Re: Serials Reading Rooms Donald Taylor 29 Oct 2008 16:01 UTC
Hi Sandra, I know that some libraries use the RSS feeds from journals to display the ToCs of journals in either their opacs or other online environment. Simon Fraser University is working on using RSS feeds to display ToCs in our ejournal records, which is requiring some programming on our part. It would be great to hear of software than facilitates this. Regards, Don --------------------------------------------------------- Donald Taylor Acting Head, Document Delivery Services e: dstaylor@sfu.ca t: 778.782.5596 f: 778.782.3023 Simon Fraser University Library 8888 University Dr. Burnaby, BC Canada V5A 1S6 ----- Original Message ----- From: "Sandra Lee" <sllee@FNAL.GOV> To: SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU Sent: Wednesday, 29 October, 2008 07:16:54 GMT -08:00 US/Canada Pacific Subject: Re: [SERIALST] Serials Reading Rooms Dear Penny, Including the TOC in your Library Journals List records is a great idea! Do you know of any commercial software products that will support this? Thanks for your help! Sandra Lee Librarian Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory PO Box 500 MS 109 Batavia, Illinois 60510 sllee@fnal.gov phone 630 840 6013 http://bss.fnal.gov/library/index.html Fermilab Library...delivering the right information, in the right format, at the right time ----- Original Message ----- From: "Penny Lochner" <plochner@MUHLENBERG.EDU> To: <SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU> Sent: Wednesday, October 29, 2008 9:04 AM Subject: Re: [SERIALST] Serials Reading Rooms Hi Mildred, Our library doesn't have space for all our current print periodicals, and as you suggest, we select titles with a purpose in mind. We only have space for the latest issue of about 90 titles, plus newspapers and trade papers (such as Advertising Age). Our faculty told us that they definitely want more than just popular magazines in this area. Our strategy is to use the reading lounge as a place for current information and popular magazines, interdisciplinary awareness, and for young college students, provide an introduction to core journals of different academic disciplines. I want to keep content fresh, so I try to limit choices to periodicals that publish at least monthly. As someone else also pointed out, I make sure to include periodicals with rich photography or varied content good for browsing. Because we are converting a good number of subscriptions to online only, we are also looking at creating a virtual reading room. I am trying to mimic the browsable nature of covers in the reading room by including article titles rather than just publication titles. This project is only in the beginning stages, and we are still picking the software that will best support the idea. I expect the idea will continue to evolve as we put things into practice. Good luck! Cordially, Penny Lochner _____________________________ Penny Lochner Head of Collection Resource Management Trexler Library Muhlenberg College 2400 W. Chew Street Allentown, PA 18104-5564 USA email: plochner@muhlenberg.edu voice: 484-664-3561 fax: 484-664-3511 >>> Mildred Merz <merz@OAKLAND.EDU> 10/28/2008 5:26 PM >>> Our library is relinquishing our large "current journals" reading room for a much smaller area. Our "current journals" room now contains all of the recent issues of newspapers and journals/magazines that we subscribe to in print. That number, of course, is ever shrinking. In anticipating our smaller space, we have started re-thinking what the purpose of the "current journals" area should be in the future. We are thinking that instead of just being what we get in print that it should be a more carefully chosen group of journals/newspapers. Perhaps the titles in "current journals" should be the core or essential titles, AND/OR perhaps they should be the more popular/readable titles that students and faculty would enjoy having in print. We have noticed at least two libraries that have created what they call "virtual reading rooms." Perhaps the physical area could be the popular/fun to read titles plus the very important interdisciplinary titles (like Nature and Science). The "virtual reading room" could be the core/essential titles. Has any other library dealt with this issue? What should be in a journals reading room? Millie Merz -- Mildred H. Merz Associate Professor Kresge Library Oakland University Rochester, MI 48309-4484 Phone: 248-370-2457; Fax: 248-370-2474 E-mail: merz@oakland.edu