1 / 25

Using collaborative projects to improve access, availability and services

Using collaborative projects to improve access, availability and services. Dr. Hazel Woodward University Librarian & Director of Cranfield University Press. Partnerships, Consortia & 21 st Century Library Services, 23 rd IATUL Conference, Kansas City, USA, 2-6 June, 2002. LOCATION.

prisca
Download Presentation

Using collaborative projects to improve access, availability and services

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Using collaborative projects to improve access, availability and services Dr. Hazel Woodward University Librarian & Director of Cranfield University Press Partnerships, Consortia & 21st Century Library Services, 23rd IATUL Conference, Kansas City, USA, 2-6 June, 2002

  2. LOCATION

  3. ACTIVITIESScope and Scale Silsoe Cranfield Shrivenham • Bioscience & technology • Agriculture, engineering & food technology • Water & environmental management • Land use & the environment • Aerospace • Engineering • Industrial & manufacturing science • Management • Electronics & electro-optics • Mechanical, materials & civil engineering • Computing and IT • Applied mathematics • Defence management • 10% • 25% • 65%

  4. EURILIA –EURopean Initiative on Libraries and Information in Aerospace • Three year project 1995-1997 • Funded by EC Action Programme for Libraries • Project partners: • Cranfield University (UK) • University of Limerick (Ireland) • Technical University of Delft [TUD] (Netherlands) • Digital Equipment Corporation (Netherlands) • Sup’Aero (France) • Instituto Nacional de Tecnica Aerospacial (Spain)

  5. Aims of EURILIA • To develop a new pan-European service to extend access to, and availability of, major aerospace collections via participating library OPACs • To develop a multi-site, multi-country document retrieval and delivery system, with a standard user-interface and including facilities for image browsing

  6. Main results of EURILIA • Z39.50 access to the OPACS of all participating libraries • Access to the full image of over 200 of Cranfield’s aerospace theses • Internet links to relevant elements of the ESA/NASA aerospace thesaurus • Development of software to manage a multi-site, multi-country document delivery system • Analysis of different document delivery pricing systems to minimise cost and maximise benefit • Pre- and post-EURILIA user studies to determine user perception and commercial viability

  7. AIM-UK Aerospace Information Management • An investigation into the effectiveness of information management processes with the UK aerospace industry • 1996-98 • Funded by the (UK) Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) and supported by the Society of British Aerospace Companies • Based on interviews with over 400 senior managers and aerospace engineers and scientists engaged in aerospace research and development

  8. AIM-UK findings (1) • Nearly half of senior managers regard their information systems as ineffective • Existing IT infrastructure were inadequate, desktop access is far from universal, and seamless user-friendly access to internal and external information resources is required • Security issues are inhibiting access

  9. AIM-UK findings (2) • Ineffective project close-down procedures and an over dependence on the knowledge in people’s hands constrains the exploitation of knowledge assets and information • There is a huge amount of scientific and technological information generated by the sector which is difficult to retrieve and considerable caution is exercised by companies in releasing information to external bodies

  10. AIM-UK – Key Recommendations: • production of a comprehensive directory of aerospace information resources • development of a current awareness service • establishment of a database or network of interconnected databases to facilitate remote access to key collections • the development of an aerospace and defence subject gateway to quality information resources on the Internet • the development of a research skills training course • AIM-EU Project started 2001

  11. The Resource Discovery Network (RDN) • Funded by the Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC) • Free Internet service dedicated to providing effective access to high quality Internet resources for the learning teaching and research community • Data provided by five hubs • BIOME – Health & Life Sciences • EEVL – Engineering, Mathematics & Computing • Humbul – Humanities • PSIgate – Physical Sciences • SOSIG – Social Sciences, Business & Law

  12. MAGiC – Managing Access to Grey Literature Collections Aims & objectives To enhance awareness, access and use of key collections of technical reports (grey literature) for the benefit of UK engineers and UK plc. • Collection development and management • Improving the visibility of key collections • Enhancing access via electronic storage and document supply

  13. MAGiC Partners • Cranfield University (lead partner) • British Library Document Supply Centre • DSTL (formerly DERA) • Loughborough University, Dept of Information Science • The Public Records Office • SIRSI Limited

  14. MAGiC - Progress to date • Assessment of the use and value of engineering grey literature • literature review • online use/value questionnaire • Mapping & collection management • Mapping collections • preliminary reports holdings questionnaire • preliminary reports producers questionnaire • Collection analysis methodology • quantitative indicators • qualitative indicators • use of electronic discussion forums

  15. MAGiC - Progress to date • National Reports Catalogue (NRC) • Options for the NRC: Z39.50 • academic libraries, BL & PRO • libraries in government and industry • does nothing for collection rationalisation • concerns over unresolved technical and performance issues associated with distributed searching

  16. MAGiC - Progress to date • National Reports Catalogue • Options for the NRC: local database & metadata harvesting • Open Archives Initiative • facilitate collection rationalisation • consistent resource descriptions • metadata without constraints of MARC • Interoperability via Z39.50 and OAI-compliance

  17. MAGiC - Progress to date • Full text archive • Digitisation • Options • ARC Reports & Memoranda • Investigate document supply options • Widening coverage/expanded detail • NACA reports • AIM-EU

  18. The MAGiC demonstrator service METReS (http://magic-reports.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/)

  19. Benefits and outcomes of collaborative projects • Enhanced online access to bibliographic information, and increasingly full text electronic resources, across institutions • Increased visibility and awareness of collections (particularly grey literature) • Enhanced access to printed materials via partner initiated document delivery services • Increased understanding of collection management and collection analysis methodology

  20. Benefits and outcomes - continued • Skills improvement in partner institutions leading to improvements in local services • Better understanding of user needs leading to development of user friendly interfaces and content aggregation • Raising the profile of partner institutions – locally, nationally, internationally • Marketing, public relations, branding of services

  21. Thank you for your attention Any questions?

More Related