Open Access
- Dave Clemens passed on the link to the Creative Commons NZ mailing list.
- The State Services Commission has released the New Zealand Government Open Access and Licensing framework.
- In our brown-bag lunch conversation about open access yesterday we also talked about the digitisation of the AJHRs, the Directory of Open Access Journals, ways/issues with getting more open access content in our catalogue and/or Summon, and a bunch of other things.
Accessibility
- Char Booth writes about e-texts and library accessibility including a great quote that “ebooks were created by the blind, then made inaccessible by the sighted.”
- NZETC has just posted about the 1064 works in DAISY format available in their collection for people with print-related disabilities. (DAISY = “Digital Accessible Information SYstem”)
Library statistics
- Dave Pattern at U of Huddersfield blogs about how “non- and low-usage of library services/resources […] relates to final grades”
- Some results from extending the Angers university library’s opening hours – in French and in Google Translate’s English
- Stats from the Toulouse library’s standard OPAC vs its mobile OPAC – in French and Google Translate’s English.
- And Meredith Farkas writes about “the unsupported interpretations” librarians often make based on our statistics
Miscellaneous
- The first year of research on the Researchers of Tomorrow (pdf) study finds that “in broad approaches to information‐seeking and use of research resources, there are no marked differences between Generation Y doctoral students and those in older age groups. Nor are there marked differences in these behaviours between doctoral students of any age in different years of their study. The most significant differences revealed in the data are between subject disciplines of study irrespective of age or year of study.”
- Assessments of Information Literacy collects links to infolit tests, assessments, rubrics and tutorials available online.
- Christina Pikas lists a Rundown of the new [database etc] interfaces this summer. There were some surprises, including a ScienceDirect/Scopus merger apparently due August 28…
[Edited 12/8 to fix a couple of broken links -Deborah]