Posts Tagged ‘e-journals’

QR codes AWAY!

Posted on July 7th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

It was the annual University of Lincoln Library staff away day on Tuesday. I performed my turn: a 20-minute presentation on QR codes in academic libraries: the culmination of our (JB, PC, CL, MN, PS, EV) little internal mini-project. (There were two other mini research projects which reported on Tuesday: one group looked at improving the student experience; the other at the best ways of promoting new library resources.)

Then we broke off into groups to consider various questions arising out of the work of the project groups. My question was this:

How could we support and encourage the use of mobile devices in the Library?

We talked around this for a while: should we be supporting their use? (We certainly support and encourage the use of desktop PCs as tools for accessing library resources and services: so why not mobiles? Part of the problem, I think, is that we’ve not reconciled our historic library-y attitude to mobile phones with the possibilities of mobile computing. Whatever: we need to come to terms with them once and for all, decide on a position, and stick to it!)

Even given that we should be prepared to support mobile devices: do we need to encourage people to use them in the Library? (People seem to be adopting smartphones perfectly readily without the need for encouragement from libraries…) Perhaps what we need to encourage is not the use of mobile devices per se, but for students and academic staff to re-consider the use of them as valid devices for learning.

We also need to remember that ‘mobile devices’ ≠ just phones, but also mp3 players, tablets (e.g. iPads), e-book readers, netbooks, etc. etc.

After a while, we narrowed it down to six recommendations for the Library: three things we could do now, with no additional money, to support the use of mobile devices – three further things that we can plan to do in the future, which would require a bit of funding.

Do now with no extra money:

  1. Add QR codes to print journal box labels, to link our print holdings to the corresponding e-journal record (c.f. this photo);
  2. ‘Soft launch’ the mobile version of RefWorks (RefMobile) to our users;
  3. Ask colleagues within the Library who are already smartphone enthusiasts (they know who they are!) to demonstrate their toys to the rest of us.

Do in the future with a bit of funding:

  1. Run a marketing campaign to encourage people to re-consider their mobile phone as a useful academic tool (“the classroom in your pocket“?);
  2. Systems development – make sure as many of our systems as possible have a valid mobile user interface, and target development at those systems which are lagging behind;
  3. Purchase tablet devices for library staff to use when ‘roving’: providing support to students away from the help desk (“…you don’t need to log in, I can show you on this!“).

Pruning surplus e-journal packages

Posted on June 23rd, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

I’ve removed a number of e-journal ‘vendor’ packages from the e-journals A-to-Z.

The titles within them are all listed under/provided by another e-journal package (usually SwetsWise FullText Titles), so we haven’t lost access to any e-journal content.

The ‘pruned’ packages are:

  • Atypon Link Journals
  • JSTOR Current Collection
  • Pier Professional
  • SpringerLINK Journals

This is part of the work we’re doing to simplify our Electronic Resources Management (ERM) procedures.

Managing e-journal holdings: different types of package: any tips?

Posted on June 9th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

The University of Lincoln Library provides access to lots and lots of electronic journals72,000-odd unique e-journal titles, at last count.

Some of these 72,000 titles are individual subscriptions – that is, journals that we pick off the shelf and pay for one-by-one – because they’re particularly appropriate to the teaching/research of the University. Many, many more of them are journals that come to us as part of a one-size-fits-all “Big Deal” database package, where we have little or no control over the titles on offer, but where there’s a critical mass of valuable content with makes it worth our while to subscribe to the whole thing. Yet more are freebie and/or Open Access titles available on the Internet which we list to make it easy for our users to find them.

In all, we maintain access to 73 separate e-journal packages (plus a handful of individual oddities that don’t form part of a package), and nearly 110,600 e-journal links (a fair number of titles are duplicated across packages).

Screenshot of the A-to-Z

To help us keep tabs on all this content, and to make sense of the many different e-journal access points on behalf of Library users, we make use of a nifty tool called the Electronic Journals A-to-Z, which is provided and maintained by a company called EBSCO Information Services. The A-to-Z consists of:

  • A hosted e-journal ‘knowledgebase’: a directory of all the possible e-journals available, from which we can select those titles to which we have access;
  • A public, searchable journal listings site, with tools for customising the display of particular e-journals (or entire packages), including the holdings data (i.e. the start- and end-dates of full-text holdings) for each title;
  • An OpenURL link resolver, which we brand as – Find it @ Lincoln
  • Various admin services including usage reports.

Even with the tools that the A-to-Z provides, it’s still a lot of work to keep on top of so many e-journals from so many different sources. To help us (“us” being me and two colleagues from the E-resources and Acquisitions teams), we maintain an ERM spreadsheet in Google Docs: this contains details of all the acquisitions & technical information we need to manage each package in the list.

The packages fall into four distinct categories [below]; each category has to be maintained in a different way.

  1. Big Deal“-style databases, to which we subscribe in toto. These cause little or no bother. EBSCO do most of the work for us. Their A-to-Z knowledgebase contains details of all the titles in the database; EBSCO add new titles and remove old ones for us; we can be reasonably confident that their holdings data accurately reflect the database. The only real problems we have with these (and all) packages are around authentication – but that’s another story. This class of packages includes all the EBSCOhost databases (such as Academic Search Elite), most business databases, quite a few packages from JISC Collections, and all Open-Access platforms.
  2. “Vendor packages”, made up of a selection of individual titles from a single publisher or journal aggregator. Although all the titles exist within the knowledgebase, ready to be selected, EBSCO have no way of knowing in advance which titles we hold (save for a few titles for which EBSCO Information Services act as our ‘subscription agent’ – keeping up with all this?), nor the details of our full-text holdings. These packages (which include most of the high-impact scholarly journals from recognised academic publishers; those which—by definition—the Academic Subject Librarians have chosen on their constituencies’ behalf) are hard work to maintain, as well as being very prone to error. For any more than a small handful of titles, we can’t possibly keep on top of them ‘manually’, and must rely on downloaded publishers’ holdings reports, which we then have to process into an EBSCO-friendly, tab-delimited format before uploading them to the A-to-Z. Publishers rarely make their holdings reports available in an immediately usable format, and subscription holdings tend to be irritatingly regularly subject to change, making this the Forth Bridge (Sisyphean task for non UK-ers!) of e-resources admin. We’re starting to try and reduce the size of the job by looking to see if all of these packages are absolutely necessary: I’ve a suspicion that some of the smaller publishers could be rolled up into the larger ‘aggregator’ packages with no loss of access.
  3. “Other” titles that don’t belong to any package. These represent a tiny proportion of our e-journals (we currently list 45 “Other” titles out of 72,000 = 0.06%) and an even more minuscule proportion of our overall usage… BUT are responsible for a disproportionately large amount of work: especially around authentication. For that reason, I try and keep the number of “Other” titles to the absolute minimum possible. I’ll use any excuse to drop one :-)
  4. Finally, what EBSCO refers to as “Custom” collections (we have 13 in total): ‘local’ packages (for local people?): stuff that doesn’t appear in EBSCO’s knowledgebase at all. This is a grab-bag of oddities, experiments, print holdings (surprisingly popular), RSS feeds, and packages with really, really funky authentication requirements. Same as for the Vendor packages in 2, we have to add these to the A-to-Z by constructing and uploading a tab-delimited file. Again, I battle to keep these “Custom” packages to a minimum: but in actual fact they’re less trouble than they might be. We have complete control over the data, so they’re relatively easy to update, and they tend to be fairly low-maintenance once they’re up and running.

You can browse a list of our current e-journal packages at: http://lncn.eu/h59

I’d really, really like to simplify things, especially for classes 3 and 4. Question for fellow e-resources librarians: what tricks do you have for managing your e-journal packages and holdings information?

Fun things to do with JournalTOCs

Posted on June 9th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

I’ve been meaning to write this up for a while. I think JournalTOCs is excellent, and it’s nice to see they’ve used their recent redesign/relaunch to make the site much more usable. JournalTOCs is one of those things—LibraryThing‘s another—where I don’t understand why more library people (especially subject/research support librarian types) aren’t raving about it.

Put simply: JournalTOCs is a tool to search for (and within) the Tables of Contents for electronic journals which are available as RSS feeds. You can find it at: www.journaltocs.ac.uk

Screenshot of JournalTOCs

“JournalTOCs is the largest, free collection of scholarly journal Tables of Contents (TOCs): 16,424 journals (including 2,149 Open Access journals) from 840 publishers.”

(An aside: what did happen to the suspiciously-similar ticTOCs? Were the two projects/services related? Is JournalTOCs just the ‘production’ version of the ticTOCs experiment? Or were they in competition somehow? I can’t seem to tell.)

Here are some of the fun things you can do with JournalTOCs:

  1. Search for articles within journal by keyword – as well as for the journal itself by name or ISSN;
  2. Browse for journals by subject or publisher;
  3. Export individual article references to RefWorks;
  4. Register for a JournalTOCs account, sign in, then select journals to ‘follow’ by ticking a box next to each one. You can then export your followed list of journals as an OPML file—effectively, a bundle of RSS feeds—and import the bundle into a feed reader of your choice. (OPML is itself quite cool.)

For instance – here’s an OPML bundle of food science journals to which the Holbeach Campus Library has a subscription. I created it by searching for and following those journals in JournalTOCs, then going to my full list of followed journals (at: http://www.journaltocs.ac.uk/followedJournals.php) and clicking the ‘Save & Export‘ link at the bottom of the screen. This creates an OPML file of your followed journals, which you need to save to your computer.

Screenshot of JournalTOCs

I can then go to my Google Reader account and upload the OPML file (you’ll find the option to do that under the Settings > Reader settings menu). JournalTOCs have a little help guide of the process you’ll need to follow in Google Reader. Other feed readers (srsly? There are other feed readers?) will do something similar.

Screenshot from Google Reader

Once you’ve uploaded your OPML bundle to G. Reader, you’ll probably want to add all the TOC feeds to the same folder (I created one called ‘foodjournals’). It would be really nice if Google Reader allowed you to specify a destination folder on import (similar to what RefWorks does): instead you have to do this manually – unless I’m missing something?

Screenshot of Google Reader

  1. JournalTOCs has a set of monster APIs, well-documented, with calls for both journals and articles. We’re hoping to make some productive and constructive use of those APIs as part of the Jerome project (that’s another blog post I need to write), but frankly this sort of thing is a Mashed Librarian’s dream. I’m already [mashup alert! mashup alert!] started using the APIs (amongst others) to populate a Google Spreadsheet with information about food science journals by ISSN. Then we use the spreadsheet to mailmerge to a PowerPoint show which forms our rolling digital photo frame mini-display at Holbeach. (This is probably another blog post I ought to write up.)
    photo_ejournals_frame [old photo]
  2. There’s a user API as well, which you can use to retrieve a list of the journals followed by a registered user of JournalTOCs (identified by email address). So, if I wanted to share my list of favourited journals, instead of publishing an OPML file I could just provide a link to: http://www.journaltocs.ac.uk/api/user/paul@paulstainthorp.com – this is more dynamic than OPML, in that if I start following a new journal, it’ll automatically be picked up by the API, without my having to export a new OPML file each time;
  3. JournalTOCs also provide advice for administrators of e-journals published using OJS (Open Journals Systems) software. This is something we could do with our own University of Lincoln-published e-journals (Neo and the Occasional Working Papers series) which are hosted on ojs.lincoln.ac.uk

For more of this sort of thing, see the official JournalTOCs blog, their news updates page, and Roddy MacLeod’s blog.

For the sake of completeness, I should also mention the Zetoc RSS feeds service. It’s not quite the same as JournalTOCs, in that these are feeds mediated by the British Library’s TOC service rather than the ‘native’, publishers’ own feeds, but it’s useful for different reasons – and it does cover some of the gaps in JournalTOCs. It’s all RSS, so you can mix and match in your feed reader.

Logging in to JSTOR

Posted on May 3rd, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

The University of Lincoln has full-text access to 500+ digitised journals through JSTOR, held in three collections: JSTOR Arts & Sciences I, II and III.

JSTOR is a “not–for–profit organization dedicated to helping the scholarly community discover, use, and build upon a wide range of intellectual content in a trusted digital archive“. It’s one of the most heavily-used e-journals services in the humanities.

However, logging in to JSTOR is not always straightforward. Here are some tips:

~~~ Tip #1 ~~~

The easiest way to access JSTOR is via the University Portal, at:

(Log in using your University of Lincoln network\accountID and password.)

~~~ Tip #2 ~~~

If you come across an article stored in JSTOR when you are searching the web (e.g. via Google Scholar), you can log in from the JSTOR login page, as follows:

  1. Scroll down the page to the section marked “ACCESS JSTOR THROUGH A PARTICIPATING INSTITUTION”.
  2. Ignore the option marked ‘Athens login’ – it’s not used in this case.
  3. In the “Select your country” box, select “United Kingdom”.
  4. In the “Select your institution” box, select “University of Lincoln”.
  5. Click the “LOGIN” button.
    Screenshot of the JSTOR login page
  6. Then, click on the link to “Go to the University of Lincoln login page” and enter your University of Lincoln network\accountID and password.
  7. (If, for whatever reason, your web browser hasn’t correctly recognised that you’re a member of the University of Lincoln, you might be presented with an Athens username/password option. If you see one of these screens, click on the “Alternative login” option, search for “University of Lincoln” and you should be sent to the correct login option. [See these login tips])

~~~ Tip #3 ~~~

If neither of these methods of access are working properly, try the alternative login at the following address:

(Log in using your University of Lincoln network\accountID and password.)

(Technical note: this alternative method of access uses LibResProxy, a CGI proxy application which mimics IP-based on-campus authentication. It will be much slower than normal access, and not all features of the destination site may be available.)

~~~~~~

If you have any problems accessing JSTOR, please speak to your Academic Subject Librarian.

E-journals A-to-Z unavailable this weekend

Posted on April 27th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

The e-journals A-to-Z and Find it @ Lincoln link-resolver service will be unavailable this weekend.

  • From: Midnight on Friday, 29 April
  • Until: 5.00pm on Sunday, 1 May

This is being done so that EBSCO (who provide these services to the University of Lincoln) can upgrade their systems. Please accept our apologies for whatever inconvenience this causes you. You will still be able to search for and access the full-text of electronic journals by using the databases listed on the e-Library section of the University Portal.

On-campus access to 14 engineering journals from IEEE Xplore

Posted on April 20th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

The University of Lincoln now has an online subscription to the full text (published since 2005) of a small number of engineering titles from IEEE Xplore, which provides access to the world’s highest quality technical literature in engineering and technology.

These 14 journals are AVAILABLE ON CAMPUS ONLY:

  1. Automatic Control, IEEE Transactions on
  2. Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers, IEEE Transactions on
  3. Circuits and Systems II: Express Briefs, IEEE Transactions on
  4. Control Systems Technology, IEEE Transactions on
  5. Energy Conversion, IEEE Transactions on
  6. Industrial Electronics, IEEE Transactions on
  7. Industry Applications Magazine, IEEE
  8. Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on
  9. Neural Networks, IEEE Transactions on
  10. Power Electronics, IEEE Transactions on
  11. Power Systems, IEEE Transactions on
  12. Signal Processing, IEEE Transactions on
  13. Smart Grid, IEEE Transactions on
  14. Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, Part B: Cybernetics, IEEE Transactions on

You can access them through the Portal and e-journals A-to-Z. Judith Elkin is the subject librarian for engineering.

More Google Analytics / Site Search

Posted on March 30th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

I’ve just enabled Google Site Search on the e-journals A-to-Z (see my previous post for context!)

Looking at the first few days’ worth of keywords seems to paint an encouraging picture: we’ve always assumed [suspected; feared] that our users are terribly confused about what the A-to-Z is for; anecdotally, students get frustrated when they search by article keyword, author’s name, etc., and receive no results, because the only thing the A-to-Z understands is the names of journals (e.g. “Annals of Tourism Research“), ISSNs, and publishers.

That happens, undoubtedly, but seems to happen a lot less than we assume. The vast majority of the search terms in the top 500 searches (based on barely a week’s worth of data, admittedly) are valid A-to-Z searches, and ought to have led the user to something meaningful.

Screenshot of Google Site Search terms for the e-journals A-to-Z

ERM flowcharts

Posted on March 18th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

We’re trying to document our ERM (e-resources management) procedures more rigorously, to help make it easier for multiple library staff to get involved in maintaining our e-journals service, and to guard against problems if the Electronic Resources Librarian (that’s me!) were to leave. Succession planning.

Just to give an idea of the complexity of the job, here’s one of the first flowcharts we’ve produced, which deals only with the authentication aspect of ERM, for one of several authentication processes, for a tiny subset of e-journals. It’ll be one of many diagrams we need to document all the permutations of ERM.

MS Visio flowchart of part of our ERM processes

As it happens, it relates to LibResProxy, an HTTP proxy application (based on CGIProxy) which we use as a ‘tool of last resort’ for providing off-campus access to certain IP-protected library e-resources, where no other method of off-campus authentication (Athens, UK Federation, form capture, etc.) exists.

We’re using MS Visio to create the flowcharts, and storing them (as native .vsd files for download) in Google Docs.

ERM using brown paper and string

Posted on February 24th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

We’re putting together a few tools to help us to manage our electronic library resources (in particular, the 130+ e-journal packages to which we provide access for our users). It’s electronic resources management without using a dedicated Electronic Resources Management System.

Specifically, we’re introducing:

  1. A shared Google spreadsheet to store information about each package (authentication method, usage, etc.)
  2. A list on the University Portal to log and review problems and errors with particular e-resources
  3. Flowcharts, produced using Microsoft Visio, to help us to develop and fix procedures for dealing with new and changed e-journal packages
  4. Biannual (April & September) usage/VfM reports for subject librarians and Library SMT