Title: Current Online Information Ecology
1(No Transcript)
2The Information Challenge
- Exponential growth of resources
- New researchers with new needs
- Multiple communication options
- New expectations and opportunities
3Information Resources and Tools
- Internet Resources
- Located everywhere
- Growth doubles each year
- Digital only
- No single search engine covers the entire
Internet - Short-lived
4Information Resources and Tools
- Library Resources
- Bricks and mortar
- Continued growth
- Analog and digital
- Standard indexing tools
- Perpetual
5The Challenge for Researchers
- To retrieve information that is
- Relevant
- Accurate
- Authoritative
- Easy to locate
6The Challenge for Libraries
- Use traditional strengths to build new programs
- Leverage the community of librarians and
libraries worldwide - Redefine the role of librarians and
libraries in the Internet age
7Modeling the Solution
- Provide seamless access to global resources
- Collect knowledge for reference access
- Complement access to information on the Internet
- Demonstrate flexibility in creating
solutions
8- Collaborative Digital Reference Service provides
professional reference service to users anywhere
anytime, through an international, digital
network of libraries.
9How Does it Work?
10Process Definitions
- End User a person who asks a question
- Member an organization or a person participating
in CDRS on behalf of an end user - Service Level Agreement (SLA) an agreement
describing the scope of services - Request Manager (RM) software for managing QA
receipt and assignment, SLA compliance and
administrative tasks
11Resource Databases
- Member Profiles
- Member features and strengths
- Member representative strengths
- Knowledge Base of Questions and Answers
- Searchable by staff, later by end users
- Confidentiality, privacy, intellectual
property maintained
12 Members
- Libraries (public, academic, special)
- Consortia
- Museums
- Ask-a Expert Services
13Three Pilot Phases
- Phase 1 (February - March 2000)
- 10 members
- Test member profiles
- 30 questions per week
- Scheduled and scripted
14 Phase 2 (June 19 - Sept. 15)
- Increase to 16 members
- Use and test sample Request Manager software and
routing decisions - Build/test revised Member profiles
- Test new Web form
- Develop Service Level Agreements
- Determine training requirements
- Determine costs
15Phase 3 (Oct. 17- Jan. 31, 2001)
- 40 members
- Scale up to full production to test volume and
speed - Investigate portal technology
- Determine Governing Body membership and roles
- Service Level Agreements
16Goals of the Pilots - Summary
- QA process, including web form
- Request Manager procedures for assigning,
tracking, etc. - Determine scope and capacity of researcher
requests - Response time
- Interoperability
- Best practices
17Modeling the Solution
- Maximum flexibility
- System integration
- Multiple partners
- Reestablish libraries as epicenters of
knowledge for their communities - Internet services implement customized community
library portals
18Community Portals Provide...
- Dynamic content - events, news, weather, book
reviews - Useful applications - reserve a book, chat with
an author, browse the catalog - CDRS Gateway - enables patrons to submit
questions during off-hours without diluting
local librarys brand
19Portals Benefits
- Internet services recover investment through
advertising and affiliation fees (e.g.,
Amazon.com) - CDRS tags along with portal for reduced fees or
for free
20Where to Next?
- One stop shopping for reference and research
services, including - Locating/verifying bibliographic citations
- Interlibrary Loan
- Document Delivery
21International / Universal Issues
- Language literacy
- Accessibility infrastructure
- Cultural political sensitivities
- Jurisdictional service constraints
- E-commerce trade agreements
22http//www.loc.gov/rr/digiref/
23Beyond CDRS an end-to-end user service model
Delivery Process ILL document delivery
Catalogue Process verify locate
Reference Process ask answer