Recommended Reading from portal: Libraries and the Academy

Well I guess I can't actually recommend them since I haven't read them yet, but the latest issue of portal: Libraries and the Academy just came out and here are the articles I plan to read (almost the whole issue!):


Google Scholar Search Performance: Comparative Recall and Precision

William H. Walters
pp. 5-24

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This paper
presents a comparative evaluation of Google Scholar and 11 other
bibliographic databases (Academic Search Elite, AgeLine, ArticleFirst,
EconLit, GEOBASE, MEDLINE, PAIS International, POPLINE, Social Sciences
Abstracts, Social Sciences Citation Index, and SocINDEX), focusing on
search performance within the multidisciplinary field of later-life
migration. The results of simple keyword searches are evaluated with
reference to a set of 155 relevant articles identified in advance. In
terms of both recall and precision, Google Scholar performs better than
most of the subscription databases. This finding, based on a rigorous
evaluation procedure, is contrary to the impressions of many early
reviewers. The paper concludes with a discussion of a new approach to
document relevance in educational settings—an approach that accounts
for the instructors' goals as well as the students' assessments of
relevance.

Academic Libraries, Facebook and MySpace, and Student Outreach: A Survey of Student Opinion

Ruth Sara Connell

pp. 25-36

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This study
surveyed 366 Valparaiso University freshmen to discover their feelings
about librarians using Facebook and MySpace as outreach tools. The vast
majority of respondents had online social network profiles. Most
indicated that they would be accepting of library contact through those
Web sites, but a sizable minority reacted negatively to the concept.
Because of the potential to infringe on students' sense of personal
privacy, it is recommended that librarians proceed with caution when
implementing online social network profiles.


The Future of Information Literacy in Academic Libraries: A Delphi Study

Laura Saunders
pp. 99-114

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Information
literacy is a central tenet of academic librarianship. However,
technological advancements coupled with drastic changes in users'
information needs and expectations are having a great impact on this
service, leading practitioners to wonder how programs may evolve. Based
on a Delphi study, this article surveyed 13 information literacy
experts about proposed futures that explore the possible evolution of
information literacy over the next decade. Although generally
optimistic in their assessment of the continued importance of
information literacy and the role librarians will play in its future,
these experts acknowledged a number of obstacles academic librarians
will face in fully realizing these possibilities.

How Do You Know That?: An Investigation of Student Research Practices in the Digital Age

Randall McClure
Kellian Clink
pp. 115-132

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This study
investigates the types of sources that English composition students use
in their research essays. Unlike previous studies, this project pairs
an examination of source citations with deeper analysis of source use,
and both are discussed in relation to responses gathered in focus
groups with participating students and teachers. The researchers
examine how students negotiate locating and using source material,
particularly online sources, in terms of timeliness, authority, and
bias. The researchers report on how teachers struggle to introduce
these concepts and how students fail to perceive authority and bias in
their sources.


Virtual Reference, Real Money: Modeling Costs in Virtual Reference Services

Lori Eakin

Jeffrey Pomerantz
pp. 133-164

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Abstract:

Libraries
nationwide are in yet another phase of belt tightening. Without an
understanding of the economic factors that influence library
operations, however, controlling costs and performing cost-benefit
analyses on services is difficult. This paper describes a project to
develop a cost model for collaborative virtual reference services. This
cost model is a systematic description of all expenses incurred by a
library in providing virtual reference service as part of a
collaborative.