E-Lert # 310 / Cyberavis no. 310
Friday January 23, 2009 / le vendredi
23 janvier 2009
CARL COMMUNIQUÉ / COMMUNIQUÉ DE L’ABRC
CARL President Leslie Weir has been invited to nominate individuals as
candidates for various committees of IFLA. More than one nomination for
each position can be submitted. Any CARL Director interested in being nominated
for any of these positions or in nominating someone else should contact
the CARL office by the end of January. Information on the available positions
is on the members’ only distribution site.
http://www.carl-abrc.ca/members/members-e.html#ifla
nominations
/
La présidente de l’ABRC Leslie Weir a été invitée
à proposer des candidats pour être siéger aux comités
de l’IFLA. Plus qu’une proposition à chaque poste est
possible. Les membres de l’ABRC qui sont intéressés
d'être proposé comme candidat, ou qui veulent proposer quelqu’un
d'autre, sont priés de contacter le secrétariat de l’ABRC
d'ici la fin janvier. Plus de renseignements sur les postes sont disponibles
sur le site de distribution réservé aux membres.
http://www.carl-abrc.ca/members/members-e.html#ifla
nominations
The Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL) was invited to a meeting
at the office of the Honourable Diane Finley, Minister of Human Resources
and Skills Development, on January 22, 2009. Brent Roe (CARL Executive Director)
and Margaret Haines (Carleton University) met with the Minister's aide and
a staff member of Human Resources and Skills Development Canada to discuss
CARL's Brief
to the Finance Committee on Budget 2009.
/
L’Association des bibliothèques de recherche du Canada (ABRC)
a été invitée à une réunion au secrétariat
de l’honorable Diane Finley, ministre des Ressources humaines et du
Développement des compétences, le 22 janvier 2009. Brent Roe
(Directeur général de l’ABRC) et Margaret Haines (Carleton
University) ont rencontré l’aide de la ministre ainsi qu’un
membre du personnel du Ressources humaines et Développement des compétences
Canada pour discuter le mémoire
de l’ABRC au Comité des finances au sujet du Budget 2009.
NEWS / NOUVELLES
Ottawa announces $10.7-million digital media project
Globe and Mail, January 22, 2009
Ottawa is spending $10.7-million to support a private-sector high-tech
research initiative in southwestern Ontario.The funding will help establish
what's being called a “Corridor for Advancing Canadian Digital Media”
with hubs in Kitchener and Stratford. The corridor will include a Digital
Media Convergence Centre in Kitchener and a research institute at Stratford
campus of the University of Waterloo.“The Waterloo region has the
critical mass of expertise, leading tech companies and educational institutions
that can drive this global revolution in the years to come,” stated
Tom Jenkins, executive chairman and chief strategy officer of software company
Open Text Corp., one of the high-tech players in the region.*
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20090122.wgtstratford0122/BNStory/Technology/home
McMaster University Library Acquires
Resistance Collection - Offers Multinational Perspectives of War
Jane Christmas, January 22, 2009
McMaster University has acquired a remarkable collection relating to the
Resistance movement, underground literature, concentration camps, anti-Semitism,
and propaganda during the Second World War. The concentration camp material
includes many poignant letters written or received by those interned in
the camps. The collection was unveiled at Convocation Hall, in a ceremony
marking International Holocaust Remembrance Day. The creation of a Virtual
Museum of the Holocaust and the Resistance and the establishment of a post-doctoral
fellowship were announced at the event.*
http://library.mcmaster.ca/news/5602
[Story also covered in the Hamilton Spectator on January 21
and 22]
SSHRC achieving greater recognition with emphasis on its contribution
to economy
RE$EARCH MONEY, Volume 23, Number 1, January 22, 2009
Midway into a five-year term and on the eve of a federal Budget, Dr Chad Gaffield remains a man on a mission to achieve greater recognition — and resources — for the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC). With an emphasis on accountability and value-for-money, the SSHRC president says that emphasizing the economic impact of the social sciences and humanities (SSH) is likely the most persuasive way to make the case for SSHRC as an equal among its peers. Gaffield says SSHRC should be a key part of the Budget's proposed stimulus package. Many critical issues in the economic crisis — global legal frameworks, intellectual property, management and global engagement — all fall into SSHRC's purview.*
AUCC appoints André Dulude as VP national affairs
RE$EARCH MONEY, Volume 23, Number 1, January 22, 2009
The AUCC has appointed André Dulude as VP national affairs in its Ottawa office, effective January 5th. He replaces Robert Best who is retiring after 19 years with the university lobby association. Dulude has held a number of senior positions in the federal public service, most recently serving as assistant DM policy, partnerships and corporate affairs at Human Resources and Skills Development Canada. He holds a BA and MA in labour relations from the University of Montreal and a BA in journalism from Université Laval.
Plus de 700 productions de l'ONF peuvent être visionnées
en ligne
La Presse, 21 janvier 2009
Les internautes du pays peuvent maintenant profiter d'un cadeau de l'Office national du film, qui célèbre son 70e anniversaire cette année. Il s'agit d'un espace de visionnage accessible gratuitement dans les deux langues officielles. Les utilisateurs pourront ainsi visionner, à des fins d'utilisation privée, plus de 700 productions, films, bandes-annonces et extraits de la collection de l'ONF.* HTML
Comparing the Fine Print at the White House and PMO Websites
Michael Geist, January 21, 2009
The inauguration of President Barack Obama brought with it a complete overhaul
of the whitehouse.gov
site. While there has been some media
coverage of the change (including the appointment of a Director
of New Media for the White House), Michael Geist points out that it is worth
comparing the copyright notices found on the White House site and the Prime
Minister of Canada's site.*
http://www.michaelgeist.ca/content/view/3626/125/
University of California Libraries
and Springer Sign Pilot Agreement for Open Access Journal Publishing
January 21, 2009
The University of California Libraries and Springer Science+Business Media
(Springer) have reached an experimental agreement that will support open
access publishing by UC authors. Articles by UC-affiliated authors accepted
for publication in a Springer journal beginning in 2009 will be published
using Springer Open Choice with full, immediate open access. There will
be no separate per-article charges, since costs have been factored into
the overall license agreement.*
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/2009/01/springer-first-us-deal-in-which.html
University of Michigan will transfer
OAIster to OCLC
Open Access News, January 21, 2009
The University of Michigan and OCLC announced a partnership to ensure continued
public access to open-archive collections through the OAIster
database. OCLC services will expand the visibility of these collections.
OAIster was developed, in 2002, to test the feasibility of building a portal
for open archive collections using the Open Archives Initiative Protocol
for Metadata Harvesting (OAI-PMH). OAIster has since grown to become one
of the largest aggregations of records pointing to open archive collections
in the world with over 19 million records 1,000 organizations worldwide
have contributed.*
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/2009/01/u-of-michigan-will-transfer-oaister-to.html
Historical Photos in Web Archives Gain Vivid New Lives
Noam Cohen
The New York Times, January 18, 2009
Photography has gone from a magical, even mystical process, to an afterthought
in barely 100 years. Nothing better captures this notion than the seemingly
banal miracle that is Flickr, the photo-sharing site containing more than
three billion photographs online. Billion. Against this backdrop, there
are the relics from the earlier age of photography, historical photographs
that have been preserved in national libraries and archives or photo agencies
and news media operations.*
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/19/technology/internet/19link.html
Google Shutters Its Science Data Service
Alexis Madrigal
Wired Science, December 18, 2008
Google is shuttering its highly anticipated scientific data service in
January, the company wrote in an e-mail to its beta testers. Once nicknamed
Palimpsests, but more recently going by the staid name, Google Research
Datasets, the service was going to offer scientists storage for massive
amounts of data generated in an increasing number of fields. About 30 datasets
— mostly tests — had already been uploaded to the site. The
project appears to have fallen prey to belt-tightening at Silicon Valley's
most innovative company.*
http://blog.wired.com/wiredscience/2008/12/googlescienceda.html
ARTICLES
Google & the Future of Books
Robert Darnton
The New York Review of Books, Volume 56, Number 2, February 2009
Google has been digitizing millions of books, including many covered by
copyright, from major research libraries’ collections, and making
the texts searchable online. After lengthy negotiations with authors and
publishers, the plaintiffs and Google agreed on a settlement, which will
profoundly affect the way books reach readers for the foreseeable future.
What will that future be? The settlement is so complex that it is difficult
to perceive the legal and economic contours in the new lay of the land.
Those who are responsible for research libraries do have a clear view of
a common goal: to open up collections and make them available to readers
everywhere. How to get there? The only workable tactic may be vigilance:
seeing as far ahead as possible, keeping an eye on the road, and remembering
to look in the rearview mirror.*
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/22281
The Relevance of the Humanities
Gabriel Paquette
Inside Higher Ed, January 22, 2009
The deepening economic crisis has triggered a new wave of budget cuts and
hiring freezes at America’s universities. Retrenchment is today’s
watchword. For scholars in the humanities, arts and social sciences, the
economic downturn exacerbates existing funding shortages. Even in prosperous
times, securing funding for such research has been difficult and humanities
scholars have often found themselves besieged by questions concerning the
relevance of their enterprise, whether measured by social impact, economic
value or other sometimes misapplied benchmarks of utility.*
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2009/01/22/paquette
Here Comes the Flood
Scott McLemee
Inside Higher Ed, January 21, 2009
In the January
issue of The Journal of Scholarly Publishing, Lindsay
Waters, an executive editor at Harvard University Press, imagines a world
in which “the well-wrought, slowly gestated essay” replaces
the monograph as the gold standard for scholarship in the humanities. In
his book Enemies of Promise: Publishing, Perishing, and the Eclipse
of Scholarship (University of Chicago Press, 2004) Waters suggests
that the production of badly written monographs is an unfortunate failing
of the system that could be fixed if different standards were adopted.*
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2009/01/21/mclemee
Google Gears Down for Tougher Times
Jessica E. Vascellaro and Scott Morrison
The Wall Street Journal, December 3, 2008
Corporate austerity is reaching one of the most extravagant spenders of
the boom years. Google
Inc. has begun to tighten its belt. For much of its 10-year history, Google
spent money at a pace that was the marvel of Silicon Valley. It hired by
the thousands and dished out generous benefits. However, revenue growth
has slowed dramatically over the past year, and with the U.S. economy in
a recession, Google is ratcheting back spending and cutting new projects.*
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122826503489174369.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
Le rapport à l’information - Vers une expertise
pédagogique
Franc Morandi
Textes des communications au Colloque « ERTé-Education
à la culture informationnelle »,
Lille, France, 16-18 octobre 2008
Le déploiement des pédagogies dans les espaces numériques
informationnels s'accompagne d'une redéfinition des « formes
du savoir ». Institution pédagogique et espaces numériques
de travail échangent leurs finalités. L'article développe
une analyse des formes de savoir et des modèles pédagogiques
associés au développement du numérique. Il interroge
la place de l'expertise pédagogique dans la conception de projets.
Cet examen conduit à la description de différents scénarios
de savoirs et à la prise en compte de l'écologie complexe
de la connaissance.*
http://archivesic.ccsd.cnrs.fr/sic_00344924/f
RESOURCES / RESSOURCES
Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL) Advocacy Resources
Academic library advocacy includes the concept of library staff-initiated,
systematic action to improve the quality of resources and services in the
campus environment. It is most successful when all library staff members
are aware the roles they play. ACRL has produced a set of advocacy tools
to help librarians articulate the value of the library to their constituents.*
http://www.ala.org/ala/issuesadvocacy/advocacy/advocacyuniversity/toolkit/acrl.cfm
Federal budget 2009: Items being tracked / Budget fédéral
2009: Éléments auxquels s’attardera l’AUCC
January 23, 2009 / 23 janvier 2009
The budget is expected to deliver an economic stimulus package that will
address the current economic challenges facing Canada. Infrastructure spending
will feature prominently in the budget. It is widely expected that the budget
will predict a substantial federal deficit for the 2009-10 fiscal year.
The government had announced a review of all federal program spending in
its November economic statement. As well as economic stimulus measures,
the budget could announce cuts to non-priority programs in an effort to
limit the extent of a federal deficit.* PDF
/
Le budget devrait comprendre un ensemble de mesures de relance qui viseront
les défis économiques auxquels le Canada doit faire face.
Les dépenses en infrastructure occuperont une place prépondérante
dans le budget et tout semble indiquer que le budget de 2009 prévoira
un important déficit pour l’exercice 2009-2010. Dans son énoncé
économique de novembre dernier, le gouvernement avait annoncé
l’examen des dépenses liées à tous les programmes
fédéraux. Ainsi, outre les mesures de relance économique,
le budget pourrait prévoir des compressions dans les programmes non
prioritaires, en vue de limiter l’ampleur du déficit.* PDF
Campus-based Publishing Partnerships: A Guide to Critical Issues
Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition (SPARC), January 2009
Campus-based publishing partnerships offer the academy greater control
over the intellectual products that it helps create. Partnerships will need
to evolve from informal working alliances to long-term, programmatic collaborations
to realize their full potential. SPARC’s Campus-based Publishing Partnerships
will help libraries, presses, and academic units to define effective partnerships
capable of supporting sustainable, innovative approaches to campus-based
publishing.*
http://www.arl.org/sparc/bm~doc/pub_partnerships_v1.pdf
2009 Horizon Report
The annual Horizon Report describes the continuing work of the New
Media Consortium (NMC)’s Horizon Project, a long-running
qualitative research project that seeks to identify and describe emerging
technologies likely to have a large impact on teaching, learning, research,
or creative expression within learning-focused organizations. The 2009 version
is the sixth annual report in the series, and was produced as a collaboration
between the New Media Consortium
and the EDUCAUSE Learning
Initiative (ELI), an EDUCAUSE program.
http://wp.nmc.org/horizon2009/
/ PDF
Ten Trends & Technologies for 2009
Michael Stephens
Tame the Web, January 12, 2009
The author looks at the trends and technologies that he believes will affect
what we do in libraries and information centers and will continue to influence
library users and nonusers alike. A major issue that remains is how libraries
can respond to turbulent economic times.*
http://tametheweb.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/tentechtrends09stephens.pdf
Perceptions 2008: An International Survey of Library Automation
Marshall Breeding
Library Technology Guides, January 18, 2009
This report describes the results of a survey conducted to gather data
regarding librarians’ perceptions toward their automation systems,
the organizations that support them and the quality of support they receive.
The survey also aimed to gauge interest in open source library automation
systems. 1,450 responses were received from libraries in 51 different countries.
The countries most strongly represented include the United States (1,150
responses), the United Kingdom (49), Canada (99), Australia (44).*
http://www.librarytechnology.org/perceptions2008.pl
EVENTS / ÉVÉNEMENTS
DSpace Foundation, Fedora Commons, Sun Microsystems and SPARC Present
All About Repositories Webinar Series
Feb. 18 at 9:00 a.m. PT
DSpace Foundation, Fedora Commons, Sun Microsystems and SPARC (The Scholarly
Publishing & Academic Resources Coalition) offer a free About
Repositories Webinar Series to provide professional learning
opportunities for repository managers, developers, curators and decision
makers. The seminar series kicks off with DSpace and Fedora: A Collaboration
Update presented by Michele Kimpton, Executive Director, DSpace Foundation,
and Sandy Payette, Executive Director Fedora Commons. Each month a new topic
or issue of interest to repository communities will be presented in a one-hour
online format. *
http://www.education-webevents.com/
* Text adapted from source / Texte adapté de la source
