Hi Robert,

At our library (Raritan Valley Community College in NJ), this work is sort of 
divided between two of us, and I just started here this semester, so I may not 
have all the answers in terms of why we made certain decisions.

RVCC migrated to WMS in the summer of 2017, which uses OCLC's Discovery as its 
OPAC/discovery service. However, we were already using EDS as our discovery 
service, so Discovery is primarily used as a catalog.

In EDS, we include most of our database content. This includes EBSCO, ProQuest, 
Gale, and Infobase databases, plus some others from providers like 
Artstor/JSTOR. However, some of the databases don't seem to work as well. We 
basically never get an Artstor result when searching in EDS, and I've heard 
streaming video from AVON doesn't work great either. Some we do not have 
selected include Films Media Group (Films on Demand I believe). This is because 
it is not available as a "partner database." Some of the databases we do have 
selected (ProQuest ones for example) are also not partner databases, so they 
rely on the link resolver for discovery, and EBSCO's list of what ProQuest has 
is not always accurate. So, it is intended to be nearly comprehensive, and 
those that were left out were more for technical reasons than any sort of 
principle. 

In Discovery, we include just ebook and some streaming video databases, since 
that's where students are looking for books and movies. 

We have not intentionally included large quantities of non-full-text, just what 
is included in the databases that also contain full text. However, I just heard 
from my colleague that in EDS she has the "Complementary Index" turned on, 
mostly because that's what EBSCO suggested she do. For us, much of what they 
have indexed is not available in any of the databases we subscribe to.

For OA in EDS, we have DOAJ selected. In Discovery, we have the Open Textbook 
Library selected. We purposefully chose to only include these because we did 
not want to overwhelm our students. However, we are considering making a custom 
search box for faculty in our OER LibGuide that uses Discovery but searches 
libraries worldwide for OA resources. The "search box generator" is something 
you can do in Discovery where you can select particular databases or content 
types as essentially forced facets.

If we ever move away from EDS and use Discovery as a full-fledged discovery 
service, I'd like to see what it can do in terms of only searching particular 
groups of databases. For example, creating a custom search box for a Psychology 
LibGuide that only searches Gale Psychology Collection, Psychology Database, 
ScienceDirect, Academic Search Premier, etc. based on what we think return the 
best results.

As far as branding, EDS is "RVOneSearch," and is the only search box available 
on the library homepage (a LibGuide page). Discovery is available by clicking a 
large button called "Books & Media" that is basically right next to 
RVOneSearch. We teach RVOneSearch in Info Lit Instruction for English I and II 
(although in II we also do more with individual databases I believe). This is 
primarily because students already have enough difficulty selecting keywords 
and evaluating results, so we do not want to add another layer to their 
research process by requiring them to select a relevant database.

Janelle

Janelle M. Bitter, MSLIS, MM
Systems and Technical Services Librarian
Evelyn S. Field Library
Raritan Valley Community College
On campus: x8329 
Off campus: 908-648-8500
[email protected]


-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Robert Heaton
Sent: Monday, December 17, 2018 5:26 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [CODE4LIB] content included in discovery service: comprehensiveness 
and inclusion of non-full-text and OA resources

** Cross-posting on ALCTS-COLLDV, SERIALST, and CODE4LIB, hoping to catch 
different audiences **

Dear colleagues,

We are experimenting with the setup of non-catalog (i.e., central index) 
results in our discovery service and would like to know what other libraries 
have done with regard to some aspects of such setup:

First, have you been comprehensive or selective with the resources indexed? In 
other words, do you treat it as a search across (almost) all your resources, or 
as a quick search that offers some useful results across most disciplines but 
doesn't intend to be comprehensive

Second, have you included large quantities of non-full-text resources? That is, 
if you have the option in your discovery system to include indexing from 
something like PsycINFO or Scopus, do you include it? If so, do you include 
many of these, or only, say, one large one? (I understand that almost all 
databases have some records where the full text is not immediately attached, 
but this is quite different from a non-full-text database.)

Third, have you deliberately and specifically included Open Access resources in 
your discovery service? These might be through "standard" collections such as 
from the DOAJ, HathiTrust, Digital Commons, or arXiv, or they might be through 
a la carte collections as packaged by your discovery-service provider.

With all this, I am also very interested in whether you have specific data to 
justify your decisions or whether they were made more on the basis of 
principle. (Then of course there such issues as how you brand it on your 
website, how you contextualize the different search options, and whether and 
how you teach the tool, but I have to stop somewhere.)

I've struggled to find literature on the content libraries include in their 
discovery services. Quick answers are better than none. Thanks for any help you 
can give.


Robert Heaton
Collection Management Librarian
Utah State University Libraries

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