Scott, thanks for sharing your survey. I'd be interested in the results
of the survey with your faculty, especially in their comments if any.
Debbie
--
Deborah Benrubi
Technical Services Librarian
University of San Francisco
Gleeson Library|Geschke Center
2130 Fulton St.
San Francisco, CA 94117
ph 415.422.5672 fax 415.422.2233
On 8/1/2016 1:14 PM, scott spicer wrote:
Hi Meghan,
I concur with deg that we need more data on specific user experiences
with library based commercial video collections. IMHO Jane Otto's 2014
C&RL article on the topic is a decent reference point (includes survey
and qualitative focus group methodologies):
Otto, J. J. (2014). University Faculty Describe Their Use of Moving
Images in Teaching and Learning and Their Perceptions of the Library’s
Role in That Use. /College & Research Libraries/, /75/(2), 115-144.
Similarly, in Spring '15 to capture some case studies as part of a
streaming task group initiative, I sent out a survey to known
instructor users of our licensed streaming video content asking about
specific pedagogical use cases, content value, streaming affordances,
and technical experience with these materials. I am not certain if it
would be helpful for your question, but feel free to take a look at a
public copy I made of this survey:
http://z.umn.edu/publicvideousesurvey. Further, I would be happy to
share some of the general results if anyone is interested.
Best,
Scott
--
Scott Spicer
Media Outreach and Learning Spaces Librarian
University of Minnesota Libraries - Twin Cities
341 Walter Library
spic0...@umn.edu <mailto:spic0...@umn.edu> 612.626.0629
Media Services: lib.umn.edu/media <http://lib.umn.edu/media>
SMART Learning Commons: lib.umn.edu/smart <http://lib.umn.edu/smart>
VIDEOLIB is intended to encourage the broad and lively discussion of issues
relating to the selection, evaluation, acquisition,bibliographic control,
preservation, and use of current and evolving video formats in libraries and
related institutions. It is hoped that the list will serve as an effective
working tool for video librarians, as well as a channel of communication
between libraries,educational institutions, and video producers and
distributors.
VIDEOLIB is intended to encourage the broad and lively discussion of issues
relating to the selection, evaluation, acquisition,bibliographic control,
preservation, and use of current and evolving video formats in libraries and
related institutions. It is hoped that the list will serve as an effective
working tool for video librarians, as well as a channel of communication
between libraries,educational institutions, and video producers and
distributors.