[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: Is it time to stop printing journals?
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: Is it time to stop printing journals?
- From: Selma Aslan <selmaslan@yahoo.co.uk>
- Date: Wed, 4 Apr 2007 20:21:48 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Dear All I have been following these discussions from Turkey for some time. The policy we follow at my university is quite straight forward: 1. Access a journal through a database subscription if the cost is justifiable. If this is not not viable, 2. subscribe to a journal online only, if perpetual access rights are granted for the volumes paid for; --nb. I could not identifiy any journals which fit to this concept, with the exception of Blackwell titles so far--. So the third choice is 3. subscribe to both online+print so that you own what you pay for. I am surprised that perpetual rights issue has not been mentioned. If I could get perpetual access rights for online subscriptions I would not consider getting print subscriptions at all. I must note that we do not cover life sciences and medicine where the quality of images come under discussion. Selma Aslan TOBB ETU, Ankara, Turkey http://www.etu.edu.tr ----- Original Message ---- From: Roger Schonfeld <Roger.Schonfeld@ithaka.org> To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu Sent: Wednesday, 4 April, 2007 12:42:11 AM Subject: RE: Is it time to stop printing journals? Dear Mark, Thank you for starting such a very timely discussion on Liblicense-l. Ithaka and its affiliates JSTOR and Portico have been thinking about these questions for some time now, and we have been working together on a variety of research studies to try to understand this environment. Most recently, in the summer and fall of 2006, we commissioned several nationwide surveys to learn about librarian and faculty attitudes and perspectives. Our academic librarian survey targeted those senior managers responsible for collection development (generally an associate university librarian at a university library, but at a smaller school this could have been a library director or an acquisitions librarian depending on how functions are assigned), and received more than 350 responses. Our faculty survey targeted individuals from across the arts and sciences disciplines, as well as several of the professions, from 4-year colleges, and received more than 4,100 responses. Both were limited to the United States. We retained a professional research firm called Odyssey to help us with these studies. One technique they use quite effectively is to offer strongly-worded statements and then gauge the level of agreement with these statements on a 10-point scale. In the figures here I will group those who selected an 8, 9, or 10 as agreeing strongly with the statement that has been offered and those who selected a 1, 2, or 3 as disagreeing strongly. Here are two such statements: * "If our library cancelled the current issues of a print version of a journal but continued to make them available electronically, that would be fine with me." On this statement, 62% of faculty members agree strongly, indicating their strong willingness to cancel current print issues and rely exclusively on e-journals. Virtually the same share of librarians, 64%, also agrees strongly with this possibility. Among both librarians and faculty, only 12% disagree strongly with this statement, suggesting that active resistance to dropping print format for journal acquisitions is relatively isolated. * Faculty members are far less willing to contemplate the withdrawal of existing backfile collections: "Assuming that electronic collections of journals are proven to work well and are readily accessible, I would be happy to see hard-copy collections discarded and replaced entirely by electronic collections." Only 20% of faculty members agree strongly with this statement, while 50% disagree strongly with it. Even though the decision to cease acquiring print-version current issues will necessarily result in print backfile collections no longer being built, it is far easier for faculty members to support a cessation of acquisitions than it is to imagine outright withdrawal. On the other hand, a plurality of librarians (43%) agrees strongly with this statement about the withdrawal of print backfiles, while only 25% disagrees strongly. Among faculty members, we were not surprised to learn of substantial differences across the disciplines in their readiness to see an elimination of print versions, both for current issue acquisitions and for backfiles. While some of these differences are as expected, with scientists generally more enthusiastic for a transition than humanists, in fact we observe substantial swings on a discipline-by-discipline level even within, for example, the humanities generally. Throughout our librarian study, we see recurring indications that the larger research libraries tend to have become more prepared internally for a transition away from print and to an exclusively electronic environment. For example, on questions where we tried to gauge just how soon a major transition might be expected, far more librarians at research universities could contemplate a tipping-point arising "in the near future" than could librarians at teaching universities or colleges. As you suggested, our studies indicate the great concern among both faculty members and librarians in ensuring that the electronic versions of journals are properly preserved for the long term. My conclusion from our studies is that, within some disciplines, there is little value remaining to faculty members in continuing to acquire print versions of current issues. (In some cases, journals with specific readership profiles, such as clinical subscribers or scholarly society members, might have additional demand for individual, but not institutional, subscriptions in print format.) Many librarians also appear ready to make a transition away from print and probably would support this for appropriate disciplines, so long as the preservation of electronic versions was assured in community-acceptable archives. At the same time, it is critical that publishers consider not only reader-side demand for print, but also the author-side demand to appear in a print publication. Some preliminary work on this topic has already been completed by Diane Harley and Jud King at Berkeley, with more to come (see http://cshe.berkeley.edu/research/scholarlycommunication/index.htm). I hope our survey findings are helpful to this discussion. I would be happy to work further with you or others individually on these very timely questions. Roger Schonfeld Manager of Research Ithaka 151 East 61st Street New York, New York 10021 (212) 500 - 2338 rcs@ithaka.org www.ithaka.org -----Original Message----- From: Mark Leader Sent: Tuesday, March 27, 2007 6:08 PM To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu Subject: Is it time to stop printing journals? The American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB) is considering discontinuing the print version of its journal Molecular Biology of the Cell (MBC). We welcome comments from the library community about the value of print journals and the adequacy of LOCKSS, Portico, and PubMed Central as archives of electronic journals. We are also curious about whether librarians would be interested in a print-on-demand option for obtaining archival print copies if regular print subscriptions were discontinued. The impetus for discontinuing the print edition is a desire to reduce author charges, especially for color figures. The cost of producing the print edition greatly exceeds revenue from print subscriptions. Author charges (page charges and color charges) are the largest source of revenue for the journal. In effect, authors are subsidizing the print subscriptions. We suspect that it is not feasible to raise the print subscription rate enough to cover the cost of print. The many-fold increase in the subscription rate that would be required would likely launch a vicious cycle of declining subscriptions and escalating subscription rates and would be tantamount to discontinuing the print journal anyway, but in a sloppy, uncontrolled manner. The online version of MBC is the journal of record and is rich in material not found in print: More than 60% of the articles include supplemental data or videos online. Since 2000, print subscriptions have been available only to institutions that also have online subscriptions (and to ASCB members, who receive access to the online journal as a benefit of membership). The online institutional subscription rate is on the low side: $578 for approximately 5400 pages per year. The print subscription rate is ridiculously low: an additional $83 for a U.S. institution. For 2007, the rates were increased for the first time since 2002. As we strive to maintain the journal's financial viability while maintaining a fair balance of revenue sources, we ve had to take a hard look at the value of the print journal, which seems to be expensive to produce and perhaps unnecessary. We have been soliciting comments from authors, editors, and ASCB members and would also like to hear from librarians. Thanks in advance for your advice! W. Mark Leader Director of Publications American Society for Cell Biology mleader@ascb.org
- Prev by Date: New Consortium Purchasing Directory Edition III Available from Frontline Global Marketing
- Next by Date: Re: Is it time to stop printing journals?
- Previous by thread: RE: Is it time to stop printing journals?
- Next by thread: Re: Is it time to stop printing journals?
- Index(es):