Beth R. Bernhardt & Leah H. Hinds 
Something’s Gotta Give [EPUB ebook] 
Charleston Conference Proceedings, 2011

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The theme of the 2011 Charleston Conference, the annual event that explores issues in book and serial acquisition, was ‘Something’s Gotta Give.’ The conference, held November 2-5, 2011, in Charleston, SC, included 9 pre-meetings, more than 10 plenaries, and over 120 concurrent sessions. The theme reflected the increasing sense of strain felt by both libraries and publishers as troubling economic trends and rapid technological change challenge the information supply chain. What part of the system will buckle under this pressure? Who will be the winners and who will be the losers in this stressful environment? The Charleston Conference continues to be a major event for information exchange among librarians, vendors, and publishers. As it begins its fourth decade, the Conference is one of the most popular international meetings for information professionals, with almost 1, 500 delegates. Conference attendees continue to remark on the informative and thought-provoking sessions. The Conference provides a collegial atmosphere where librarians, vendors, and publishers talk freely and directly about issues facing libraries and information providers. In this volume, the organizers of the meeting are pleased to share some of the learning experiences that they-and other attendees-had at the conference.
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表中的内容

Preface

Introduction

Plenary Sessions

The Semantic Web for Publishers and Libraries, by Michael Keller

Data Papers in the Network Era, by Mackenzie Smith

Everything We See Hides Another: Coping with Hidden Collections in the 21st Century Library, by Mark Dimunation

The Digital Public Library of America: The Idea and Its Implementation, by 30 Robert Darnton

New Initiatives in Open Research, by Clifford Lynch and Lee Dirks

Executives’ Roundtable: The Boundaries are Getting Blurred, by T. Scott Plutchak, Paul N. Courant, and H. Frederick Dylla

I Hear the Train A Comin’, by Greg Tananbaum, Kevin Guthrie, and Anne Kenney

The Long Arm of the Law, by Bill Hannay and Ann Okerson

The Future of Online Newspapers, by Debora Cheney, Chuck Palsho, and Chris Cowan

The Status Quo Has Got to Go, by Brad Eden

Hyde Park Corner, by Melody Burton and Kimberly Douglas

Acquisitions/Collection Development

Downsizing from the Big Deal: What’s Education Got to do With It?, by Robert G. Kelly and Susann De Vries

Reducing Unintentional Duplication: Adventures and Opportunities in Cooperative Collection Development, by Leslie Button, Rachel Lewellen, Kathleen Norton, and Pamela Skinner

Collaborating with Course Pages: Strategies for Curriculum-based Development and Assessment, by Robin Chin Roemer and Michael Matos

Free is the Best Price: Building Your Collection of Primary Sources with Free, Online, Digital Collections, by Joan Petit

It’s Not You, It’s Me: Breaking Up with Perpetual Access, by Kirsten Huhn and Geoffrey Little

From Backlog to Workflow: American University’s Approach for Handling Preservation Books and Missing Serials Issues, by Stacey Marien and Dawn Fairbanks

Don’t Forget the Little Publishers, by David Myers, Tom Taylor, Stuart Silcox, and Jim Dooley

Something’s Gotta Give: Is There a Future for the Collection Development Policy?, by Matt Torrence, Audrey Powers, and Megan Sheffield

Offline E-book Access: ebrary Survey of Librarians, by Allen Mc Kiel

2011 Global Student E-book Survey, by Allen Mc Kiel

Let’s Get the Dialogue Started: Keeping E-books Current, by Gail Johnston and Tamara Remhof

Kent State University Libraries Develops a New System for Resource Selection, by Kay Downey

Academic Libraries Without Print, by Allen Mc Kiel, Jim Dooley, Robert Murdoch, and Carol Zsulya

BIP 4 CD=LW, by Theresa Preuit Rhodes

The Charging of Technical Services at UNC Charlotte, by Michael Winecoff

New Subjects, New Communities, New Formats: The Library Collection in the

Digital World, by Angharad Roberts

Best Practices for Presentation of E-Journals, by Andrea Twiss-Brooks and Katharina Klemperer

Acquisitions Business in a Middle East Context Henry Owino

New Tricks for Old Data Sources: Mashups, Visualizations, & Questions Your ILS Has Been Afraid to Answer, by Brian Norberg, Darby Orcutt, and John Vickery

SERU 2.0: It’s Not Just for Journals, by Selden Durgom Lamoureux and Judy Luther

Improving ERM: Critical Work Flow and Operations Solutions, by Betsy Appleton, Shannon Regan, Lenore England, Li Fu, and Stephen Miller

A First-Year Librarian’s Weeding Project Management Experience from Start to (Planned) Finish, by Kady Ferris and Scott Warren

Weeding One STEPP at a Time, by Eleanor Cook, Dan Shouse, and William Joseph Thomas

Selection for Non-Remote Storage, by Steve Alleman

Transfer 2.0 and Beyond! An Update, by Tim Devenport and Jennifer Bazeley

Virginia Tech’s Participation in ASERL’s Cooperative Print Journal Retention Project, by Connie Stovall, Leslie O’Brien, and Edward Lener

Speed Weed: How We Weeded More Than 70, 000 Items in Three Months, by Gail Johnston and Tamara Remhof

Let’s Go and Haul!: A Square-Rigger’s Guide to Weeding “Age of Sail” Collections

in the 21st Century, by Valarie Prescott Adams and Douglas Black

Administration/Management

Looking for Money in All the Right Places: How One Academic Library is Making Good Use of Grant Funds, by Michael A. Arthur

Using Your Library’s Annual Report to Market Library Services, by Corey Seeman

What Gives? Evaluating Bound Journals for Transitioning to Electronic and

Developing an Electronic Collection Development Policy, by J. Michael Lindsay, Adam Kemper, and Sandra Oelschlegel

Turn That Frown Upside Down: Management Strategies for Improving Library Employee Morale in Uncertain Times, by Cindy L. Craig and Curt G. Friehs

What’s in a Name? Are We Fish or Fowl?, by Shin Freedman and Marcia Dursi

Resource Acquisitions: An Experiment In Library Reorganization at Slippery Rock University, by Heather Getsay and Catherine Rudowsky

Working Together to Win: The 21st Century Acquisitions Department, by Jill Jascha

Institution-Wide Collaboration: How Learning Communities Can Help, by Christine Lewis, Michael Stopel, Jackie La Placa Ricords, and Timothy Cherubini

How to Turn Around a Battleship Before the Budget-Cut Missile is Lodged in the Hull: A Case Study, by Lindsey E. Schell and Susan Macicak

Inventory of a Small Academic Library: Cooperation and Communication Through the Units, by Erin E. Boyd, Amy Smith, Kent Snowden, and Debbie West

Bullied by Budgets, Pushed by Patrons, Driven by Demand: Libraries and Tantalizing Technologies, by Narda Tafuri and Antje Mays

Budget’s Stretched, Staff Stressed, Usage Stalled Something’s Gotta Give!, by Stacy Baggett and Megan Williams

Where is the Hospitality in Your Library?, by Corey Seeman

Are Libraries Thriving? An Oxford Debate, by .Jill Emery

Keeping Up with the Things that Matter: Current Awareness Tools and Strategies for Academic Libraries, by Mike Diaz, Clifford Lynch, Karen Downing, and John Dupuis

Budget/Evaluation

Developing a Weighted Library Allocation Formula, by Jeff Bailey and Linda Creibaum

Shared Advocacy through Data: Looking Beyond the High Cost of Journals, by Jane Nichols and Andrea A. Wirth

The Value of Purchasing E-book Collections from a Large Publisher, by Aaron K. Shrimplin and Jennifer W. Bazeley

Electronic Resource Assessment: Adventures in Engagement, by John Tofanelli, Colleen Major, and Jeffrey Carroll

Contextualizing and Interpreting Cost per Use for Electronic Journals, by Matthew Harrington and Connie Stovall

An Absence of Allocations, by Cathy Goodwin

The Lib Value Project: Three Reports on Values, Outcomes, and Return on Investment of Academic Libraries, by Carol Tenopir, Rachel A. Fleming-May, and Tina E. Chrzastowski

An Academic Library’s Efforts to Justify Materials Budget Expenditures, by Steven Carrico

Put it Simply: Tools and Tips for Communicating Library Collections Data, by Hilary Davis

Giving Them What They Want: Providing Information for a Serials Review Project, by Kristin Calvert and Rachel Fleming

Data Lifecycle Management: What Has Got to Give, by Will Hires

Scholarly Communication

Library Publishing Services: Strategies for Success, by Charles Watkinson, Catherine Murray-Rust, Daureen Nesdill, and Allyson Mower

What Can We Say With Certainty about Scholarly Communication in the 21st Century?, by Michael P. Pelikan

Mixing Oil and Water: Recipes for Press-Library Collaboration, by Patrick Alexander, James Mc Coy, Leila Salisbury, and Richard Brown

We’re All In This Together: Supporting the Dissemination of University Research

Through Library Services, by Michelle Armstrong

Supporting Effective Communication and Workflows in Social Science Research: Findings and Summary of a Group Discussion, by Bernie Folan

The Impact of Japan’s March 11th Earthquake and Tsunami on Libraries and the Conduct of Research and Publications in Japan, by Mikiko Tanifuji

Publishing Partnerships: Why, When, and How Collaboration Sometimes Trumps

Competition, the User Perspective, by Elizabeth Chisato Uyeki

Making Open Access Work in the Social Sciences, by Hob Brooks, Eric Moran, Jeffrey Carroll, and Deborah Ludwig

Techie Issues

E-Resource Triage: Why Doesn’t My Full-Text Resource Open and

How Can I Fix It?, by Leslie Burke

Where’s Professor Watt’s Request? Streamlining to a Paperless Acquisitions

Workflow, by Rita M. Cauce

Mainstreaming Media: Innovating Media Collections at the NCSU Libraries, by Darby Orcutt

You Ought to Be in Pictures: Bringing Streaming Video to Your Library, by Cheri Duncan and Erika Peterson

Platform Choice: Policies and Practice, by Tina Feick, Jason Price, Susan Macicak, Dennis Brunning, Anne Mc Kee, and Mary Marshall

Champagne Wishes, Caviar Dreams: Incorporating E-readers into Leisure Reading While on a Beer Budget, by Anna Craft, Elisabeth Leonard, and Katy Ginanni

Saving Time, Energy, Keystrokes, and Sanity: Adventures in Order Automation, by Julie Kliever, K.C. Hendges, John Riley, and Lynne Branch Browne

Give a Little Bit: Using Lean Tools to Create Efficiencies in Acquisitions and Beyond, by Lisa Spagnolo

Beyond EDI: An Agent’s Role in the Cloud, by Christine M. Stamison, Anne Campbell, and Michael Winkler

Tired of Reinventing the Wheel? Then Stop! How to Use Online Communities for Solutions to Common Library Issues, by Laura Warren and Julie Obst

Moving Your Library to the Cloud, by Carrie Rampp, Jennifer Clarke, and Bill Burkholder

Managing Expectations and Obligations: The Librarian’s Role in Streaming Media for Online Education, by Kathleen Carlisle Fountain

End Users/Usage Statistics

Patron-Driven Acquisition Practices of U.S. Research Libraries: East vs. West, by Jennifer Duncan and Jeff Carroll

Getting to the Heart of the Matter: What Faculty Tell Us about How Our Collections Support Student Learning, by Marcia Thomas

The Role of Reference in Discovery Systems: Effecting a More Literate Search, by Will Wheeler

Discovery Systems are No Different: We Must Still Teach Searchers How to Become Researchers, by Craig Leonard Brians and Bruce Pencek

End User Tools for Evaluating Scholarly Content, by Carol Anne Meyer

Understanding the 21st Century Research Landscape: Emerging Trends and Needs Within and Across Disciplines, by Mike Diaz, Audrey Powers, Corey Seeman, Dennis Brunning, and Jason Phillips

Understanding the 21st Century Research Landscape: Emerging Trends and Needs Within and Across Disciplines—Perspectives from a Business Library, by Corey Seeman

Moving Toward the User-Centered Library: Learning Behaviors and Their Impact on Library Planning, by Leah M. Dunn

Technical Services Talk: Fostering Faculty Collaboration through Reorganization and Communication, by Kyle Mc Carrell and Lou Ann Blocker

Win Friends and Influence Faculty: Methods for Citation Analysis, by Leslie Farison

Relevancy Redacted: Web-Scale Discovery and the “Filter Bubble”, by Corey Davis

Experiences from the Field: Choosing a Discovery Tool for YOUR Unique Library, by Jennifer Castaldo, Christine Korytnyk Dulaney, Tom Klingler, Doralyn Rossman, and Laura Wrubel

Discovery by the Numbers: An Examination of the Impact of a Discovery Tool through Usage Statistics, by Jody Fagan and Meris Mandernach

The Patrons Demand, But What Do They Really Want?, by Forrest Link, Yuji Tosaka, and Cathy Weng

Untapped Resources: Graduate Assistants and Collection Development, by Lily Todorinova and Brittany Rhea Deputy

Partnering for Patron-Driven Acquisitions: What You Need to Know, by Ashley Bailey, Molly Royse, Deb Thomas, and Gail Watson

Demand-Driven Success: Designing Your PDA Experiment, by Charles Hillen and Glenn Johnson-Grau

Give Them What They Need (And Want): Computer Science and Engineering Customers, by Ellen Safley

Patron-Driven E-book Solutions: Moving Beyond the Banana Books Incident, by Gabrielle Wiersma and Yem Fong

By Popular Demand: Building a Consortial Demand-Driven Program, by Xan Arch, Robin Champieux, Susan Hinken, Emily Mc Elroy, and Joan Thompson

Index

关于作者

Beth R. Bernhardt is Electronic Resources Librarian at the Jackson Library, University of North Carolina at Greensboro.

Leah H. Hinds is Assistant Director of the Charleston Conference.
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语言 英语 ● 格式 EPUB ● 网页 642 ● ISBN 9780983404347 ● 文件大小 16.6 MB ● 编辑 Beth R. Bernhardt & Leah H. Hinds ● 出版者 Purdue University Press ● 市 IN ● 国家 US ● 发布时间 2012 ● 下载 24 个月 ● 货币 EUR ● ID 5854245 ● 复制保护 Adobe DRM
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