Now showing items 1-6 of 6

  • Assessment of a Broad-Based CCC “Get It Now” Program Implementation 

    Messner, Kevin; Hurst, Susan; Bazeley, Jennifer; Withers, Rob
    We conducted a year-long pilot of the Copyright Clearance Center’s “Get It Now” rapid document delivery program. Get It Now is intended to supplement traditional library journal collections by providing rapid on-request ...
  • Book Lovers, Technophiles, Printers and Pragmatists: The Social and Demographic Structure of User Attitudes toward e-Books 

    Revelle, Andrew; Messner, Kevin; Shrimplin, Aaron; Hurst, Susan (2012-09)
    Q-methodology was used to identify clusters of opinions about e-books at Miami University. The research identified four distinct opinion types among those investigated: Book Lovers, Technophiles, Pragmatists, and ...
  • Contradictions and Consensus — Clusters of Opinions on E-books 

    Shrimplin, Aaron; Revelle, Andrew; Hurst, Susan; Messner, Kevin (2011-03)
    Q methodology was used to determine attitudes and opinions about e-books among a group of faculty, graduate students, and undergraduates at Miami University of Ohio. Oral interviews formed the basis for a collection of ...
  • Contradictions and Consensus: Clusters of Opinions on E-books 

    Hurst, Susan; Messner, Kevin; Revelle, Andrew; Shrimplin, Aaron (2012-09-12)
    Q methodology was used to determine attitudes and opinions about e-books among a group of faculty, graduate students, and undergraduates at Miami University of Ohio. Oral interviews formed the basis for a collection of ...
  • Seeing the Forest by Counting the Trees 

    Hurst, Susan; Revelle, Andy; Shrimplin, Aaron (2014-03-26)
    Libraries, particularly academic libraries, are swimming in a sea of data. Librarians often contribute to this by counting every possible patron interaction in an attempt to both define their current situation and to predict ...
  • Seeing the Forest by Counting the Trees [slide deck] 

    Sprimplin, Aaron; Revelle, Andrew; Hurst, Susan (2014-03-26)
    Libraries, particularly academic libraries, are swimming in a sea of data. Librarians often contribute to this by counting every possible patron interaction in an attempt to both define their current situation and to predict ...