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MetaLib - Making E-resources Earn Their Keep Frank Parry USTLG, Edinburgh 17 June 2004
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Loughborough – the facts! 13,500 students 2,800 staff serials – 4000 print, over 6000 electronic books – over 400,000 databases – over 200
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E-resources earning their keep what e-resources? e-journals and databases monitor usage statistics & value for money promotion database of the month training sessions and now…MetaLib!
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Portals JISC describes portals as: “a network service that brings together content from diverse distributed resources using technologies such as cross-searching, harvesting, and alerting, and collates this into an amalgamated form for presentation to the user.”
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Commercial portals offer: grouping of databases simultaneous searching (through Z39.50, web scraping and xml) collation of results de-duplicating links to full text
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Some commercial portals DigitaLink / iPac (Epixtech) ENCompass (Endeavour) Rooms (SIRSI) MetaLib (ExLibris) Millennium Access Plus (MAP) Portal (Innovative) TalisPrism (Talis) ZPORTAL (Fretwell-Downing)
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OpenURL is a linking technology & a protocol for interoperability between services hotlinks from databases leads a user to appropriate full text resources
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Portals and linking at Loughborough MetaLib portal of all our databases simultaneous searching of compliant databases SFX openURL links article records to library catalogue and/or e-journals
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Implementation of MetaLib & SFX large team approach Systems, Support Services & Academic Librarians long time scale March – September smaller, separate team implemented SFX
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Discussions look and feel branding contents (electronic & print) authentication (VLE username & password) Library’s web pages (which should exist) information skills
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Cataloguing & configuring cataloguing easy form driven quality & content testing configuration not so easy who should configure? technical staff / academic librarians how many databases are cross searchable?
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Pilot and “live” piloted with 3 Academic Departments focus groups Questionnaire positive feedback “live” in September 2002 smaller MetaLib group (four people) on average half a day per week
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What has it meant for the Library? role of library staff very little change enquiries are often easier to answer training simpler Handout http://www.lboro.ac.uk/library/dbase/metalib.html http://www.lboro.ac.uk/library/dbase/metalib.html Online tutorial http://inhale.hud.ac.uk/perl/jump.pl?13- 56http://inhale.hud.ac.uk/perl/jump.pl?13- 56 increased use of databases
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Statistics increase in usage of databases 609%
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Statistics by database usage up Zetoc 1385% SportDiscus 1207% ICEA 225% INSPEC 73% OCLC 79% ABES 36% IBSS 31% Beilstein 23% usage down Psycinfo-63% Lexis-Nexis-51% Mintel -36% RAPRA-31% UKOP -6% Art Abstracts-12% Compendex -4%
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Top ten databases in 2003 JuneJulyAugustSeptemberOctober ArticleFirstZetocArticleFirst ZetocArticleFirstZetoc IBSS Ante OPACASSIA ABMIBSS Ante OPACASSIA OPAC AnteOPAC CompendexInspec ASSIAInspec Compendex InspecSportDiscus BHISportDiscusBHICeramic AbsMedline SportDiscusCompendexBioSci Comp & InfoEng MatMedline Compendex BioSciPolymer SportDiscusComp & Info
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What does MetaLib mean to our readers? students less reliance on Google? cross searchable versus most appropriate? researchers & academics using MetaLib cross search more than anticipated
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The future investigate: usage statistics for e-journals searching behaviour of readers incorporate new features of MetaLib e-journals
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Thanks…. Parts of this presentation were originally created for a conference paper delivered by Ruth Stubbings
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