L i b ra r y C o n n e c t i o n s UFV Library Newsletter LIBT students tour the Chilliwack library  Shastri collection  New people in new positions  Copyright: fair dealing is key  Shastri Collection  January‐February 2013 2 Message from Patti Wilson “It would be nice to track the dry marker stats and see which ones are the most popular. It seems like most people prefer black, but the nursing students like red and blue for drawing veins and arteries.” —Leslie Olsen, page 6 The University of the Fraser Valley Library publishes Library Connections in pdf format on the library website, monthly, during fall and winter terms. This issue was produced by the library newsletter team: Mary-Anne MacDougall, Patti Wilson, Shawnna Pierce, Heather Compeau, Selena Karli and Lisa Morry. Contributors to this issue: I am writing this from the sunny office of the University Librarian, with a spectacular clear view of Mount Baker outside my window. This is definitely one of the perks of my new interim position, replacing Kim Isaac during her educational leave. This is an exciting year for me, full of learning opportunities, like mastering the meeting schedule and whether I am supposed to vote or not! I am very thankful to all the administrative assistants, finance and human resources staff who are shepherding me through the many new processes. Special thanks go to the library’s greatly supportive administrative assistant, Genevieve Kreye. Changes in staffing and job responsibilities continue, with many people ably stepping up to fill new roles. It is wonderful to see the energy, creativity, and capabilities of our new and newly promoted technicians and librarians. Our library staff has also shown great flexibility and cooperation to cover the personnel shortages we have had this semester. This month’s newsletter features articles about our Shastri Library collection, the complexities of e-book purchasing, new staff, the remarkable increase in visitors to the Chilliwack library, and, our soon to be favorite topic of discussion, copyright. I hope you enjoy this issue. Patti Wilson Acting University Librarian Patti Wilson Colleen Bell Heather Compeau Leslie Olsen Robin Pittman Lisa Morry Feedback? maryanne.macdougall@ufv.ca heather.compeau@ufv.ca Thanks to Robin Pittman for taking our cover photo. Inside 3 Library Connections 4 India Studies library program 5 New tech-in-charge, new library techs in Abbotsford 6 Chilliwack statistics go way up 7 Copyright: What you need to know 8 E-book collection on the rise Reference requests librarians get: "Do you have igneous rocks?" (In Chilliwack, we do!) Moira Guzyk page 5 Checking out the new Chilliwack library Students peer into the window from the reference sec on into the library office. For the first time, in our memory anyway, library and information technology students included the Chilliwack campus library on their tour through a variety of local and specialized libraries. Tech-in-charge Leslie Olsen and Education Librarian Heather Compeau took students through the new library at Canada Education Park. Among the topics was explaining how we moved all those books and got them back on the shelves. For more photos, turn to page 9 India Studies Library Programme at UFV brings Indigenous viewpoint to collec on 4 By Patti Wilson Did you know that as a member of the Shastri Indo-Canadian Institute, the UFV Library has added 1,795 volumes to our collection since 2004? Every year the library is allocated rupees to spend on ordering books, journals, and CDs published in India. This has enabled us to greatly increase our holdings in support of India and Indo-Canadian studies, obtaining resources from an indigenous point of view. Over the years we have chosen to concentrate on better known publishers operating in India, such as Sage, Oxford, Cambridge, and Penguin, as we can usually find detailed contents information and reviews to aid with selection, and publishing and printing standards are higher. Faculty and librarian-selected orders are transmitted to the Shastri office in India. After a six month wait while the items are shipped at sea, the books arrive, often wrapped in burlap and plastic for protection. Ac ng University Librarian Pa Wilson The Shastri collection books are proving popular, with 5,174 checkouts to date. Our top 10 “best sellers” are:  The Sikhs in Canada : migration, race, class, and gender  Canadian Sikhs through a century, 1897-1997  Fractured identity : the Indian diaspora in Canada  The eleven pictures of time : the physics, philosophy, and politics of time beliefs  Mapping multiculturalism  Women, marriage and customs in India  The Indian diaspora : dynamics of migration  Canadian diaspora : Asia-Pacific immigration  Woman's marriage in India : cultural practices, age and mate selection  Trafficking in women and children : myths and realities Subject areas collected include: (Indian…)  Philosophy  Religion, Mythology, Festivals, Folkore  Society and culture  Women’s Issues  History (all eras, regions)  Politics  Geography, Environment  Social Anthropology  Fashion and Textiles  Business, Economics, Labour, Trade  Crime and Justice  Social issues, Sociology  Education  Fine Arts  Literature, Film Just type “Shastri” in the UFV Library catalogue search box, and you will bring up the full list. Remember, if you would like to purchase books published in India, just send us your list and we will try to fill your requests. Moira Guyzk takes over as tech‐in‐charge, Susan Gibbs and Korina Sco take on permanent roles If you stop by the Abbotsford library, you will meet Korina Scott and Susan Gibbs, who are the two new full-time circulation technicians in Abbotsford. They have both been here for a while. Korina, who is a graduate of UFV’s LIBT program, has worked on both the Abbotsford and Chilliwack campuses during the past four years. Susan has also worked on-call for the UFV Library since 2011, as well as working at Surrey Public Library as an information services technician. Susan is also a graduate of UFV’s LIBT program. We are fortunate to have these experienced and capable technicians joining our full-time staff. Moira Guzyk is the new tech-in-charge of the Abbotsford library. Moira has worked at UFV for four years as a circulation technician, casual technician and temporary serials technician. Moira worked mostly in Abbotsford, but also in Chilliwack and Mission. Moira has a Library and Information Technician diploma from Fanshawe College and brings a wealth of experience from her previous positions at UBC, Kwantlen, Vancouver Public Library, and the Taiwan Trade Office. Above Moira Guzyk, le Korina Sco , and right, Susan Gibbs 5 Chilliwack library numbers double since move 6 used it in 2009 and 2,883 came in in December Statistics tell the story of student response to the 2010—that’s compared to 4,136 in December 2012. We can also say that we had 1,249 reference move from the over-burdened and aged former Chilliwack library to the new library at Canada Education questions in September 2012—the start of the first semester after the move—compared to 817 referPark. ence questions in 2009, 756 questions in 2010 and While books in and books out have been trend702 questions in 2011. ing down, the numbers of people walking through Chilliwack also has study rooms, which we did the doors has roughly doubled in the Chilliwack not have at our old location and are proving popular. campus library since the move last summer. In September 2012, there were 70 study room bookMore than 9,300 people used the Chilliwack liings, in October 128 bookings, in November 200 brary in January this year, 4,136 walked in during bookings, in December 118 bookings and in JanuDecember, last semester, 11,062 in November, ary 2013, there were 77 bookings. 11,241 in October and 10,619 in September. We lend out dry erase markers to students using It’s difficult to do a direct comparison on a number of levels: our gate counter wasn’t functioning in these study rooms. “It would be nice to track the dry marker stats and see which ones are the most pop2011 and we recently changed the way we keep ular,” said Chilliwack tech-in-charge Leslie Olsen. It public service statistics. seems like most people prefer black but the nursing We used to write numbers and types of quesstudents like red and blue for drawing veins and artions on paper, we’ve tried and just purchased teries.” RefAnalytics, which means we are now tracking The dimensions of the space, as well as safety questions using computer software. To date, we considerations, mean we now have at least two lidon’t have a report that tells us how much work we’ve been doing. As much as we would like to lay brary staff on at all times. Monday to Thursday, durout the differences numerically, to some extent, we ing the semester, we now have two library technicians working together. That’s a change from prevican’t. ous semesters when library techs worked with stuWe can go back and compare entrance counts dent shelvers in the evenings. from other years. For example, we can say 2,010 We can say what it feels like behind the desk. people used the library in December 2008, 2,663 This is no longer a one-person library. It’s busy! By Lisa Morry and Leslie Olsen Copyright: what you need to know Do you want to copy chapters out of a textbook for your class? Show a Youtube video? Stream a television show? Then this is for you. Canada’s Copyright Act and the Association of Community Colleges of Canada’s interpretation of fair dealing means changes to the way UFV handles copyright. As a result of these changes, UFV has opted out of Access Copyright. This means greater control, but also greater responsibility. UFV will be hiring a copyright officer, who will be working out of the library. It will be the copyright officer’s job to handle all the sticky questions, but for now, the library, print services and the bookstore can help. Information literacy and web services Librarian Colleen Bell designed the flow chart below to help faculty decide if they’re on the right side of the copyright law. The flow chart is deceptively simple, compared to the actual rules and permutations UFV must follow. For example, new educational provisions in the Copyright Act eliminate the need to pay for the right (referred to as Public Performance Rights) to show a film in a classroom with students. You can show a legal copy of a DVD that you purchase, rent from a 77 video store, borrow from the library or from a friend. A Youtube video is okay to use, but only if it is a legal copy and does not have a message stating that it is not all right to use it. Instructors can use publicly available Internet resources in their courses. This material must not be password protected or digitally locked. There is, however, lots more to this picture. Ultimately, if you can’t find what you want, come to the library and we’ll help you search for alternatives. Librarians Colleen Bell and Heather Compeau will be bringing copyright workshops to faculty council meetings in March. If you need help now, talk to your liaison librarian or visit any UFV library. Faculty Copyright Workshops Access and Continuing Studies: March 15th , 2013 Arts: April 5 , 2013 Health Sciences: February 22nd , 2013 Professional Studies: February 22nd , 2013 Science: March 8th, 2013** Trades: March 14th , 2013 **Still to be confirmed. Teaching and Learning workshops April 16 2:30-4:30 p.m. CEP A1202 April 18 10-11:30 a.m. AB B121 Balancing act: E‐books make for 8 cost‐effec ve collec on expansion You can’t read them in the bathtub, but e-books are floating to the top of library collections. At the end of the past year, 23 per cent of American adults read e-books, compared to 16 per cent at the beginning of the year, while fewer Americans read print books, according to the Pew Internet Report (December 27, 2012). The number of people with e-readers or tablets is growing steadily. In a survey UFV library conducted in 2007, 87.3 per cent of 510 respondents told us we should continue purchasing e-books, and we have. We now have 135,937 e-book titles in our collection from a variety of publishing companies. Major collections include Ebrary’s Academic Complete, Sage Knowledge, Springerlink, Gale Virtual Reference Library, and Oxford Reference Online. Although many people would probably prefer to read a print book rather than an e-book, there are advantages to the electronic format. Multiple users can use e-books at one time, except where restricted, and can use them at their convenience, including in the middle of the night. Ebooks allow the library to provide a depth and breadth of content that we might not otherwise be able to afford. They are searchable and save students time, as well as providing more options for students who do not live close to our campuses. There are also challenges, including increased staff training in acquisitions, in cataloguing and coding materials for off-campus use, keeping our catalogue up-to-date with constantly changing collections, and training students in multiple platforms and formats, as well as administering and gathering statistics from multiple platforms. Purchasing models are varied, with books being licensed as multi-disciplinary subscription packages, sold only as subject collection bundles, sold as individual titles with a variety of simultaneous user options, rented, or sold through patron-driven acquisition programs. As with print and electronic databases, publishers control terms of use and prices. Publishers sometimes set e-book prices high or have a “onetime one-download” purchase model which shuts out libraries. While some collections have very reasonable costs per title, others are more expensive for libraries to purchase than individual users would pay for the books. For example, the Kindle edition of “Zapotec Women: Gender, Class and Ethnicity in Globalized Oaxaca,” costs $14.95 for a single purchaser, the paperback is $26.95, the hardcover is $44.95, but the Ebrary single user is $89.95 and the multi user is $134.93. Publishers are also setting the conditions under which e-books can be used. Some limit the number of pages which may be printed, some limit the length of time books may be checked out, the number of simultaneous users, or the downloading of pages, chapters or entire books. The market is varying wildly as e-books become mainstream. From our viewpoint, it’s a balancing act between print versus e-book purchases. LIBT students seeing library firsthand 9 Educa on librarian Heather Compeau (le ) leads LIBT students through the new library as a student works in the foreground. Tech‐in‐charge Leslie Olsen (le ) shows off her colour‐coded chart for the library move. Right, students listen to Leslie and Heather talk about working in an academic library.