Enhancing the use of electronic resources on a university library's website : herding electronic resources into subject groupings

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dc.contributor.author Carrigan, Esther
dc.contributor.author Sewell, Robin
dc.contributor.author Wilson, Mary Dabney
dc.contributor.author Highsmith, Anne L.
dc.contributor.editor Van der Westhuizen, Erica E.
dc.contributor.editor Croft, Vicki F.
dc.contributor.other International Conference of Animal Health Information Specialists (5th : 2005 : Onderstepoort, South Africa)
dc.date.accessioned 2008-08-05T07:59:12Z
dc.date.available 2008-08-05T07:59:12Z
dc.date.created 2005
dc.date.issued 2007
dc.description Includes bibliographical references en
dc.description.abstract The integration of five separate websites from the campus libraries at Texas A&M University in 2002 resulted in the creation of a unified listing of all electronic resources, with well over 20,000 entries. This was the first time we were able to provide library users with a single, comprehensive list of electronic resources. But it quickly became clear that it was not very usable. In June 2002 the University Libraries Web Implementation Team (WIT) identified a diverse group of library staff to “explore the possible alternatives for providing intellectual access to the subject content of web-presented resources.” Expertise and library experience across the group spanned library public services, technical services and systems. This group became known as the WIT Subjects Group. The goals for this group were to develop a system that would: • Support keyword and subject access to web-listed resources and to our website as a whole • Support mapping to broader subject groupings, both dynamically created or predetermined • Provide a framework and guidelines for the addition of metadata to all locally developed content or external links • Make full use of the specificity and richness of existing content data • Maximize the use of existing content data with automatic updating capabilities to avoid labour intensive maintenance requirements. It took over a year to develop and release the system for subject presentation of web resources. Efforts are continuing to improve the maintenance process and to refine the actual visual presentation of subject searching results. This paper describes the investigation and evaluation of possible alternatives for the subject presentation of electronic resources; the selection and modification of a system for subject presentation; the implementation of the system including maintenance workflows and continuing challenges; communication and training efforts; and plans and hopes for the future. en
dc.description.statementofresponsibility Esther Carrigan, Robin Sewell, Mary Dabney Wilson and Anne L. Highsmith
dc.description.uri http://www.library.up.ac.za/vet/icahis en
dc.format.extent 100343 bytes
dc.format.extent 4 p. : col. photo
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.identifier.citation Carrigan, E, Sewell, R, Dabney Wilson, M & Highsmith, AL 2006, 'Enhancing the use of electronic resources on a university library's website : herding electronic resources into subject groupings', in Van der Westhuizen, EE & Croft, V (eds), Running wild, running free: capturing, harnessing and disseminating knowledge flows in support of animal health: 5th International Conference of Animal Health Information Specialists, 4-7 July 2005, Onderstepoort, South Africa, University of Pretoria, Veterinary Science Library, Pretoria, South Africa, pp. 63-66. en
dc.identifier.isbn 1868565482
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2263/6463
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher University of Pretoria, Veterinary Science Library en
dc.relation.ispartof Sessions 2 & 3: E-Resources en
dc.relation.requires Adobe Acrobat Reader, version 6.0 or higher en
dc.rights ©University of Pretoria en
dc.source Original conference proceedings: Van der Westhuizen, EE & Croft, V (eds) 2006, 'Running wild, running free: capturing, harnessing and disseminating knowledge flows in support of animal health: 5th International Conference of Animal Health Information Specialists, 4-7 July 2005, Onderstepoort, South Africa', University of Pretoria, Veterinary Science Library, Pretoria, South Africa. 160 p. en
dc.subject ICAHIS proceedings en
dc.subject Electronic resources en
dc.subject Texas A&M University en
dc.subject Texas A&M University Libraries en
dc.subject.lcsh Electronic information resources en
dc.subject.lcsh Subject headings en
dc.title Enhancing the use of electronic resources on a university library's website : herding electronic resources into subject groupings en
dc.title.alternative Running wild, running free : capturing, harnessing and disseminating knowledge flows in support of animal health en
dc.type Text en


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