Title: How to Help Anyone Use Licensed Databases
1How to Help Anyone Use Licensed Databases
- Instructor
- Glenn Johnson-Grau
- gjohnson_at_lmu.edu
- An Infopeople Workshop
- Summer/Fall 2006
2This Workshop Is Brought to You By the Infopeople
Project
Infopeople is a federally-funded grant project
supported by the California State Library. It
provides a wide variety of training to California
libraries. Infopeople workshops are offered
around the state and are open registration on a
first-come, first-served basis. For a complete
list of workshops, and for other information
about the project, go to the Infopeople website
at infopeople.org.
3Introductions
- Introduce yourself to your neighbors
- Name
- Library
- Position
- Name a database you use and why you like it
4Workshop Overview
- Library subscription databases
- hands-on practice, but
- focus on teaching users
- How to talk to users about databases
- Getting the material in a format useful to the
user - Acrobat, printing, saving, etc.
- New and forthcoming developments
- federated searching and more
5Using Bookmarks in Class
- Go to bookmarks.infopeople.org
- Look for the licensed_databases_bkmk.html file
- Click on it so it shows on the screen
- With the class bookmark file showing in Internet
Explorer, click the Favorites menu, choose Add to
Favorites - Notice the name in the Name box so that you can
use the Favorites list to get back to the class
bookmarks for the rest of the day.
6Question for the Group
- When helping a user with a database, are you
giving them a fish or teaching them how to fish?
7What Users Think of Us (If At All)
- OCLCs Perceptions of Libraries and Information
Resources - see bookmarks for full report
- Awareness of library resources low
- 55 know of online reference works
- 34 know of online periodicals
- Usage is lower still
- 27 use online databases annually
- 84 begin with a web search engine
8Database Usage in Libraries
The good news
- Libraries are viewed favorably
- both physical and online presences
- Our online resources are worthwhile
- Awareness and usage higher for 14-17 18 to
24-year-olds - 41 of 18 to 24-year-olds use online periodicals
annually - 13 of over 65-year-old use them
9People want a usable answer - not the best -
not the most reliable They are satisficing
working for a minimally acceptable result
10What is a Database?
- Database
- organized collection of information made
searchable by computer - Licensed Database
- database paid for by the library, made available
to users - not free web resources
11How do you learn a new database?What do you
need to know?
12Talking About Databases
- Users may not understand
- Library jargon
- periodical? serial? abstract?
- Free web vs. licensed databases
- Which resources to use
- why isnt there just one database for everything?
13Feel the Pain of the User
- Most users do not care where the information
they need comes from, or who provides itnor
should they have to Roy Tennant - And yet we expect users to
- ? Know what type of information they want
- ? Navigate library websites and jargon
- ? Deal with the vendors brand names
- ? Choose from many databases
- ? Negotiate the un-Google-like interface
- http//infopeople.org/training/webcasts/02-08-05_
metasearch.html
14Ready for Reference
- Friendly, approachable demeanor
- Active listening
- Open and neutral questioning
- Self-verbalization
- i.e., thinking out loud
- Follow-up
- Does this answer your question?
15Reference Using a PC
- Assess users computer skills
- make no assumptions
- Best at users workstation
- get out from behind the desk and let the user
drive - Behind the desk co-browsing
- rotate screen to user, or
- bring user behind desk
- Self-verbalize
- explain what you are doing, where you are going,
and why
16Article Databases
- What is your librarys main general database?
- EBSCOhost MasterFile
- most widely used in public libraries
- EBSCOhost platform for databases
- links between EBSCOhost products
- Gale
- InfoTrac or OneFile or PowerSearch?
17Database Features
- How do you explain
- Its Not Google
- boolean operators required
- Limit by
- date
- publication title
- full text only
18Database FeaturesPrinting Emailing Results
- How do you explain
- Print preview?
- Framed pages?
- Copying and pasting into Word?
19 Dealing with Acrobat
- Navigation
- page by page scrolling
- jumping to a page
- thumbnail pages as navigation tool
- searching in documents
- Zooming in and out
- does not change print size
- tinyurl.com/jh79y
20Acrobat Considerations
- Printing
- always use Acrobats print button
- very important in database interfaces
- Ex. EBSCOhost Gale
- Saving
- large file sizes, particularly color docs
- usually will not fit on floppy drive
- some email systems may block large files
21Reference Databases
- This is where it gets tricky
- greater range of products with greater number of
interfaces - specialized tools
- more products more interfaces more interface
updates - Example
- Biography Resource Center
- Gale database with custom interface
22E-book Collections
- What are e-books?
- Does your library have e-book collections?
- Have you helped patrons use e-books?
23E-book CollectionsLibrary Issues
- Tradeoffs convenient but clunky
- 24/7 anywhere access / awkward interfaces
- Critical mass of titles necessary
- 80/20 rule 20 of titles get 80 of use
- Best when integrated into catalog
- rather than another database to search
- Collections get stale
- require weeding
24E-book CollectionsUser Issues
- E-books are an alien concept for users.
- They require
- Practice on the interface level
- with ebook reader
- Explanation of Digital Rights Management (DRM)
- Printing, saving, emailing
- i.e. Why cant I print the whole book?
- Often require an individual user account
- personal email account
25Federated Searching
- AKA Meta or Cross-Database Searching
- Search multiple sources simultaneously
- Simplified search interface
- Results ranked and (usually) deduped
- Not meant to replace searching specific databases
when appropriate
Next two slides adapted from Roy Tennant webcast
See bookmarks
26Why Federated Searching?
- Most users do not care where the information
they need comes from, or who provides itnor
should they have to - An interface that minimizes what the user needs
to know to get what they want - Examples
- WebFeat MuseGlobal
- Serials Solutions CentralSearch
- Innovative Interfaces MetaFind
27- How easy can we make it?
- Ex. LAPL defaults to cross search
28Group Discussion
- How do you or how could you describe federated
searching to the public?
29New Database Features
- Grouping results by subject, type of publication
- ex. subject terms pulled from results
- EBSCO calls it clustering
- Gale OneFile has similar feature
- EBSCO Visual Search
- interactive visual map of results by topic
- Grokker software
30Tell us one thing from today that you would share
with staff at your library.