett Green, Angela Courtney, and Megan Senseney
COUNTER: Consistency, Clarity, Simplification, and Continuous Maintenance, by Anne Osterman, Lorraine Estelle, and Oliver Pesch
Is Small Beautiful? The Position of Independent Scholarly Publishers in an Environment of Rapid Industry Consolidation, by Charlie Remy, Steve Cohn, Richard Gallagher, and George Leaman
Social Scholarship? Academic Communications in the Digital Age, by Steven Weiland
The Sky’s the Limit: Scholarly Communication, Digital Initiatives, Institutional Repositories, and Subject Librarians, by Sarah A. Norris, Lee Dotson, Barbara Tierney, Richard H. Harrison II
Wrangling Services Contracts in Libraries, by Michael Rodriguez
Supporting Research Information Management in the Research University: Partnerships, Challenges, and Possibilities, by Rebecca Bryant, Beth Sandore Namachchivaya, Julie Speer
Technology and Trends
Wrangle Your Data Like a Pro With the Data Processing Power of Python, by Geoffrey P. Timms and Jeremy M. Brown
Head in the Clouds: Will a Next-Generation Library Management System Bring Clear Vision? , by Denise M. Branch
A Tale of Two Campuses: Open Educational Resources in Florida and California Academic Institutions, by Alejandra Nann, Julia Hess, Sarah Norris, John Raible
Finding the Right Fit for Article Delivery: Using Resource Sharing Technology to Provide Enhanced Access, by Shannon Pritting
Moving From Reclaiming to Reclaimed: The Big Picture and a Case Study of a Trending Initiative, by Bobby L. Hollandsworth
Index
Mengenai Pengarang
Beth R. Bernhardt is the assistant dean for Collection Management and Scholarly Communications at the Jackson Library, University of North Carolina at Greensboro; Leah H. Hinds is assistant director of the Charleston Conference; and Katina P. Strauch is the assistant dean of Technical Services and Collection Development at the Addlestone Library, College of Charleston, founder of the Charleston Conference, and editor of Against the Grain, the journal linking publishers, vendors, and librarians, which is issued six times a year.