Contributed by Organizations or Campuses; Articles, Papers, and Reports; and Information Discovery and Retrieval

Information Behaviour of the Researcher of the Future

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Title:Information Behaviour of the Researcher of the Future (ID: CSD5384)
Source:JISC
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (01/23/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

This study was commissioned by the British Library and JISC to identify how the specialist researchers of the future, currently in their school or pre-school years, are likely to access and interact with digital resources in five to ten years' time. This is to help library and information services to anticipate and react to any new or emerging behaviours in the most effective way. In this report, we define the `Google generation' as those born after 1993 and explore the world of a cohort of young people with little or no recollection of life before the web.

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Handbook for Information Literacy Teaching

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Title:Handbook for Information Literacy Teaching (ID: CSD5345)
Source:Cardiff University
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (12/21/2006)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

This Handbook was written by a group of subject librarians at Cardiff University to support their colleagues in Information Services as they developed their information literacy teaching.

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Enhancing Graduate Education: A Fresh Look at Library Engagement

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Title:Enhancing Graduate Education: A Fresh Look at Library Engagement (ID: CSD5316)
Author(s):Diane Goldenberg-Hart (Coalition for Networked Information)
Source:ARL: A Bimonthly Report
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (01/16/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

Over 100 librarians, administrators, faculty, and other members of the academic community concerned about issues relating to graduate education convened in Washington DC on October 12, 2007, to participate in the forum "Enhancing Graduate Education: A Fresh Look at Library Engagement."2 Sponsored by the Association of Research Libraries (ARL) and the Coalition for Networked Information (CNI), the event promoted engagement in conceptualizing the library's evolving role in graduate education, and it encouraged academic libraries to begin considering new ways to partner with the broader graduate studies community. The forum was inspired by the Council of Graduate Schools 2007 report, Graduate Education: The Backbone of American Competitiveness and Innovation,3 which examines the current state of graduate education and how it influences the positioning of the United States in the global economy.

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On the Record: Report of The Library of Congress Working Group on the Future of Bibliographic Control

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Title:On the Record: Report of The Library of Congress Working Group on the Future of Bibliographic Control (ID: CSD5308)
Source:Library of Congress
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (01/09/2008)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

This is the final report from The Library of Congress Working Group on the Future of Bibliographic Control.

The Report is based on the key premise that the community is at a critical juncture in the evolution of bibliographic control and information access/provision. It is time to take stock of past practices, to look at today's trends, and to project a future path consistent with the goals of bibliographic control: to facilitate discovery, management, identification, and access of and to library materials and other information products. Libraries must work in the most efficient and cooperative manner to minimize where possible the costs of bibliographic control, but both the Library of Congress and library administrators generally must recognize that they need to identify and allocate (or, as appropriate, reallocate) sufficient funding if they are serious about attaining the goals of improved and expanded bibliographic control.

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Folksonomies and Image Tagging: Seeing the Future?

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Title:Folksonomies and Image Tagging: Seeing the Future? (ID: CSD5256)
Author(s):Diane Neal (North Carolina Central University)
Source:American Society for Information Science and Technology
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (12/05/2007)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

This article gives an overview on folksonomies, what they are and how people use them.

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Searching Video Lectures

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Title:Searching Video Lectures (ID: CSD5257)
Author(s):Kate Greene (Technology Review, Inc.)
Source:Technology Review
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (12/05/2007)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

A tool from MIT finds keywords so that students can efficiently review lectures.

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‘Scholarship in the Digital Age’

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Title:‘Scholarship in the Digital Age’ (ID: CSD5227)
Author(s):Scott Jaschik (Inside Higher Ed)
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (11/14/2007)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

"It’s hard to meet academics these days whose work hasn’t been changed by the Internet. But even if everyone knows that the world of scholarship has changed, it’s not always clear just how or the way those evolutions fit into the broad history of scholarship. Christine L. Borgman sets out to do just that in Scholarship in the Digital Age: Information, Infrastructure and the Internet, just published by MIT Press. Borgman, a presidential chair in information studies at the University of California at Los Angeles, responded to e-mail questions about her book. "

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Using Blogs for Formative Assessment and Interactive Teaching

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Title:Using Blogs for Formative Assessment and Interactive Teaching (ID: CSD5121)
Author(s):Lisa Foggo (University of York)
Source:Ariadne
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (04/30/2007)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

This case study shows how students were taught the skills they need to find information relevant to their subject area. As groups of students are generally seen once only, measures to assess the effectiveness of teaching are needed, i.e. to determine the skills the students have acquired. Blogs were used as a tool for formative assessment and were used to measure student expectations before teaching, and their level of satisfaction with the session afterwards. The blog [1] helps the tutor to understand if learning outcomes have been achieved and whether the session has met student expectations. It also requires students to reflect on the skills that they have acquired.

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Beyond Google: How do students conduct academic research?

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Title:Beyond Google: How do students conduct academic research? (ID: CSD5108)
Author(s):Alison J. Head (Saint Mary's College of California)
Source:First Monday
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (09/04/2007)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

This paper reports findings from an exploratory study about how students majoring in humanities and social sciences use the Internet and library resources for research. Using student discussion groups, content analysis, and a student survey, our results suggest students may not be as reliant on public Internet sites as previous research has reported. Instead, students in our study used a hybrid approach for conducting course–related research. A majority of students leveraged both online and offline sources to overcome challenges with finding, selecting, and evaluating resources and gauging professors’ expectations for quality research.

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Inheritance and loss? A brief survey of Google Books

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Title:Inheritance and loss? A brief survey of Google Books (ID: CSD5107)
Author(s):Paul Duguid (University of California, Berkeley)
Source:First Monday
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (09/04/2007)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

The Google Books Project has drawn a great deal of attention, offering the prospect of the library of the future and rendering many other library and digitizing projects apparently superfluous. To grasp the value of Google’s endeavor, we need among other things, to assess its quality. On such a vast and undocumented project, the task is challenging. In this essay, I attempt an initial assessment in two steps. First, I argue that most quality assurance on the Web is provided either through innovation or through “inheritance.” In the later case, Web sites rely heavily on institutional authority and quality assurance techniques that antedate the Web, assuming that they will carry across unproblematically into the digital world. I suggest that quality assurance in the Google’s Book Search and Google Books Library Project primarily comes through inheritance, drawing on the reputation of the libraries, and before them publishers involved. Then I chose one book to sample the Google’s Project, Lawrence Sterne’s Tristram Shandy.

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