Teaching and Learning via the Network
The Gateway to Information
Project Number 15 - 1993
Fred Roecker
User Education Librarian
The Ohio State University
326 Main Library
1858 Neil Ave. Mall
Columbus, OH 43210-1286
(614) 292-6151
Fax: (614) 292-7859
roecker.1@osu.edu
Other Individuals And Organizations Associated With The Project
Abstract
The Gateway to Information is designed to assist library novice users
define their information needs, then easily find, evaluate, and select the
most relevant materials regardless of format in the Ohio State University
Libraries (OSUL). The Gateway provides help developing research strategies
and enables individuals to become independent users of information. The goal
of The Gateway is to improve students' satisfaction and success using the
resources of The Ohio State University.
The Gateway provides pathways to 18 CD-ROMs, the online catalog
(LCS, Library Control System), and hundreds of encyclopedias, periodical
indexes, biographical, statistical, and review materials. Source cards list
the title, call number, years of coverage, abstract of contents, and location
in the OSUL, as well as floorplans, campus maps, library addresses,
collection profiles and hours.
The Gateway needs no information handouts, directions, workshops, or
staff intervention.
Gateway takes users far beyond the online catalog, providing
instruction and guidance in identifying which materials likely will best meet
their needs, where the materials are, and how to evaluate and use them.
Custom front-ends for each electronic resource eliminate the need for users
to learn the separate commands for each database. All databases from any
vendor are searched with the same commands and display information in the
same user-friendly layout.
The Gateway also provides access to the OhioLINK central
databases and catalog located in Dayton, Ohio. Access to other internet
resources and catalogs will be made available through The Gateway as user
demand grows. Thus, The Gateway is the foundation for even novice users to
successfully move through remote electronic resources. The Gateway brings the
future of information access to students and faculty...today.
The Gateway and The Coalition Project Proposals
The Gateway directly addresses the needs of library users
overwhelmed by the available electronic and print resources available in the
modern library.
The Gateway was developed with grant monies only, showing how
projects can succeed with only small amounts of funding. It has been
incorporated into all 26 OSU Libraries, in heavy demand by undergraduate,
graduate, and faculty. Librarians have created advanced pathways for The
Gateway to highlight their resources in Business, Communication, Latin
American Studies, and Women Studies to point out relevant materials in
subject fields and answer advance research inqueries when librarians are
unavailable.
The Gateway is internationally recognized as the information
access resource of today by libraries in Switzerland, Israel, Puerto Rico,
France, South Africa, Canada and others. Harvard, Stanford, University of
Arizona, Univ. of Michigan, Duke, and many others have expressed interest in
purchasing The Gateway, recognizing that The Gateway allows users to become
successful independent information users without workshops, flyers, or staff
help. The Gateway has been successfully transferred to Univ. of Cincinnati
and will be featured at EDUCOM 1993. OSUL is also working with Univ. of
Michigan and Duke to make The Gateway available on their campuses as well.
The Columbus Public Library and INFOhio (the K-12 linking of 26 school
libraries) also want The Gateway.It is an answer to their shrinking budgets,
shortened library hours, limited reference help and workshops.
A VT100 version is being completed that will operate on any
terminal from labs, dorms, offices, and homes. This version will be easily
customized using our unique programming tool, allowing staff with only
limited computer to highlight collections and create pathways for any
institution. This version will later have a graphical user interface to
allow Macintosh, Windows and other interfaces to be displayed remotely in the
design of Z39.50.
The Gateway also accesses the OhioLINK catalog and databases
located in Dayton, Ohio, and could easily provide pathways and front ends to
any internet resource as users demand these resources. Interlibrary loan,
remote catalog searching, NREN access, gopher use...anything on the internet
is potentially accessable and easily used by The Gateway.
Audio-visual requirements
(Mac version at OSUL)
Macintosh SI or better, B & W monitor, 80M fixed disk, 4MB memory
HyperCard 2.0
MitemView
MacTCP
Mac System 6
EtherTalk card
Direct access to the Internet (can be done with modem, but slower)
(VT100 version)
Any computer with VT100 capability
B & W monitor
Direct access to the Internet (can be done with modem, but it's slow)
Overhead projector
LED display unit