General notes and thoughts about Online Northwest 2007 (Feb 16, 2007), by Elizabeth Nielsen
OSU Libraries were well represented on both sides of the podium. I attended the keynote and 3 sessions A full program summary is available.
Highlights (take-aways) of the sessions I attended:
Keynote by Stephen Abram
- added values of libraries (and librarians) is to improve the “quality of the question” and the user experience
- Google (commercial search engines) can answer “who, what, when, where” questions; libraries do best at answering “how” and “why” questions
- in academic setting, library “instruction” needs to be linked at the “lesson” level (assignment, project, or task)
Session One: Creating Online Library Tutorials with Macromedia Captivate: Process and Product (Karen Munro, UC Berkeley)
- strongly recommends flash files (*.swf) for delivery of tutorials — are seamless for user
- keep tutorials short (3 minutes max; 1 minute may be better)
- Captivate now an Adobe product
- develop tutorials that can be used for a variety of purposes (across classes, courses, or disciplines)
- adding audio doubles the development time
- storyboard each action and write script
- importance of tying tutorial to an assignment
- put tutorial at the point of need
- her powerpoint
- sample tutorial (in beta testing)
- her own “post mortem” of the session
Session Two: Observing Student Researchers in their Native Habitat (John Law, Proquest)
nothing astounding here
- qualitative research (observing students doing research for class research project) and quantitative (survey)
- used Facebook to place ad to solicit research participants (didn’t mention library or Proquest in ad)
- many students started their research at course website
- little evaluation of whether resource was appropriate for the specific task (used what they were familiar/comfortable with)
- strong brand recognition
- student researchers chose library resources because librarian visited class; professor required or suggested it; or brand awareness
- students use google for primary research; to supplement research (make sure they didn’t miss anything); quick reference to get background information; or to locate known resources (known websites; major newspapers; library resources)
- why students chose google for primary research: unfamiliar with library e-resources; bad experience with library (trying to search catalog for article; authentication issues; e-resources web page unclear)
- students indicated do NOT use myspace or facebook for coursework or research — might use for group projects
- once in library databases, users don’t have difficulty conducting research
- full text is prerequisite; abstracts are essential
Session Three: Digital Archiving on a Shoestring: Development of the Oregon Documents Repository (Kyle Banerjee and Arlene Weible, Oregon State Library)
presentation outline
document repository
- difficulty of distinguishing between publications and public records (perhaps a reason to use same repository for both)
- use MARC records for description/metadata — allow integration of description of paper/electronic document
- returning native file format not essential; most important to retain content
- not trying to preserve the experience of using the original format
- design determined by workflow