Enregistré dans:
Détails bibliographiques
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Langue:en
Publié: 2006
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED495775
Tags: Ajouter un tag
Pas de tags, Soyez le premier à ajouter un tag!
_version_ 1867181567632211969
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Mass Digitization: Implications for Information Policy: Report from "Scholarship and Libraries in Transition: A Dialogue about the Impacts of Mass Digitization Projects" Symposium (Ann Arbor, Michigan, March 10-11, 2006) Library Role Libraries Information Literacy Information Policy Electronic Libraries Library Materials Media Adaptation Publishing Industry Copyrights Access to Information Evaluation The U.S. National Commission on Libraries and Information Science (NCLIS) sponsored the symposium "Scholarship and Libraries in Transition: A Dialogue about the Impacts of Mass Digitization Projects" in March 2006 at the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor. The symposium was organized with a keynote and several other individual presentations, as well as five panels, each focusing on particular stakeholders or targets in digitization: libraries; research, teaching and learning; publishing; economics; and public policy. The individual speakers and panelists are listed at the end of this report. This report identifies nine major issues that arose from that symposium and summarizes key points under each: copyright, quality, the role of libraries, ownership and preservation, standardization and interoperability, the role of publishers and booksellers, business models, information literacy, and assessment. Under each of the nine areas, this report synthesizes the relevant comments made by the speakers at the symposium. The report concludes that the challenges ahead are many and finding workable solutions will be like fitting together puzzle pieces. The solutions will involve education and awareness, policies, responsibility, standards, quality, cooperation, rights, sustainability, technology, and assessment.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED495775
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2006
record_format eric
spellingShingle Mass Digitization: Implications for Information Policy: Report from "Scholarship and Libraries in Transition: A Dialogue about the Impacts of Mass Digitization Projects" Symposium (Ann Arbor, Michigan, March 10-11, 2006)
Library Role
Libraries
Information Literacy
Information Policy
Electronic Libraries
Library Materials
Media Adaptation
Publishing Industry
Copyrights
Access to Information
Evaluation
Mass Digitization: Implications for Information Policy: Report from "Scholarship and Libraries in Transition: A Dialogue about the Impacts of Mass Digitization Projects" Symposium (Ann Arbor, Michigan, March 10-11, 2006) Library Role Libraries Information Literacy Information Policy Electronic Libraries Library Materials Media Adaptation Publishing Industry Copyrights Access to Information Evaluation The U.S. National Commission on Libraries and Information Science (NCLIS) sponsored the symposium "Scholarship and Libraries in Transition: A Dialogue about the Impacts of Mass Digitization Projects" in March 2006 at the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor. The symposium was organized with a keynote and several other individual presentations, as well as five panels, each focusing on particular stakeholders or targets in digitization: libraries; research, teaching and learning; publishing; economics; and public policy. The individual speakers and panelists are listed at the end of this report. This report identifies nine major issues that arose from that symposium and summarizes key points under each: copyright, quality, the role of libraries, ownership and preservation, standardization and interoperability, the role of publishers and booksellers, business models, information literacy, and assessment. Under each of the nine areas, this report synthesizes the relevant comments made by the speakers at the symposium. The report concludes that the challenges ahead are many and finding workable solutions will be like fitting together puzzle pieces. The solutions will involve education and awareness, policies, responsibility, standards, quality, cooperation, rights, sustainability, technology, and assessment.
title Mass Digitization: Implications for Information Policy: Report from "Scholarship and Libraries in Transition: A Dialogue about the Impacts of Mass Digitization Projects" Symposium (Ann Arbor, Michigan, March 10-11, 2006)
topic Library Role
Libraries
Information Literacy
Information Policy
Electronic Libraries
Library Materials
Media Adaptation
Publishing Industry
Copyrights
Access to Information
Evaluation
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED495775