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Section 2: CASE STUDIES
California Digital Library (University of California)

University Profile
- Founded 1868
- 9,600 faculty members on 10 campuses: Berkeley, Davis,
Irvine, Los Angeles, Merced, Riverside, San Diego, San Francisco,
Santa Barbara, and Santa Cruz
- 634 bachelor's degrees; 476 master's degrees; 437 doctoral
degrees
|
Library Profile
The University of California (UC) Board of Regents and President
Richard Atkinson founded the California Digital Library (CDL)
in 1997. Calling the CDL a "library without walls," Atkinson
charged it with selecting, building, managing, and preserving
the university's shared collections of digital resources and
with applying new technologies to increase use of the university's
physical collections across all UC campuses and the state at
large. CDL's vision encompasses four strategies: building,
sharing, and preserving digital collections; creating tools
and services; influencing and supporting innovation in scholarly
communication; and fostering strategic partnerships for digital
library development. Located in the Office of the President
in Oakland, CDL operates with about 45 full-time staff members
within the office's complement of 1,500 staff members. |
History
The California Digital Library emerged from a series of discussions,
begun in 1991, on enhancing Melvyl, a union catalog of UC and other
California libraries. Clifford Lynch, then head of the Division of
Library Automation for the UC system, presented a draft plan for the
future of the online catalog for discussion by UC librarians from all
campuses at their regular meetings. The librarians considered the plan
and recommended that it be broadened to address what the UC libraries
could do together to create a digital environment that they could not
build separately. Richard Lucier, who was then the university librarian
at UC San Francisco, obtained release time to rewrite the document
in consultation with a Digital Library Executive Working Group. Concurrently,
the campus chancellors were becoming concerned about the rising cost
of the UC libraries and the potential impact of digital technology.
UC was in the midst of a budget crunch of significant magnitude at
this time.
The result was agreement by the chancellors and the president to
create the Library Planning and Action Initiative (LPAI). Lucier
was appointed to head this 18-month effort, which was guided by an
advisory committee of provosts, faculty, administrators, and librarians.
The report of the LPAI (1998) and subsequent regents' budgets embodying
the report's recommendations identified seven strategies to help
guide the UC libraries through a transition from a campus-based and
print-centered service model to one that blends print and digital
information and more effectively leverages the shared resources and
capabilities of the UC system. The three principal strategies were
to (a) sustain adequate campus print collections, (b) expand the
sharing of collections among the UC libraries, and (c) establish
the California Digital Library as a shared digital collection and
digital library environment for the UC system. After a national search,
Lucier was named the founding university librarian for system-wide
scholarly information and executive director of the CDL, which emerged
as a "co-library" of the University of California system.
Because CDL was born during a fiscal crisis, the plan that the
advisory committee developed bound the budgetary crisis with the
electronic future. By sharing existing print collections and developing
a shared digital collection, the system could make the most of its
limited resources. The budget proposal, which was finally approved
by every academic senate and by the UC administration, emphasized
resource sharing but also made up for some of the drastic reductions
that campuses had experienced in their print budgets owing to the
recession. The proposal included some money for resource sharing
(an improved interlibrary loan program among the campuses that later
turned into circulation of the "university-wide collection")
and financial support for building a system-wide electronic environment.
Upon the urging of UCLA Provost Charles Kennel (chair of the LPAI
advisory committee) it also included an increase of more than $12
million over three years to campus libraries for their print collections.
Initial Progress and Future Challenges
The CDL helps provide infrastructure that lowers the cost to campus
libraries of delivering high-quality online collections and services.
Its investment in bibliographic catalogs, electronic collections, digital
library tools and services (reference linking, persistent object naming,
cross-collection searching), and consensus building around various
standards and good practices provides what the campus libraries commonly
require but are unable to develop independently. Work in three areasMelvyl,
a consorital licensing operation, and an e-scholarship programis
indicative of the progress but also of the challenges incumbent in
this approach.
Melvyl remains the jewel in CDL's crown. Well before the CDL was
established, it had gone some way toward encouraging scholarly exploitation
of campus collections as if they formed a part of a single university
collection. The addition by the CDL of a request service through
which patrons can initiate interlibrary loan (ILL) requests online
from the catalog interface, and a courier service through which interlibrary
loan requests can be delivered overnight, greatly fostered the trend.
Since the inception of these services in 1999, the number of interlibrary
loan requests has increased dramatically. In fall 2003, the ILL service
will be further enhanced with the addition on each campus of high-volume
digitization facilities capable of digitizing requested items and
delivering them to patrons online. Yet Melvyl and its ancillary services
cast a long shadow. Their maintenance absorbs scarce technical resources
and as such could impede the pace of innovation and development that
may be required of a maturing digital library.
In support of a shared university collection, the CDL hosts a consortial
licensing operation that systematically acquires access to and, where
appropriate, enriches commercial electronic materials under terms
and at costs that are favorable to the UC libraries. The shared collection
of commercial electronic journal and reference databases is available
system-wide and extends local holdings at marginal additional cost
to campus libraries. Experience with shared electronic collections
is cautiously being extended into the domain of print, but by the
libraries as a collective rather than by the CDL. As UC libraries
cancel subscriptions to printed journals that are also available
electronically, they are asking whether they can act together to
ensure that a physical copy of record is maintained at least somewhere
within the university. They are also taking an in-depth look at strategies
for managing distributed collections of printed government documents.
The discussion forces libraries to confront very difficult issues
of ownership as well as accessissues that could test the limits
of collaboration.
An e-scholarship program stimulates and facilitates innovation
in scholarly communication in support of research and teaching, and
includes tools and services that facilitate the creation, production,
peer review, management, and dissemination of scholarly publications.
The program responds to a recommendation of the LPAI task force to
experiment with new means of scholarly publishing. The task force
found that "the present system of journal publication no longer
meets faculty needs to distribute information quickly and effectively" and
in a manner that makes economic sense to the university. The e-scholarship
program's biggest success is its working papers and e-prints repository.
Still in its early days, the repository is attracting deposits from
UC faculty. Changing scholarly communications, however, requires
a great deal more than new technical services and experimentation
on the part of some faculty at a single university. It requires change
in scholarly practice generally. By providing alternative forms of
scholarly communications, libraries can exert some influence. Also
required is the active participation ofeven leadership fromacademic
quarters.
The CDL's early progress is due in part to fortuitous timing. The
rising cost of information and a state budget crisis helped move
CDL planning to implementation. The success of the Red Sage Project
at UC San Francisco, the creation of a statewide consortium in Ohio
(Ohiolink), and the emerging licensing models from publishers supported
the concept of shared or consortial acquisitions of electronic scholarly
journals, reference databases, and other commercial content.
Support of all the campus libraries was also important, especially
from the largest, i.e., Berkeley and UCLA. By 1996, the Berkeley
library was already a nationally known center for digital library
development. Given the severity of the budget crisis in the 1990s,
some at Berkeley were concerned that funding for CDL would decrease
resources for digital library development at the campuses. UCLA was
enormously supportive; in fact, the support of University Librarian
Gloria Werner was a key factor in the successful start of the CDL.
In time, Berkeley, through sharing its expertise and experiences,
also became enormously helpful. It has taken a lead in important
collaborative digital library developments, including the Online
Archive of California (a union catalog of finding aids) and the planning
of a digital archival repository for UC libraries.
Strong political alliances were equally important. The provost
of UCLA, the chair of the advisory board, and key librarians, who
had worked together and had developed trust, provided underlying
support. The health sciences librarians, who had a long history of
collaboration, provided support early on. Lucier, Werner, and Phyllis
Mirsky, deputy university librarian at UC San Diego, were three critical
leaders with health sciences backgrounds. The CDL also benefited
from a densely interlocking committee structure that exists to this
day.
The CDL's ability to deliver on its service promises, to move quickly
from planning to action, and to demonstrate its benefits to the campus
libraries in real and quantifiable terms has also been important,
though may be under threat as the service grows. In its first few
years, CDL released new collections and services on a regular semiannual
basis. It continues to report out on the real savings that are involved
in the development of shared collections and digital library infrastructure.
The CDL has also fostered interchange among the campus libraries
by bringing campus staff to work at the CDL on a short-term basis
(and paying them), by hosting digital library development forums
jointly with other library committees, and by co-developing with
campus libraries various digital collections, services, and tools.
It has finally built relations with faculty who need to drive and
endorse the goals of the CDL and the system-wide library planning
agenda more generally.
According to Lucier, now librarian at Dartmouth College, CDL's
continued success depends on the spark of individuals who are willing
to work together and on their drive to accomplish this work. Other
challenges facing the CDL include (1) maintaining its fiscal health
during the current state budget crisis; (2) facilitating development
of a shared university library collection that comprises both digital
and print materials; (3) developing a technical and organizational
infrastructure that enables it to manage legacy services while supporting
more speculative development initiatives undertaken on behalf of
the UC libraries; (4) encouraging faculty exploitation of alternative
means of scholarly publishing that are being developed by the e-scholarship
program; (5) continuing to stimulate and find rewarding challenges
for the CDL's very high-caliber and energetic staff; and (6) maintaining
agility in the context of a large and rambling bureaucracy. Confronting
these challenges will require a more stable operations environment
within the CDL; continued collaboration, trust, and understanding
among the UC libraries; inclusive discussions and decision making
within the CDL; and a perpetually refreshed vision of the university
libraries' strategic directions.
Harvard University (Cambridge)

University Profile
- Founded 1636
- 18,000 students
- 2,000 faculty members, plus 8,000 faculty members in the
teaching hospitals
- 164 bachelor's degrees; 74 master's degrees; 72 doctoral
degrees
|
Library Profile
- 14,437,361 volumes held
- $80,862,137 total annual expenditures
- 1,088 staff members (excludes hourly employees)
The Harvard University Library (HUL) is part of Harvard's central
administration and serves as the coordinating body for the more
than 90 separate libraries that make up the Harvard library system.
HUL develops and implements library services and programs that
are centrally provided, including library systems, off-site storage;
preservation, university archives, and digital initiatives. The
largest group of Harvard libraries is found in the Harvard College
Library, which administers 11 libraries for the Faculty of Arts
and Sciences, including the Widener Library. |
History
In the mid-1990s, there was comparatively little digital library activity
at Harvard. One exception was the development of Web portal services
that opened to electronic journals and other commercially supplied
content. The reason Harvard was less active than other universities
may be due in part to the highly decentralized structure of the university.
Each of the faculties has its own endowment, receives tuition dollars
from its students, and is taxed for common services. On the Harvard
campus, the name that has been given to this decentralized system is "Every
Tub on Its Own Bottom" (ETOB).1 The
faculties are expected to be entrepreneurial and autonomous, and because
the libraries in effect belong to the faculties, they are also highly
decentralized. Cost recovery is an integral ingredient in ETOB; therefore,
just as the Harvard faculties pay the university for some services,
individual libraries pay the HUL for systems, storage, and some digital
library services. In turn, the HUL provides services and products that
the libraries want and need.
By the late 1990s, the involvement of HUL Associate Director for
Planning and Systems Dale Flecker in the Digital Library Federation's
program and architecture committees brought him into contact with
early major innovators. They included staff from Michigan and Cornell,
and peers in other research libraries that were beginning to build
digital library infrastructures. As a result of discussions with
Flecker and others, HUL Director Sid Verba convened a group of administrative
deans, faculty members, and librarians. Under the chairmanship of
Harvard College Librarian Nancy Cline, the committee was charged
to consider how Harvard should begin its digital library program.
The committee recognized that building a common infrastructure
was of prime importance. The group's focus on building infrastructure,
as opposed to digitizing collections, reflected the recognition that
collections responsibilities were highly distributed throughout the
90 libraries. The committee believed that a strong infrastructure
could help lower the overhead to the libraries creating digital collections
and help build coherent information solutions. It envisaged that
the central program would have a consulting and educational role
as well as responsibility for building centralized systems and services
that would be shared by all the libraries. Through grants made to
the libraries and other parts of the university, the committee hoped
to entice the community to participate in a coordinated infrastructure.
The program was named the Library Digital Initiative (LDI) and was
placed in the Office for Information Systems of the HUL.
Sid Verba argued to the university administrators, particularly
to then President Neil Rudenstine, that if Harvard could replace
its central accounting systems, a very expensive project, it should
also provide funding to develop the digital library, an endeavor
more important to fulfilling the university's core mission. Verba
requested and received one-time funding of $12 million to be allocated
over five years from President Rudenstine's discretionary funds.
Five million dollars of this sum is being spent on the grant program,
leaving $7 million for building the infrastructure. This initiative,
like others at Harvard, will eventually be supported at least in
part by cost recovery. The plan to establish and fund a digital initiative
was virtually unopposed by the faculties, in part because new money
had been found to support it and because the library had already
achieved considerable success in developing a highly regarded Harvard
union catalog.
The LDI's focus is practical and systems oriented; it has no direct
ties to faculty research. A reflection of Harvard's decentralized
organization, the LDI provides services to the university's many
distributed libraries. Because the role of LDI is to provide the
infrastructure and that of the libraries is to use that infrastructure
to provide services appropriate to their particular clientele, the
Harvard libraries, and not the LDI, are meant to connect directly
to the faculty. Harvard's librarians work well with one another,
sharing values, a common profession, and a growing recognition of
their interdependence. Their success in developing a microfilm and
an online catalog, as well as completing the retrospective catalog
conversion of more than five million titles, has prepared them to
look for opportunities to develop other shared activities.
Now and the Future
Because of the strong book culture at Harvard, particularly in the
Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Nancy Cline has approached digitization
as a logical extension of the continuum of recorded knowledge. She
believes it is Harvard's responsibility to access and preserve digital
materials in the same way that it has accessed and preserved print
materials. The LDI offers Cline and others a place to become involved
with digital library activities and to begin to build an infrastructure
even while many of the faculty are not yet interested in or aware of
the research potential of digital materials and services. The College
Library is making a substantial commitment to e-journals and promoting
this commitment in terms of its historical role in developing collections.
Because of its strong preservation and conservation program, the College
Library is also using digital preservation to manage heavily used print
collections.
Three digital reformatting facilities are being created: one in
Widener to digitize page material; one in the art museum to digitize
photographs, slides, and art works; and one in the music library
to digitize sound and related materials. The LDI supported building
one of these centers, and the Harvard College Library financed the
other two. Each of these centers is being integrated into the LDI
infrastructure, and the digitized output will feed directly into
the depository. At this point, digitization occurs when the library
needs to minimize the handling of selected materials or to conserve
deteriorating materials and when faculty members request that materials
be digitized (e.g., some slide and pamphlet collections). Given the
size of the collections, conservation at a very large scale is a
primary driver at Harvard.
To increase the use of digital materials, a number of libraries
that are being renovated are creating new kinds of spaces for collaborative
learning and for learning in a multimedia setting. Major renovations
are occurring in the business, law, divinity, and medical libraries
and in the Widener Library. Renovations are being coupled with outreach
by librarians, who are teaching students and faculty members how
to use the Web and other digital resources.
The activities of the LDI staff consist of consulting, training,
and raising the awareness of the issues in digital libraries, e.g.,
metadata, reformatting, and digital acquisitions, as well as building
a technical infrastructure. LDI is a central resource for education
and consulting, and its consultations have now extended to the museums
and other parts of the university that have research collections.
For the future, a primary activity will be to continue building the
infrastructure.2 The first-generation
systems now in place include those for converting and storing technical
and descriptive metadata, access management, naming, and cataloging.
Most of the LDI effort to this point has been spent developing systems
rather than content. LDI is only now beginning to populate its systems.
To access objects in the repository, metadata about the objects
must be made accessible through various LDI-maintained online catalogs.
Libraries (and others) fund the cost of preserving and accessing
materials stored in the repository. A number of libraries are using
the repository, as are the art museum and the School of Public Health.
The professional schools are the least involved at this point. The
major cooperative effort across the libraries is still consortial
purchasing, which is accomplished at HUL by at least two full-time
employees who oversee the processes of identifying, evaluating, and
negotiating access to commercial digital content.
HUL recovers the marginal cost of storage and preservation from
units using the repository. LDI has defined three levels of preservation
responsibility for materials deposited in the repository. First,
LDI will assume full preservation responsibility for materials deposited
in preferred ("normative") formats, along with the prescribed
metadata. LDI will provide only "bit preservation" for
materials in a second list of formats. Preservation of materials
in formats not yet listed remains undefined. Over time, LDI will
address the preservation status of a widening range of formats. Libraries
must adhere to the standards and expect to be billed for migration.
Metadata standards for text, images, and sound have been completed;
film and video are not. Flecker expects the repository use to grow
substantially.
Because President Rudenstine allocated one-time funding to the
LDI, Flecker and his office must address the issue of funding in
the next phase of the program. He worries that digital libraries
are developing more slowly than had been predicted, that the cost
of infrastructure development will be larger than estimated, and
that they may have underestimated the time needed to develop a mature
infrastructure.
Challenges
Harvard faces the following challenges in developing its digital library:
- Because Harvard is highly decentralized and wealthy, the various
faculties frequently have little reason to collaborate. On the
other hand, collaboration among the libraries has been noticeably
successful and has produced services that faculty and students
appreciate across the institution.
- Information technology (IT) services are fragmented throughout
the institution and within the libraries. For example, the Widener
Library relies on HUL for its integrated library system and digital
library services, on the central IT Department and the Faculty
of Arts and Science's Academic Computing Department for network
support, and on both central departments and the Faculty of Arts
and Sciences for administrative data. The difficulty of developing
digital library initiatives in a distributed computer environment
is matched by the difficulty the university is experiencing in
developing tools for online course management.
- The book budget is sacred, especially to the Faculty of Arts
and Sciences. Fifty-five percent of the collections budget is endowed
(and therefore restricted); the remainder is faculty-driven. It
is difficult to use acquisitions dollars for anything other than
books and journals. This is not to say that the faculty members
do not want electronic resources: they do want them, but they want
them to be supported through funds that supplement the traditional
collections budgets. At Harvard, senior faculty members strongly
influence many decisions in the library.
- Faculty interest in technology is wide but conflicting. Some
faculty members want to take full advantage of the newest technology;
others, many of whom are senior faculty, do not. Those who have
a strong interest in newer options have smaller voices; for this
reason, some librarians fear that Harvard will miss opportunities
that other institutions will seize. Many wonder whether President
Lawrence Summers's notion that Harvard should be giving more to
the country will lead him to urge that the Harvard libraries become
leaders in digital preservation and access.
- LDI needs to make its cost recovery in digital initiatives work.
It may request significant additional presidential funding because
the required infrastructure will not be completed within the five-year
period, even though there is a solid first generation of production
systems in place. Over time, LDI hopes to move the cost of building
and updating the production systems to one of the common goods
(ETOB) paid by the faculties. LDI also requires core funding that
may exceed $1 million annually for ongoing innovation, consulting,
and outreach.
- Future priorities for LDI include more concentration on born-digital
materials, on integration of digital library content and infrastructure
with other systems within the university (course management systems)
and with other libraries nationally, and on digital preservation.
Conclusion
Harvard is developing an interesting and creative program in a unique
and difficult environment. The argument that the library needs to demonstrate
a role in digital space as a natural outgrowth of a historical role
in nondigital space is beginning to work, but very slowly. By emphasizing
infrastructure, conservation, and preservation, the library may be
able to build a substantive collection of digital materials of all
kinds, much as the Library of Congress has done. Because of the environment,
however, library involvement in end-user services that could actively
support research and learning will vary greatly across the university.
With the approach the Harvard libraries are taking, scholars will use
the materials in the digital repository in their research, much as
they do now with books, but the library could remain more or less in
a traditional role for some time into the future.
People Interviewed
Sid Verba, director of the university library; Dale Flecker, associate
director for planning and systems in the university library; Nancy
Cline, librarian, Harvard College; Tom Michalak, executive director,
Harvard Business School, Baker Library; Harry S. Martin III, librarian,
Law School Library; Hugh Wilburn, librarian and assistant dean for
information services, Frances Loeb Library; and Barbara Graham, associate
director of the university library for administration and programs.
Indiana University (Bloomington)

University Profile
- Founded 1820
- 37,963 students
- 1,709 faculty members (full-time equivalent)
- 5,204 bachelor's degrees; 1,582 master's degrees; 401 doctoral
degrees
|
Library Profile
- 6,314,658 volumes held
- $26,459,375 total annual expenditures
- 313 staff members (excludes hourly employees)
|
History
When Suzanne Thorin assumed the post of dean of libraries at Indiana
University (IU) in 1996, the libraries had no formal digital library
program. There were, however, three "bright-light" initiatives:
VARIATIONS, a streaming audio music e-reserves project; LETRS (Library
Electronic Text Resource Service); and DIDO (Digital Images Delivered
Online), an art-image data bank that served the School of Fine Arts.
None of these projects had base funding in the libraries, although
LETRS had been provided staff from University Information Technology
Services (UITS) since the former's inception in the late 1980s.
VARIATIONS, one of the earliest streaming audio experiments, operated
in a "skunk-works" environment in the campus music library.
The music library was headed by David Fenske, now dean of the College
of Information Science and Technology at Drexel University. Fenske
drew funds for the project on an ad hoc basis from the deans of the
music school and libraries and from UITS. IBM provided some equipment
and advice. Jon Dunn, an information technologist who has had a major
role in shaping the Digital Library Program (DLP), was the primary
technical force behind VARIATIONS.
LETRS was begun in the early 1990s as a partnership between the
libraries and the computing center, with joint staffing, space provided
by the library, and equipment provided by the computing center. It
provided the model upon which the DLP was eventually built.
One abiding characteristic at Indiana, which exists in part because
of limited funding, is a robust collaboration between the libraries
and information technology (IT) units. In the 1980s, with the advent
of NOTIS, the first eight-campus library management system, the two
entities recognized that they would be forever joinedfor better
or for worse. The libraries had long relied on UITS for storage and
security of their digital output. During the late 1980s, the relationship
grew. Librarians and technologists established INFORM, a discussion
group where the two cultures informally explored matters of mutual
interest and got to know each other's worlds. These discussions produced
a series of campus forums that culminated in a national Public Broadcasting
System teleconference called "Networked Information and the
Scholar."
In January 1997, six months after Thorin arrived at IU, Michael
McRobbie, who came from the Australian National University, became
Indiana's vice-president and chief information officer (CIO). With
academic computing and administrative computing already merged and
the addition of telecommunications to the IT organization nearly
completed, McRobbie began to direct IT at the Bloomington and Indianapolis
campuses, which had previously been administered separately. With
funding from President Myles Brand, McRobbie was able to transform
long-term and divisive discussions about equipment into an action
plan for campus-wide purchases through life-cycle funding. Brand
and McRobbie also obtained additional state funding for technology
to support teaching and learning.
All eight campuses subsequently participated in extended discussions
that led to the adoption of a three-year IT strategic plan under
which base and one-time funding was allocated for existing digital
library projects, including VARIATIONS; the digital library program,
including research and development; and electronic records management.
Thus, through a plan that incorporates resources to implement it,
a centralized ("czar") model for IT has evolved at the
eight-campus university.
Before the discussions that led to the IT strategic plan took place,
Thorin struggled with how to shape decentralized and underfunded
digital projects and to build a broader, more cohesive digital environment
in the libraries. (Thorin had planned the first technology conference
at the Library of Congress when Librarian of Congress James Billington
sought advice about turning American Memory into a real national
digital library.) She engaged Michael Keller, university librarian
and director of academic resources at Stanford University, as a consultant.
She also explored activities taking place at the University of Michigan,
where Dan Atkins and others were building a robust digital library
environment. McRobbie, as well as Blaise Cronin, dean of the School
of Library and Information Science (SLIS), were enthusiastic about
adopting the Michigan model, with UITS, the libraries, and the SLIS
as partners. ,p> With Keller's recommendations in hand, Thorin reorganized
Library Information Technology by merging two departments and appointing
a new director, Phyllis Davidson, to a joint UITS/libraries position.
Kristine Brancolini, long-time head of media and reserves for the
library and a copyright expert, was appointed director of the DLP.
This early developmental period was filled with change, and not
all library staff were happy with what was unfolding. The creation
of the DLP and related events temporarily destabilized what had long
been a predictable environment.
With respect to presidential leadership in IT, the situation at
Indiana was similar to that at Michigan. At Michigan, then-President
James Duderstadt worked through a number of colleagues in the School
of Engineering and in IT to foster change. Indiana's Brand has given
consistent and enthusiastic support to IT, primarily through McRobbie's
leadership. McRobbie's support has helped numerous efforts, including
the DLP, proliferate, particularly on the Bloomington and Indianapolis
campuses. This approach is also making implementation of current
multicampus efforts, such as building an effective course management
system and dealing with e-scholarship, a more cohesive process than
it is in the decentralized environments at some large institutions.
Growth
At first, Brancolini and Dunn were the only full-time DLP staff members
other than the technical UITS staff in LETRS and the full-time systems
administrator in the music library. Others who participated part time
included the head of preservation and an area studies catalog librarian,
who added metadata expertise. The team's early efforts to obtain grants
were unsuccessful. These failures were learning experiences both in
writing grants and in building technical expertise. By the time Indiana
was awarded a $3-million National Science Foundation grant in 2000
to expand VARIATIONS into a digital music library for teaching and
learning, the program had achieved great success in grantsmanship.
As DLP staff grew as a result of support from the UITS strategic
plan and reallocation of library staff, the roles of the partners
changed. Perhaps because the SLIS gets its academic credibility from
linking with other academic units rather than with library or technology
services, its involvement has diminished, except where it contributes
funding for a specific purpose, e.g., encoded archival description
(EAD) training.3 The recent addition
of the School of Informatics to the DLP partnership gives the program
a new opportunity for an applied research component. Overall, the
maturing program has worked in the following five areas:
- building program, staff, organization, structure, and funding
- stabilizing funding and technology for VARIATIONS, LETRS, and
DIDO
- building expertise through national collaboration
- building integrating technology at the lowest level (server storage
that can be used by multiple projects) and at the next level (the
software infrastructure)
- integrating the DLP into the libraries' operations
Organizationally, the program reports to the dean and has a mandate
to roam and create both in the Bloomington libraries and on the other
IU campuses. To explore program integration, Brancolini, Davidson,
and associate deans Martha Brogan and Harriette Hemmasi have held weekly
discussions for more than a year and have codified all the libraries'
digital efforts to set the stage for developing a plan for the future.
The DLP is also exploring how faculty can interact more deeply with
the program and how the program can exert influence in Indiana's research
environment. There are a number of faculty-led DLP projects, including
one in folklore being considered for Mellon funding and another in
archaeology/informatics, but there is as yet no consistent or organized
participation. Now that it has emerged from the nuts-and-bolts stage
and is maturing, the program has an opportunity to move to a more integrated
and strategic institutional approach.
Challenges
Indiana now faces challenges in technology and strategic thinking.
- Technology. When the program began, it inherited the infrastructure
available to VARIATIONS and LETRS to deal with audio and texts, and
since that time, staff have built up technology expertise in images
(e.g., DIDO, the Hoagy Carmichael Collection). With the technology
infrastructure being built piece by piece, the present challenge
is to integrate digital content now located in a variety of software
and hardware environments. The DLP has an opportunity to take advantage
of the IU mass storage service, which includes tape and disk base
storage for all types of data, in 1- to 2-terabyte disk caches and
tape libraries that have a 300-terabyte total capacity. Research
data of all sorts are being stored, and VARIATIONS is the second-largest
user through its WAV and MPEG files. (The largest user is high-energy
physics.) With UITS facility providing a general low-level infrastructure,
the DLP will work on the administrative and management access software
layer that would sit on top of the mass storage and enable cross-collection
searching.
To explore the creation of a digital repository, the DLP is looking
at general services that it could provide to units in the library
and on the campuses that might want the DLP to manage, preserve,
and provide access to digital information. With the new emphasis
on partnerships within the libraries and an evolving role for Library
Information Technology, staff will have increasing roles in these
endeavors.4 Through a working group
of librarians, IT staff, and faculty, this concept will be explored
in fall 2002. The DLP's participation as a beta site in FEDORA
(Flexible and Extensible Digital Object and Repository Architecture),
a University of Virginia Libraries venture to build a repository,
is part of IU's own repository exploration.
The other main technology ingredient in IU's digital library
program is the University of Michigan's DLXS (Digital Library Extension
Service) software, which is used in LETRS, where they have implemented
the text class and will be implementing the image class in the
future. The extent to which DLXS integrates with FEDORA and other
work remains to be seen, but DLXS does not provide a repository
solution at any rate.
- Strategic Thinking. The DLP is struggling to find effective
ways to codify and to communicate its knowledge to a broader community.
In some respects this is a promotional activityand opportunity.
In addition, the program needs staff who are dedicated to infrastructure
development and do not have project responsibilities. With such success
in obtaining grants, the number of projects keeps growing, and the
thinking that needs to take place about the overall infrastructure
keeps moving into the background. The program believes it can make
its mark in the humanities and the performing arts.
Because it is unlikely that numbers of additional staff will
be hired (except temporarily through grant support), the DLP is
challenged to use existing resources to build an integrated program.
The meetings involving Brancolini, Davidson, Brogan, and Hemmasi
have been productive in sorting out what parts of the library and
the DLP can take leadership on any issue. In the case of the Teaching
and Learning Technology Center, now being built in the main library,
for example, there are opportunities for DLP staff and bibliographers
to interact with faculty who are learning how to integrate technology
into their classes. Leadership for placing the libraries' created
and purchased digital information into the course management system,
OnCourse, is also a shared responsibility.
Potentially fruitful points of contact between DLP and other
parts of the library include the following:
- Research and Development (R&D): Does R&D occur mainly
in the DLP and cross into the library? Can the libraries request
that the DLP conduct R&D for needs in their areas?
- Metadata: What is the relationship of the new metadata librarian
in technical services to the DLP and to the repository project?
- Equipment: How can Library Information Technology partner with
the DLP to ensure that the libraries have an IT framework that
suits the DLP ventures?
- Faculty projects: Some faculty will approach bibliographers,
and others will come to the DLP. How can efforts be integrated
so that the faculty members get the best services?
The absence of a shared vision concerning the library's digital future
will lead to focusing on second-order issues, such as who does what
or who is stepping on another's boundaries. It will also promote
duplication and limit progress. Therefore, the fruitful discussions
that the four managers have had and that have produced an impressive
list of existing endeavors need to be transformed into real strategic
planning.
Summary
Although Indiana was not one of the early digital library pioneers,
it has developed its digital program rapidly in the past six years.
Capitalizing on a coherent, multicampus IT environment that is adequately
funded, the digital library program has concentrated on building
expertise and gaining a national reputation. Its current challenge
is to build an integrated library through system-wide planning and
implementationa library system that capitalizes on the university's
strong centralized IT structure and is motivated by critical changes
taking place in teaching, learning, and research.
People Interviewed
Michael McRobbie, vice-president for information technology and CIO;
Kristine Brancolini, director of the DLP; Gerry Bernbom, assistant
to the vice-president for digital libraries; Perry Willett, assistant
director, DLP; Jon Dunn, assistant director for technology, DLP;
Martha Brogan and Harriette Hemmasi, associate deans; Phyllis Davidson,
director of Library Information Technology; Jennifer Riley, digital
media specialist, DLP; Jake Nadal, acting head of the Preservation
Department; Jackie Byrd, acting head of the Acquisitions Department;
Sybil Bedford, digital imaging specialist and metadata cataloger,
DLP; Randall Floyd, digital library system administrator, DLP; Ken
Rawlings, programmer analyst, DLP; Radha Surya, electronic text support
specialist, DLP; Andy Spencer, project manager for the Russian Periodical
Index, DLP; Natalia Rome-Lindval, electronic text specialist, DLP.
Suzanne Thorin participated in some of these interviews as Indiana
University dean of libraries.
New York University

University Profile
- Founded 1831
- 48,000 students
- 3,100 faculty members in 14 schools and colleges
- Six locations in Manhattan
- 89 bachelor's degrees; 108 master's degrees; 91 doctoral
degrees
|
Library Profile
- 3,936,625 volumes held
- $28,694,958 total annual expenditures
- 324 staff members (excludes hourly employees)
|
History
When Carol Mandel was appointed dean of libraries at New York University
(NYU) in April 1999, she found little digital library development
under way. The reason for this vacuum was a very traditional approach
to teaching and learning at the universityan approach that
was mirrored in the library.
Before 1998, NYU's information technology (IT) infrastructure
was highly fragmented, comprising three independent units that
reported to three vice-presidents: administrative computing, academic
computing, and telecommunications. The units were operationally
successful each year, but no strategic or multiple-year planning
took place. In fact, at that time the university administration
did not view IT as being a significant factor in NYU's planning.
For years, the library administration had discouraged collaboration
with the IT units; as a result, none occurred, except where creative
staff worked together across lines by stealth or at least without
formal sanction or encouragement. Although the library provided
television services and media support for campus classrooms, there
was little synergy among and within the organizations. Lacking
a strong campus technology infrastructure, the library network
was cobbled together.
Things began to change in the early 1990s, when the library received
a grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to produce an online
catalog that would provide links from the catalog to full-text
commercial and government resources via a Z39.50 interface. This
initiative was soon overtaken by new technology, notably the World
Wide Web. The grant enabled NYU libraries to test some technology
applications; e.g., they developed online finding aids that linked
to digital surrogates for selected holdings. However, the original
purpose of the grant was not realized, which disappointed staff
and impeded progress in planning for the digital future. Additional
factors that impeded progress included the unsupported technical
environment, the absence of standards, and the lack of library
staff who had the technical skills to apply the few standards that
were available and who had relevant project design and management
skills.
In 1992, the university administration convened a faculty committee
to investigate the effectiveness of academic computing. Libraries
were included in the committee's mandate. A subsequent committee
recommended that a chief information technology officer (CITO)
be appointed to look after a full range of computing.
In 1998, Marilyn McMillan was appointed CITO and the IT units
were merged. McMillan instituted a stronger technical support system
and increased the hours of the help desk from eight hours a day
to 24/7. By the time Mandel was interviewed, she recognized that
the university had come to view the effective use of IT as essential
to its research and teaching missions. The new administration expected
that the CITO and the dean of libraries would work as a team.
Together, Mandel and McMillan worked, as they put it, "to
take the clippers to the barbed-wire fence" that had been
built between the separate information organizations. They formed
a team of staff members who had collaborated on technology-related
matters behind the scenes, and this team identified areas where
the two units could work together. These areas included infrastructure,
the library's network, digital library development, authentication,
and publications. As a first and highly symbolic effort, the organizations
merged their existing handbooks for faculty and students into a
single publication. The team offered other suggestions that helped
Mandel and McMillan restructure, retool, and staff their respective
organizations.
In the recent past, new money had not been available, but the
library and the IT units often saved what they called "budget
dust," or year-end funds. Since Mandel and McMillan have been
working together, a limited amount of new money has been made available
to the units. In fiscal year 2000/2001, each organization received
program improvement funds that are being used to build infrastructure.
In addition, in March 2001, the board of trustees voted to impose
a technology fee of $50 per term for full- and part-time students
enrolled in degree programs and to earmark the proceeds for the
improvement of student computing services.
With some restructuring in place, Mandel and McMillan are exploring
how to effect other needed changes. They are discussing the merit
of some shared library/IT positions. Librarians have academic status
and tenure, but Mandel has some flexibility to appoint new staff
who have digital library skills and experience. Although the two
have no formal plan for building their digital presence, they have
used a shared approach to articulate the purposes, goals, and benefits
of the digital library initiative in various planning and budget
documents. These descriptions will be part of a discussion in a
new deans' working group on libraries and information technology
that will feed into planning under way as part of a new presidential
administration. The plan will need to be in alignment with the
administration, but seminal work being accomplished now will create
the platform on which to develop specific digital goals.
The Future
The platform being built includes the following tactical initiatives:
- Hiring appropriately skilled personnel. Although NYU has a
number of talented digital library staff (most of whom are supported
by grant funds and some of whom are on loan from IT), they need
to build a stable team using base funding.
- Conducting selective experimentation through discrete projects
to help design the infrastructure requirements for the future.
- Building storage capacity. David Ackerman, director of eServices,
and Peter Brantley, director of library information technology,
have been working with Sun Microsystems to create a Digital Library
Center of Excellence. NYU had been building a portal using Sun
infrastructure, and the libraries took the initiative to interest
Sun in building the center. The libraries also made Ex Libris
a third partner in this effort, after working with the company
to implement SFX reference linking. Sun products will supply
very significant computing and storage capacity (SF 15K), which
the library will divide into two areas: (1) research and development
and (2) production and other necessary digital library infrastructure
components.
- Designing a program around NYU's strengths and needs while
positioning the library nationally and internationally in a leadership
role. The current thinking is that NYU will build on its strengths
in the performing arts (audio and video) and on its orientation
toward visual and multimedia materials from many subject areas
taught and researched at NYU, including performance and film
studies. The program will build on NYU's location in a city that
values visual and performing arts. It will emphasize the university's
strengths in computer science, in intellectual property law,
and in selected special collections. Mandel and McMillan want
to make progress in the difficult area of copyright for multimedia
and believe they can provide national leadership in this area.
Through a program funded by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation,
the libraries are focusing on how to clear copyright for recorded
music so that it may be used in educational settings. Rights
and authentication issues are main emphases of the NYU programs.
In the Napster debate, for example, NYU students were concerned
not only about sharing music files but also about maintaining
the rights to the materials they had created themselves.
The University Press reports to the dean of libraries. Mandel
hopes to position the press to produce reference works electronically.
Mandel and the press director are debating how and what to
digitize. In addition, Mandel wants to digitize material that
is high profilei.e., that has eye-catching contentto
bring the libraries good publicity. The library is highly regarded
by the faculty already because it consistently publicizes its
efforts.
Mandel and McMillan also muse about other issues: How can
we increase production? Who are our natural partners? What
born-digital material should we collect and preserve? Should
we digitize our brittle books? How can we relate more closely
to teaching and learning? How can we use Mellon support to
preserve moving images? How can we develop a program that is
integrated into both the library and the campus?
Obstacles
Potential obstacles lie in two principal areas: technical and personnel.
Technical. There is considerable demand for bandwidth
at NYU, with 20,000 students in residence halls and others in rented
facilities where ISP services are needed. Although this problem
exists nationwide, it is more intense at NYU because of its city
campuses, which use instructional learning technologies heavily.
In spring 2000, 30 courses used Blackboard, Inc., software for
online teaching; by spring 2001, 700 classes with 8,000 students
were using instructional technologies. NYU offers some 7,000 classes
with online components, and growth is exponential. Another obstacle
is the unpredictable nature of the market for technology. Different
components of the university's core infrastructure will become
obsolete at different times, fundamentally changing the nature
and demands for interoperability. Again, this is not a problem
that is unique to NYU.
On the other hand, the work that NYU has accomplished in developing
its portal has given the staff broad and deep experience with front-end
applications. They have confidence that they can continue to meet
and exceed the expectations of their community.
Personnel. Challenges include finding appropriately skilled
new library staff members as well as developing and retraining
the existing staff. The differences between library and IT cultures
is also a concern. The culture of librarians with tenure may be
a barrier at a time when teamwork and the amalgamation of library,
professional, and technical cultures are necessary for success.
There is also a lingering legacy of skepticism among library staff
members, who witnessed earlier failed efforts at technology innovation.
Finally, a major issue is whether the library and the IT groups
can obtain enough financial support to build a viable program.
Conclusion
The energy in NYU's startup program is contagious. While the staff
and dean think out loud (they call it "trolling and sniffing"),
they have actually created the time needed to reflect, explore, and
shape their program while they build the infrastructure needed for
continued excellence.
University of Michigan (Ann Arbor)

University Profile
- Founded 1817
- 39,439 students
- 3,710 faculty members
- 186 bachelor's degrees; 229 master's degrees; 145 doctoral
degrees
|
Library Profile
- 7,348,360 volumes held
- $41,368,972 total annual expenditures
- 459 staff members (excludes hourly employees)
|
History
Distributed computing was emerging at Michigan in 1991 in a campus-wide
mainframe environment with a proprietary but robust operating system,
the Michigan Terminal System, that had its origins in the 1960s.
Daniel Atkins, then interim dean of the School of Engineering, and
Doug Van Houweling, vice-provost for Information Technology, became
concerned about how distributed computing would change Michigan's
information environment and whether the library could adapt to the
change.
Along with Donald Riggs, director of the University Library at
that time, the two administrators led a yearlong symposium on library
information technology and on how the library would need to transform
itself in a networked environment. In another group, which was
chaired by former University of Michigan President Robben Fleming
and included Dean Robert Warner of the School of Library and Information
Studies, Atkins, Riggs, and Van Houweling distilled the first report
into three recommendations:
- The complementary expertise of the library and the campus information
technology (IT) communities should be harnessed.
- The university should invest in visible projects to learn by
doing.
- An information community based on library principles should
be created.
Provost Gil Whitaker presented the recommendations to an enthusiastic
President James Duderstadt. Meanwhile, the authors had already decided
to take a next step: investing $375,000 to develop their ideas and
to jump-start the changes. They asked Wendy Lougee to take a one-year
leave of absence from her position as head of the graduate library
to assume responsibility for building a collaborative digital environment.
She was given independence from the library administration, a separate
budget, and an office in the graduate library. Lougee was charged
with developing projects that would test technologies and bring the
three partners together synergistically.
When Lougee began her work, the three organizations were very
different from what they are today. The Information Technology
Department (ITD) was a large organization with more than 600 full-time
employees that focused mostly on infrastructure; the School of
Library and Information Studies (SILS), under Atkins, was just
beginning to think about re-engineering itself; and the library
operated in a traditional mode.
Atkins, who had already developed close ties with a number of
publishers and foundations, especially Kellogg Foundation and the
National Science Foundation (NSF), took the lead in applying for
grant funding. He brought leading figures to Michigan to observe
the program and to engage in discussion about its future. Atkins
always included representatives from the library in these discussions
because he valued librarians' knowledge about how to organize information.
Van Houweling removed some ITD staff from day-to-day operations
and lent them to the digital effort.
A big boost to the program's credibility occurred in 1994, when
NSF, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), and
NASA awarded SILS a Digital Library1 grant. The grant supported
an investigation of agent architecture (decomposition of query
mode with various software programs) to define and develop interfaces
and an infrastructure for users and providers that would create
a comprehensive "library" environment. At this point,
the library and SILS began to work effectively together. Librarians
brought their expertise in the principles of librarianship, service
ethics, and an understanding of collections to the research team,
which included economists, psychologists, and educational researchers.
Engineers, who mostly guided the project, were somewhat dismissive
of librarians' input. Michigan's participation in the TULIP project,5 its
early JSTOR testing of 10 economic journals, and its leadership
in PEAK provided complementary research and helped infuse content
into the project.
By 1996, Lougee believed the digital library program needed dedicated
staff. Van Houweling contributed $400,000 so that Lougee could
hire IT staff; the Media Union's IT director, Randy Frank, agreed
to provide machine-room support for digital library services and
equipment up to $250,000 per year. The library also contributed
funding. The result of this financial support was the birth of
what is now called Digital Library Production Services (DLPS) and
the involvement of expert campus technologists who worked on evolving
models for storage and connectivity. (NSFnet began at the University
of Michigan.) A few years earlier, Lougee had recruited John Price
Wilkin to return to Michigan to head the Humanities Text Initiative
(HTI), and in 1996 he was appointed to head DLPS. DLPS pulled together
various activities that had hitherto been scattered across the
campus and initiated creative thinking about how to integrate a
range of projects and to build the infrastructure necessary to
do so.
In the mid-1990s, Michigan participated in or directed a number
of format-based projects: the Museum Educational Site Licensing
Project (images), HTI (encoded text), JSTOR (page-based documents),
and fledgling work with numeric data. Also during this period,
Michigan developed, with Cornell University, the Making of America
(MOA), a digital library that documents American social history
from 1850 until 1877. Michigan scanned about 1,600 monographs and
nine journals and focused on access (searchable text), while Cornell
focused on preservation (facsimiles).8
In 1995, Lougee was promoted to an assistant director of the
University Library. At this point, the digital library program
was represented through her membership on the library's administrative
team. She used financial incentives to entice library staff to
participate in the initiatives and allocated funding for staff
development in the digital arena. Lougee was also given responsibility
for selecting e-content for the library and began to work with
library selectors, vendors, and publishers. During the period of
collaboration with Atkins and Van Houweling, Lougee's independence
and role as a change agent made some in the library administration
uncomfortable. But with a different library director, William Gosling,
Lougee's new role as a high-level administrator in the library,
and increasing opportunities for staff, the digital library program
began to gain some of the recognition internally that it already
received nationally.
Abrupt Change
In fall 1995, James Duderstadt announced his resignation. A new president,
Lee Bollinger, was appointed in November 1996. He appointed Nancy
Cantor as provost. Atkins resigned as dean of the School of Information
and resumed a faculty position, and Van Houweling left Michigan to
become the president of the University Corporation for Advanced Internet
Development. Active university support for and interest in the digital
library program vanished almost overnight. However, Provost Cantor
did give the library significant unrestricted money, which enabled
Gosling to move a number of digital library staff from soft to base
funding. Within two years, the atmosphere at Michigan, along with
the priorities of the institution, had completely changed. Gone were
the days when Atkins and Van Houweling could walk in the back door
of the president's home and discuss the digital future.
While moving from a mainframe to a distributed environment, the
ITD, under Van Houweling, was still a large organization that included
telecommunications and academic and administrative computing. Jose
Marie Griffiths, who succeeded Van Houweling and also was appointed
Chief Information Officer, had both a conceptual and operational
role during her five-year tenure. She was charged by the provost
to re-conceptualize the information technology environment and
to move some operations to the schools and departments. As schools
and departments accepted responsibility for their information technology
operations, she developed a federation among information technology
staff to foster collaboration. She also had responsibility for
the operation of all centralized campus systems and the staff who
supported them. She was an advisor to the digital library program
and helped to ensure that the program's funding was strengthened
by transferring to it significant base funding from her operations.
In 2001, with Griffiths's departure, along with that of Bollinger
and Cantor, psychology professor James Hilton was appointed associate
provost for academic information. He does not hold the title or
responsibilities of a chief information officer. Hilton argues
that the pendulum has swung so far to a distributed environment
that it is likely to swing back to some centralized functions in
the future. His philosophy is that the central IT unit should provide
the core infrastructure, with the schools and colleges adding applications
on top of it. Hilton defines core services as the network, security,
and other elements that the smaller schools and colleges would
define as core.
At present, Michigan's IT environment could be described as fairly
chaotic. The institution moved suddenly from a president who was
evangelical about IT to one who seemed to believe it was tangential.
Seven years after Duderstadt's departure and the appointment and
departure of other high-level administrators, a new president will
need to address the legacy of two dramatically different approaches
to information technology.
According to Hilton, the most distinctive feature at Michigan
today may be the depth of its distributed IT environment. Like
Harvard, Michigan has considerable financial support, and the various
schools and colleges operate autonomously"tubs on their
own bottoms"as at Harvard. The IT environment is diverse,
and the individual units have few reasons to cooperate with one
another or to invest in an institutional approach. Central IT provides
services by agreement only with units that choose not to develop
their own information technology infrastructure. The challenge
is how to build collaboration in the present distributed environment.
Creating common course management tools is a special challenge,
as is bringing library resources and services easily into a Michigan
instructor's online environment.
Today
The rich collaboratory that flourished under Duderstadt diminished
with his departure. However, library funding added by former Provost
Cantor and funding transferred from Griffiths to the library have
increased the library's digital library base to $6 million. DLPS
currently supports 30 full-time equivalent positions. The School
of Information, under Dean John King, continues to support a percentage
of three digital library salaries, but at this point the school's
collaboration with the library is minimal. The digital library program
is now embedded solely in the library. At the time Lougee left Michigan
in June 2002 to become university librarian at the University of
Minnesota, her portfolio had expanded to include the Library System
Office, Desktop Support Services, Digital Library Production Services,
and the recently created Scholarly Publishing Office (SPO). She was
instrumental in overlaying a traditional library organization with
groups that deal with issues such as access to electronic resources,
networked information, e-collection, and information technology policies
and priorities.
The program itself has moved into a production phase. No longer
do staff members encode every text; instead, DLPS has built a core
infrastructure with a framework of minimal encoding that can be
supported across media. They have defined various object classes
and produced several interchange formats that enable them to leverage
similar functionality across corpora.
With digital preservation now the policy in the library, DLPS
has responsibility for digitizing books for preservation purposes.
Specific collections are not targeted; instead, preservation staff
select titles to be digitized using the condition of the object
as the measure. In cases where the books are disbound (and sometimes
even when they are not), the book is not recreated in paper, rebound,
and returned to the shelf or even returned to the shelf after digitizing;
instead, it is available only online. Selecting materials for this
growing database of digitally reformatted content, for the most
part, takes place at some distance from the scholarly community.
The chief purposes of the SPO are to increase interaction with
the faculty and to experiment with new publishing models. The SPO
aids faculty authors in finding alternative venues for publishing.
It also works with small society or university presses to migrate
existing print publications to digital. The office specializes
in creating born-digital publications and in developing and enhancing
electronic versions of conventional print publications. It also
helps develop mechanisms for publication and distribution of scholarly
digital research projects.
Finally, the digital program sells memberships to other libraries
to its search engine and middleware so that they can develop their
digital library collections. This Digital Library Extension Service
offers members a suite of tools for mounting collections, including
text, images, bibliographic data, and finding aids. Training workshops
and e-mail support are provided with membership, which has expanded
to 27 institutions worldwide.
Conclusion
The history of the University of Michigan's digital library program
is extraordinary in nearly every way. Its beginnings document what
can only be called planets in alignment: a visionary president who
contributed funding and nurtured an experimental environment and
administrators who encouraged collaboration across the academic community.
Michigan's digital library program, while still supported magnificently,
is now a library-based program that is focused primarily on reformatting
and providing services to other libraries and organizations. Changing
leadership at the university level has forced changes in the digital
library program. With the departure of Lougee, the last of the adventurers
from the Duderstadt period, it will be interesting to track how Michigan's
program evolves in the next years.
People Interviewed
The authors met with William Gosling, director of the University
Library; Wendy Lougee, associate director for Digital Library Services;
John Price Wilkin, head of the DLPS; Christie Stephenson, assistant
head of the DLPS; Christina Powell, coordinator of Encoded Text Services;
Maria Bonn, head of the SPO; James Hilton, associate provost for
academic information and instructional technology affairs; Daniel
Atkins, former dean of the School of Information, now director, Alliance
for Community Technology and professor of electrical engineering
and computer science; and Doug Van Houweling, former vice-provost
of information technology and now president and chief executive officer,
University Corporation for Advanced Internet Development (Internet2).
University of Virginia (Charlottesville)

University Profile
- Founded by Thomas Jefferson in 1819
- 18,848 students
- 1,904 faculty members (including clinical faculty)
- 44 bachelor's degrees; 63 master's degrees; 54 doctoral
degrees
|
Library Profile
- 4,678,553 volumes held
- $25,844,109 total annual expenditures
- 298 staff members (excludes hourly employees)
|
History
In the early 1990s, the University of Virginia (UVA) libraries were
largely traditional in their services and thinking. Kendon Stubbs,
a visionary and long-time UVA library administrator, began scanning
the horizon looking for trends and markers that could point to future
directions that the library needed to consider. He encouraged interested
colleagues in the library and the university to talk about the future.
Stubbs realized that the impact of technology on the academy would
create fundamental changes within the library. As a bold first step,
he appointed David Seaman,9 then an English
Department graduate student, to establish an Electronic Text Center
in Alderman Library. The center opened in 1992. Since then, it has
sought to build and maintain an Internet-accessible collection of
SGML texts and images and to establish user communities adept at
the creation and use of these materials.
Therein lies the heart and soul of Virginia's digital library
program: it is focused on the scholar. The center's goal was to
encourage e-text creation within the scholarly community, and it
structured its work around faculty interests, using scholars and
graduate students to help select and encode the texts. The staff
of the Electronic Text Center are direct links to the faculty and
have work spaces in areas of the library where faculty can find
them easily. Early on, their efforts "created a buzz," even
though the first projects were opportunistic. Seaman contacted
high-profile faculty and persuaded them to use electronic materials
and to spread the news across the campus. From 1993 until 1997,
the center taught many faculty members how to create searchable
texts. Seaman characterizes this service as a "big honey pota
real attraction for the library." But, at that point (as now)
faculty interested in using electronic resources were outnumbered
by those who either were not interested or who actively defended
traditional library services.
At the same time the Electronic Text Center was being set up,
the Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities (IATH)
was being created for faculty. Stubbs made sure that IATH in effect "grew
up in the library," where it now supports a full-time staff
of nine. In addition to staff, two fellows in residence and nearly
two dozen other fellows have active research projects, several
of which have their homes in the Alderman Library. Having IATH
located in the library enabled the library to enrich its experimentation
with faculty-led production and use of electronic resources. Through
the University's support for IATH, the library, which is usually
short on resources, receives an infusion of benefits.
University Librarian Karin Wittenborg recalls that during the
early years of digital library development, she worked hard to
elicit the support of the deans. The university president, an advocate
of the library generally, did not climb aboard the digital library
effort until he visited the Electronic Text Center and learned
what was being done there. Fortuitously, Martha Blodgett was the
successful candidate in a national search for the position of associate
university librarian for information technology. Blodgett had been
at UVA in the campus Information Technology and Communication (ITC)
Department. Since her appointment in the library, she has been
instrumental in fostering collaboration between ITC and the library.
The Instructional Toolkit, a project Blodgett headed while in ITC,
is an example of an ITC service that had not previously interested
the library, even though the toolkit included a module for "library
resources." The toolkit provides the resources to create,
distribute via the Web, and manage instructors' online course packets.
Once in the library, Blodgett was able to identify electronic reserves
as a potential toolkit use that fit with library priorities. Now,
80 percent of the faculty members have toolkit pages, and the library
receives regular accolades from the faculty for the range of scanning
and toolkit support services it offers. At first, Wittenborg notes,
the students were not a driving force in the digital program, but
now she can count on them to push new technology developments.
One of the interesting aspects of Virginia's human resources
environment is flexibility, both in the use of space and in staff
assignments. Instead of building a production facility outside
the library organization, the program at Virginia has worked within
the organization from the start. To provide space for IATH and
the Electronic Text Center, staff were, as Wittenborg put it, "clumped." Those
doing traditional work who occupied prime space were moved to less
publicly accessible spaces. As the success of the program grew,
the staff members who were physically displaced, along with others,
could and did take credit for that success. It is useful to note
that librarians at Virginia do not have tenure or teaching faculty
status, even though they are included in the category of "general
faculty." Instead, they have three-year appointments that
are renewable. The basic requirement for a librarian position is
a master of library science degree or some other relevant master's
degree. The staff is not unionized. These qualities maximize the
library's flexibility in appointing and reassigning staff. In addition,
for the past 10 years, staff members have been encouraged to spend
10 to 20 hours a week working in units outside their own. As the
digital centers evolved, staff members from all parts of the library
participated through this "staff-sharing" program. Ideas
hatched and skills acquired were brought back to home units. Also,
subject selectors were required to develop Web pages for the academic
departments that they serve, thereby giving them firsthand experience
with creating an online resource. Flexibility is also evident in
the higher administration. Wittenborg described a time when the
library had no funds and appealed to the provost to make a critical
hire. Her request was approved within a day.
Now and the Future
The fluidity within the library has nurtured interdisciplinary collaboration
among the faculty members. Where they used to retreat to their studies,
faculty members now confer with one another in the library in collaboratory
settings. These spaces have been cobbled together, not through renovation
dollars but because of an entrepreneurial spirit. The library supplies
physical space, equipment, and large-scale support for almost any
kind of digitizing operation, including support for grant-funded
and other faculty research projects. The digital future, including
the development of digital collections and any new services, is closely
linked to faculty needs.
In its early stages, the library made a commitment to purchasing
e-resources with a view to developing a critical massor,
in David Seaman's words, "enough stuff to make it interesting." The
library also made a commitment to integrate e-resources in the
catalogwherever there is both a print and an electronic version,
the catalog employs a single record. In recent years, the library
has created a digital content fund, that is, an allocation from
the acquisitions budget that is targeted to specific nonbibliographic
digital content, full-text, image, or statistical or other data.
That funding is provided for one-time purchases and for subscriptions
for up to three years, at which time each subscription is evaluated
for continuing support within the regular acquisitions budget.
This transitional mode helps subject librarians think about how
to use collections funds for both digital and traditional materials.
As for e-resources, Virginia has purchased fewer than the median
of Association of Research Libraries (ARL) until recently, when
the library set a goal to be in the top quarter of all ARL libraries.
To move this successful program further into the future, Wittenborg
and the associate library directors have initiated the development
of the "library of tomorrow," which seeks to blend digital
and traditional library services. In beginning this project, the
library formed five planning teams to explore issues and to make
recommendations. The library administration expected to have about
five volunteers for each team, but when they sent out a call for
participation, they received requests from more than 80 staff members,
or a third of the staff. As a result, each of the five planning
teams had more than 15 members. Documents were posted electronically
as they emerged. Thus far, groups have recommended a digital library
production services unit and more emphasis on digital library research
and development.
The central production service, established in August 2001, is
the vehicle for library-initiated digital production. The staff
is deciding what to digitize and what to purchase in all the formats.
There is some tension between the centers and the central production
unit over roles and responsibilities, but this conflict will likely
be worked out in time. The second recommendation has resulted in
a prototype digital repository using FEDORA built in collaboration
with the Computer Science Department at Cornell University and
funded by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation (Payette et al. 1999).
The dual emphases of the digital program are (1) to serve as
a central repository and a production unit, both of which leverage
and support the work of what are now three digital centers (e-text,
geostat, and digital media); and (2) to build a set of robust services
for the faculty through information communities.
Conclusion
The relatively small size of the University of Virginia and the physical
environment of the campus have contributed to the success of this
program, which is tailored to the research and teaching needs of
the faculty. With the library sharing its spaces with scholars and
concentrating on their continued active involvement, this program
emerges as a fine example of an integrated, holistic approach to
building a digital library.
The library is contending with a number of challenges. These
include the integration of different formats (e.g., text, images,
GIS) that will be archived in the repository. It will be a challenge
to manage content and to deliver it into different and often unimaginable
service environments. A further challenge is to identify what higher-level
services should be built. In this respect, Virginia's strength
is in its centers, where strong relationships with faculty, and
hence a good understanding of future needs, have been developed.
Without much additional funding from the university, the library
at Virginia has reallocated and redistributed its own resources,
has been enormously successful at obtaining grants, and has built
what may be the only deeply scholar-centered digital library program
in the country.
People Interviewed
Karin Wittenborg, university librarian; Kendon Stubbs, deputy university
librarian; Martha Blodgett, associate university librarian for information
technology; Diane Walker, associate university librarian for user
services; Thornton Staples, director, digital library research and
development; David Seaman, director, Electronic Text Center; Melinda
Baumann, director, digital library production services; James Campbell,
director, Internet access services; Michael Furlough, director, Geospatial
and Statistical Data Center; Anne Whiteside, fine arts librarian;
Judith Thomas; director, Robertson Media Center; and Benjamin Ray
and David Germano, faculty members in the Department of Religious
Studies who use technology in their research and teaching.

1 Outside Harvard, ETOB is called Responsibility
(Revenue or Value) Center Management (RCM) and has been adopted by
numerous large universities, including the University of Pennsylvania,
University of Southern California, University of Minnesota, and Indiana
University. The opposite approach to the traditional centralized
or general funding concept, RCM makes each academic unit responsible
for generating its own income through tuition and other revenue and
for managing its own expenditures. In RCM, libraries can be funded
by the academic units as a common good or remain a separately "funded
off the top" entity.
2 Flecker was influenced strongly by Robert Kahn's
and Robert Wilensky's seminal article, A Framework for Distributed
Digital Object Services (May 1995). Available at: http://www.cnri.reston.va.us/k-w.html.
3 This situation somewhat parallels that at the
University of Michigan, where the School of Information is heavily
involved in digital library research, but its partnerships with
the library have diminished in the past few years.
4 The IU libraries are a partner with Stanford
University Libraries in building a production system for LOCKSS
(Lots of Copies Keep Stuff Safe), a way to archive electronic journals.
Funded by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the National Science
Foundation, and Sun Microsystems, the IU libraries IT unit is creating
software to manage the archived electronic journals within library
operations.
5 TULIP (The University Licensing Program) was
a collaborative project (19911995) of Elsevier Science and
nine American universities, including the University of Michigan,
to test systems for networked delivery to and use of journals at
the user's desktop. For more information, see http://www.elsevier.nl/homepage/about/resproj/trmenu.htm.
6 PEAK (Pricing Electronic Access to Knowledge)
was a collaboration between Elsevier Science and the University
of Michigan (19971999) that explored pricing and delivery
alternatives for more than 1,100 Elsevier science journals. PEAK
gave Michigan experience with large document stores and enabled
staff to develop expertise quickly. The final report on the PEAK
experiment is found at: http://www.dlib.org/dlib/june99/06bonn.html.
7 The Media Union offers traditional and digital
library resources, while also supporting high-performance computing,
virtual reality, and multimedia experimentation.
8 A second phase of Michigan's MOA, also funded
by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, focused on documenting the
methods and economics of digitization but also produced nearly
10,000 additional digitized volumes for Michigan.
9 David Seaman left the University of Virginia
in July 2002 to become director of the Digital Library Federation.

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