I sat calmly, I listened
attentively, I followed with kiln interest, and I knew the unknown – the eBooks.
This is what happened when a guest lecturer, Ms. Renee Reagon, Director of Technical Services and
Electronic Resources Management at Stellenbosch University made
a presentation on eBooks on Tuesday, 13th March, 2013 at the University of
Western Cape.
By critically analyzing
the rich content of a well prepared and logically delivered lecture by a well
knowledgeable library professional, I join the other experts
who are advocating for the full adoption of eBook technology to effectively
meet the information needs of our library and information centers clients.
The presentation enlightened
me on several eBook issues with the major ones being opportunities and challenge;
coincidentally, this was also the title of the lecture.
Being efficient,
effective and convenient, coupled with advanced, sophisticated, user friendly and
customizable soft wares and platforms, I find the eBook technology as an
innovation that has a potential to make the job of a librarian easier, pleasant
and inspirational. With the advocate for virtual libraries reaching a center
stage, the eBook technology fits well because the books will no longer be
housed and locked in a building limiting access to information seekers. For
academic libraries, students will no longer scramble for most valuable books as
they can access them anytime.
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| Picture courtesy of Technical Services and Electronic Resources Management: Stllenbonch University. |
An early bird catches the worm.
The picture shows Stellenbosch University students at the library
entrance waiting for the library to open so that they can scrable for the most valuable book in the library. The eBook technology is being touted to be a solution to such
a problem.
However, I would like
to warn librarians about some risks associated with the eBook technology. Not all books are released in digital format
upon their release, a situation that may deny library users an access to latest
books. Concerns on Digital Rights Management
and ownership issues need an urgent attention before we can fully adopt this
technology.
As a lecturer at the
only library school in Malawi, I am convinced that I have to liaise with colleagues
in the department to incorporate the eBook concept either as a course or as a
topic in one of the courses.

i think you are right Winner. we will have to incorporate it as a topic in one of the courses but not as a course on its own
ReplyDeleteThis should be a topic within the modules the school offfers not a course.
ReplyDeleteInteresting indees
ReplyDelete