Julie and Jodie, thanks so much for the information.  I'll look into the 
alternatives you mentioned.

Cheers,

Matt

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jodie Borgerding
Sent: Tuesday, November 06, 2012 12:05 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Videolib] Question about Rosetta Stone

I just want to echo the same sentiments as Julie. After getting burned on the 
technical issues of the individual Rosetta Stone software titles, we looked 
into getting an electronic subscription. They gave us a quote of something like 
$200/subscription for 250 - 500 people in which 1 person = 1 subscription. And 
these are individual subscriptions, not simultaneous users so technically only 
500 students/faculty/staff from our entire university population (21K+ 
worldwide) would be able to use the electronic subscription. Not worth 
$100,000. We ended up going with Mango Languages and our users really like it.

Jodie

________________________________________
 
Jodie L. Borgerding, M.L.S.
Instruction and Liaison Librarian
Emerson Library
Webster University
470 E. Lockwood
St. Louis, MO  63119
(314) 246-7819
[email protected]
http://libguides.webster.edu/soc
http://libguides.webster.edu/religion
http://libguides.webster.edu/zombies 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Julie Evershed
Sent: Tuesday, November 06, 2012 10:38 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Videolib] Question about Rosetta Stone

We too get many requests for Rosetta Stone. There are a variety of reason we 
don't purchase it, the primary one being the exorbitant cost (you cannot 
purchase the individual kits for circulation -it is too difficult technically 
to uninstall, reinstall...). However, we have tried out Tell Me More, and are 
currently piloting a subscription of Livemocha. Yabla is not as interactive, 
and offers fewer languages, but it a nice product as well.
My patrons seem satisfied with these alternatives.

Julie
--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Julie Evershed, Director
Language Resource Center
University of Michigan
North Quad
105 South State Street, #1195
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1285
phone: (734)764-0424
www.umich.edu/~langres/


On Mon, Nov 5, 2012 at 4:01 PM, Ball, James (jmb4aw) 
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi All,
>
>
>
> Every now and then I get requests for Rosetta Stone language learning 
> products.  Does anyone by that, and if so what are the pros and cons?  
> I usually buy Pimsleur, but students are telling me that like the
interactive
> part of Rosetta Stone.
>
>
>
> Cheers,
>
>
>
> Matt
>
>
>
> ______________________________
>
> Matt Ball
>
> Media and Collections Librarian
>
> Clemons Library
>
> University of Virginia
>
> [email protected]
>
> 434-924-3812
>
>
>
>
> VIDEOLIB is intended to encourage the broad and lively discussion of
issues
> relating to the selection, evaluation, acquisition,bibliographic 
> control, preservation, and use of current and evolving video formats 
> in libraries
and
> related institutions. It is hoped that the list will serve as an 
> effective working tool for video librarians, as well as a channel of 
> communication between libraries,educational institutions, and video 
> producers and distributors.
>

VIDEOLIB is intended to encourage the broad and lively discussion of issues 
relating to the selection, evaluation, acquisition,bibliographic control, 
preservation, and use of current and evolving video formats in libraries and 
related institutions. It is hoped that the list will serve as an effective 
working tool for video librarians, as well as a channel of communication 
between libraries,educational institutions, and video producers and 
distributors.




VIDEOLIB is intended to encourage the broad and lively discussion of issues 
relating to the selection, evaluation, acquisition,bibliographic control, 
preservation, and use of current and evolving video formats in libraries and 
related institutions. It is hoped that the list will serve as an effective 
working tool for video librarians, as well as a channel of communication 
between libraries,educational institutions, and video producers and 
distributors.

VIDEOLIB is intended to encourage the broad and lively discussion of issues 
relating to the selection, evaluation, acquisition,bibliographic control, 
preservation, and use of current and evolving video formats in libraries and 
related institutions. It is hoped that the list will serve as an effective 
working tool for video librarians, as well as a channel of communication 
between libraries,educational institutions, and video producers and 
distributors.

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