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Audit of walk-in access for members of the public to online resources at HE and FE libraries in the South-West of Englan

Audit of walk-in access for members of the public to online resources at HE and FE libraries in the South-West of England. Funded by SWRLS (South West Regional Library Service). Project Aims.

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Audit of walk-in access for members of the public to online resources at HE and FE libraries in the South-West of Englan

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  1. Audit of walk-in access for members of the public to online resources at HE and FE libraries in the South-West of England Funded by SWRLS (South West Regional Library Service)

  2. Project Aims To facilitate the provision of public access to educational / research materials that are increasingly available in online format only, thereby supporting widening participation and community education within the region through the sharing of information and expertise. This will be done by: • Conducting an audit of current policies and practices • Sharing information between colleagues in FE and HE libraries who are working on IT solutions for appropriate access • Promoting the resources and access policies • Producing a report summarising the outcomes and a directory with more detailed information about walk-in access to online resources in the region.

  3. What is ‘walk-in access’? • Use of electronic resources by visitors, members of the public • Physically entering the premises, not available at a distance • The term walk-in access – licences, political correctness

  4. Project Summary This project will review the mechanisms in place, and being developed, in further and higher education libraries, to provide walk-in access for the general public and school students to electronic resources.

  5. The Steering Group Members • Claire Holmes, Project Librarian, UWE • David Boyd, Electronic Resources Librarian, University of Bristol • Eilidh Mackay, Assistant Librarian, UWE • Geoff Cole, Community Engagement and Schools Support Librarian, UWE • Ian Collins, Partnerships Librarian, UWE • Jacqueline Chelin, Deputy Librarian, UWE • Karen Foster, Head of Learning Centre, Yeovil College

  6. Context –nationally/internationally • SCONUL Task and Finish Group on Access Issues – WATER (Walk-in Access To E-Resources) project • The WATER project will seek the views of users, Library Directors and SCONUL Access scheme representatives to identify the issues associated with implementation of walk-in access by UK HEIs • SCURL (Scottish Confederation of Universities and Research Libraries) Walk-in Access Project • An audit of current practice in members’ institutions, looking at the definition of walk-in access, the mixed economy of authentication management, identity management

  7. Literature Search – a starting point Literature search of relevant professional journals and online information sources to establish best practice • SCONUL and UCISA (2007) HAERVI: HE access to e-resources in visited institutions. • RIN (2009) Overcoming barriers: access to research information content. • Research report 2: Perspectives from libraries • Research report 3: How institutions manage access to information sources for non members • Research report 4: Information access for members of research pools in Scotland • RIN (2006) Access for members of the public to digital content help in university and college libraries: a report on current practice and recommendations for the future. • House of Commons Select Committee (2004) Scientific publications: free for all?

  8. Methodology • Audit in the form of a questionnaire chosen due to: • Geographical area – South West region • Nature of the investigation • Time of year – autumn term • Analysis of results • Cost-saving

  9. Methodology • Case Study benefits: • Visit – first hand view of the service • Face-to-face discussion • Service – from staff and walk-in perspective • In-depth investigation of methods chosen • Accuracy and detail • Build stronger relationships • Follow up • Telephone interviews

  10. Responses • 41 questionnaires sent out to FEIs/HEIs in the SWRLS area • 34 responses – 14 HEIs, 20 FEIs • 6 HEIs offer walk-in access (though one has since withdrawn the service)

  11. Figures and Trends • For those not providing access (28 out of 34): • Two thirds of institutions do not have any plans to introduce the service in the future • The majority of institutions rarely or never receive requests from walk-in users to access electronic resources. • IT restrictions and legal issues over licences are the biggest factors preventing institutions from implementing the service • The biggest driver/motivating factor would be the simplification and standardisation of licences and their legal frameworks.

  12. Figures and Trends

  13. Figures and Trends • For those providing access (6 out of 34): • Restrictions of the service varies - age, commerical use, opening hours • Over 80% require users to sign an Acceptable Use Policy • 50/50 in terms of whether dedicated kiosks are provided or whether users can use any computer in the library • Most institutions provide temporary log-ons • Majority provide access expiring at end of the day • IT restrictions and barriers greatest problem to overcome

  14. Figures and Trends • Institutions that did not encounter technical difficulties had help from their IT departments • 80% allow visitors to print • 50% allow visitors to save information to memory stick • Most institutions have a list of resources permitted on their webpages • Uptake of the service has been low for all institutions • Promotion of the service is poor

  15. Case Study 1 • The service was primarily introduced due to feedback from students on validated/licensed courses • 20 catalogue terminals can be used by walk-in users • Users can select a resource from the catalogue or use a list of permitted resources • EZproxy authorises access • Firefox browser with kiosk mode • No facility for printing or saving yet • Users don’t need to sign Acceptable Use Policy • Have not monitored use but believe it to be low • Eduroam available

  16. Case Study 2 • Service in use for 3-4 years, introduced when IT and library services were merged • Introduced for two reasons – community and new student logons • Access is provided via Microsoft Active Directory • This application populates information about the user into pre-prepared network accounts • Visitors sign AUP and ID checked • Wide range of resources permitted • Shibboleth used to authenticate • Any computer can be used in the library • Eduroam available • Do not promote service

  17. Outcomes of the project • Wider access for non-HE students and general public to online research resources • Sharing / promotion of expertise about walk-in services • Facilitating collaboration between sectors in establishing walk-in services • Encouraging further resource sharing • Contributing to other regional / national initiatives • Supporting widening participation, lifelong learning and community engagement

  18. Implications of the project • Impact on organisations providing this service • Demand / level of use • Support required from Library staff • Collaboration, eg • HEIs could support local FEIs to set up service • FEIs and HEIs move towards offering a wider community resource to support public libraries

  19. Recommendations • SWRLS • Share this report more widely through web site • Maintain directory of institutions offering walk-in access • Members to consider potential audiences for such a service • Promote outcomes of project to related national projects • National bodies (eg JISC, SCONUL) • Influence licence providers to simplify and clarify walk-in access provisions

  20. Recommendations • Individual institutions in the South West • HEIs and FEIs to set up walk-in user service if not already providing one • Inform SWRLS of any changes in walk-in access policy • Target / promote service to appropriate audiences through analysing requests received • HEIs / FEIs to consider using Eduroam • Close liaison with IT department when planning / implementing walk-in service • Use institutional policies as driver for implementation of walk-in service • Use implementation to drive institutional policy!

  21. List of Respondents - universities • Bath Spa University • Bournemouth University • Cranfield University • Plymouth University • Royal Agricultural College • Southampton Solent University • University College Falmouth - Dartington College of Arts • University College Plymouth St Mark & St John • University College Winchester • University of Bath • University of Bristol • University of Exeter • University of Gloucestershire • University of the West of England (UWE)

  22. List of Respondents – FE colleges • Bicton College • Bridgwater College • Cirencester College • City College, Plymouth • City of Bath College • City of Bristol College • Cornwall College • Exeter College • Filton College • Gloucestershire College • Hartpury College • New College, Swindon • South Devon College • Stode College • Stroud College • Swindon College • Truro and Penwith College • Weston College • Weymouth College • Yeovil College

  23. Directory: Who offers access? • University of Bath http://www.bath.ac.uk/library/users/visitors.html#walk • University of Exeter http://as.exeter.ac.uk/library/resources/e-resources/eligibility/ • University College Falmouth http://library.falmouth.ac.uk/651/using-the-library/information-for/walkin-users/article.asp • University of Gloucestershire http://insight.glos.ac.uk/departments/lis/Pages/default.aspx • Plymouth University http://www.plymouth.ac.uk/pages/view.asp?page=634

  24. Bibliography • SCONUL and UCISA (2007) HAERVI: HE access to e-resources in visited institutions. Available from: http://www.ucisa.ac.uk/publications/haervi_guide.aspx • RIN (2009) Overcoming barriers: access to research information content. Available from: http://www.rin.ac.uk/our-work/using-and-accessing-information-resources/overcoming-barriers-access-research-information • Research report 2: Perspectives from libraries Research report 3: How institutions manage access to information sources for non members Research report 4: Information access for members of research pools in Scotland • RIN (2006) Access for members of the public to digital content help in university and college libraries: a report on current practice and recommendations for the future. Available from: http://www.rin.ac.uk/our-work/using-and-accessing-information-resources/public-access-licensed-journals-held-academic-lib • House of Commons Select Committee (2004) Scientific publications: free for all? Available from: http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200304/cmselect/cmsctech/399/399.pdf

  25. Contact us • Geoff Cole, Community Engagement and Schools Support Librarian, UWE. Email: Geoff.Cole@uwe.ac.uk • Jacqueline Chelin, Deputy Librarian, UWE. Email: Jacqueline.Chelin@uwe.ac.uk March 2012

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