Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Learn how information professionals are addressing the electronic resource issues being faced in their own libraries and around the world
This informative volume gives you an up-close look at the increasingly important role that electronic serials play in the overall library collection, today and in the future. It addresses many of the themes, problems, and questions raised by this fast-evolving medium, including e-journal publishing issues, troubleshooting, and accreditation issues, as well as e-reserves, e-books, and more. In E-Serials Collection Management: Transitions, Trends, and Technicalities, library professionals from the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, and Australia discuss these issues, the problems they have faced, and the solutions they have developed for them.
From the editor: It is my belief that e-serials will continue to emerge as the key players in the library world, as the physical library gradually and inexorably gives way to the virtual library. As e-journals insinuate themselves throughout the infrastructures of libraries and expand their reach globally, the issues addressed in this book are becoming of concern to all librarians, not just the electronic resources and information technology specialists. Librarians all over the world are struggling with how to manage electronic serials and the issues associated with them. In this book, readers will see how library professionals just like themselves deal with electronic journals, their transitions, trends, and technicalities.
With helpful graphs, figures, and charts making the information in the book easily accessible and understandable, E-Serials Collection Management: Transitions, Trends, and Technicalities will increase your understanding of:
- the interrelationship between pricing, licensing, technological aspects, and proximity to publishers and librariesfrom the point of view of a leading global subscription agent
- the benefits and pitfalls of using vendors/publishers, third-party providers, and subscription agents for electronic journal services
- how information professionals are currently developing and cataloging online materialswith a survey of 70 libraries
- the IP ranges vs. passwords conundrum
- the advantages of joining a consortium to make journals available to users at a lower cost to your library
- how to determine the amount of usage your electronic products are getting
- claiming and troubleshooting e-journalswith a fascinating case study from UCLA's biomedical library
- how to efficiently handle electronic articles destined for a reserve collection
- how to select an e-book model that will satisfy your users and your staff
- open-access systems and softwareand what they mean to your institution
- regional accreditation for e-serials
- using a database-driven approach to manage e-resources
- and more
Table of Contents
Current trends in electronic journal publishing : an agent's unique insight into pricing, licensing, and technological aspects based on proximity to publishers and libraries / Paul Harwood, Carolyn Alderson -- To use or not to use : the benefits and challenges of using a subscription agent for electronic journals / Patricia A. Loghry -- Collection development and cataloging of online materials : what libraries are doing now / LadyJane Hickey ... et al. -- IP ranges versus passwords : the pros, the cons, and what's in between / Lee Ann Howlett -- Consortia and electronic journals : an overview / Miriam Childs, Wil Weston -- Usage data : issues and challenges for electronic resource collection management / Joanna Duy -- Case study in claiming/troubleshooting e-journals : UCLA's Louise M. Darling Biomedical Library / Barbara Schader -- Electronic reserve : a future in transition? / Ebe Kartus, Susan Clarke -- E-books after the fall : a new model / Vivian Lewis -- Open access and retrieval : liberating the scholarly literature / Gerry McKiernan -- E-serials and regional accreditation / Cheryl McCain, Karen Rupp-Serrano -- Managing e-resources : a database-driven approach / Sarah Robbins, Matthew Smith -- Developing a database for e-journals that improves both access and management / Kevin Brewer, Betty Rozum, Flora Shrode.