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Acquiring E-book Content: An Academic Perspective. Jill Taylor-Roe, Newcastle University Library Jill.Taylor-Roe@ncl.ac.uk 9 th November, 2005. A modern Grail Quest: Acquiring the desired e-book content…. What are the drivers for an academic library?. Student Numbers Course Structure
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Acquiring E-book Content: An Academic Perspective Jill Taylor-Roe, Newcastle University Library Jill.Taylor-Roe@ncl.ac.uk 9th November, 2005
What are the drivers for an academic library? • Student Numbers • Course Structure • CPD Courses • Distance Learning • International Students • Pressure on Physical Resources • Failure of physical resources to meet all core demands
Student Numbers • Historical Studies, English Lit – between 150-350 students per module • Medicine – 945 students on clinical placements • Business Studies – between 300-350 students per module
Course Structure • Seminars – high demand – short timescale • Clinical Placements – working in hospitals on shifts • PGCE – working in schools • Multidisciplinary Courses – same resources needed by students on different programmes • Key texts – used by UGs and taught PGs
Growth of CPD • MEd – research degree for practicing teachers • Courses for Clinicians and Health workers • MBAs/ Diplomas in Management • MA Creative Writing • MA Local History
Distance Learning • MScBiodiversity and Ecotourism – joint programme with Thai University • PhD Educational Psychology – students based in South Yorks and Scotland • MSc Oncology and Palliative Care – clinicians based in hospitals around the Northern Region • MSc Pipeline Structure – students based on oil rigs in the North Sea
International Students • High Fees • Increased Expectations • Educational and Cultural Differences
Pressure on physical resources • Heavy Use by 300 plus • Students takes its toll !
Print Alone is not the answer • Multiple Copy provision – 1:15, 1:10 • Different Loan Periods – hours, days, weeks, • Reference Only • Not what users want!
The Start of the Quest :Initial Experience • Not much available! • Reference Books • Encyclopedias
Early Adventures… • ORO • Wiley Encyclopedias • Encyclopedia of Life Sciences • Rudinet
More recent acquisitions… • T&F Ebooks • Books@ Ovid • Kumar & Clark – Clinical Medicine • European Retail Handbook • KNOVEL • EEBO • ECCO
What we really, really want… • More textbooks! • Current wishlist runs to several hundred • More interactive books – with data, images MCQs, questionnaires etc • Multi User licences • Reliable usage data!
What exactly are we measuring? • Sessions • Page views • Hits • Prints • Downloads • Title Visits • Secure Chapters viewed
As yet there are no clear KPI’s for e-books. Costs per printed page might be one. The ratio of Print Quota (maybe 5% of total book) to pages printed is one indicator of popularity. What does it tell us? E-Book usage 2005; top 20 by printed pages Total downloads may include; Copy (& Paste?), Save to Disk, as well as Printed Pages – depends on the licence.
Importance of COUNTER! • There is as yet no generally agreed standard for e-book usage reports. • Consequently each publisher has a different format: • Impossible therefore to draw any meaningful benchmarking comparisons.
Where next? • More work with publishers • Experiment with pricing models • Importance of JISC E-Books Group • Agree COUNTER code for stats reports • Compare usage of print and e versions • User studies – what do they prefer and how are they using the books?
Will we get there? …Yes – provided that… Publishers are willing to experiment with content and pricing models Efforts are made to standardise usage data We listen to our customers – who are ultimately the people who will determine whether ebooks are a long term success.
“So aftir the quest of the sankgreall was fulfilled… was there grete joy in the courte” (Malory: Morte d’Arthur)