Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Finch, Jannette L.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ874944
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867181069371965440
author Finch, Jannette L.
author_facet Finch, Jannette L.
Finch, Jannette L.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Measuring Effectiveness in a Virtual Library Finch, Jannette L. Electronic Libraries Academic Libraries Data Analysis Reference Services Library Services Evaluation Methods Library Materials Web Sites College Libraries Mathematical Formulas Measuring quality of service in academic libraries traditionally includes quantifiable data such as collection size, staff counts, circulation numbers, reference service statistics, qualitative analyses of customer satisfaction, shelving accuracy, and building comfort. In the libraries of the third millennium, virtual worlds, Web content and remote customer populations mean that traditional measures of quality service are no longer complete. Applying methods to quantify effectiveness is vital to future success, and is a necessary precursor to examining quality of service. This case study of a small, virtual academic library, created to serve a non-traditional student population, faculty, and community, illustrates the use of measures such as the saturation rate of student population, the percentage of bibliographic sessions and orientations compared to number of courses offered, and Web site traffic patterns. As library services are affected by factors such as self-sufficient customers, declining physical collections, staff cuts, and increases in virtual traffic, all types of academic libraries may find it useful to implement the relatively uncomplicated data analysis explored in this article, in addition to established methodologies. (Contains 3 tables.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ874944
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2010
record_format eric
spellingShingle Measuring Effectiveness in a Virtual Library
Finch, Jannette L.
Electronic Libraries
Academic Libraries
Data Analysis
Reference Services
Library Services
Evaluation Methods
Library Materials
Web Sites
College Libraries
Mathematical Formulas
Measuring Effectiveness in a Virtual Library Finch, Jannette L. Electronic Libraries Academic Libraries Data Analysis Reference Services Library Services Evaluation Methods Library Materials Web Sites College Libraries Mathematical Formulas Measuring quality of service in academic libraries traditionally includes quantifiable data such as collection size, staff counts, circulation numbers, reference service statistics, qualitative analyses of customer satisfaction, shelving accuracy, and building comfort. In the libraries of the third millennium, virtual worlds, Web content and remote customer populations mean that traditional measures of quality service are no longer complete. Applying methods to quantify effectiveness is vital to future success, and is a necessary precursor to examining quality of service. This case study of a small, virtual academic library, created to serve a non-traditional student population, faculty, and community, illustrates the use of measures such as the saturation rate of student population, the percentage of bibliographic sessions and orientations compared to number of courses offered, and Web site traffic patterns. As library services are affected by factors such as self-sufficient customers, declining physical collections, staff cuts, and increases in virtual traffic, all types of academic libraries may find it useful to implement the relatively uncomplicated data analysis explored in this article, in addition to established methodologies. (Contains 3 tables.)
title Measuring Effectiveness in a Virtual Library
topic Electronic Libraries
Academic Libraries
Data Analysis
Reference Services
Library Services
Evaluation Methods
Library Materials
Web Sites
College Libraries
Mathematical Formulas
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ874944