Showing posts with label LIS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LIS. Show all posts

Friday, May 6, 2011

Copyright Watch | Global Transparency in Copyright Law

 

Copyright Watch | Global Transparency in Copyright Law

What is Copyright Watch?

The details of copyright law used to be important for only a few in the creative industries. Now, with the growth of the Internet, we are all authors, publishers, and sharers of copyrighted works.

Our dream was to build a user-friendly resource of national copyright laws to help citizens of the world undertake comparative research. We wanted to raise awareness of the importance of balanced copyright law in the information society, and draw attention to points of commonality and of difference in countries' laws and legal traditions. We also wanted to create an information sharing resource, where copyright watchers could post information about proposed amendments to their own copyright laws, and understand the changes in others.

We hope that Copyright Watch will be a resource maintained and driven by the Access to Knowledge community and that copyright monitors in each country will help to keep this information up to date and relevant.

Finally, we hope that Copyright Watch will help document the importance of copyright to all aspects of cultural life and human freedom. Balanced and well-calibrated copyright laws are extremely important in our global information society. The smallest shift in the legal balance between the rights of copyright owners and users of copyrighted knowledge can destroy or enable business models, criminalize or liberate everyday behaviour, and transform or eradicate new technology. A law that is passed in one nation can quickly be taken up by others, through bilateral trade agreements, regional policy initiatives or international treaties. We all need to keep watch.

Who Are We?

Copyright Watch was begun by an international group of copyright experts, drawn from the Access to Knowledge community. We’d like to thank Corporacion Innovarte, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Electronic Information for Libraries (eIFL.net), the International Federation of Library Associations, Professor Michael Geist, the Third World Network, and the Bangalore Centre for Internet and Society for their support.

Content Research was done by: Teresa Hackett and Isabel Bernal (eIFL.net), Matt Earp (Electronic Frontier Foundation consultant), and Professor Kenneth Crews at the Copyright Advisory Office, Columbia University. Technical Design and ongoing support is provided by the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Funding to create Copyright Watch was generously provided by the Open Society Institute.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

ipl2: Information You Can Trust

 

ipl2: Information You Can Trust

ipl2 is a public service organization and a learning/teaching environment. To date, thousands of students and volunteer library and information science professionals have been involved in answering reference questions for our Ask an ipl2 Librarian service and in designing, building, creating and maintaining the ipl2's collections. It is through the efforts of these students and volunteers that the ipl2 continues to thrive to this day.

Friday, February 26, 2010

digitalresearchtools / FrontPage

digitalresearchtools / FrontPage 

Digital Research Tools (DiRT)

This wiki collects information about tools and resources that can help scholars (particularly in the humanities and social sciences) conduct research more efficiently or creatively.  Whether you need software to help you manage citations, author a multimedia work, or analyze texts, Digital Research Tools will help you find what you're looking for. We provide a directory of tools organized by research activity, as well as reviews of select tools in which we not only describe the tool's features, but also explore how it might be employed most effectively by researchers.

digitalresearchtools / FrontPage

Friday, June 12, 2009

Pubget: the search engine for life-science PDFs

Pubget: the search engine for life-science PDFs

Pubget solves the problem of full-text document access in life science research. Instead of search results linking to papers, with Pubget's proprietary technology, the search results ARE the papers. Once you find the papers you want, you can save, manage and share them — all online.

Each year, scientists spend at least a quarter billion minutes searching for biomedical literature online. This is time they could better spend curing disease and building the future. Pubget's mission is to give them (you!) that time back.

Pubget: the search engine for life-science PDFs

Don't Sign Contracts with Confidentiality Clauses, says ARL - 6/11/2009 - Library Journal

 Don't Sign Contracts with Confidentiality Clauses, says ARL - 6/11/2009 - Library Journal

Don't Sign Contracts with Confidentiality Clauses, says ARL

Nondisclosure has "negative impact on effective negotiations"

Josh Hadro -- Library Journal, 6/11/2009

ARL urges members not to agree to restrictive contracts

  • Will open negotiations work?
  • Mechanism planned for collecting licensing and contract terms

Aiming to increase libraries' leverage in pricing and licensing negotiations, the board of the Association of Research Libraries (ARL) urges member libraries to refrain from entering into vendor contracts that require nondisclosure or confidentiality clauses.

The hope is that more openness among libraries about analogous agreements at similar institutions will force vendors to offer more equitable deals all around.

Georgia Harper, scholarly communications advisor for the University of Texas at Austin, agreed, telling LJAN, "the more libraries one is able to talk to about what one is hearing from a vendor, the better to make decisions about the benefit versus the cost."

May not be enough
Harper also indicated, however, that this effort toward openness may not be enough on its own to revise the pricing standard downward over the long term. 
"[I]f the ARL goal were achieved, I feel certain the vendors would find other ways to maintain their margins," she said. "Like all successful players in a market economy, they have many strategies to build and sustain their income streams. If one source of revenue dries up or diminishes despite their efforts to keep it steady or increase it, they will create a new one or enhance an old one."

Sharing contract terms
Given that publicly funded institutions are more bound than private ones by disclosure requirements, it seems that the ARL statement is aimed primarily at the latter. But the statement also goes further with recommendations that apply equally to all kinds of institutions.

ARL libraries are urged at the outset to "share upon request from other libraries information contained in these agreements." 
The last line of the statement hints at something further, describing a proposed "mechanism by which [ARL] members can share information with one another about their agreements," to be established by ARL. 
Though no further details were available, this could mark the beginnings of an opt-in resource for collecting licensing terms, potentially saving librarians the significant effort of making requests of licensing terms from peer institutions.

Don't Sign Contracts with Confidentiality Clauses, says ARL - 6/11/2009 - Library Journal

Monday, June 8, 2009

Legal Threats Database | Citizen Media Law Project

Legal Threats Database | Citizen Media Law Project 

Legal Threats Database

Welcome to the CMLP's database of legal threats! The database contains lawsuits, cease & desist letters, subpoenas, and other legal threats directed at those who engage in online speech. You can view, search, and comment on every entry in the database. Interested in lawsuits against bloggers? You'll find them on the Lawsuits Involving Blogs page. How about threats involving forum posts and user comments? You'll find those here. You can use our advanced search page to sort the entries by any criterion of your choosing, as well as perform full-text searching of the underlying documents.

We need your help to keep the database accurate and up to date. If you've been threatened with legal action or know of someone who has, please let us know by using our contact form or by entering the information directly into the database through our easy to use threat entry form. If you have questions, check out our database FAQ.

Legal Threats Database | Citizen Media Law Project

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Not Enough Time in the Library - Chronicle.com

"Research Literate -- so much better than information literacy -- IMHO -- HSM"

FIRST PERSON

Not Enough Time in the Library

Just because your students are computer-literate doesn't mean they are research-literate

By TODD GILMAN

As an academic librarian, I hear an awful lot of hype about using technology to enhance instruction in colleges and universities. While the very word "technology" — not to mention the jargon that crops up around it, like "interactive whiteboards" and "smart classrooms" — sounds exciting and impressive, what it boils down to is really just a set of tools. They're useful tools, but they don't offer content beyond what the users put into them.

Today we have hardware and software that facilitate communication, resource-sharing, and organization. We have computers attached to projection systems for lectures and demonstrations; social-networking and messaging sites like MySpace, Facebook, and Twitter; virtual spaces like blogs and wikis in which to collaborate; course-management software like Blackboard/WebCT, Sakai, and Angel to supplement or even take the place of the physical classroom; and programs such as RefWorks, Endnote, and Zotero to keep track of and format bibliographies.

Oldsters tend to associate those tools with youngsters. Many faculty members, especially senior ones, believe they are less adept at using those tools than their students are. While that much may be true, the assumption that follows — that when it comes to technology, today's students need no faculty guidance — most certainly is not.

While college students may be computer-literate, they are not, as a rule, research-literate. And there's a huge difference between the two.

The fact that some professors do not recognize the distinction means they effectively assume that their students find themselves as much at home in the complex and daunting world of information as when they upload 25 photos from their iPhone to Facebook and text their friends to announce the latest "pics."

Academic librarians are eager to offer sessions for students on what we call "research education." But the mistaken assumption that students don't need it means that many professors don't ask us to meet with their students, or even respond to our enthusiastic offers to lead such sessions. Students don't need to be taught anything about working online, because they were practically born digital, right?

Research education is not tools education. Research education involves getting students to understand how information is organized physically in libraries, as well as electronically in library catalogs and in powerful, sometimes highly specialized commercial databases. It means teaching students to search effectively online to identify the most relevant and highest-quality books, articles, microform sets, databases, even free Web resources.

Students do not come to college armed with those skills, nor are they likely to be acquired without guidance. Yet students desperately need such skills if they hope to function effectively in our information-driven economy. As Wayne C. Booth, Gregory G. Colomb, and Joseph M. Williams opine in The Craft of Research: The "vast majority of students will have careers in which, if they do not do their own research, they will have to evaluate and depend on the research of others. We know of no way to prepare for that responsibility better than to do research of one's own."

Professors may need to be reminded that online searching requires a set of skills that are the strong suit of academic librarians — and that we are eager to impart those skills to students. Faculty members may also need to be reminded that developing those skills takes practice. Would professors assume that students possess the critical-thinking skills necessary to make sense of an early-17th-century document related to the Plymouth Bay Colony just because they grew up in Massachusetts?

Here, then, are some tips for faculty members on how to augment students' research skills.

Spend a class period on search strategies. Show students how to find their way around the library's electronic catalog (for books) and a few general databases such as Academic Search Premier, those in the WilsonWeb platform, and LexisNexis Academic (for articles). A librarian can conduct a session with your students on those sources and, more important, demonstrate effective search strategies to avoid frustration and wasted time. Make the session mandatory, hold it during class, and be sure to attend it, to show you mean business. Even better, teach the session with the librarian, or at least chime in to stress key points.

Take a tour. Introduce students to the physical spaces of the library, especially the reference desk, the reference collection and its contents, the periodical reading room, and the stacks — including how to read a call number. Believe it or not, many students' familiarity with their college or university library stops at the study spaces.

Reinforce the lesson with an assignment. Devise a for-credit assignment that echoes what you and the librarian have shown the students. It should emphasize key distinctions that they often forget, such as the need to search the online catalog for books but library databases for articles. You might also incorporate a component that challenges students to evaluate the quality of information they find, such as comparing the top results returned by a keyword search in Google with those returned in Academic Search Premier with the peer-reviewed box checked. Which results are more authoritative, and how can students tell?

Take it a step further. Perhaps you want to do more than require a single assignment, such as encouraging students to use library materials in support of arguments in their term papers. It would be good to assign them Chapter 3 (pp. 40 to 55) of the second edition of The Craft of Research (available for library purchase as an e-book, so students don't have to shell out extra). The chapter covers how to turn interest in a topic into a research question that's worth trying to answer. It should reduce the likelihood that students will set out to write a paper on "the history of rowing on U.S. college campuses" and move them instead toward an argument supported by convincing data about, say, "the role that athletics plays in U.S. college admissions."

In an ideal world, students should have multiple encounters with librarians, not just the standard 60-to-90-minute session that is most common now.

Faculty members in Yale's English department clearly recognize the growing importance of research education: They have just agreed to increase fivefold the number of undergraduates who will attend library sessions as an integral part of their introductory writing and literature courses (from 350 to roughly 1,900). Add to that our new "personal librarian" program, which pairs every Yale freshman with a Yale librarian, and you see the students themselves begin to be repositioned to value learning the craft of research. Let's hope this example encourages others to follow suit.

The more time students spend with us, the further they can go beyond the basics into larger conceptual issues. Once they have determined what makes a good research question in the first place, they can move on to ask themselves (and the librarian) what is needed to answer specific questions they want to explore, developing the confidence that comes from knowing they are looking in all the right places for answers, and actually finding what they seek.

Todd Gilman is the librarian for literature in English at Yale University's Sterling Memorial Library.

Not Enough Time in the Library - Chronicle.com

Monday, March 23, 2009

New videos from Project Information Literacy - Project Information Literacy: A large-scale study about early adults and their research habits

Project Information Literacy: A large-scale study about early adults and their research habits

Tune in to Project Information Literacy's (PIL's) new series of short videos, the PIL InfoLit Monologues, which are about how college students conduct research in the digital age. The hope is the "public service videos" will be shown in classes, training sessions, and meetings and will spark further discussion about information literacy. 
PIL InfoLit Monologue, No. 1 (2:10) is about what students say about Wikipedia. The video draws on research from PIL's Fall Discussion Groups. Project Information Literacy is a national research study, led by Alison Head and Mike Eisenberg of the University of Washington's iSchool and supported with a gift from ProQuest.

Project Information Literacy: A large-scale study about early adults and their research habits

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Link Library of Open Access English Language Journals

Link Library of Open Access English Language Journals

Blog posted in comments area of Schol comm blog -- need to take a closer look at this ....seems good at first look -- HSM

Link Library of Open Access English Language Journals

Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ), Open J-Gate, Open J Gate, Open Access Journals, Open Access, Free Access, E-Journals, e-journal, Periodical, Periodicals, Magazine, Magazines, Journal, Abstract, Articles, Quarterly, Research

Link Library of Open Access English Language Journals

Saturday, February 14, 2009

MERLOT - Multimedia Educational Resource for Learning and Online Teaching

MERLOT - Multimedia Educational Resource for Learning and Online Teaching

MERLOT is a leading edge, user-centered, searchable collection of peer reviewed and selected higher education, online learning materials, catalogued by registered members and a set of faculty development support services. MERLOT's vision is to be a premiere online community where faculty, staff, and students from around the world share their learning materials and pedagogy.

MERLOT's strategic goal is to improve the effectiveness of teaching and learning by increasing the quantity and quality of peer reviewed online learning materials that can be easily incorporated into faculty designed courses.

MERLOT - Multimedia Educational Resource for Learning and Online Teaching

The Museum of Broadcast Communications

The Museum of Broadcast Communications

The mission of the Museum of Broadcast Communications (MBC) is to collect, preserve, and present historic and contemporary radio and television content as well as educate, inform, and entertain the public through its archives, public programs, screenings, exhibits, publications and online access to its resources.

The MBC is an Illinois non-profit corporation that owns and manages two subsidiaries, Museum.TV and the National Radio Hall of Fame (NRHOF) and its website radiohof.org.

MBC Collection

Each subsidiary focuses on radio or television and the intellectual foundation of each entity is an encyclopedia—the Encyclopedia of Radio (EOR) and the Encyclopedia of Television (EOT).

Each entity has its own separate Steering Committee, made up of outside members as well as select MBC board members. Each Steering Committee reports to the MBC Board of Directors and each entity produces an annual fund raising benefit ---- the NRHOF Induction gala/broadcast held each November and MBC Salutes held each May.


MBC Collection

Since 1987 the MBC has offered free access for public learning to a diverse population, with the presentation of over 180 public programs, and through its online users around the world.

A Chicago-based professional staff and volunteers work on each subsidiary, with oversight of each entities' website provided by the MBC board's Online Committee.

The MBC opened to the public in June of 1987 at River City in Chicago’s South Loop neighborhood. From 1992 until 2003, the museum was located in the Chicago Cultural Center. It is currently raising funds to complete a new 62,000 square-foot home at State and Kinzie Streets in Chicago. Donations are welcome.

The Museum of Broadcast Communications

Charity Navigator - America's Largest Charity Evaluator | Home

Charity Navigator - America's Largest Charity Evaluator | Home

Founded in 2001, Charity Navigator has become the nation's largest and most-utilized evaluator of charities. In our quest to help donors, our team of professional analysts has examined tens of thousands of non-profit financial documents. As a result, we know as much about the true fiscal operations of charities as anyone. We've used this knowledge to develop an unbiased, objective, numbers-based rating system to assess the financial health of over 5,000 of America's best-known charities.

Specifically, Charity Navigator's rating system examines two broad areas of a charity's financial health -- how responsibly it functions day to day as well as how well positioned it is to sustain its programs over time. Each charity is then awarded an overall rating, ranging from zero to four stars. To help donors avoid becoming victims of mailing-list appeals, each charity's commitment to keeping donors' personal information confidential is assessed. The site is easily navigable by charity name, location or type of activity and also features opinion pieces by Charity Navigator experts, donation tips, and top-10 and bottom-10 lists which rank efficient and inefficient organizations in a number of categories.

Charity Navigator - America's Largest Charity Evaluator | Home

Monday, February 9, 2009

Nebraska Memories

Nebraska Memories 

Nebraska Memories is a cooperative project to digitize Nebraska-related historical and cultural heritage materials and make them available to researchers of all ages via the Internet. Nebraska Memories is brought to you by the Nebraska Library Commission.

Nebraska Memories

FREE -- Teaching Resources and Lesson Plans from the Federal Government

FREE -- Teaching Resources and Lesson Plans from the Federal Government

FREE makes it easier to find teaching and learning resources from the federal government.

More than 1,500 federally supported teaching and learning resources are included from dozens of federal agencies. New sites are added regularly.

You are invited to link to FREE. (Use a FREE logo, if you'd like).

Get new resources delivered to you several times a week: sign up for the FREE RSS.

Federal agencies, if you're looking to involve teachers in developing teaching resources, see our lessons learned.

FREE was originally conceived in 1997 by a federal working group and launched a year later. It was redesigned and relaunched for the first time in November 2006.

FREE -- Teaching Resources and Lesson Plans from the Federal Government

David Rumsey Historical Map Collection

David Rumsey Historical Map Collection 

Now over 100 new maps added to the Rumsey Historical Maps in Google Earth and to a new layer in Google Maps. Read more about these collections.. New! September, 2008, over 30 new maps in Google Earth, including the Wheeler Survey of the U.S. West, 1871-83.

The David Rumsey Historical Map Collection has over 18,460 maps online. The collection focuses on rare 18th and 19th century North American and South American maps and other cartographic materials. Historic maps of the World, Europe, Asia, and Africa are also represented. Collection categories include antique atlas, globe, school geography, maritime chart, state, county, city, pocket, wall, childrens, and manuscript maps. Some examples are United States map, maps New York, California map, Arizona map, America map, New York City map, Chicago map, and Colorado map. The collection can be used to study history, genealogy and family history.

David Rumsey Historical Map Collection

Current Cites

Current Cites 

Current Cites

Roy Tennant, Editor

Search:
Results in summary form or complete

A team of librarians monitors information technology literature, selecting only the best items to annotate for this free publication. The resulting issue of 8-12 annotated citations of current literature is emailed to a mailing list and is available as an RSS feed.

To suggest items to review, email the editor. If you have a print publication you wish to be considered, please send it to Roy Tennant, Editor, Current Cites, OCLC Programs and Research, 777 Mariners Island Boulevard, Suite 550, San Mateo, CA 94404, USA.

Current Cites has been published continuously since August 1990. If you want to know more, please see the history of Current Cites.

Current Cites

The Atlas of Early Printing - The University Of Iowa Libraries

The Atlas of Early Printing - The University Of Iowa Libraries

About The Atlas

The Atlas of Early Printing is an interactive site designed to be used as a tool for teaching the early history of printing in Europe during the second half of the fifteenth century. While printing in Asia pre-dates European activity by several hundred years, the rapid expansion of the trade following the discovery of printing in Mainz, Germany around the middle of the fifteenth century is a topic of great importance to the history of European civilization. This website uses Flash to depict the spread of European printing in a manner that allows a user to control dates and other variables.

The Atlas of Early Printing - The University Of Iowa Libraries

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Public.Resource.Org

 Public.Resource.Org

Welcome to Public.Resource.Org!

“Making Government Information More Accessible”

Public.Resource.Org