Enregistré dans:
Détails bibliographiques
Auteurs principaux: Lonsdale, Ray, Armstrong, Chris
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Langue:en
Publié: 2010
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ922255
Tags: Ajouter un tag
Pas de tags, Soyez le premier à ajouter un tag!
_version_ 1867181081732579328
author Lonsdale, Ray
Armstrong, Chris
author_facet Lonsdale, Ray
Armstrong, Chris
Lonsdale, Ray
Armstrong, Chris
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Promoting Your e-Books: Lessons from the UK JISC National e-Book Observatory Lonsdale, Ray Armstrong, Chris Electronic Publishing Textbooks Academic Libraries Librarians College Faculty College Students Use Studies Marketing Foreign Countries Role Publishing Industry Library Role Focus Groups Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to describe the findings from the qualitative strand of the National e-Book Observatory (2007-2009) project, relating to the promotion of e-textbooks in UK universities by the library, academics and publishers. A complementary paper on the ways in which students and academics locate e-books provided by their library will appear in a future issue. Design/methodology/approach: Following the provision by the Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC) in the UK of collections of e-textbooks, the project used deep log analysis, benchmark surveys and focus groups to develop a rich picture of library e-collection management and use by students and academics. Focus groups were undertaken with library staff, academics and students; the dialogues were transcribed and analysed using NVivo7 software. Findings: The qualitative studies found that libraries were using a range of promotional tools, although these were not always finding their targets. Often libraries had no formal promotion strategy for e-resources. Although little in evidence, the value of academic commitment and promotion was emphasised. Promotion by publishers and aggregators is both to libraries and directly to academic staff. Students felt that they were largely unaware of promotion beyond the presence of e-books in the catalogue, and in some cases stated explicitly that they thought more should be done to promote library e-resources to them. Practical implications: The paper offers pragmatic guidance on promotional methodologies. Originality/value: The project describes the first major, national usage study of e-books in higher education. The paper contributes significantly to the literature in discussing the importance of promoting e-books to students and staff. (Contains 2 tables.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ922255
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2010
record_format eric
spellingShingle Promoting Your e-Books: Lessons from the UK JISC National e-Book Observatory
Lonsdale, Ray
Armstrong, Chris
Electronic Publishing
Textbooks
Academic Libraries
Librarians
College Faculty
College Students
Use Studies
Marketing
Foreign Countries
Role
Publishing Industry
Library Role
Focus Groups
Promoting Your e-Books: Lessons from the UK JISC National e-Book Observatory Lonsdale, Ray Armstrong, Chris Electronic Publishing Textbooks Academic Libraries Librarians College Faculty College Students Use Studies Marketing Foreign Countries Role Publishing Industry Library Role Focus Groups Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to describe the findings from the qualitative strand of the National e-Book Observatory (2007-2009) project, relating to the promotion of e-textbooks in UK universities by the library, academics and publishers. A complementary paper on the ways in which students and academics locate e-books provided by their library will appear in a future issue. Design/methodology/approach: Following the provision by the Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC) in the UK of collections of e-textbooks, the project used deep log analysis, benchmark surveys and focus groups to develop a rich picture of library e-collection management and use by students and academics. Focus groups were undertaken with library staff, academics and students; the dialogues were transcribed and analysed using NVivo7 software. Findings: The qualitative studies found that libraries were using a range of promotional tools, although these were not always finding their targets. Often libraries had no formal promotion strategy for e-resources. Although little in evidence, the value of academic commitment and promotion was emphasised. Promotion by publishers and aggregators is both to libraries and directly to academic staff. Students felt that they were largely unaware of promotion beyond the presence of e-books in the catalogue, and in some cases stated explicitly that they thought more should be done to promote library e-resources to them. Practical implications: The paper offers pragmatic guidance on promotional methodologies. Originality/value: The project describes the first major, national usage study of e-books in higher education. The paper contributes significantly to the literature in discussing the importance of promoting e-books to students and staff. (Contains 2 tables.)
title Promoting Your e-Books: Lessons from the UK JISC National e-Book Observatory
topic Electronic Publishing
Textbooks
Academic Libraries
Librarians
College Faculty
College Students
Use Studies
Marketing
Foreign Countries
Role
Publishing Industry
Library Role
Focus Groups
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ922255