12. •Enhance the student learning experience
• Encourage engagement between lecturers
and students
• Encourage excellence in teaching and
learning
• Improve staff efficiency and productivity
• Maximize the value of library resources
• Integrate with your existing ICT investments
13. Library experience:
5 hours per reading list
1000 lists
50 days of senior staff time
and
85 days for library team members
22. “Reading lists are the most important thing
the university gives us. They tell us what
we should do and indicate how we are
going to be assessed”
CILIP Library & Information Update June 2010
30. “Course resource lists aren’t just a library
thing, they go to the heart of what
universities are about”
Mike Berrington, Deputy Director LLR
Nottingham Trent University
35. Key facts:
•Share HE Wide system
•Agile development with customers
•Delivered software as a service
•Devolved authentication to support SSO
•Implementation flexibility
• OPAC, Bookshop, Link Resolver
• VLE integration via blocks
• Design
48. Books Articles Audio
eBooks Databases
Theses Video
Open Access Web pages
CLA materials IR Docs
OERs
49. Reviews to support acquisitions
• See library availability of requested items
• See if items are on other lists
• Review LCN for in-stock items
• Review the note to student
• Review the note to library
• Review the relative importance of
requested items
• Log dialogue between library colleagues
50. Summary
•A strategic teaching and learning tool
•Supporting flexible and inclusive modes
of study
•Provides stock management and
acquisition tools
51. • Enhance the student learning experience
• Maximize the value of library resources
• Encourage engagement between lecturers
and students
• Encourage excellence in teaching and
learning
• Improve staff efficiency and productivity
• Integrate with your existing ICT investments
57. Interesting links
E Book link example (Dawson-era)
• http://readinglists.central-lancashire.ac.uk/items/9AFF5F4A-EEB3-CEFD-D27B-
6087E84C5CF0.html
Manchester good example of structure and guidance
• http://www.readinglists.manchester.ac.uk/lists/18A61CCA-633E-510D-8F49-
4316AD671D23.html
• E-Book link Derby example
• http://liblists.derby.ac.uk/items/6F62CF75-C7EE-5059-D18B-CCC13B3868B7.html
• http://resourcelists.rgu.ac.uk/items/69EBD228-8059-05C5-0297-3DE35DB10F9D.html
• Handbook style at UCL:
• http://readinglists.ucl.ac.uk/lists/B0F8C599-4E83-A17B-A6D5-0C42FA9D0EA7.html
Who are these institutions – well, currently we have 20 customers subscribing to Aspire. They are each having different successes with Aspire, and different reasons for selecting.<Click> NTU<Click> MMU<Click> Keele
Who are these institutions – well, currently we have 20 customers subscribing to Aspire. They are each having different successes with Aspire, and different reasons for selecting.<Click> NTU<Click> MMU<Click> Keele
Its also not unusual for students to be keen to get started and that kind of motivated learner are only to be encouraged…
A great start...but no reading list (this seems to be disappointing…
Building anticipation of the keen learner…..“FINALLY” perhaps denotes a sense of expectations not being met…
Building anticipation of the keen learner…..“FINALLY” perhaps denotes a sense of expectations not being met…
We find that some comments demonstrate more obviously negative view and we can imagine the effect on student motivation at even this early stage…
…and questions whether the Uni understand the student viewpoint?
(2 of 2) Anxiety generated by fear of limited resource... stock management issues
And in terms of understand our students we are talking about a generation of learners who are likely to organise their learning electronically...At this stage of student experience (coming from media rich schools and homes perhaps...are paper based only resources acceptable...
IF WE ARE TO REFLECT ON the question ‘are reading lists important’ these TWEETS are indicative of: the level of importance felt by the studentthe impact LISTS have on student preparation The impact of LISTS on student motivationSupplemental: And some may feel as in this case a sense of being overwhelmed by LISTS… Is these a issue of context and structure? A small reading list with no structure and notes is likely to be less accessible than a large reading list with a useful structure and supporting notes…
They are undoubtedly a challenge to collate and distribute…
And if you have to do this...and ...Preparation is everything...why not do this in conducive surrounding....(subtext: Aspire offers all the Academic needs to complete the task anytime/anywhere...)
A significant task then….
For some its not something to rush…
Can we do this more efficently?
PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE can we do this more efficiently….
And finally the librarian... Linking and integration “not as easy as it seems”... Again, it does not have to be this way
And finally the librarian... Linking and integration “not as easy as it seems”... Again, it does not have to be this way