Ebooks in academic libraries: management and access issues

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Presentation transcript:

Ebooks in academic libraries: management and access issues Andrea Imre Southern Illinois University Carbondale ALA Annual Conference, ALCTS Electronic Resources Interest Group June 29, 2013

Southern Illinois University Carbondale Public Institution Research University (high research activity) 14130 undergraduate, 4026 graduate, and 627 professional students 84% of students receiving financial aid

Morris Library ARL library Collection budget: $5.2 million Mono budget 10% Ebook collections often purchased with end of year money

Ebook collections at SIUC Proquest (Early English Books Online -2003, Literature Online - 2005) Readex (Early American Imprints) Intelext Past Masters Credo Reference (2007) Netlibrary –now on Ebscohost Cambridge Histories Online (2010) Oxford Scholarship Online (2011) Elsevier (2005) Springer collections (starting in 2010) Cold Spring Harbor (2012) IEEE (2012) MyiLibrary - Patron Driven Acquisition – (starting 2008)

E-resource Management E-journals vs. ebooks Collection development considerations Platform issues Formats Download options / mobile device compatibility Digital rights management issues ILL Acquisition issues New workflows Title lists Access / discovery issues Catalog Linkresolver Google Assessment (usage statistics) Yearly renewal decisions vs. One time purchases & annual fees title reconciliation Title reconciliation for serials vs incomplete title lists for ebooks

Challenges compared to ejournals Monographic nature Inaccurate title lists Incomplete information in title lists (i.e. ISBNs) Purchasing based on copyright date Withdrawn titles Updating MARC records

Cataloging challenges Method of notification Method of delivery (library admin site, e-mail notices, FTP, record order form for upgrades) Updates schedule Title lists (Acquisition) Record quality Stable control numbers (001 & 003) Correctly coded fixed fields 010 field Identifiers (ISBNs) or lack of ISBNs OCLC # (some vendor records include the print version’s OCLC #) Stable URLs MARCedit Challenges of overlaying records for the same title when purchased from different vendors Oxford records

Assessment of ebooks Usage statistics one-time purchases subscription based products PDA Google-effect Disciplinary differences EEBO image files, download individual pages in PDF or TIFF declining use since 2004-2012 >50 % drop in sessions, >50 % decrease in FT access Literature Online (drama, prose, poetry, criticism, journals, all HTML) 2005-2012 50 % drop in sessions, >50 % decrease in FT access Elsevier (large jump in 2011, overall increase since initial purchases, 2013 Jan-May already approaching Total 2012 use) Early American imprints (download large sections, entire document/ebookpossible in PDF) Credo reference up (reference materials widget on library website, up by almost 50% since 2008-2012) Springer (new content constantly added, so higher use is expected – 2005-2013, 300% growth in usage 2010-2012) Cambridge (increased use but hard to discover ebook on Google, no ebook version listed, links are to print version – working with publisher) Oxford Scholarship online – classics and Philosophy – very low usage even though we have the MARc records, Google access is fine, download on tablet is a problem (Cicero in letters)

Future directions?

http://www.mediapost.com/publications/article/198257/the-whole-story-internet-use-by-platform.html#axzz2XQTogUrA From MediaPost at http://www.mediapost.com/publictions/article/198257/the-whole-story-internet-use-by-platform.html#axzz2QTogUrA

Expectations Market trends / Mobile devices Demand for more ebooks Rising tablet sales “Mobile Dawg” initiative at SIUC Demand for more ebooks Expanded options from vendors/ publishers Purchasing models (access model, single user model, multiple user model, loans) More publishers offering download options Libraries need to work w/ publishers to improve ebook issues Access model – maybe best suited for classroom use Smartphones How People Really Use Mobile. (2013). Harvard Business Review, 91(1), 30-31. “68% consumers’ smartphone use happens at home” (Harvard Business Review, 2013) Seven primary motivations for mobile users: 46% = “me-time”, socializing, shopping, accomplishing, preparation, discovery, self-expression

Q & A Contact info: Andrea Imre Electronic Resources Librarian Southern Illinois University Carbondale phone: 618-453-4339 e-mail: aimre@lib.siu.edu