Transcript Document

EPIC Online Publishing
Use and Costs
Evaluation Program:
Summary Report
Purpose of EPIC
Evaluation Program
• To investigate how online electronic resources
affect different aspects of the scholarly
communication process.
a) general perspective
b) through lens of EPIC projects
How Does the Shift to Electronic
Resources Affect the Following Groups?
• Publishers
• Information Technology
• Librarians
• Faculty
• Students
Research Projects
•Librarian Focus Group
•Faculty Interviews
•Student Interviews
•Librarian Online Survey (1007 respondents)
•Faculty Online Survey (845 respondents)
•Student Online Survey (1233 respondents)
http://www.epic.columbia.edu/eval/
Summary of Findings
Librarians:
Changes in Library Staffing,
Responsibilities, and Skills
Staffing
64% of librarians report that additional staff have
been added:
• IT staff (48%)
• Webmaster (38%)
• Site licensing specialists (12%)
• Data management librarian (7%)
New Responsibilities
• Instructing users in use of electronic resources (91%)
• Reviewing/evaluating/ electronic resources for purchase
(80%)
• Recommend for purchase (78%)
• Evaluate usage (50%)
• Make retention decisions (50%)
• Review license agreements (22%)
New Job Skills
When asked to list out new skills needed, respondents
mentioned:
• Overall knowledge of computers and software
• Web development/programming
• Computer search skills
• Database knowledge
• Troubleshooting skills
• Decision making skills for purchase of new electronic
resources
Faculty and Students:
Changes in Teaching, Research,
and Learning
Teaching
99.8% use electronic resources in some capacity for
teaching
Enhanced lectures/course assignments:
• Use of current events information (81%)
• Use of real data for examples or assignments (85%)
• Use of Internet during class to demonstrate with
interactive graphics (Flash) or applets (70%)
Teaching (cont’)
Supplementary teaching tools:
• Use of online information as primary or secondary
course material (92%)
• Use of Learning Management Environments (35%)
Administrative aid:
• Course website (61%)
Research
92% report electronic resources have affected the type of
projects they work on
Affects types of projects worked on:
• Increased access to colleagues from around the world within
and outside their area of expertise (77%)
• Increased access to information in own field (63%)
• Increased access to data (59%)
• Increased access to information outside area of expertise which
allows work on interdisciplinary projects (44%)
Research (cont’)
Affects productivity and audience reached:
• Increases scholarly productivity (75%)
• Research reaches a broader audience (59%)
• Research gets out into the public eye sooner (48%)
Learning
Benefits reaped:
• Ability to do projects they couldn’t have done in the past
(F: 85%, S: 73%)
Challenges faced:
• Get overloaded with information (S: 57%)
• Have difficulty judging the quality of information
(F: 93%,
S: 51%)
• Plagiarism (F: 87%, S: 48%)
Learning (cont’)
Work habits:
• Tend to go no further than electronic resources
(F: 91%, S: 55%)
• Students don’t learn how to use physical library (F: 89%,
S: 23%)
Observations and Conclusions
Change in Role of Library
• Physical spaces other than the library are taking on important
roles in research, teaching, and learning
• Physical library used more for its’ study space than for its’
academic resources
• Lack of organized instruction for remote users
• Loss of library control over the quality of material that reaches
users
Change in Information that
Reaches Users
• Availability of information that users might otherwise not have
• Increased use of non-library sponsored materials
• Too much information
• Not all information is good information (lack of quality
control)
Change In Faculty/Student
Work Habits
When, where, and what they use:
• Work any time of day or night
• Work from locations other than a campus facility
• Often don’t go beyond electronic resources
Change in Interactions
Between Faculty and Students:
• Use of Learning Management Environments
• Use of e-mail
Among Faculty:
• Increased contact with colleagues outside one’s institution
• Virtual conferences
• Virtual research teams
Critical Areas for Further Research
• Library and publishing strategies that
acknowledge faculty and student use of
Google as the first stop for research.
• Future role of libraries as physical and
virtual spaces for research and learning
• Need for new functionality in electronic
resources to satisfy new user expectations.
Christina Norman
Research Director
The Electronic Publishing Initiative
at Columbia (EPIC)
[email protected]
http://www.epic.columbia.edu/eval