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RKA20140619 ILL Implications in a Bookless Library: Needs, Strategies and Solutions Kathryn Miller 2015.

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Presentation on theme: "RKA20140619 ILL Implications in a Bookless Library: Needs, Strategies and Solutions Kathryn Miller 2015."— Presentation transcript:

1 RKA20140619 ILL Implications in a Bookless Library: Needs, Strategies and Solutions Kathryn Miller 2015

2 RKA20140619-2 The Bookless Library

3 RKA20140619-3 Library Mission: To promote intellectual discovery in an innovative, user- centered, learning environment; provide specialized resources and support opportunities for every Poly student and scholar to connect, collaborate, and anticipate technological progress. Library Vision: The Florida Polytechnic University Library will be a central hub of student success by providing a variety of information-based services, including learning support programs, career services, academic tutoring, and student success workshops.

4 RKA20140619-4 How can we be “bookless”? Internal Support Provost Faculty Strong funding for PDA program Florida Industrial Phosphate Research Institute (FIPR) Specialized print collection One-of-a-kind materials State University System Uborrow FLARE Local Public Libraries Lakeland Polk County Bookmobile Florida Virtual CampusDigital Reading Initiative Flow Information (Reference) Management tool

5 RKA20140619-5 ILL Implications in a Bookless Library Needs: We need to have licenses that allow lending of electronic materials. Strategies: Key language to include in licenses. Solutions: Is direct article purchase a solution? Shared Platform (Think Amazon)? How do we lead change?

6 RKA20140619-6 Needs Google Scholar “The availability of online information resources, available through subscription-based online library databases (e.g., InfoTrac, JSTOR, PubMed) and on the open Web (e.g. government sites, Wikipedia, Google Scholar) has significantly changed college level research. Today’s college students need to develop keen research competencies and strategies for tapping, evaluating, and sorting through the proliferation of information sources available to them.” “Learning the Ropes: How College Freshman Conduct Course Research Once They Enter College,” Alison J. Head, Project Information Literacy Research Report, December 4, 2013. We need to have licenses that allow lending of electronic materials. –Faculty –Students

7 RKA20140619-7 Legal Questions? Question: Does copyright law allow for electronic books to be shared with other libraries? Question: Can I lend electronic journal articles?

8 RKA20140619-8 Copyright Law vs. Copyright Law Section 108 of the Copyright Act –Allows a library to copy and send to another library portions of copyrighted materials as part of its ILL service, provided the "aggregate quantities" of copied items received by the borrowing library do not substitute a periodical subscription or purchase of a work. “Put another way, there has been no transposition of the first sale doctrine into the digital sphere. As a result, the first sale doctrine does not apply to licensed copies. By definition, a digital book or sound recording or image is not owned by the licensee. Libraries do not own their copies of ebooks, at least not in the same sense they own their copies of printed books. The ability of libraries to provide their patrons with access to an ebook is conditional upon their ability to adhere to the license terms” https://www.copyright.com/Services/copyrightoncampus/content/ill.html http://www.thedigitalshift.com/2013/03/copyright/why-we-miss-the-first-sale-doctrine-in-digital-libraries/

9 RKA20140619-9 CONTU Guidelines A borrowing library limits requests to no more than five articles from the most recent five years of a specific journal. Libraries either pay copyright royalties after the 5 th article is requested, or subscribe to the journal. Functions as reassurance to copyright holders that ILL will not replace periodical subscriptions and book purchases by libraries.

10 RKA20140619-10 Contract Law

11 RKA20140619-11 Strategy: Key License Language http://www.minitex.umn.edu/Sharing/Ejournals.aspx

12 RKA20140619-12

13 RKA20140619-13

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16 RKA20140619-16 Interlibrary Loan Policies http://www.minitex.umn.edu/Sharing/Ejournals.aspx

17 RKA20140619-17

18 RKA20140619-18 @ Poly: Growing Articles: ILL: 12 articles received 5 for faculty, 7 for students. Direct Article Purchase: 7 2 for faculty, 5 for students. Books: 15 books received, both OCLC (10) and Uborrow (5). 3 for faculty, 12 for students.

19 RKA20140619-19 Where are we Going? ILL as a Collection Development Tool Policies—How to control spending Is it cheaper to just buy the book and give it to the patron? Establish Reciprocal Borrowing Agreements with library networks Assessment

20 RKA20140619-20 Solutions--Direct Article Purchase

21 RKA20140619-21 Solutions Copyright Clearance Center--Get It Now Article Choice—Elsevier Reprints Desk WTS Article Delivery—University of Wisconsin Madison Consider: An Amazon type platform for article exchange Or do we have that already?

22 RKA20140619-22 Controls

23 RKA20140619-23 Implications for a Bookless Library Lessons Learned Can we have everything? Do we need to have everything? Staffing Teaching Faculty Librarians Marketing (need to sell the virtual library) Support services Have something that is unique Interlibrary loan Connection to a traditional library Importance of assessment Quantitative vs. Quantitative

24 RKA20140619-24 Change How do we lead change?


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