Posts Tagged ‘GCW’

I Am Collecting A Collection

Posted on May 31st, 2012 by Paul Stainthorp

As part of the setup process for our forthcoming EBSCO Discovery Service (“Find it at Lincoln”), we’ve been rationalising the location and collection codes which display on our library catalogue (HiP). These will be harvested and used by EBSCO to allow users to limit searches of our printed/ebook holdings to particular collections, as well as to modify and limit searches using facets. (Explanation of faceted search here. Screenshot of EDS showing search facets here.)

The location and collection codes/labels used in HiP had drifted over the years. Many of them were redundant, there was the odd item assigned to a rogue collection, and some of the language was out-of-date. This has all now been brought into line. We have 4 locations, and 32 unique location:collection combinations.

Screenshot of the library catalogue showing locations and collections

Here is an updated list of all of our collections.

Location: GCW University Library

  1. Abstracts & Indexes
  2. Audio-visual Collection
  3. Complementary Medicine Clinic – a collection of books which isn’t actually held in the Library…
  4. Dissertations – for historical reasons, actually in a separate location, “GCW University Library (Core)”
  5. Ebooks – all ebooks are notionally located in the main GCW University Library*
  6. Historical Resources – I’ve no idea what this is…
  7. Journals
  8. Law Library
  9. Local History Collection
  10. Main Collection
  11. Maps
  12. Maths & Statistics Room – small collection of reference books on the ground floor
  13. Microform
  14. Oversize Collection
  15. Zibby Garnett Library – our rare books room; c.f. the Zibby Garnett Fellowship
  16. (Please ask at the library desk) – a catch-all label for various closed collections and odd things—SPSS CDs, off-prints, etc.—held in filing cabinets

Location: Theology Reading Room

  1. Main Collection

Location: Riseholme Park Campus Library

  1. Audio-visual Collection
  2. Journals
  3. Main Collection
  4. Reference Collection
  5. Special Collection (Riseholme Park) – historical and rare books, mainly agriculture and biology
  6. (Please ask at the library desk)

Location: Hull Campus Library

  1. Audio-visual Collection
  2. Dissertations
  3. Journals
  4. Main Collection

Location: Holbeach Campus Library

  1. Audio-visual Collection
  2. Dissertations
  3. Main Collection
  4. Reference Collection
  5. (Please ask at the library desk)

*I know, this doesn’t make much sense.

The University of Lincoln Library is on Twitter

Posted on May 2nd, 2012 by Paul Stainthorp

Follow @GCWLibrary for updates.

Screenshot of the Library on Twitter

What could you get done in the Library with an extra 6½ hours?

Posted on January 24th, 2012 by Paul Stainthorp

Now’s your chance to find out: we’re extending the term-time opening hours of the GCW University Library by an extra 6½ hours per week. (This applies to the times when we’re not open 24 hours a day, of course.)

From Monday, 30 January 2012, until the end of the current term:

  • The Library will open at 08.00 Monday-Friday (instead of 08.30)
  • On Saturdays, we’ll open at 09.00 (instead of 10.00)
  • On Sundays we’ll open at 09.00 (instead of 12.00)
  • Desk services will also start earlier at the weekends, at 09.15

This takes our total opening hours to 106 hours/week in term time, or 146 hours/week during 24-hour opening. (This compares well with other universities’ library opening hours. Three universities selected at random on the web had term-time opening hours for their main academic library of 135, 108½, and 100 hours per week.)

Screenshot of the new term-time opening hours

 

You can find our new opening hours on the University Portal.

I’ve got to get to a library… fast!

Posted on October 11th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

Here’s a lovely little hack for displaying the contact details of our 5 libraries, neatly in a web page:

Map of the geo-lookup areas (approximate)

It uses Alex Bilbie‘s implementation of a geolocation/IP-lookup script to try and determine the nearest library to the person viewing the page, according to the following rules:

  1. If you’re on campus, then choose the library for that campus.
  2. If you’re within 20 miles of one of our three campus libraries (Riseholme, Hull, or Holbeach) then choose the nearest library.
  3. If you’re actually inside Chad Varah House, choose the Theology Reading Room.
  4. If none of these rules apply, choose the main GCW University Library.

We’ll be tweaking these ‘library lookup’ rules to get the best results. I’d also like to look at overriding the geo-lookup settings for logged-in users (displaying instead the library for their campus of study as derived from their profile). And what about displaying information about SCONUL Access libraries for distance learners, perhaps making use of Owen Stephens’ SCONUL libraries lookup script?

The page then uses the jQuery ‘accordion‘ widget to display the contact details for the chosen library, in a nice expandable format (i.e. you can click on the headings to display the details for a different library). It all degrades gracefully for browsers with less-than-impeccable support for JavaScript.

Neat, no? The code is on Github if you want to have a look.

Screenshot of the library contact page

Links to Blackwell’s from the library catalogue (MARC 020 $a Considered Harmful)

Posted on September 26th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

We’ve added a link to Blackwell’s online bookshop to every book catalogue record on our catalogue.

Example here.

Screenshot of the library catalogue

Books bought via these links (or via http://bookshop.blackwell.co.uk/lincoln) attract a 5% discount, and free delivery on orders over £20. The Blackwell Connect shop at the University (located in the foyer of the GCW University Library) is open 10am-4pm Monday-Friday from Monday 19th September until Friday 11th November 2011.

Unfortunately, quite a few of the links don’t work, because the catalogue record contains additional, parenthetical trailing free text [examples: …(pbk.) …(hbk.) …(ebk.)] after the 10- or 13-digit ISBN itself, all within the MARC 020 $a field – and this additional trailing text breaks Blackwell’s URL structure.

This sort of thing might be standard cataloguing practice: but unfortunately it’s a practice that leads to unusable—and certainly not “MAchine-Readable“—data, especially in a field that contains such a useful unique ID. See the Robot Librarian’s blog post on why …(pbk.) drives him “absolutely batshit crazy“.

Without recataloguing or mass-MARC-editing every record in our collection, I’m not sure how we can fix this. Possibly some kind of Yahoo! Pipes hack is in order: honestly, I’m not sure I have the energy.

Here’s an example of a ‘bad’ link to Blackwell’s, as generated by our catalogue. And, just to prove it’s not just Blackwell that suffers, here’s a link to the same book in Amazon: again generated by HiP; again broken.

(Technical note: the links to Blackwell’s which appear on each catalogue record page are in the form “http://bookshop.blackwell.co.uk/jsp/id/{{x}}/?alumni=A1041″ …where {{x}} is the contents of the first MARC 020 $a field – which should be an ISBN of the book. The link will only appear if the MARC record contains an 020 field.)

Thin clients in the GCW Library

Posted on September 7th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

Reposted from Leigh Haynes’ internal Windows 7 & Office 2010: Transforming the University Corporate Desktop blog:

“Two thin client devices (small dedicated computers) have been installed in the GCW Library so that staff and students can try the proof of concept for a centralised Windows 7 & Office 2010 Corporate Desktop. The machines are located in the Reservations area on the Ground Floor.

“Staff and students are invited to walk-up and login to trial the two different environments. Both the Citrix and Remote Desktop environments are available from both thin client devices and so it doesn’t matter which one you use. Once you have logged in, there is a link on the desktop through which you can leave feedback.”

Library opening hours in August

Posted on August 5th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

August‘s library opening hours are now on the Portal.

From all of us in the Library: have a good summer :-)

Summer poppy field

Library staff training: web browsers available in the GCW

Posted on August 5th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

I’m doing a short staff training session for library colleagues this morning, about the various web browsers available to users in the GCW at the University of Lincoln, and some of the pros & cons of each. With slides. See also this blog post.

Library Impact Data Project: good news, everybody!

Posted on June 18th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

I think this is worth re-posting from the LIDP blog:

LIDP graphicWe are very pleased to report that we have now received all of the data from our partner organisations and have processed all but two already!

Early results are looking positive and our next step is to report back with a brief analysis to each institution. We are planning to give them our data and a general set of data so that they can compare and contrast. There have been some issues with the data, some of which has been described in previous blogs, however, we are confident we have enough to prove the hypothesis one way or another!

In our final project meeting in July we hope to make a decision on what form the data will take when released under an Open Data Commons Licence. If all the partners agree, we will release the data individually; otherwise we will release the general set for other to analyse further.

I submitted Lincoln’s data on 13 June. It consists of fully anonymised entries for 4,268 students who graduated from the University of Lincoln with a named award, at all levels of study, at the end of the academic year 2009/10 – along with a selection of their library activity over three* years (2007/08, 2008/09, 2009/10).

The library activity data represents:

  1. The number of library items (book loans etc.) issued to each student in each of the three years; taken from the circ_tran (“circulation transactions”, presumably) table within our SirsiDynix Horizon Library Management System (LMS). We also needed a copy of Horizon’s borrower table to associate each transaction with an identifiable student.
  2. The number of times each student visited our main GCW University Library, using their student ID card to pass through the Library’s access control gates in each of the three* years; taken directly from our ‘Sentry’ access control/turnstile system. These data apply only to the main GCW University Library: there is no access control at the University of Lincoln’s other four campus libraries, so many students have ’0′ for these data. Thanks are due to my colleague Dave Masterson from the Hull Campus Library, who came in early one day, well before any students arrived, in order to break in to the Sentry system and extract this data!
  3. The number of times each student was authenticated against an electronic resource via AthensDA; taken from our Portal server access logs. Although by no means all of our e-resources go via Athens, we’re relying on it as a sort of proxy for e-resource usage more generally. Thanks to Tim Simmonds of the Online Services Team (ICT) for recovering these logs from the UL data archive.

I had also hoped to provide numbers of PC/network logins for the same students for the same three years (as Huddersfield themselves have done), but this proved impossible. We do have network login data from 2007-, but while we can associate logins with PCs in the Library for our current PCs, we can’t say with any confidence whether a login to the network in 2007-2010 occurred within the Library or elsewhere: PCs have just been moved around too much in the last four years.

Student data itself—including the ‘primary key’ of the student account ID—was kindly supplied by our Registry department from the University’s QLS student records management system.

Once we’d gathered all these various datasets together, I prevailed upon Alex Bilbie to collate them into one huge .csv file: this he did by knocking up a quick SQL database on his laptop (he’s that kind of developer), rather than the laborious Excel-heavy approach using nested COUNTIF statements which would have been my solution. (I did have a go at this method—it clearly worked well for at least one of the other LIDP partners—but it my PC nearly melted under the strain.)

The final .csv data has gone to Huddersfield for analysis and a copy is lodged in our Repository for safe keeping. Once the agreement has been made to release the LIDP data under an open licence, I’ll make the Repository copy publicly accessible.

*N.B. In the end, there was no visitor data for the year 2007/08: the access control / visitor data for that year was missing for almost all students. This may correspond to a re-issuing of library access cards for all users around that time, or the data may be missing for some other reason.

A LNCD booklist

Posted on June 14th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

We have been able to buy a number of useful books on agile software development / rapid innovation of technology for education, aimed particularly at developing student skills and participation in institution-wide projects: they’re all in the GCW University Library now.

  • Allamaraju, S. (2010) RESTful web services cookbook. Sebastopol, CA: O’Reilly.
  • Chacon, S. (2009) Pro Git. New York, NY: Springer-Verlag.
  • Chodorow, K. and Dirolf, M. (2010) MongoDB: the definitive guide. Farnham: O’Reilly.
  • Cohn, M. (2010) Succeeding with agile software development using Scrum. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Addison-Wesley.
  • Flanagan, D. and Matsumoto, Y. (2008) The Ruby programming language. 1st edition. Beijing; Farnham: O’Reilly.
  • Lawson, B. and Sharp, R. (2010) Introducing HTML5. Berkeley, CA; London: New Riders.
  • Lutz, M. and Ascher, D. (2004) Learning Python. 2nd edition. Beijing; Cambridge: O’Reilly.
  • Plugge, E., Membrey, P., and Hawkins, T. (2010) The definitive guide to MongoDB: the NoSQL database for cloud and desktop computing. New York, NY: Apress.
  • Powers, S. (2003) Practical RDF. Beijing; Cambridge: O’Reilly.
  • Richardson, L. and Ruby, S. (2007) RESTful web services. Beijing; Farnham: O’Reilly.
  • Segaran, T., Evans, C., and Taylor, J. (2009) Programming the Semantic Web. Beijing; Farnham: O’Reilly.

There’s a live copy of the same booklist on RefShare, available to download/export:

This little collection of books is designed to support the work of the new cross-University technology-for-education group, the existence of which Joss Winn announced last month. Since then, the group has been given a name: LNCD (it’s a partial pun on “linked”, suggesting “Lincoln”, and also a recursive acronym: see below and at: http://lncd.org/)

LNCD

LNCD’s Not a Central Development group

LNCD is a progressive group that includes educational developers, technologists, teachers, researchers and students and was set up to support the objectives of Student as Producer through the research and development of technology for education. The work of LNCD is informed by the progressive pedagogy of Student as Producer so as to engender critical, digitally literate staff and students. Core principles of the group are that we recognise students and staff have much to learn from each other and that students can be agents of change in the use of technology in education.