Slides to accompany talk given by Jayne Kelly and Sarah Stamford, to a seminar in the Book
Publishing Histories series, held at Anglia Ruskin University on November 1st 2011.
2. ebooks@cambridge service
• Sarah Stamford - Chair ebooks Advisory Group
• Jayne Kelly – ebooks Administrator
• Collaboratively funded initiative of Cambridge College,
Departmental, Faculty and University libraries
• Co-ordinate University-wide ebook acquisition
• Support teaching and learning
• Promote awareness
• Monitor usage
• http://www.lib.cam.ac.uk/ebooks/
3. Some context
• Digital Revolution = opportunities
• Digital publishing = rapid change
• Blurred identities
4. Discovery and access
• When there is so much information out there,
discovering accessible relevant resources quickly is key
• Multiple access points
• Institutional authentication
• The need for the Ama iin t in the Amazon
5. Using platforms for research
• Flexible linking
• IRIS Project Report: Induction, Research and Information
Skills (Arcadia Project by Lizz Edwards-Waller, 2009
• Enhanced visibility
• Researching is active, interactive & disruptive
• ‘Ontology is overrated’ (Clay Shirky)
7. Information literacy
“a cluster of abilities that resides within the individual
learner, enabling him or her not only to seek out
information, but also to assess it for bias, to evaluate its
worth and relevance to the learner’s own needs … to
define the task in hand; to analyse its argument and the
grounds on which the argument is made; and finally to be
able to assimilate new information, even if that conflicts
with previously held beliefs or convictions.”
‘Developing a new curriculum for information literacy’, Dr
Emma Coonan, LTS News, Issue 22
8. Research results
• Platforms need to integrate research studies and
offer opportunities for wide dissemination
• Accessibility of information silos
• Security
9. Future developments
• Cloud storage?
• Focus groups?
• Research impacts?
• Logging the research process?
• Storing ideas and communications?
• Darwin with a Kindle?
10. And finally…
• Discovery & access need improvments
• Traditional publishing models are dissolving
• Digital silos are not ideal
• Librarian as intermediator
• Publishers , academics and librarians collaborating
11. Any questions?
We acknowledge our thanks to Emma Coonan (Cambridge University
Library) & Libby Tilley (English Faculty Library) for their contributions.