020 Bibliotheks- und Informationswissenschaften
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Institute
Background and Purpose of this Meeting With an opening reception sponsored by Thomson Scientific on the evening of Thursday, October 5, the University Library of Frankfurt and the German-North American Resources Partnership (GNARP) and will be hosting an important two-day conference this Autumn in Frankfurt, Germany: »The World According to GNARP: Prospects for Transatlantic Library Partnership in the Digital Age« Sessions at this meeting will explore the wealth of library resources - archival, print, and digital - available to students and researchers (in Germany and the United States) in five selected subject areas: North American Studies, German Studies, Judaica, Africana, and South Asia/India, highlighting both existing avenues (and obstacles) for transatlantic resource sharing along with future prospects. In addition, several other important topics will be highlighted through individual presentations and panel discussions: the future of German as a language of the sciences; existing and planned electronic journal archives in Germany and the U.S.; print and digital repositories; and a special panel on »comparative cataloging cultures« on both sides of the Atlantic. The »World According to GNARP« conference will be taking place simultaneously with the Frankfurt Book Fair, the largest book-related event in the world, attracting annually 285,000 visitors (2005), thus giving participants who arrive early the chance to combine attendance at both the Book Fair and Conference. A cultural event and dinner in Frankfurt are planned for Friday 6th October.
The key hypothesis is that the IT industry lure us into the IT world with a promise to solve our information problems. Do we sign the contract, we will recognise that the IT industry can´t keep the promise. One reason: they themselves lost sight over there own game. Therefore they have to invent new tools continiously. LIS professionals should not leave the field IT professionals. LIS professional should rather put stress on to reveal the difference in the value chain between data – information – knowledge. Information and knowledge is brainware and not produced by hard and software in the sense of IT philosophy. Against the background of the language game of Jean-François Lyotard, the author explains the information and knowledge society as language game invented by the IT industry. Furthermore his beliefs of postmodernen LIS professionals and the consequences involved for LIS traning will be presented.
Trends for distributed, open, and increasingly collaborative models of information delivery challenge the library's classic roles. In addition, trends within the research community for more interdisciplinary and collaborative scholarship create an opportunity for more enabling information infrastructure. In an age of Amazon, Google, and "social" tools, how should the library respond? My presentation will focus on strategies for bringing the library's "assets" into the flow of researchers' work. How can the library integrate its resources into the scholar's workflow? What are the emerging challenges of this integration?
The University library in Frankfurt/Main owns the largest collection of literature on Judaism and Israel in Germany and one of the major collections in the world. Its task is to document the history of the Jewish people and to serve as a resource for study and research in Germany. The Jewish Division is therefore collecting all relevant national and international publications covering all aspects of post-biblical Judaism and Jewish culture in a most comprehensive manner, as well as all publications on the modern State of Israel. Two databases offer access to the large collections of the Judaica-Division. Yiddish Literature is the database that offers online access to the page images of the outstanding historical Yiddish collection, containing about 800 extremely rare and precious Yiddish and German-Jewish books printed in Hebrew letters from the 16th century onwards. Compact memory is a gateway to more than 100 Jewish periodicals in the German language area published in the 19th and 20th century, providing partly images, partly full-text-search and a bibliographic database of articles. The implementation of a third, new digital project, the »Virtual Judaica-collection« has just started - the digitization and online-presentation of the historical Judaica resources. Formed by his curator Prof. Aron Freimann, it was the largest and most significant Judaica collection on the European continent before the war. The goal is to offer free access to about 18.000 books with 2 Mill. pages over the web. In light of these developments, the presentation will evaluate the current possibilities of German-North-American cooperation in the area of digital projects.
The mission of the Harvard Judaica Collection is to comprehensively document Jewish history and civilization in all places and periods. To accomplish its mission, the Judaica Collection collects materials in all languages and in all formats—books, pamphlets, periodicals, newspapers, sound recordings, and videos, posters, broadsides, and photographs. A particular focus is the Library’s Documenting Israel program, which covers all aspects of Israeli life and culture in great depth; Harvard has the largest collection of Israeli publications and Israel-related materials outside the State of Israel. The Harvard Judaica Collection also attempts to have comprehensive coverage of the publications of Jewish communities throughout the globe, including a significant collection of publications from countries across Europe. Collecting these materials requires cooperation with a wide array of institutions and individuals around the world.
Elektronische Informationsressourcen, wie beispielsweise elektronische Zeitschriften und Datenbanken, gewannen in den letzten Jahren zunehmend an Bedeutung im Feld der akademischen Literaturversorgung. Mit diesem Trend einhergehend konnten Veränderungen der Bezugspraxis bei Bibliotheken einerseits und neue Preis- und Geschäftsmodelle bei Verlagen andererseits beobachtet werden. Neben der bequemeren Nutzbarkeit für die Leser bietet das neue Medium auch neue Formen des Kostencontrollings und der Optimierung für die Abnehmer. Dieser Workshop soll sich mit der Frage der Kostenrechnung und -verteilung für Konsortien für elektronische Informationsressourcen insbesondere eJournals beschäftigen. Dabei werden die neuen Möglichkeiten der Nutzungsmessung besonders berücksichtigt. Neben den theoretischen Ansätzen werden auch konkrete Beispielrechnungen durchgeführt und die Praktikabilität für die Umsetzung in der Praxis im besonderen Maße diskutiert.
Rückläufige Ausleihen, steigende Besucherzahlen, sinkende Anfragen nach bibliothekarischen Auskünften stehen einer steigenden Zahl an Beratungen in der Literaturverwaltung und neuerdings auch zu Statistikprogrammen, Programmiersprachen und einem größeren Bedarf an Förderung digitaler Kompetenzen von universitärer Seite gegenüber; alle diese Faktoren bedingen eine Neuausrichtung der klassischen Benutzung in Bibliotheken. Die Benutzungsabteilung der SUB wurde in den letzten Jahren personell gestrafft und das Profil stärker auf Basisdienstleistungen konzentriert, um neue Handlungsfelder in anderen Bereichen der SUB erschließen zu können. Wohin soll die weitere Entwicklung gehen: stärkere Automatisierung, Outsourcen von Standardservices an Wachdienste, Reduktion von Diensten und gleichzeitige Professionalisierung des Personals für neue Angebote? Welches Personal wird zukünftig mit welcher Qualifikation an welchen Stellen benötigt? Und wie findet sich der Einzelne darin wieder?Mitte 2018 startete die Benutzungsabteilung einen Strategieprozess, analysierte in drei Servicegruppen anhand des Business Model Canvas die drei Servicecluster - "Literaturbereitstellung/Recherche", "Informations- und Medienkompetenzvermittlung/Beratung" und "Lernort und lernunterstützende Infrastruktur" - und ermittelte Potentiale und Defizite. Parallel dazu überprüften die Gruppen- und Teamleitungen gemeinsam mit der Abteilungsleitung unter Anwendung der Szenariotechnik die Geschäftsidee ihrer Abteilung, um schließlich mit Hilfe von Kompetenzprofilen ein Personalentwicklungskonzept zu erstellen.Der Vortrag beschreibt den Weg zu einer Strategie der Benutzungsabteilung im Rahmen der Gesamtstrategie der SUB Göttingen, die verschiedenen Modelle, Methoden und Herausforderungen auf dem Weg zu einer Neuausrichtung.