RUL Staff networking & communicating re Academic Libraries, Resources, Scholarly Communication, Research Support, Access, Workplace, & more ...
Friday, October 3, 2008
Why We Need A New Approach to Putting Library Collections Online
http://chronicle.com/wiredcampus/article/?id=3362&utm_source=at&utm
Presidents of major universities want more library materials distributed online, without prohibitive charges.
At the Universal Access Digital Library Summit, held on September 24 and 25 at the Boston Public Library, Mark Huddleston, president of the University of New Hampshire, Peter Nicholls, provost of the University of Connecticut, and Jack Wilson, president of the University of Massachusetts, called for new approaches to the digitization of library collections that will allow access for all. The presidents urged libraries to halt what they described as an assault on the public’s right to knowledge, done in the name of copyright.
Thursday, October 2, 2008
HSRC leads the way in free online publications
2 NEW DIGITAL MODELS PROMISE ACADEMIC PUBLISHING FOR
PROFIT:
New ventures explore ways for academic publishers to put
monographs online without driving themselves out of business.
http://chronicle.com/free/2008/10/4842n.htm?utm_source=at&utm_mediu
m=en
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
How to build a Web we can trust
http://www.scidev.net/en/editorials/how-to-build-a-web-we-can-trust.html
The World Wide Web's inventor wants to make websites more trustworthy. This should be done by encouraging good practice, not imposing strict rules.
Interesting that under the section entitled: "Dangerous inability" in this article mention is make of Thabo Mbeki's night-time web-surfing excursions!
Thursday, September 25, 2008
e-textbooks on demand
http://chronicle.com/wiredcampus/article/?id=3342&utm_source=at&utm
_medium=en
http://chronicle.com/wiredcampus/article/?id=3342&utm_source=at&utm
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Regional journals can boost science capacity
http://www.scidev.net/en/opinions/regional-journals-can-boost-science-capacity.html
Wieland Gevers was, until recently, the executive officer of the Academy of Science of South Africa, and is the chair of its Committee on Scholarly Publishing.
Monday, September 22, 2008
Excellent book for Academic Librarians
"The academic library and the Net Gen Student" / Susan Gibbons
Only 99 pages! Gives an excellent overview of the 'new' digital student and the types of technologies we need to get our heads around.
Dewey: 027.7 GIB
Friday, September 19, 2008
On Stupidity, Part 2 Exactly how should we teach the 'digital natives'?
On Stupidity, Part 2
Exactly how should we teach the 'digital natives'?
By THOMAS H. BENTON
Last month I reviewed a collection of recent books (The Chronicle, August 1) arguing that Americans, particularly those now entering college, have been rendered "stupid" by a convergence of factors including traditional anti-intellectualism, consumer culture, the entertainment industry, political correctness, religious fundamentalism, and postmodern relativism, just to name some of the usual suspects.
Of course the anticipated consequences of the "stupidity crisis" seem dire enough — the end of democracy, the economic decline of the United States, the extinction of humanity as we know it — that one feels compelled to register opposition to the "Age of Unreason" by buying a few books.
I bought seven of them. And I am convinced — as if I ever doubted it — that, over the past several decades, we have become less knowledgeable, more apathetic, more reliant on others to think for us, more susceptible to simple answers, and more easily exploited.
The Link to the article is :
http://chronicle.com/jobs/news/2008/09/2008090501c.htm
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Library Connect newsletter from Elsevier
The latest issue is now available at:
http://libraryconnect.elsevier.com/lcn/0603/lcn060301.html
The overall theme is E-Learning.
Includes some useful insights on how libraries can support e-learning on campus and lots more.....
Book Southern Africa
http://book.co.za/
"BOOK Southern Africa is a literary news and social network for publishers, authors and the general book-buying and -reading public. BOOK SA reports on local fiction, non-fiction, poetry, biography, book happenings, reviews and more: you can start exploring now by clicking the links above.
BOOK SA is also a free author and publisher website service for those involved in the world of Southern African literature. Our sites' special features help drive information about books throughout the web, attracting new audiences and creating more space for literary endeavours. Our goal is to help build the Southern African literary marketplace to new heights. "
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
Online literacy
Two more interesting articles from the Chronicle of HE on this topic.
ONLINE LITERACY IS A LESSER KIND: Web skimming may be a kind of
literacy, says Mark Bauerlein, but it's not the kind that
matters most.
http://chronicle.com/weekly/v55/i04/04b01001.htm?utm_source=at&utm_me
d
ium=en
* DISCUSSION OF DIGITAL TOOLS' ROLE IN LEARNING:
http://chronicle.com/review/brainstorm/bauerlein/?utm_source=at&utm
_medium=en
Digital generation???
(Interesting to note that this is talking about American students)
[from the Chronicle of HE]
NOT ALL YOUNG PEOPLE ARE TECH-SAVVY: Contrary to popular belief, there is no such thing as a "digital generation," writes Siva Vaidhyanathan.
http://chronicle.com/weekly/v55/i04/04b00701.htm?utm_source=at&utm_medium=en
user name: rulibrary
password: ru2007
Exceprt:
Every class has a handful of people with amazing skills and a large number who can't deal with computers at all. A few lack mobile phones. Many can't afford any gizmos and resent assignments that demand digital work. Many use Facebook and MySpace because they are easy and fun, not because they are powerful (which, of course, they are not). And almost none know how to program or even code text with Hypertext Markup Language (HTML). Only a handful come to college with a sense of how the Internet fundamentally differs from the other major media platforms in daily life.
College students in America are not as "digital" as we might wish to pretend. And even at elite universities, many are not rich enough. All this mystical talk about a generational shift and all the claims that kids won't read books are just not true. Our students read books when books work for them (and when I tell them to). And they all (I mean all) tell me that they prefer the technology of the bound book to the PDF or Web page. What kids, like the rest of us, don't like is the price of books.
Of course they use Google, but not very well — just like my 75-year-old father. And they fill the campus libraries at all hours, just as Americans of all ages are using libraries in record numbers. (According to the American Library Association, visits to public libraries in the United States increased 61 percent from 1994 to 2004).
Monday, September 15, 2008
Recycle your A4 discarded paper
Journal of Library Innovation
plans to publish The Journal of Library Innovation, one of the first
journals devoted explicitly to innovation and creativity in libraries.
This peer reviewed, electronic journal will publish original research,
literature reviews, commentaries, case studies, reports on innovative
practices, letters, as well as book and product reviews. The journal will
also welcome provocative essays that will stimulate thought on the current
and future role of libraries in an Internet Age.
The inaugural issue will be published in January 2010. Please watch for a
call for papers in the near future. For more information, please contact
Editor-in-Chief Sheryl Knab (sknab@wnylrc.org) or Managing Editor Pamela
Jones (pjones@medaille.edu
Friday, September 5, 2008
KNOL: Google's new encyclopedia
http://chronicle.com/free/v55/i02/02a01701.htm?utm_source=at&utm_m
edium=en
Thursday, September 4, 2008
Drop in textbooks sales
KNOW WHY:
A negative trend in textbook sales has accelerated in the last
couple of months, and online piracy may be one cause of the
decline.
http://chronicle.com/free/2008/09/4480n.htm?utm_source=at&utm_mediu
m=en
--> MANY STUDENTS SEEK PIRATED TEXTBOOKS ONLINE:
http://chronicle.com/free/2008/09/4477n.htm?utm_source=at&utm_medi
um=en
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
Top 25 articles in Journal of Academic Librarianship
These are the top 25 from the J of Academic Librarianship (Jan-Mar 2008) - for your interest.
Monday, September 1, 2008
SABINET Gateway - African Online Journal Archive
Sabinet Gateway, an organisation promoting and supporting library and information services in Africa, has chosen OCLC's CONTENTdm Digital Collection Management Software to store, manage and make available an African Online Journal Archive.
read press release at:
http://www.itweb.co.za/office/sabinet/0808260725.htm
"The Next Scholarly Communication"?
SPARC-OAForum@arl.org)
Colleagues
As some may be aware, I have long proposed The Wiki as The Next Scholarly
Communication/Publishing Environment
Gerry McKiernan. "Disruptive Scholarship: An Idea Whose Time Has Come
Re(Use) / Re(Mix) / Re(New)." Invited keynote presentation delivered at
Transforming Practice for An Authentic Future, 3rd International
Conference on Plagiarism, June 23-25, 2008, Northumbria University,
Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England. Director' Cut version self-archived at:
http://www.public.iastate.edu/~gerrymck/IPC2008-DC.ppt (30 August 2008)
"Wikis: Disruptive Technologies for Dynamic Possibilities," Invited
presentastion delivered at Digital Libraries à la Carte: Choices for the
Future. Module 2: Technological Developments: Threats and Opportunities
for Libraries, Tilburg Innovation Centre for Electronic Resources BV
(TICER), Tilburg University, Tilburg, The Netherlands, August 23, 2005.
Self-archived at: http://www.public.iastate.edu/~gerrymck/TICER2005.ppt
(30 August 2008)
Thanks To Bernie Sloan, Sora Associates, Bloomington, Indiana has have
learned about a wiki called Mememoir and its associated implementation in
the WikiGenes project that I believe is a A Major Realization of The
Disruptive Scholarship Vision
"Reporting in [the September 2008 issue] Nature Genetics, scientist Robert
Hoffmann develops the first Wiki where authorship really matters. Based on
a powerful authorship tracking technology, this next generation wiki links
every word to its corresponding author. This way readers can always know
their sources and authors receive due credit.
[snip]
Clear authorship attribution in this next generation wiki makes it also
possible that users can rate each other based on their contributions. For
the first time, collaborative publishing can therefore be enhanced with
the advantages of a reputation system. Hoffmann describes how a
self-regulating reputation system can help to settle editing conflicts,
which were an important problem in first generation wikis and used to
depend on slow and refutable top-down decisions.
The scientific wiki project, introduced in the September issue of Nature
Genetics and released online today, is the first of its kind and a
milestone in the Mememoir project. "This release is an important proof of
principle, but our ambitious aim with the Mememoir project is to
revolutionize publishing in all of science," says Dr. Hoffmann, "with a
knowledge base that is open access, interdisciplinary and combines the
altruistic possibilities of wikis with explicit authorship."
Robert Hoffman / A Wiki for the Life Sciences Where Authorship Matters /
Nature Genetics / volume 40 / number 9 / 1047 - 1051 /September 2008 /
Published online 27 August 2008 / doi:10.1038/ng.f.217
Access to sample text from the paper as well as links to the full text of
the article (for subscribers (?)) in HMTL and PDF format as well as links
to the WikiGenes site and associated components (e.g., Introduction &
Tutorial, Sample 'Author' Contribution Page, Sample 'Author' Contribution,
etc.) are available at
[ http://tinyurl.com/582jq2 ]
Please share your thoughts/reactions/etc as a Comment on the entry for
this posting on the Scholarship 2.0 blog
BTW: Recommendations Of Any And All Other Radical Scholarly Wikis
Like/UnLike Mememoir / WikiGenes Are Most Welcome.
Regards,
Gerry
Gerry McKiernan
Associate Professor
Science and Technology Librarian
Iowa State University Library
Ames IA 50011
gerrymck@iastate.edu