2015
DOI: 10.1080/0361526x.2015.1017716
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Opportunities beyond Electronic Resource Management: An Extension of the Core Competencies for Electronic Resources Librarians to Digital Scholarship and Scholarly Communications

Abstract: This article will provide an overview of current topics in Digital Scholarship and Scholarly Communications (DS/SC) and draw connections between these new areas and the traditional skill set of electronic resources librarians. Commonalities between the skills outlined in the Core Competencies for Electronic ResourcesLibrarians and those needed for success in DS/SC will form the basis of the author's recommendations for involvement in these new areas.

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Cited by 6 publications
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“…As digital scholarship advances in academia, an increasing number of academic librarians are acquiring skills in computer programming, Web design, text encoding, geographic information systems and mapping, data analysis and storage, app development, online gaming, and 3D animation. As most librarians already have expertise in the digital scholarship areas that college faculty often lack, such as copyright management, digital rights management, metadata, and management of content management systems and institutional repositories (Dresselhaus, 2015;Keener, 2015;Marcum, 2014;Posner, 2013;Rumsey, 2011;Russell, 2013;Schaffner & Erway, 2014;Sinclair, 2014), the new technical skills that they learn actually help them with their work in creating wayfinding maps and games to help patrons navigate the library, as well as digitizing print resources and making those new electronic resources compatible with data analysis programs such as R. It is now possible for librarians to show students and faculty how to search databases such as Hathi Trust to find evidence of certain word usage, language trends, popularity of public figures, or other information that will answer a research question.…”
Section: How Libraries Support Digital Scholarshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As digital scholarship advances in academia, an increasing number of academic librarians are acquiring skills in computer programming, Web design, text encoding, geographic information systems and mapping, data analysis and storage, app development, online gaming, and 3D animation. As most librarians already have expertise in the digital scholarship areas that college faculty often lack, such as copyright management, digital rights management, metadata, and management of content management systems and institutional repositories (Dresselhaus, 2015;Keener, 2015;Marcum, 2014;Posner, 2013;Rumsey, 2011;Russell, 2013;Schaffner & Erway, 2014;Sinclair, 2014), the new technical skills that they learn actually help them with their work in creating wayfinding maps and games to help patrons navigate the library, as well as digitizing print resources and making those new electronic resources compatible with data analysis programs such as R. It is now possible for librarians to show students and faculty how to search databases such as Hathi Trust to find evidence of certain word usage, language trends, popularity of public figures, or other information that will answer a research question.…”
Section: How Libraries Support Digital Scholarshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Makerspaces, Wikipedia edit-a-thons, hackerspaces and other collaborative learning situations hosted in the library encourage students and faculty of all disciplines to learn valuable STEM skills from each other in a perceived non-judgmental, social environment. Academic librarians also perceive that library involvement in digital scholarship maintains their relevance on university campuses (Dresselhaus, 2015;Pho & Masland, 2014;Vandegrift, 2012). At the same time, "traditional" librarian culture still views collaboration with other units within their physical library space as a threat (Vandegrift, Varner & Varner, 2013).…”
Section: Challenges In Making a Safe Space For Digital Scholarship In Academic Librariesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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