Do esplendor medieval ata os séculos escurosAnakker_99
Galiza, tras volverse un reino de maior prestixio e independente, trouxo un gran esplendor á lingua galega polo cal foi considerada unha das linguas oficiais xunto co latín. Sen embargo, a finais da Idade Media o castelán influíu perxudicialmente sobre o galego, o que o levou a unha etapa de decadencia.
Who uses this stuff, anyway? An investigation of who uses the DigitalCommonsNASIG
A great deal of the professional literature is devoted to developing content and faculty buy-in for institutional repositories. However, little is known about the end users of these repositories. This is unfortunate since great content is of little value if no one uses it and knowing more about users and their needs leads to more relevant content. So, we need to ask ourselves: "Who exactly is using this stuff, anyway?" Since 2010, Utah State University has been surveying its IR users to answer this question. DigitalCommons@USU houses more than 20,000 documents with full-text downloads of over 500,000. With this much content and activity, our 3-year old repository has matured to a point that we are beginning to shift our focus from just seeking content to understanding our users, their needs, and how we can better meet those needs. In this presentation, we will share the results of our survey, discuss the implications of the results, and propose future directions of investigation.
Presenter: Andrew Wesolek, Utah State University
Evaluating library support for a new graduate program: Finding harmony with a...NASIG
In 2008, the University of Southern Indiana began a new Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) program offered via distance education. Prior to its beginning, USI librarians collaborated with nursing faculty to identify ways to support the program. As a result of these discussions and using grant funding provided by the nursing department, the library added relevant electronic journals and open access journal collections Providing electronic access to the journals would enable distance education students to easily use these materials. In addition to existing full-text databases, the library also made available two open access journal collections, including Bentham Open Access Journals and PubMed Central Open Access Journals. The library also expanded its interlibrary loan (ILL) services by providing an article delivery (AD) service on a trial basis to all students enrolled in the program living more than 50 miles from campus. This three-year study sought to answer the question, “How well do the library’s new and existing resources and services support DNP student research?” The methods used by this study included a citation analysis of references listed in formal papers, an examination of usage statistics generated by the electronic resources supporting the program, a student satisfaction survey, and a review of students’ use of ILL and AD services. The citation analysis provided data indicating the sources used (number, type, currency, etc.) by the students and the library’s ability to supply them. Reviews of the usage statistics for the online journals and databases provided a comparison of how the use of these resources has been affected by the DNP enrollment. The student satisfaction surveys have given feedback on the students’ opinions and behaviors regarding the resources and services made available by the library.
Presenters: Peter Whiting and Philip Orr, David L. Rice Library, University of Southern Indiana
HI-Tech Computers provides networking solutions such as LAN, WAN, wireless networking, server room design, and VPN solutions. It offers brands from D-Link, Cisco, HP and more. It has specialists for these solutions and a large number of satisfied clients. It also provides data backup solutions, firewalls, servers, and addresses issues caused by computer viruses. It aims to provide customized solutions for different types of clients and needs.
The Path to a Flat Stomach: All You Need to Grab Those Perfect Set of Six-Packshairlll
Belly fat is dangerous and lifestyle changes are needed to reduce it. Focusing solely on abdominal exercises will not reduce belly fat since it does not target the underlying fat. A full-body routine that includes weight training along with a nutrient-rich diet is needed. Interval training with varying intensity burns more fat than steady cardio alone. Combining strength training and high intensity interval training with a clean diet focused on natural foods is the best approach to achieving a lean stomach.
Do esplendor medieval ata os séculos escurosAnakker_99
Galiza, tras volverse un reino de maior prestixio e independente, trouxo un gran esplendor á lingua galega polo cal foi considerada unha das linguas oficiais xunto co latín. Sen embargo, a finais da Idade Media o castelán influíu perxudicialmente sobre o galego, o que o levou a unha etapa de decadencia.
Who uses this stuff, anyway? An investigation of who uses the DigitalCommonsNASIG
A great deal of the professional literature is devoted to developing content and faculty buy-in for institutional repositories. However, little is known about the end users of these repositories. This is unfortunate since great content is of little value if no one uses it and knowing more about users and their needs leads to more relevant content. So, we need to ask ourselves: "Who exactly is using this stuff, anyway?" Since 2010, Utah State University has been surveying its IR users to answer this question. DigitalCommons@USU houses more than 20,000 documents with full-text downloads of over 500,000. With this much content and activity, our 3-year old repository has matured to a point that we are beginning to shift our focus from just seeking content to understanding our users, their needs, and how we can better meet those needs. In this presentation, we will share the results of our survey, discuss the implications of the results, and propose future directions of investigation.
Presenter: Andrew Wesolek, Utah State University
Evaluating library support for a new graduate program: Finding harmony with a...NASIG
In 2008, the University of Southern Indiana began a new Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) program offered via distance education. Prior to its beginning, USI librarians collaborated with nursing faculty to identify ways to support the program. As a result of these discussions and using grant funding provided by the nursing department, the library added relevant electronic journals and open access journal collections Providing electronic access to the journals would enable distance education students to easily use these materials. In addition to existing full-text databases, the library also made available two open access journal collections, including Bentham Open Access Journals and PubMed Central Open Access Journals. The library also expanded its interlibrary loan (ILL) services by providing an article delivery (AD) service on a trial basis to all students enrolled in the program living more than 50 miles from campus. This three-year study sought to answer the question, “How well do the library’s new and existing resources and services support DNP student research?” The methods used by this study included a citation analysis of references listed in formal papers, an examination of usage statistics generated by the electronic resources supporting the program, a student satisfaction survey, and a review of students’ use of ILL and AD services. The citation analysis provided data indicating the sources used (number, type, currency, etc.) by the students and the library’s ability to supply them. Reviews of the usage statistics for the online journals and databases provided a comparison of how the use of these resources has been affected by the DNP enrollment. The student satisfaction surveys have given feedback on the students’ opinions and behaviors regarding the resources and services made available by the library.
Presenters: Peter Whiting and Philip Orr, David L. Rice Library, University of Southern Indiana
HI-Tech Computers provides networking solutions such as LAN, WAN, wireless networking, server room design, and VPN solutions. It offers brands from D-Link, Cisco, HP and more. It has specialists for these solutions and a large number of satisfied clients. It also provides data backup solutions, firewalls, servers, and addresses issues caused by computer viruses. It aims to provide customized solutions for different types of clients and needs.
The Path to a Flat Stomach: All You Need to Grab Those Perfect Set of Six-Packshairlll
Belly fat is dangerous and lifestyle changes are needed to reduce it. Focusing solely on abdominal exercises will not reduce belly fat since it does not target the underlying fat. A full-body routine that includes weight training along with a nutrient-rich diet is needed. Interval training with varying intensity burns more fat than steady cardio alone. Combining strength training and high intensity interval training with a clean diet focused on natural foods is the best approach to achieving a lean stomach.
What's Up with Docs?!?: The Peculiarities of Cataloging Federal Government Se...NASIG
As capricious and prone to unpredictable changes as serials in general library collections, government documents serials possess special features that make them particularly difficult to catalog and manage, from government documents-specific MARC fields and coding to SuDoc numbers and distinctive enumeration that can complicate holdings statements. Electronic government documents serials present another set of complex cataloging challenges involving GPO's use of the single-record approach in serial records. Ensuring that cataloging records reflect the unique characteristics of government documents serials and yet "play well" with other serial records in the library ILS can be tricky, particularly if the cataloging of government documents serials is performed by staff outside the department. Each of the three presenters brings a specific perspective on these peculiarities: Fang Gao describes the cataloging of government document serials from the perspective of a cataloger working at the Government Printing Office's Library Technical Information Services Department--providing a voice from the source. Joseph Nicholson offers the point of view of the local cataloger who must make government documents' records conform to the guidelines of the individual library's online catalog. Stephanie Braunstein will moderate and share her frustrations, mostly having to do with providing logical and uncomplicated access to government information, as a Government Documents Department Head in a Regional Federal Depository Library that also happens to be a library in a major research library.
Stephanie Braunstein and Joseph R. Nicholson, Louisiana State University; Fang Huang Gao, Government Printing Office
This document provides information on various business opportunities that can be established on a 25 acre land parcel located 5 km from the Mahadev Temple in Beje Fata, Chakore Gaoo village near Nashik, Maharashtra. The opportunities mentioned include banana, mango, and other fruit plantations, vegetable farms, dairy and poultry farms, nurseries, herbal products, food processing, and windmills. Logistics, water treatment plants, and machinery for industries like food processing are also mentioned as available services.
The document describes several commercial properties for sale or lease in Nashik, India. Properties include shops ranging from 300-400 sq ft, an office building of 7700 sq ft, plots of land from 5000-9775 sq yards, and residential/commercial plots of 1800-2000 sq ft. The properties have features like spartex flooring, aluminum windows, security, and nearby amenities. Locations provide easy access to the city center and major roads.
Silos are not limited to big departments. When I started at UB, the two technical services technicians did either acquisitions or physical processing of new materials, but not both. Their work was limited by system – if it wasn’t in the ILS, someone else did it. Following the principle of “whoever has the item/information completes the work”, technicians now add items to WorldCat Lists and create invoices for gifts as part of cataloging; do physical processing of standing orders as part of acquisitions; and are learning to maintain journal holdings in Serials Solutions and E-books in SFX.
Presenter:
Betty Landesman
Head of Technical Services and Content Management, Langsdale Library, University of Baltimore
Bringing history into the digital age: A case study of an online journal tran...NASIG
This document summarizes the case study of transitioning the print journal "Canadian Military History" to a digital format and making it available online through an institutional repository. It describes the background and goals of the project, challenges around copyright and author agreements, lessons learned around policy development, and strategies for creating an online readership while maintaining the journal's prestige. The successful digital transition required a critical mass of content, metadata, and long-term investment of resources.
Library as publisher handout 4-ojs design-briefNASIG
Handout to accompany presentation "Library as Publisher"
Lauren Collister
Electronic Publications Associate, University of Pittsburgh
Timothy S. Deliyannides
Director of the Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing and Head of Information Technology, University of Pittsburgh
It has been predicted that by 2016, 9 out of 10 college students will own a smartphone. In order to connect with students where they are most likely beginning their information searches, it increasingly important for libraries to make library collections discoverable via a mobile platform and to create an effective mobile search environment for library resources. This program highlights some of the mobile applications available for and in use by libraries, focusing on Murray State University's implementations of Browzine and Boopsie. The presentation will address the institutional needs that lead us to the acquisition of these services, the ins and outs of the implementation, any challenges involved in the set up, marketing and user education, how the applications were received and used once they were set up, and whether or not we saw a change in use statistics after implementation.
Presenter:
Cris Ferguson
Murray State University, Director of Technical Services
Discovery and analysis of the world's research collections: JSTOR and Summon ...NASIG
In the age of networked information, we've seen major changes to the
expectation of how bibliographic data is searched and serves research.
Summon is a web-scale discovery service that indexes and provides
relevancy ranking across 1 Billion items from thousands of collections and
makes them accessible to researches from a single search box in 450
institutions in over 40 countries. JSTOR is a not-for-profit provider of high
quality scholarly content spanning more than 300 years and covering nearly
60 disciplines. JSTOR provides on-line access to nearly 1,600 journals for
more than 7,500 institutions in 166 countries. This presentation will discuss
similarities in the mission and differences in the scope of these two services,
including how they work together. We'll delve into the inner workings of each
including treatment of data, analysis of search, and challenges each service
faces in their mission.
Presenters: Laura Robinson, Serials Solutions and Ron Snyder, ITHAKA
Opportunities beyond electronic resource management: An extension of the Core...NASIG
This presentation will provide an overview of current topics in digital scholarship and scholarly communications and draw connections between these new areas and the traditional skill sets of acquisitions and electronic resources employees. Commonalities between the skills outlined in the Core Competencies for Electronic Resources Librarians and those needed for success in digital scholarship and scholarly communications will form the basis of the presenter's recommendations for staff involvement in digital scholarship and scholarly communications.
An inventory of skills and talents among acquisitions staff will provide insight into the best ways to leverage existing human resources for the expansion of acquisitions duties into digital scholarship and scholarly communications. The presenter will outline new opportunities for acquisitions staff based on external research and internal staffing practice at the University of Montana.
Angela Dresselhaus
Acquisitions and Electronic Resources Librarian, University of Montana, Missoula
I am the acquisitions and electronic resources librarian at the University of Montana, Missoula where I manage the acquisition and electronic resources units. I am an active member of NASIG and serve as the NASIG Newsletter Editor-In-Chief.
Copyright in Practice-A Participatory WorkshopNASIG
Copyright presentations often focus on “the rules” without sufficient attention to practical decision-making. Yet because application of the law so often depends on specific facts and circumstances, this approach can leave a big gap for actual library practice. This workshop will focus on situations and how to make specific decisions; discussion of the rules and principles of copyright law will, it is hoped, emerge from those applications. Although common situations will be discussed in order to provide a comprehensive look at copyright decision making, participants are encourage to bring real-life problems for the group to consider and discuss.
Presenter:
Kevin Smith
Director of Scholarly Communications, Duke University
As Duke University’s first Director of Copyright & Scholarly Communications, Kevin Smith’s principal role is to teach and advise faculty, administrators and students about copyright, intellectual property licensing and scholarly publishing. He is a librarian and an attorney (admitted to the bar in Ohio and North Carolina) and also holds a graduate degree in religion from Yale University. At Duke, Kevin serves on the University’s Intellectual Property Board and Digital Futures Task Force, and he convenes the Open Access Advisory Panel. He is the current Chair of the ACRL’s Research and Scholarly Environment Committee and serves on the SPARC Steering Committee. His highly-regarded web log on scholarly communications discusses copyright and publication in academia, and he is a frequent speaker on those topics.
Many serials titles still exist in print only, and major commercial digitizing efforts often overlook titles that are not widely held. If out of copyright, these titles can be digitized by libraries, giving this old scholarship new life. Many libraries do some sort of digitization of textual materials, but too often serials experts are not involved. The titles may not be presented in ways that pull the serial together while also allowing article level linking. Serials experts can be valuable contributors to these digitization projects. This presentation will provide information on how to digitize text efficiently and how serials are being presented in digital collections. Serials specialists will learn ways that they can contribute to local digitization efforts to help ensure these titles are presented as effectively as possible.
Presenter: Wendy C Robertson
Keep on knockin' but you can't come in: access denials and e-journal selectionNASIG
In 2012, librarians at UNC-Chapel Hill examined journal activity reports for titles with one of their Big Deal publishers to determine if there was an evident demand for journals we weren't entitled to access. Based upon this data, we exercised our "swap allowance" to gain access to the most highly sought after titles. This session will present before and after snapshots of usage after a full year of subscription access.
Presenter:
Megan Kilb
E-Resources Librarian, UNC-Chapel Hill
We are committed to taking care of children and delivering the best quality service for all customers, as we are proud of our work welcoming new concepts and matching all requirements, while encouraging exercise as a habit and enjoying it in an open environment.
Automated creation of analytic catalog records for born digital journal articlesNASIG
This presentation will summarize the approach to bibliographic metadata developed at the University of Michigan Library for journal articles published and archived in HathiTrust using the mPach toolset, which allows journal editors to create born-digital open-access journals and create their own metadata as a byproduct of the publishing process. Specifically, mPach allows a journal editor to convert edited manuscripts from common source formats such as Microsoft Word into JATS (Z39.96-2012) XML and embed structured metadata about the article and journal. Since HathiTrust currently uses MARC as its common-denominator metadata format, JATS metadata are automatically mapped to MARC fields, creating one analytic record per article but without normalizing to follow RDA rules for transcription from primary sources of information or creating entries according to name authorities. For each new journal, a serial record for the journal is created manually by a serials cataloger. This serial record and each analytic record for articles in that journal link to a "collection" for the journal built using the HathiTrust Collections feature.
See accompanying handout at http://www.slideshare.net/NASIG/automated-creation-of-analytic-catalog-records-for-born-digital-journal-articleshandout
Presenter:
Kevin S. Hawkins
Director of Library Publishing, University of North Texas
Denton, Texas
O Río Umia, a inspiración desde a paisaxeiesasorey
Descrición da paisaxe do río Umia, que foi fonte de inspiración de poetas e do que xurdiron lendas que quedaron fixas na tradición oral galega. Elaborada por Aldara Rey Blanco, de 3º ESO B
Sobre as revoltas sociais que rematan coa morte dos señores na Baixa Idade Media. Tradución ó galego e actualización da anterior versión "Violencia y muerte del señor en Galicia a finales de la Edad Media", Studia Histórica. Historia Medieval, Salamanca, vol. IX, 1991, pp. 125-157.
2. Índice
1. Introdución. (Diap:3)
2. O esplendor medieval. (Diap:4)
3. A literatura medieval. (Diap: 5, 6, 7 e 8)
4. O galego durante a Idade Media. (Diap: 9)
5. Causas da decadencia. (Diap: 10, 11 e 12)
6. Séculos escuros. (Diap: 13)
7. Conclusión. (Diap: 14)
8. Fontes. (Diap: 15)
3. INTRODUCIÓN
Galicia chega a ter
unha certa autonomía
que lle permite
establecerse como
reino independente en
determinados
momentos dos séculos
X, XI e XII. Naquela
época a lingua máis
utilizada era o galego
agás en cataluña. A
finais dos séculos XIV
e XV Galicia sofre um
período de decadencia
e queda sometida ó
reino de Castela.
4. O ESPLENDOR MEDIEVAL
É o período de grandeza da literatura medieval e
transfórmase na lingua por escelencia en case
toda a península. A igrexa e os señores feudais
tiñan o poder.
8. A LITERATURA MEDIEVAL
CANTIGAS DE ESCARNIO E MALDICIR:
Son parodias burlescas que teñen como obxetivo
ridiculizar.
9. O GALAEGO DURANTE A IDADE
MEDIA
Durante esta época
Galicia era un reino
independiente, o latín
eo galego eran as
linguas máis utilizadas.
A xustiza empeza a
utilizar o galego.
O glego é usado pola
igrexa.
Empézase a utilizar na
lírica.
10. CAUSAS DA DECADENCIA.
Sustitución nobiliar:
Débese a loita entre Pedro I e Enrrique de
Trastamara pola coroa de Castela. A nobreza
galega apoiou a Pedro I. O vencedor foi Enrrique,
polo que para premiar aos nobres que o apoiaran
quitoulles as terras ao galegos que non o apoiaron.
Ahí entrou o castelán en Galicia.
11. CAUSAS DA DECADENCIA
Guerras Irmandiñas:
Foi a mediados do século XV, os burgueses e os
labradores relevaronse contra os señores feudais
polos abusos e a violencia. Os irmandiños
queimaron moitos castelos dos señores feudais. Os
señores que perderon as suas posesións foron a
castela en busca de refuxio, e atopárono, a raíña
Isabel a católica axudoulles a recuperar as suas
posesións.
12. CAUSAS DA DECADENCIA
Segunda sustitución nobiliar:
Guerra disnástica, na que Isabel a Católica e
Xoana a Beltranexa loitaron pola coroa de
Castela. Os nobres galegos non apoiaon a
Isabel, polo que a sua consecuencia foi a
segunda sustitución nobiliar e o
sometemento ao Reino de Castela.
13. OS SÉCULOS ESCUROS
A finais da Idade
Media a lingua e a
literatura galegas
entran nun período de
decadencia, motivado
pola perda do poder
político do Reino de
Galicia. O galego so é
utilizado polo pobo.
14. CONCLUSIÓN
Durante o explendor
medieval o galego é
utilizado polos
señores feudas, a
igrexa e o pobo. E
utilízase tamén na
lírica.
Durante os séculos
escuros, Galicia está
sometida a castela e o
galego so é utilizado
polo pobo.