Information Practice in Science and Technology

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A01=Mary Schlembach
academic library management
ARL Library
ARL Study
Author_Mary Schlembach
Category=GLM
Category=PD
collection
cross-disciplinary research support
Defense Technical Information Center
Departmental Libraries
development
digital resource assessment
DOI System
DTIC
electronic
electronic database usage
Electronic Reserves
engineering
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
Gather Usage Statistics
Geology Librarianship
government information access
Government Printing Office
haworth
IP Address
journal
libraries
library
library outreach strategies
Library Systems Staff
MIT Library
MIT's Faculty
National Technical Information Service
NTIS
Originate IP Address
press
Public Terminal
Reference Linking
Science Technology Librarians
services
Tiff Image
Transaction Log Analysis
UIUC Library
usage statistics analysis in libraries
Vendor Supplied Usage Data
Web Server Logs

Product details

  • ISBN 9780789021847
  • Weight: 330g
  • Dimensions: 148 x 210mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Aug 2003
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Examine the vital issues facing sci-tech libraries in today's economic and technological climate!

This book addresses current challenges and changes in science and technology librariesand shows how librarians are handling them in difficult financial times. It examines issues related to closing and merging libraries, online collections maintenance and costs, assistance/outreach geared toward specific groups of library patrons, and the gathering of usage statistics in the electronic environment. You'll also find specific descriptionsand a general overviewof new technologies and case studies of the impact of new technologies on sci-tech library management. Handy tables and figures make the information easy to access and understand.

Presenting a wide variety of problems and solutions, Information Practice in Science and Technology will help you understand the needs of users regarding current information technologies and how to meet them. From the editor: Among the critical challenges facing sci-tech libraries (and actually all libraries) are the need to perform detailed collection assessment and evaluation, particularly in regard to e-resource collections; the need to examine and provide appropriate public services; and the need to develop strategies for the adoption of new information technologies. This book addresses these key issues and attempts to provide both perspective and insight into these problems.

Information Practice in Science and Technology examines:

  • how merging academic departmental libraries can both improve services and smooth the transition to increased use of digital information
  • the process of developing, managing, and providing access to an electronic collectiona case study from the University of Notre Dame, with special attention paid to licensing and publisher agreements
  • how a limited Web interface can be enhanced and become a digital portal to a library's print collectiona case study from the Grainger Engineering Library at the University of Illinois
  • how libraries can support academic faculty research in cross-disciplinary subject areas
  • how to address the specialized subject area information needs of meteorologists and geologists
  • outreach methods that the University of California uses to better connect with library patrons and demonstrate the services that the library offers
  • Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs)the new technology for archiving and linking electronic information
  • how to gather and benefit from usage statistics, with attention to electronic databases, statistics gathered from public library terminals, and transaction log usage statistics for electronic reserves
  • the proposals to provide all government documents through an electronic distribution systemand what that will mean to sci-tech libraries

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