Please join us at ALA for the following program:
Articles on Demand: Library Perspectives:
http://ala14.ala.org/node/14379
When:
Monday, June 30, 2014 - 1:00pm to 2:30pm
Las Vegas Convention Center, N262
Presenters:
Articles-on-demand, also known as pay-per-view, is an evolving
acquisitions model which allows libraries to purchase article content
from a variety of journals without having to subscribe to all of the
individual titles involved. Different vendors offer different models and
options for libraries to participate. Libraries will discuss their
decision-making process, successes and challenges along the way, and
their current methods for acquiring content. Articles-on-demand options
from both publishers and third-party vendors will be discussed.
Speaker 1: Beth R. Bernhardt
When faced with a sizeable cut in their library serials budget in 2002,
UNCG moved away from their e-journal subscription model and implemented
a pay-per-view model. UNCG worked with several publishers to establish
pay-per-view options for their journals. This included working with at
the timeFirstSearch, Ingenta, Wiley and Ovid. A criterion for selection
was established and access was setup for more than 1600 titles. This
approach proved to be more cost effective and enabled the library to
expand access to e-journals. Cost for this model continued to increase
while publishers were moving toward “Big Deals”. In 2005 UNCG used
pay-per-view statistics as one of their indicators in making the
decision to shift from pay-per-view to the Big Deal model. Now in 2014
with more budget cuts on the horizon UNCG libraries has implemented
several Big Deal cuts and will again look at pay-per-view.
Beth Bernhardt is the Assistant Dean for Collection Management and
Scholarly Communications at UNC Greensboro. She has her graduate degree
in Library and Information Science from the University of South
Carolina. Beth was the Electronic Resources Librarian at UNC Greensboro
for 13 years. She is also the current program director for the
Charleston Conference.
Speaker 2: Susanna Bossenga
Document delivery has become an increasingly popular method for
libraries to provide patrons with convenient access to journal articles
in a time of shrinking library budgets and rising subscription costs.
NEIU began looking at document delivery providers in 2008. After careful
review, the British Library was selected as a vendor and work began on
implementation. In 2011, the decision was made to change our document
delivery service provider to the Copyright Clearance Center. This
session will discuss the vendor review and selection process, the
initial implementation, the migration of services, and current document
delivery workflows. It will also look at the costs and benefits of using
document delivery, as well as the current state of document delivery at
NEIU.
Susie Bossenga is the Serials & Electronic Resources Management
Librarian at Northeastern Illinois University and oversees their Serials
and Government Documents Unit. Prior to working at Northeastern, she was
the Serials & Electronic Resources Librarian at Wheaton College in
Wheaton, IL. She has a Master of Library and Information Science from
the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee and a Master of Arts in Teaching
from Concordia University, Chicago.
Speaker 3: Mark England
ReadCube Access is a patron-driven service, allowing libraries to
provide individual journal articles on demand. The technology was
developed and first executed in a partnership between ReadCube, the
University of Utah and Nature publishing Group. Now in use at the
University of Utah for two years, ReadCube Access can successfully
provide instantaneous access to journal content at a reduced cost per use.
Mark England is currently the Collection Development Librarian in the
Marriott Library at the University of Utah. Formerly, he held
administrative positions at North Dakota State University and was the
engineering librarian at Brigham Young University. Mark studied
engineering at the University of Minnesota and North Dakota State
University and earned his MLS at Brigham Young University.
Kristin E. Martin
Electronic Resources Management Librarian
The University of Chicago Library
1100 E. 57th Street - JRL 170
Chicago, IL 60637
773-834-2702
kmarti_at_uchicago.edu
<http://m.lib.uci.edu/>
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Received on Mon Jun 16 2014 - 16:41:09 EDT