Library Planning

Recent blog entries tagged with Library Planning.

August 22--Free Web Seminar on Ithaka's Research Program: How New Technologies Affect Higher Ed

Created by Peggy Kurkowski (EDUCAUSE) on August 15, 2008

ELive logoIthaka's research group studies how new technologies are affecting higher education and how colleges and universities can best manage these changes in four discrete program areas: providing academia with the policy basis needed to transition effectively and responsibly away from print collections and toward increasingly electronic-only collections; helping information-services organizations meet the needs of scholars by understanding their changing attitudes and practices; improving the community's understanding of how new information resources drive teaching and learning practices; and analyzing strategies for the most effective possible dissemination of knowledge from colleges and universities to researchers, students, and other learners.

E07 Podcast: An Interview with Robert Renaud

Created by Kelly Walker (Tintinnabulous) on November 12, 2007

In this 16-minute podcast, we feature an interview with Robert Renaud, Vice President and CIO, Dickinson College He discusses the future of and challenges facing Enterprise Resource Planning systems as well as leadership in a time of change.

Sponsored by Real Networks

Educause Live! Podcast: Architectures for Collaboration—Roles and Expectations for Digital Libraries.

Created by Gerry Bayne (EDUCAUSE) on August 14, 2007

From January, 2007, your host, Steve Worona, is joined by Peter Brantley for the topic "Architectures for Collaboration—Roles and Expectations for Digital Libraries". Click on this topic link for access to the accompanying presentation slides.

The collective expertise of digital libraries in making available the diverse literatures of science and artistic expression, in concert with the increasing sophistication of commercial partners and the development of distributed, interactive forms of publishing, require libraries to chart the engineering of new architectures for teaching, learning, and research. Digital libraries must work to forge the new collaborations required to enable and build these services.