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HKALL: Overview and Status Update. Tony Ferguson University of Hong Kong Librarian Acting Director of IT in Learning. Background. April 2002, a JULAC taskforce with representatives from 8 institutions were charged to explore:
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HKALL: Overview and Status Update Tony Ferguson University of Hong Kong Librarian Acting Director of IT in Learning
Background • April 2002, a JULAC taskforce with representatives from 8 institutions were charged to explore: • The experience of other consortia employing user initiated document delivery services • The use of software/utilities/systems which could be used by the JULAC Libraries • The resource implications (e.g. reduce ILL-based borrowing and lending but will likely see significant increase on circulation increase, etc.) • September 2002, an interim report recommended: • That such a service was a good idea for HK • That a suitable software platform be selected and implemented
System Selection Prerequisites The taskforce then went to work to figure out which system to recommend. They decided upon 5 “drop dead ”criteria. The system must: • Accept user initiated online interlibrary requests • Support unmediated interlibrary requests directly from users to lending libraries • Support book loans • Check incoming interlibrary requests automatically against the user’s own collection, and block that request if the requested item was available on the shelf • Supports Chinese, Japanese and Korean (CJK) characters
The Taskforce selected INNReach because • It was the only system to meet all criteria • CJK was a showstopper • Because all 8 institutions were already III customers, implementation would be much easier
More Background • Irrespective of the Taskforce’s findings, only 3 libraries were enthusiastic enough to try the system out. They ran an experiment from January to September 2004. • Remaining 5 adopted a “wait and see” approach • Their concerns included: • Cost • Impact on local collections and users • Impact on library staff • Possible threat of reduced funding
The three trial participants • Lingnan University (LU) • ca 400,000 physical vols • City University of Hong Kong (CityU) • ca 1.1 million physical volumes • University of Hong Kong (HKU) • ca 2.3 million physical vols
Major Problems Encountered • Building the HKALL Union Catalogue - Matching CJK records problem • Three institutions needed to establish complimentary circulation rules and policies: • Minimise policies that interfere with local circulation practices while still trying to maximise use of the mega collection; • ensure that the policies would not undermine the interest of users in the owning libraries; and • make the policies as simple as possible so that: • they are easily understood by both users and operational staff members; • operational procedures are simple and administrative costs are minimal; • they can readily include new participating libraries.
Reproduced from Innovative Interfaces: <http://www.iii.com/innreach/index.shtml#systemmgmt>
How HKALL Works Scenario 1: A book is not owned by the local library
Patron receives email pickup notice after the book is transferred to the borrowing site
We have 2 copies but both are checked out and one has 5 holds and the other has 3 holds. Check HKALL
Patron receives email pickup notice after the book is transferred to the borrowing site
Major Lessons Learned • Many more items borrowed using InnReach than traditional ILL (several hundred percent more) • Cheaper to process borrowing and lending transactions (40-45 percent cheaper) • Users loved it
Typical comments • “Excellent on the whole” • “… this scheme has been excellently carried out. With this scheme, resources in the universities can be better utilised. • “HKALL simply makes life easier. Thank you…….” • “It should include all eight institutions in HK.”
Post Experiment Major Events • Following many discussions the 8 university libraries decided to apply to the government’s University Grants Committee for funding • They requested hardware, software, and a limited amount of staff start up funds • They were awarded nearly all the requested funds • We began installation of software, figuring out what were the challenges, and solutions during the summer 2005 • We had a soft launch September 1, 2005
Challenges that were solved or we learned to live with • Chinese character problems. Traditional and simplified Chinese records were not merging; Japanese variants had the same problem. • HKALL wanted to have call numbers in item records but some libraries didn’t put them there and so the system couldn’t find them. Innovative had to figure out a solution. • Sites didn’t want to all have the same borrowing profiles.
Findings so far • Super growth in amount of borrowing and lending • Social Science; Sci/Tech; Lang/Lit still most requested subjects • Super fast • Undergrads and post graduate students the largest users
Growth in Use: 3 Test Libraries Items delivered September to November 2004 and 2005 compared (INNReach in place both years): • City U 350% increase • HKU 239% increase • Lingnan U 237% increase
Where are we now? • The program is so successful that we have to find another courier service • HKU is going to experiment with a RAPID non returnable INNReach related module. • We are about to replace the test hardware with new hardware • We will be loading new Innopac software that will effect INNReach • INNReach will be the borrowing system that will be used in our shared storage facility • Future issues: allow other HK or China libraries to join INNReach? • INNReach is the best example of DEEP COLLABORATION between academic institutions in Hong Kong!!!
Rapid Option Works like INNReach • Patron discovers they lack the needed journal • Click to Rapid to search the Rapid catalogue – just like INNReach • Patr finds the title (hopefully) • Patron provides the specific author, volume, issue, page, etc. information • Some supplementing of the citation takes place • Information transferred to ILLIAD • ILL staff process the request in RAPID • Possible to create a HK pod in RAPID so that HK libraries’ collections are first looked at.