Introduction | p. 1 |
President's Greeting at the Opening Banquet | p. 5 |
Preconference Programs | |
The "Seventy Percent Solution": Assessing Criteria for Model Fund Allocations | p. 9 |
Cataloging Survival for Non-Catalogers, or You Thought You Would Never Need to Catalog Again | p. 17 |
Plenary Sessions | |
Content Industry Outlook 2003: Asteroids That Are Changing the Information Landscape | p. 27 |
Town Hall Meeting | p. 33 |
There Is No Forest, We're Only Hugging the Trees: Nontraditional Ways of Acquiring, Providing Access to, and Managing Serials | p. 39 |
Concurrent Sessions | |
The Information Resource Matrix: A Revolutionary Method to Present Relationships Among Online Serial Objects | p. 59 |
Serial Aggregations, Multiple Versions, and the Virtual Union Catalog: The California Digital Library Catalog, SUNY, and Ex Libris Experiences | p. 69 |
Finding a Better Trail Through the Journals Forest | p. 83 |
Expose Yourself to Electronic Journals | p. 99 |
The Digital Preservation Conundrum, Part 1 | p. 107 |
The Digital Preservation Conundrum, Part 2: Preservation and Electronic-Archiving | p. 115 |
How Electronic Journals Are Changing Patterns of Use | p. 121 |
Usage Statistics: Taking E-Metrics to the Next Level | p. 143 |
Seeing the Forest and the Trees When Developing a New Acquisitions System | p. 155 |
From Tiny Acorns to Great Oaks: Taking a Nationwide Approach to Library Cooperation | p. 161 |
Helping Manage the E-Journal Forest: Do You Need an Agent Any More? Part 1 | p. 173 |
Helping Manage the E-Journal Forest: Do You Need an Agent Any More? Part 2 | p. 179 |
Hot Topics | p. 191 |
Workshops | |
Case Studies in Electronic Serials Cataloging, or What Am I Supposed to Do With This? | p. 203 |
Branching Out: The Importance of Networking in a Library Landscape | p. 209 |
Web-Based Trails and Cross-Campus Partnerships | p. 215 |
From Catalogers to Ontologists: Changing Roles and Opportunities for Technical Services Librarians | p. 221 |
Copyright Law: Fact or Fiction? | p. 227 |
Electronic Content: Is It Accessible to Clients with "Differabilities"? | p. 233 |
Planning for New Growth in the Forest: Cultivating New Serialists for the Future | p. 241 |
When the Rug Comes Out from Under: Managing Change, Technology, Information, and Staff | p. 245 |
Tools for Tenure Trailblazing: Planning Productive Paths for Green Serialists | p. 253 |
Policies and Procedures Manuals in Technical Services: The Forest, the Trees, and the Critters | p. 257 |
Paving the Way for Print Repositories Through Electronic Access | p. 263 |
Reinventing Acquisitions with a "Forget-to-Do" List | p. 269 |
Electronic Resource Management and the MARC Record: The Road Less Traveled | p. 275 |
From Survival Hike to a Walk in the Park: Training Guideposts to Lead the Way | p. 281 |
Starting with an Empty Map: Benchmarking Time and Costs for Serials Operations | p. 287 |
Is It Working: Usage Data as a Tool for Evaluating the Success of New Full-Text Title Access Methods | p. 295 |
Using the Library's OPAC to Dynamically Generate Webpages for E-Journals | p. 301 |
Keeping the Connection: Maintaining E-Journal Subscriptions | p. 309 |
Providing a Table-of-Contents Service to Faculty | p. 315 |
Poster Sessions | p. 321 |
18th Annual NASIG Conference Registrants | p. 329 |
Index | p. 345 |
Table of Contents provided by Rittenhouse. All Rights Reserved. |