The unweildy and replete nature added to the ripple-effect of the Internet Resources
calls for modern information-management skills to classify, filter and group the
authentic sources so as to develop Subject Gateways. A suject gateway may generally
be defined:
A Web-based mechanism for accessing of high quality, evaluated resources
identified to support research/study in a particular subject discipline. How to
ensure high quality: It is suggested that for information gateway a high quality
Internet resource is one that meets the information needs of the user.
It may not be possible for Librarian alone to develop subject gateways without minimalizing
the coordination and advisory role of subject experts. But he could stack up all
existing subject gateways for the benefit of scholar community. Librarians should
take up this task as a self-rewarding one. Best practices for managing e-resources
are critical--two decades after the advent of electronic journals and databases,
librarians are still grappling with how to effectively manage these resources in
conjunction with their print resources. Now e-books have become yet another stream
of purchasing and management, while economic pressures mean that librarians have
to justify every penny spent on collections and resource development.
As libraries build ever-larger collections of electronic resources, finding ways
to manage them efficiently becomes a major challenge. The number of electronic journals,
citation databases, and full-text aggregations held by most libraries has grown
rapidly. Managing these electronic resources involves providing the library's user
with convenient ways to find and access them and providing library staff with the
tools to keep track of them.
Libraries subscribe to electronic content in a number of different ways. Some publishers
offer packages that include many electronic journals, some products may include
electronic journals from many different publishers, and libraries acquire some electronic
journals individually. Abstracting-and-indexing (A&I) products include citations
to articles in journals from many different publishers. And since not everything
is in electronic form, print resources cannot be neglected.
But that doesn't mean we shouldn't recognize the importance of this format or the
benefits of it's use. It's also important we recognize that slowly but surely our
trusted print standbys are being eked out by their cheaper (and arguably more convenient)
electronic counterparts, whether we like it or not.