2. Outline of Meeting
1. Chuck’s introduction
• Outreach and Education effort
• LSD and Reference services
• Storage Library
• Creation of the new Emory Center for Digital
Scholarship
2. Services Dashboard - Chris and Kristan
3. Humanities Team – Kim
4. Social Sciences Team – Chris
5. Sciences Team – Kristan
6. Area Studies Team – Chuck
7. Access Services – Amy
• LibChat
• LibAnswers
8. Ares Project – Fran
9. ILL – Deep dive – Margaret
10. Collections – Chris
• PDA
• Collection Use Metric
11. EDC – Rob
12. Outreach and Education - Erin
Presentations
3. Services Div. 2012-2013 Dashboard
SERVICES USE NOTES
Circulation (print)
Circulation of New
Monographs
N/A New library metric for scorecard
Serials in E-Format Expenditure + Numbers of Titles
Database Collection In Terms of Expenditure & Use
E-Journal SFX Use
Consultations
Electronic Data Center
Interlibrary Loan Review in process
Instruction
Library Service Desk
Reserves
Dashboard Key:
Service on target
Service needs further
investigation
Service problem
Use is increasing
Use is stable
Use is decreasing
4. Humanities Team
O Erica Bruchko, African American Studies and
United States History
O Joyce Clinkscales, Music
O Kim Collins, Art History & Classical Studies
O James Steffen, Film and Media Studies, Theater,
Dance, Interdisciplinary Studies/Graduate Institute
of Liberal Arts and LGBT Studies
O Sandra Still, English and American Literature
O Alain St. Pierre, European History and
Philosophy
O Matt Roberts, French, Italian, and Comparative Lit.
11. Electronic DATA CENTER &
SOCIAL SCIENCES
Political Science
Economics
Sociology
Alumni
Public Health
Business School
Data Consulations by Top Departments, 2012-13
12. Highlights/Achievements
O Two peer reviewed articles on data curation
O Immersion participant (Teaching Track)
O Undergraduate Research Award Winners
O Psychology Chair of EBSS Subcommittee
(ACRL/ALA)
O Citation Analyses completed for Psychology
and Economics
O Strengthening of FIOCRUZ
relationship, research data management
group
13. Other notable updates
O Research guides for Development Studies and
Psychology 200 continue to receive substantial
use
O Women’s Studies transition to Jennifer
Elder, due to departmental changes in focus
O Educational Studies still needs support
O Information for Social Scientists—50th issue
electronically published in April, over 500 hits
(MOOCs, ebooks, research guides of
interest, citation analysis, data management
initiatives)
14. Economics
O Graduate program still under review
O Citation Analysis completed using multiple
tools (Scopus, Web of Science, Google
Scholar)
O E-Only for HB and HC in Approval Plan
(accounts for about 25% of total titles on
Approval)
O High number of STLs in DDA pool for HB-
HF (including Business)
15. Science Team Successes
O YBP Approval Plans – Health & Woodruff
O Chemistry Library Renovations
O Partnering on Research Data Management
O Training & Mentoring Science
Librarian/CLIR Fellow
O New Libguide: Citation Analysis
17. New faculty / new programs / changes
African Studies 1. ranked 6th in USNW
2. 2 new positions in English
3. 1 new position in African Art History
4. 1 position will be permanent
between IAS, Anthropology, and the
MDP
5. Mellon appointment to English in
2014
CJK Chinese Studies: 2 new faculty in
East Asian studies:
1. Anthropology
2. Chinese Classics
3. East Asia Cinema (2014)
Korean Studies: 2 new faculty; 2
instructors for language
Japanese Studies: no new positions
Contemporary Chinese Studies: an area of
emphasis - Dean’s committee report with
recommendations
18. New faculty / new programs / changes, cont.
Russian One of the reduced programs
1. new head of REEES to be
appointed
2. new head of REALC to be
appointed
3. Looking a new ways to continue the
teaching of Russian
Middle Eastern Studies First cohort for the new Ph.D. program
in Islamic Studies will be here this fall
Spanish and Portuguese 1. Karen Stolley is the new Chair
2. Position vacancy for Portuguese
Studies – status not known
LAS Robert Goddard was appointed the new
Director
Jewish Studies New instructor for Yiddish
South Asia Search pending for a new position
19. Notable Acquisitions
REEES Epstein donation Donation of a significant portion of
his library on Russian language,
philosophy, history, and culture
MESAS Buehler Sufi
collection
Continue to catalog materials
from on the best collections on
Sufi
Tibetan
Studies
TBRSC Collection Addition of two collections of core
titles (all e-books)
Jewish Studies films Acquisition of contemporary
Israeli feature films
Japanese
Studies
films Acquired the top 10 best
Japanese films
Chinese
Studies
films Acquired contemporary films
South Asia E-resources Oxford Scholarship online
20. Notable Acquisitions, cont.
Chinese
Studies
E-resources 1. Sikuquahsu on-line
2. North Korean news database
3. China Academic Journals
Series G
Series J
4. Oxford database for Chinese
Studies
African Studies E-resources 1. House of Commons
Parliamentary Papers database for
18th & 19th c
2. Confidential Prints: Africa, 1834-
1966
3. Global Commodities: Trade,
Exploration and Cultural Exchange
Latin American
Studies
E-resources 1. Archivo histórico del Arzobispado de
México
2. Confidential Print: Latin America,
1833-1969 (Adam Matthews)
21. Collection Development Collaborations
Latin American
Studies
1. UGA- Central American Collaboration Completed
2nd year of collaboration with U GA Latin
American Librarian to deepen Central American
collecting in Georgia - Results 94% of the 121
titles collected are unique
1. UGA – French Speaking Caribbean
Collaboration Both Emory and UGA have
implemented small approval plan for the region
1. LAARP Distributed Resources Program – Emory
is a member of the program in our selection of
books on the humanities and social sciences
from Brazil.
22. Cataloging
Titles Volumes
East Asian: Chinese,
Japanese and Korean
2,641 3,412
MESAS 1,391 1,765
South Asian 470 254
REEES and Jewish
Studies
567 655
24. Access Services
O BLART
O Head: Fran Pici, Colin Bragg, Oliver Smith, Alfredo
Villar
O Stacks and Storage
O Head: Melanie Bunn, Jerrold Brantley, Patrick
Buckley, Neil D’Cruze, Lisa Hamlett, Kevin
Miller, Bran Peacock,
O LSD
O Head: Melanie Bunn (Interim- TBA), Lloyd
Busch, Tara McCurley, Rich McNeal, Jessica
Perlove, Erich Wendt
O Interlibrary Loan
O Head: Margaret Ellingson, Kathy Britt, Marie
Hansen, Kitty Quitmeyer, Sarah Ward, TBA
25. Access Services: Year in Review
O BLART
O Ares implementation project
O MM desk and staff area renovation planning
O Chemistry Library closing until 2015
O Chemistry Library services at Math/Sci
O Gift collection project
O ILL
O Rapid ILL implementation
O ILLiad v 8.3 and 8.4 implementation
O ILLiad/Shibboleth implementation
O ILL borrowing ―deep dive‖
O Anne Nicolson retired
26. Access Services: Year in Review
O Stacks and Storage
O Post Life Sciences tower backshift complete/remeasuring
O Stack tower closed for repairs, Dec-Jan
O Integration of Storage in Services/Stacks Team
O New microfilm machines (Minolta SL1000)
O Storage selection policy approved
O Universal storage delivery/book delivery pilot
O Gifts workflow management
O Library Service Desk
O Reference Advisory Group established
O LSD Head – new position search in progress
O SFS project completed
O LibAnswers implementation
O Reference staffing pool
O EPASS tutoring center installation
28. Access Services: Looking Ahead
O BLART
O Ares, Ares, Ares
O MM desk and public area renovation
O Equipment refresh/Classroom technologies
O ILL
O ILLiad 8.4 feature integration
O Borrowing Specialist hire
O Assess RapidILL and HMA delivery
29. Access Services: Looking Ahead
• Stacks and Storage
• Assess book delivery
• New storage ranges
• Theology and HMA moves
• Integration of Stacks and Storage teams
• LSD
• New TL
• LibAnswers
• Student Services/Services Learning
Commons space planning
30.
31. ILL ::
O Articles (& Chapters) only
O Supplied from print & e-resources (Open
Access or Licenses allow ILL)
O ARL (67) and ASERL (31) Pods
O No fees between libraries
O <24-hr electronic delivery (PDF)
O System Avgs: 71% Fill Rate & 14-hr
Delivery
32. Borrowing ::
O August 2012 – date
O 1198 Borrowing Requests total
RapidILL
O 1076 Filled via Rapid libraries = 90%
O Delivery Time: 15.8 hrs
O 122 Canceled – Available at Emory, Bad
Cite or Duplicate Request
O Wrinkles: OpenURLILLiad linking –
User Education & field mapping tweaks
33. Lending ::
O October 2012 – date
O Articles only, not Chapters
O 6910 Lending Requests
O 6222 Filled (mostly E) = 90%
O Delivery Time: 10.2 hours
O 688 Canceled – holdings/availability issues
O 6 to 1 Lending/Borrowing ratio
34. ILL :: Delivery Pilot
O March 2013 – date
O Deliver books requested from Woodruff
Stacks by HMA curators
O 164 requests total
O 4 curators, 2 = 93% of requests
O 99% filled from our collection or ILL
O Wrinkles: serials, checked-out, missing,
articles/chapters, Oxford
38. Collection Management—
Update 2012/2013
O Fiscal year ends August 31, 2013
O Tight year for numerous reasons
O Budget numbers not known until
late August/early September
allocations to follow
39. Major Initiatives
O DDA pilot, spend below projection (only
$10K), pilot continues through Fall
O HEGIS code changes to better reflect
spend on ejournals vs print serials
O Lost and Missing Book Policy and
Process Review (w/Access Services)
O New Storage Policy to expedite
transfers, approved and (officially)
implemented July 1, 2003
40. Other Initiatives
O Approval Plan revisions for Woodruff and
HSCL
O Selection of 2,800 LF material to
temporarily move from Clifton to HMA
O Life Sciences collections collaboration
45. O Project Muse, 2013 Installment UPCC (2,800
projected titles)
O LN/PQ Bills and Resolutions
O Vogue and Entertainment News Archives
O Harvard/De Gruyter ebook package, 2012-3
O Adam Matthews—over 10 collections, multi-
year purchase
O Financial Times
O Oxford Bibliographies and Handbooks
(ongoing)
Notable Purchases
47. Mission Statement
O The Electronic Data Center supports the use
of geospatial and quantitative data for both
faculty and students and in both research and
teaching. It furthers the academic mission of
scholarly inquiry by assisting users with
locating relevant data and with assembling
those data into usable forms, thus allowing
users to test and evaluation arguments and
hypotheses and to move from the realm of the
abstract and theoretical to the realm of the
empirical. Reflecting the non-disciplinary
nature of data, the Center assists researchers
from departments and schools throughout the
university.
49. Highlights - GIS
O ATL Maps Projects:
City Directories
1928-Vintage Maps
Geocoder
O Field Work:
St. Catherine’s Island
Samothrace
O Consultations
50. Highlights – Data Management
O Hire of Jennifer Doty
O Fall 2012 Survey
O Presentations: RDAP and IASSIST
O Curation Projects:
ICPSR
DataVerse Network
O GA Tech Collaboration
51. “The future, Mr. Gittes! The
future!!”
O Emory Center for Digital Scholarship
(ECDS)
O Intent is to maintain existing services and
support and develop new services to
supplement what we already do
O Planning for the move up to Level 3 is
underway
56. Orientation 2012
O Orientation – Pizza party/tours
O Pizza party all on one floor! Much better!
Alas, no gluten free pizza.
O Orientation Leaders (i.e. other students)
took their groups on tours of the library
during orientation. We provided tour notes
to make sure they highlighted the important
(to us) things.
O Chaotic but good chaos.
60. Game
O 10 tasks (photos)
O Only 10 entries.
O Potential reasons:
• time o’ year (in the first 2-3 weeks of
semester when they are
overwhelmed)
• prize?
61.
62. PACE 2012
Pre-Major Advising
Connections at Emory
For the first time, the library was actually
part of the PACE curriculum. Week 6 was a
library exercise. We gave them a choice of 2
out of 3 activities.
68. New or newish workshops
O ETD submissions
O Copyright and your dissertation
O Dissertation bootcamp
69.
70. Study Breaks
Bring us your tired, your hungry, your huddled
masses outside the Jones Room door
71.
72. An actual quote
by an actual student
"Take a picture of me
with the dog –--
I need to send this photo to
my mom so she can feel
good about paying full
tuition at Emory."
75. New Partnership
O ACE! (not to be confused with
PACE, FAME, DiSC, ECIT, ECDS, MODS, etc
.)
O Academics & Culture @ Emory
O Incoming First Year undergraduates can take
part in the ACE Program for International
Students.
O 4-week program
O prepare them for a successful adjustment to the
academic, social and cultural life at Emory and
in Atlanta before the fall semester begins.
The Pre-Major Advising Connections at Emory Program (PACE) is a multifaceted academic advising support system which serves first-year students until they declare a major before the end of their second year. Prior to their arrival, incoming students are matched with a faculty adviser and peer leaders who help them acclimate to college life, find their passions and plan for academic and career success. The Office for Undergraduate Education (OUE) and Campus life supplement this advising team and provide educational panels, programs and sessions throughout the first year. These informational meetings serve to further connect students to campus resources and help them identify avenues for academic and personal growth. First-year students enroll in PACE 101 and receive one semester hour of academic credit toward their Emory College degree for successfully completing the program. The grading basis for the course is satisfactory/unsatisfactory.