The minutes of the meeting of Ovid enhancement group held 9th July 2010 can be found at:
http://www.jibs.ac.uk/liaison/OVIDSP/minutes.html
JIBS represents users of bibliographic databases and related products available to the UK HE, FE and Research Council communities via national site-licence arrangements.
Thursday, September 02, 2010
Sunday, July 18, 2010
JIBS-Ebsco Enhancement Meeting - Minutes
The minutes of the last meeting are now available on the JIBS website at
Ebsco Minutes for June 30th 2010
Ebsco Minutes for June 30th 2010
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
"Where now for resource licensing"? summary
Catherine Parker (University of Huddersfield / JIBS committee member) has written a summary of the JIBS/EduServ workshop "Where now for resource licensing"? held earlier this month:
http://www.jibs.ac.uk/events/workshops/licensing/licensingsummaryparker.pdf
http://www.jibs.ac.uk/events/workshops/licensing/licensingsummaryparker.pdf
Friday, June 18, 2010
Andy Powell's summary of JIBS/Eduserv Event
Further to Sue's summary of Wednesday's event, you may be interested to read this version by Andy Powell of Eduserv:
http://efoundations.typepad.com/efoundations/2010/06/where-next-for-resource-licensing.html
http://efoundations.typepad.com/efoundations/2010/06/where-next-for-resource-licensing.html
Where now for resource licensing? - slides available
The speakers' presentations from Wednesday's JIBS/EduServ workshop "Where now for resource licensing?" are now available at:
http://www.jibs.ac.uk/events/intro.html
http://www.jibs.ac.uk/events/intro.html
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Eduserv-JIBS licensing event 16 June - summary
Thank you to everyone at JIBS and Eduserv who helped organise yesterday's event. And a big thank you to all of the excellent speakers. It was a well-attended and interesting event. The slides and a more detailed summary will apppear via this blog and the JIBS website in the next week.
Owens Stephens's entertaining keynote set out some of the challenges we face in making e-resources available - especially with regard to the changing expectations of our users, which mean licences need to be flexible. He asked - is walk-in access no longer the key issue it once was? Louise Cole of Kingston University reinforced this by giving a very useful and comprehensive overview of the types of user groups we encounter (including some in a submarine!). Josephine Burt of the Open University described the particular issues faced by the OU in providing resources for users who are all off-site, and the increasing number of collaborative courses where the boundaries for licensing become very fuzzy. Jenny Carroll of Eduserv then gave us summary results from a survey of Eduserv data contacts, which gathered information about the types and levels of partnership arrangements out there. Jenny also asked participants at the event to feedback on their priorities for extending licences to external groups.
After lunch (where the buzz of discussion was very lively), Matt Durant explained Bath Spa University's decision to use Open Athens rather than Shibboleth, and included a useful demonstration of the technicalities. Mark Bide of EDItEUR gave a very enlightening presentation about machine readable licences, particularly ONIX-PL, and stressed the need for librarians and others to specify ONIX-PL compliance from providers. Ed Dee of EDINA also encouraged us to demand SAML compliance from service providers, with a useful technical illustration of why this is not currently the norm, which means granularity of usage data cannot be achieved. Finally, Martyn Jansen of Eduserv summed up the issues, and reported on a detailed analysis which Eduserv have carried out of providers' licence terms. Eduserv plan to refine their licence terms to make them relevant to today's users and make them more future-proof, but are still open to suggestions from the library community.
Owens Stephens's entertaining keynote set out some of the challenges we face in making e-resources available - especially with regard to the changing expectations of our users, which mean licences need to be flexible. He asked - is walk-in access no longer the key issue it once was? Louise Cole of Kingston University reinforced this by giving a very useful and comprehensive overview of the types of user groups we encounter (including some in a submarine!). Josephine Burt of the Open University described the particular issues faced by the OU in providing resources for users who are all off-site, and the increasing number of collaborative courses where the boundaries for licensing become very fuzzy. Jenny Carroll of Eduserv then gave us summary results from a survey of Eduserv data contacts, which gathered information about the types and levels of partnership arrangements out there. Jenny also asked participants at the event to feedback on their priorities for extending licences to external groups.
After lunch (where the buzz of discussion was very lively), Matt Durant explained Bath Spa University's decision to use Open Athens rather than Shibboleth, and included a useful demonstration of the technicalities. Mark Bide of EDItEUR gave a very enlightening presentation about machine readable licences, particularly ONIX-PL, and stressed the need for librarians and others to specify ONIX-PL compliance from providers. Ed Dee of EDINA also encouraged us to demand SAML compliance from service providers, with a useful technical illustration of why this is not currently the norm, which means granularity of usage data cannot be achieved. Finally, Martyn Jansen of Eduserv summed up the issues, and reported on a detailed analysis which Eduserv have carried out of providers' licence terms. Eduserv plan to refine their licence terms to make them relevant to today's users and make them more future-proof, but are still open to suggestions from the library community.
Wednesday, June 09, 2010
Ebsco Enhancement Meeting - June 29th
There will be an Ebsco Enhancement meeting on June 29th in Birmingham. Could you please send any questions you would like me to put to Ebsco staff by June 22nd
Regards
Maureen
Maureen Richardson
Electronic Resources Manager
Edge Hill University
richardm@edgehill.ac.uk
Regards
Maureen
Maureen Richardson
Electronic Resources Manager
Edge Hill University
richardm@edgehill.ac.uk
Friday, April 30, 2010
Where next for resource licensing? (JIBS / Eduserv workshop 16/06/10)
Where next for resource licensing?
Joint JIBS User Group and Eduserv event
Joint JIBS User Group and Eduserv event
Wednesday 16 June, 10.30am - 4pm
Khalili Lecture Theatre, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London
Do you know what your staff and students are allowed to do with the journals, databases or e-books your library provides for them?
Are you are an e-resources manager, already grappling with the thorny issues surrounding licence agreements?
This joint JIBS and Eduserv event will explore the issues around licences including :-
· the expanding customer base and distributed sites of most libraries
· the issues raised by cross institution arrangements, collaboration, affiliation and franchising
· our users’ expectations in a digital environment
· varying authentication systems and the management data they provide
· developments in machine-readable licences
Come along to this event to hear from some of the key players, and to put forward and discuss your problems and ideas.
See the programme at: http://www.jibs.ac.uk/events/workshops/licensing/programme.htm
Booking form is at http://www.jibs.ac.uk/events/workshops/licensing/bookform.htm
We plan to report the event in a live blog. For anyone tweeting, blogging or sharing other material about the event, the event tag is ‘wn4rl’ (‘#wn4RL’ on Twitter).
For enquiries about the event, please contact Sue Cumberpatch (sc17@york.ac.uk) or Fiona Bowtell (f.bowtell@open.ac.uk).
If you are interested in joining or learning more about JIBS please go to the JIBS User Group website at http://www.jibs.ac.uk/, or if you would like to know more about Eduserv, please visit: http://www.eduserv.org.uk/
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Survey of Digitisation of Core Readings in UK Higher Education
The final report of a survey carried out independently by Jane Secker (LSE) and June Hedges (UCL) in March/April 2009 is now available. The survey looked primarily at current activities relating to the scanning of core readings to support taught courses, but also touched on wider issues such as copyright in HE institutions, e-learning support and collection development.
Carried out following the introduction of the Copyright Licensing Agency's new Comprehensive Licence (which allows copying from digital originals) in August 2008, the survey posed questions about the impact of this and of the previous Trial Scanning Licence on services provided by libraries across the sector.
The report is available at the project website: http://clt.lse.ac.uk/Projects/Digitisation_survey.php
Carried out following the introduction of the Copyright Licensing Agency's new Comprehensive Licence (which allows copying from digital originals) in August 2008, the survey posed questions about the impact of this and of the previous Trial Scanning Licence on services provided by libraries across the sector.
The report is available at the project website: http://clt.lse.ac.uk/Projects/Digitisation_survey.php
Thursday, April 01, 2010
JIBS student prize
- - Updated October 2010 - -
THIS CONTEST HAS NOW CLOSED - the winner will be announced shortly
A student award is being offered by JIBS User Group for a research-based project in JIBS area of concern. The JIBS Student Prize will be awarded to a Postgraduate dissertation or a final year Undergraduate project which focuses on the area of library information systems, bibliographic databases or other resource discovery technologies and how such resources or technologies are being developed or exploited. Practical projects that exploit such technologies will also be considered if they have been accepted as Postgraduate dissertation or final year Undergraduate project. Each type will be given appropriate consideration. Each School of Library and Information Studies is invited to nominate one of their students' projects for the award.
THIS CONTEST HAS NOW CLOSED - the winner will be announced shortly
A student award is being offered by JIBS User Group for a research-based project in JIBS area of concern. The JIBS Student Prize will be awarded to a Postgraduate dissertation or a final year Undergraduate project which focuses on the area of library information systems, bibliographic databases or other resource discovery technologies and how such resources or technologies are being developed or exploited. Practical projects that exploit such technologies will also be considered if they have been accepted as Postgraduate dissertation or final year Undergraduate project. Each type will be given appropriate consideration. Each School of Library and Information Studies is invited to nominate one of their students' projects for the award.
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