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JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 1
The UK academic vision for e-books
JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 2
JISC national e-books observatory project
Liam Earney
Collections Team Manager Caren MilloyJISC Collections Project [email protected] [email protected] www.jiscebooksproject.org
JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 3
The need for a new vision
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JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 4
A new study
A feasibility study on the acquisition of e-books by HE libraries and the role of JISC
Ignorance in the HE sector of what e-books are available
Low awareness within HEIs of the value and relevance of e-books
Poor understanding by library staff and publishers of each others needs
Complexity of access routes to aggregators or publishers platforms
Too few e-books are available
Available e-books are not up to date or relevant to UK users
Pricing models are not appropriate
Publishers are not making the right textbooks electronically available on the right terms
JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 5
The Vision for e-books in UK education
The UK education community will have access to quality e-book content that is of high
relevance to teaching, learning and research across the broadest range of subject areas. Flexible business and licensing models will
support a diversity of needs, allowing users to do what they want when they want and how
they want. All e-books will be easily discoverable and consistent standards will allow all content to be fully integrated into
library, learning and research environments.
JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 6
Discoverability
How do I find out whether the books I want are available in e-format, which publishers are offering them and what platforms they are available on?
Steps required: Take the lead in initiating and establishing the feasibility of such a catalogue
JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 7
Users
I am a librarian and the students enrolled at my institution can be part time, full time, distance learners, on campus, off campus, in a partner institution, working in research lab, working on a project with a business or overseas. Isn’t the term remote access irrelevant?
Steps required: Explore new models with publishers and aggregators and create forums for discussion
JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 8
Standards
If all e-book platforms have different standards and levels of functionality how in the world are we meant to know all this, communicate it to our users and integrate the e-books with library systems and emerging technologies?
Steps required: Communicate benefits of standards compliance and monitor emerging standards
JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 9
Access
If we can’t let more than one student access an e-book at a time, or if a user can’t copy a section of text into an assignment or if a student can’t access the e-book direct from a reading list or course area within a VLE how are we meant to encourage enough use of the books to justify the cost?
Steps required: Develop access and licensing models in line with how users actually utilise e-books
JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 10
Web 2.0
As format becomes less relevant to users and they simply see it all as stuff that helps their learning and research, how do I as a librarian ensure that it is presented in a way that helps them find what they want when they want it?
Steps required: Explore and harness the skill sets of the future
JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 11
Business Models
I want flexible e-book agreements that allow me to pick the titles that my institution needs, sometimes I just want to buy a chapter of an e-book.
Steps required: Partner with the e-books industry and the library community to experiment with alternative business models
JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 12
Repositories
My institution is pushing forward a policy on its own repository and the use of JORUM, what are the implications of this for my e-book licenses and what about archival access?
Steps required: Monitor the progress and impact of institutional repositories and national repositories
JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 13
Plagiarism
If users see content as ‘stuff’ and are used to searching in the online environment and flicking from one link to another selecting content of interest as they go, I worry that they will not reference properly and that plagiarism may increase.
Steps required: Raise awareness and require content providers to incorporate the submission of content into Turnitin as part of the model licence.
JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 14
Textbooks!
There is a demand for core reading list e-books in my institution but these are not being made available and when I ask publishers why they say that there is no evidence of the demand and thus they are reluctant to make these e-books available. But if they don’t make the core titles available online then users are not as interested and therefore the level of demand seems low.
Steps required: The national e-book observatory project
JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 15
The first step
license collections of e-books that are highly relevant to UK higher education taught course students in four discipline areas:
– Business and Management studies
– Engineering
– Medicine (not mental health or nursing)
– Media Studies
achieve a high level of participation in the project by making the e-books available on the publishers own platform (where appropriate) and on a variety of e-book aggregator platforms.
evaluate the use of the e-books through deep log analysis and to asses the impact of the ‘free at the point of use’ e-books upon publishers, aggregators and libraries
transfer knowledge acquired in the project to publishers, aggregators and libraries to help stimulate an e-books market that has appropriate business and licensing models
JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 16
How will it work?
Tender deadlines – 23rd April 2007 and 10th May 2007
Evaluation and Consultation – May – July 2007
Awarding of bids – 31st July 2007
Signing of two year licenses –September 2007
Delivery of e-books on platforms – September 2007
Promotion and Integration – September 2007 to December 2007
Deep log analysis – 1st January 2008 – 31st December 2008
Analysis and writing up – January - March 2009
Next steps – April 2009 – August 2009
JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 17
advantages and benefits
Provide an in-depth understanding of how e-books that support UK higher education taught course students are actually used in teaching and learning
Enable publishers, libraries and aggregators to assess the demand for core reading list e-books
Enable all parties to measure the effect of ‘free at the point’ of use e-books on the buying behaviours of students.
Enable libraries to measure the benefits and potential costs of providing core reading list e-books to students
Inform the creation of appropriate business and licensing models
Inform the promotion of e-books within an institution
Raise awareness generally of e-books throughout the academic community
Stimulate the e-books market in a managed environment
JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 18
The future
Collaboration and sharing
JISC Collections April 8, 2023 | UMSLG / UHSL Open Forum | Slide 19
Thank you
Thank you for listening
www.jiscebooksproject.org
02030066003
07817030769