e-books and e-readers: for the librarian’s consideration

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www.le.ac.uk/beyonddistance www.le.ac.uk/duckling E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration Seminar at the Media Zoo Beyond Distance Research Alliance University of Leicester 28 January, 2011 Terese Bird and Simon Kear ZooKeepers of the Media Zoo

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E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration. Seminar at the Media Zoo Beyond Distance Research Alliance University of Leicester 28 January, 2011 Terese Bird and Simon Kear ZooKeepers of the Media Zoo. Programme. What is an e-book in 2010? How does one read an e-book in 2010? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

www.le.ac.uk/beyonddistancewww.le.ac.uk/duckling

E-Books and E-Readers:For the Librarian’s ConsiderationSeminar at the Media ZooBeyond Distance Research AllianceUniversity of Leicester

28 January, 2011

Terese Bird and Simon KearZooKeepers of the Media Zoo

Page 2: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

Programme

1. What is an e-book in 2010?

2. How does one read an e-book in 2010?

3. DUCKLING Project - Distance students and e-book readers

4. Libraries and e-books

5. Publishers and e-books

6. Let’s make an e-book (or download an e-book)

Page 3: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

1. What is an e-book in 2011?

Photo: DianthusMoon, flickr

I have a feeling we’re not in NetLibrary anymore…

Page 4: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

1. What is an e-book in 2011?

Photo: jaydedman, flickr

1. Downloadable

2. No internet required to read

3. Various formats

a) Epub

b) Mobi Pocket

c) pdf

Page 5: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

2. How does one read an e-book in 2011?

On a computer or laptop

1. Calibre

2. Adobe Reader

3. Kindle App

4. Others

Page 6: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

2. How does one read an e-book in 2011? (2)

On an e-book reader

1. Amazon Kindle

2. Sony models

3. Sovos

4. Others

Page 7: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

2. How does one read an e-book in 2011? (3)

On an iPad

1. Apple iBooks (similar to iTunes idea)

2. Kindle app (Mobi Pocket)

3. Stanza app

4. Individual book apps

Photo: Jon Erickson, flickr

Page 8: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

2. How does one read an e-book in 2010? (4)

On a mobile phone

1. iPhone - Stanza, Kindle App

2. Android phones

3. iPod Touch - Stanza, Kindle App

4. Blackberry

5. Windows 7 phone

6. OthersWindows 7 phone photo courtesy of Sam Judson, flickr

Page 9: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

3. The DUCKLING Project:Delivering University Curriculum:Knowledge, Learning and INnovation Gains

• 3 distance programmes:– One MA in Applied Linguistics and TESOL– Two MSc in Occupational Psychology

• 4 technologies:

Podcasting

Wimba Voice Board

Sony E-book readers

Second Life

Page 10: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

E-book readers• 28 Sony PRS-505

• About £150

• Pre-loaded with material otherwise on Blackboard

Photo by Wendigo on Flickr

Page 11: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

Course material conversion

Diagram created by Emma Davies and Terese Bird

Calibre is free, open-source, and cross-platform

Page 12: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

Convenience• Everything in one device

• Portable

• Long battery life

• ‘Remembers’ where you stopped reading

• “I've also gotten into the habit of carrying my reader with me everywhere, and if I'm in a situation where I'm waiting for 20 minutes I will automatically open the reader.”

Photo by Wolfiewolf on Flickr

Page 13: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

Cost and resources

• £600 to print and ship notes

• £240 to buy, load, and ship e-reader

• “I paid about $100 for them to print out [one module’s notes] for me”

• Greener?

Page 14: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

Changed study strategy

• The e-book reader changed my way to keep notes and made my study more effective. Before, I used my laptop to write a lot of notes because I feel I will forget the whole thing if I don’t take them down. But taking notes is time-consuming and not that effective because I never really use the notes. With the e-book reader, it’s not very inconvenient to go back to the material on the e-reader, and I can remember where the material was and go back to the module on the e-reader and look through it. As a result of that, I didn’t take a lot of notes and I don’t think that it [not taking notes] makes a difference to my study.

• The e-book reader has changed my approach to how I do assignments to some extent. Previously, I started my assignments after I’ve done all the readings from print. I now start from the assignment and then read the material. I’m being more selective now in what I’m reading, and it’s saving me time in a way. Before I just tried to read everything, I worked a lot harder before but I didn’t really get the grades.

Photo by CarbonNYC on Flickr

Page 15: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

E-book readers• Effective for learning

• Effective for saving resources

• Questions?

Photo by Wendigo on Flickr

Page 16: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

4. Libraries and E-books

1. Hampshire Digital Library -http://hampshirelibrary.lib.overdrive.com

2. Chicago Public Library - http://overdrive.chipublib.org

Page 17: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

4. Libraries and E-books

National Libraries

1. British Library

2. American Library of Congress

Page 18: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

5. Publishers and E-books

1. Project Gutenberg www.gutenberg.org - for all devices, all formats

2. Feedbooks.com

3. Manybooks.net

Page 19: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

5. Publishers and E-books (2)

1. Google Books

2. Despite recent court settlement, seems to mostly USA-based so far

Page 20: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

5. Publishers and E-books (3)

1. Amazon and Kindle

2. Buy online, download onto any device

3. Cheaper than paper books

4. If no e-book, “Tell the Publisher”

Page 21: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

5. Publishers and E-books (4)

Apple iBooks

1. Often cheaper than Amazon

2. Buy online, download onto many devices (iPod, iPad, iPhone)

3. Cheaper than paper books

4. Apple muscle pushing publishers

Page 22: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

Questions?

Photo by uwdigitalcollections: http://www.flickr.com/photos/23327394@N05/2247503744/

Page 23: E-Books and E-Readers: For the Librarian’s Consideration

6. Let’s make an ebook

Photo: DianthusMoon, flickr

It can’t be too hardto make an

ebook!