1 / 12

Review of Web Guide Software for Libraries

Review of Web Guide Software for Libraries. TEACHING, LEARNING AND TECHNOLOGY COMMITTEE LIBRARY INSTRUCTION ROUND TABLE (LIRT) . Purpose of the Project. To take a look at some of the software options available to create web guides for use in library instruction and other venues. 

Télécharger la présentation

Review of Web Guide Software for Libraries

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Review of Web Guide Software for Libraries TEACHING, LEARNING AND TECHNOLOGY COMMITTEE LIBRARY INSTRUCTION ROUND TABLE (LIRT) 

  2. Purpose of the Project • To take a look at some of the software options available to create web guides for use in library instruction and other venues.  • To look at the well-known options as well as some lesser known ones • To evaluate the options across a series of features and aspects to assist in comparisons across products. • To provide libraries some real world information about these options in order to help with decision-making processes.

  3. Products Reviewed • AT&T Knowledge Network Explorer  • Encyclopedia Britannica Online Workspace  • LibData  • MediaWiki / PBWiki • SubjectsPlus  • Libguides  • Library a la Carte

  4. AT&T Knowledge Network Explorer • What it is: Free service designed for librarians, teachers and trainers with two components: • Blue Web’n: collection of reviewed websites and activities chosen by professional educators • Filamentality: tool to create Hotlists, Scrapbooks,Treasure Hunts and Subject Samplers • Cost: Free • Support: Excellent esp. in AT&T States. Tutorials, seminars and other training information available. • Ease of Use: Easy to use but confusing menu options. • Hosting Requirements: None (all on the web)

  5. Encyclopedia Britannica Online Workspace • What it is: Allows EB Online users to create a workspace on which they can place content from EB including video, links, articles.  • Cost: Free with EB Online subscription • Support: Help files are available by topic and index • Ease of Use: point and click • Hosting Requirements: None • Summary: This resource may be best suited to librarians, teachers and middle through high school students. College undergraduates may also benefit from the organization capability of Workspace and the wealth of information available in Encyclopedia Britannica Online.

  6. LibData • What it is: library oriented application with authoring environments for subject pathfinders, course related pages and general purpose web pages • Cost: Free, open-source using a GNU General Public License • Support: Adequate. The LibData development team at the University of Minnesota can provide some support. Product is very reliable. • Ease of use:  • high learning curve for the administrator/implementation side • Training for authors required as page creation is not completely intuitive.  • Scalability/Customizability: • Can create templates to standardize page design and content organization.  • LibData contains several customizable categories and information types to organize resources on a page. • Hosting requirements: need an Apache web server with knowledge of SQL and PHP code. 

  7. MediaWiki/PBWorks (nee PBWiki) • What they are: Open source Wiki products • Cost: Free, Open Source but MediaWiki requires a server • Support • No formal support but active developer communities • Ease of Use:  • Back end administration is easy for a techie, not so easy for a novice - need to know PHP at the least • Front end use is the same as most wikis - some wiki syntax and uploading documents can be confusing • Reusing content not easy  • Customizability: • Can create skins for uniform look/feel (MediaWiki) • Extensions are available for many things (i.e. usage counts) but require tweaking 

  8. Subjects Plus • What it is: open source tool for dynamically managing library subject guides and pathfinders, as well as the library’s A-Z list of databases, staff list, FAQs, and a suggestion box. • Cost: Free, open source • Support: Excellent user-friendly documentation through a wiki, also includes a Google group for questions & comments • Customizability: • Color, font, and categories can be customized • Side bar can be customized to include contact info, chat widget, RSS feeds, etc. • Ease of use:  • Requires some expertise to install • Creating and editing guides very straightforward once established • Hosting Requirements: requires PHP (> 4), MySQL (> 4.1), and a web server

  9. Libguides • What it is: commercial product for creating research guides, course guides, portals, etc. • Cost: annual license fee ranges from $899 to $2,999 • Support: blog, forum, training webinars, twitter stream, responsive staff, "Springshare Lounge" community • Customizability: • Customizable to a certain degree (CSS, color scheme, header images, javascript for extra functionality) • All LibGuides have a distinct look and feel. • Ease of use: • easy for even the most non-tech-savvy to use • easy to edit and move content around  • easy to embed video, RSS, widgets, etc.  • easy to share content modules across multiple pages • Hosting Requirements: none, web based

  10. Library a la Carte • What it is: Created by University of Oregon an open source custom content management system for creating library guides for course assignments and subject research without requiring knowledge of HTML or other web technologies. • Cost: Free, open source • Support: Great tutorial web pages, but limited live support • Customizability: • Fully customizable content sections • Limited customizability for layout and format • Ease of use: • Requires some tech knowledge to set up and customize • Simple-to-use search feature • Easy to share content modules across multiple pages • Easy to embed video, RSS, widgets, etc.  • Hosting Requirements: MySQL Database and an Apache HTTP Server

  11. Summary of Review Results

  12. Questions? Paper is online at: http://connect.ala.org/node/77641

More Related