Evidence Summary
Open Access
Complements Interlibrary Loan Services, but Additional User Education is Needed
A Review of:
Baich, T. (2015).
Open access: Help or hindrance to resource sharing? Interlending & Document Supply, 43(2), 68-75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ILDS-01-2015-0003
Reviewed by:
Richard
Hayman
Assistant
Professor & Digital Initiatives Librarian
Mount
Royal University
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Email: rhayman@mtroyal.ca
Received: 29 Nov. 2015 Accepted: 18 Jan.
2015
2016 Hayman.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative
Commons‐Attribution‐Noncommercial‐Share Alike License 4.0
International (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/),
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium,
provided the original work is properly attributed, not used for commercial
purposes, and, if transformed, the resulting work is redistributed under the
same or similar license to this one.
Abstract
Objective – To
examine interlibrary loan (ILL) request rates for open access (OA) materials
and determine how OA may affect resource sharing. This research updates the
author’s previous study.
Design – Quantitative
analysis.
Setting – A
large, urban, public research university library system in the United States of
America.
Subjects –
1,557 open access ILL material requests among 23,531 total ILL requests
submitted during the 2012 and 2013 fiscal years (July 2011-June 2013).
Methods – The
library has tracked and recorded OA requests that appear among ILL material
requests since 2009. Using OCLC’s ILLiad software to manage ILL requests, they
have implemented two custom routines. One routine is for open access searching
on standard items, and uses software plugins to search across various open
resources. All materials published prior to 1923 are treated as being in the
public domain, so requests for these materials are automatically routed to this
queue. The second custom routine is used for searching for OA electronic theses
and dissertations, and is employed when the requested resource is not found in
the library’s subscription resources. Other article requests are routed to the
RapidILL service for open access availability.
Main Results – The
research presented reveals that ILL requests for OA materials exhibited a
steady increase year over year, while overall ILL requests decreased slightly.
This finding is true both for the fiscal years reported in this study and also
the years since the author’s original study in 2011 (Baich, 2012). Of the 1,557
OA requests examined, 72% (n=1,135) were for journal articles, 8% (n=125) were
for books or book chapters, 9% (n=140) were for theses or dissertations, 3%
(n=54) were for conference papers, and 7% (n=105) were for reports.
Library staff typically fill these article
requests using gold OA or green OA sources. The researcher notes the difficulty
in refining by source, though confirmed that 15% of articles requested (n=170)
were filled using a gold OA source, and that another 30 article requests
(~2.6%) were filled with materials available in the public domain. This leads
to the conclusion that the majority of article requests are filled using green
OA sources. As the library also includes OA collections within its electronic
resources, staff filled 13% of ILL article requests (n=152) using journals and
repositories from these sources. Another 16% of article requests were filled
using a combination of various online open repositories, including subject
repositories (n=83), institutional repositories (n=84), or national or
consortial repositories (n=16).
The author includes a similar breakdown of
fulfillment rates and sources for the other main categories explored – books
and book chapters, theses and dissertations, conference papers, and reports –
representing a combined 27% of all OA ILL requests. Regarding this content, it
is noteworthy that overall open access requests for these material categories
has dropped across each category when compared to the author’s previous study,
with the exception of report requests, which more than doubled compared to that
previous study.
The study includes a brief overview of the
user status for users making the various open access requests, with
undergraduate students (n=283) and graduate students (n=807) combined making
70% of all requests. Subject areas are also briefly examined, with ILL requests
coming from 63 different schools or departments across the library system. The
top 15 are reported, with Psychology being the top requester (n=198), followed
closely by Engineering & Technology (n=182). The author notes that 7 of the
top 15 are STEM or health science disciplines.
Conclusion – The
rate of ILL requests for OA materials shows that library users continue to struggle
with information retrieval. The researcher concludes that in many cases, making
an ILL request is easier for the user than completing a thorough search. Since
staff resources are being redirected to fill user requests for materials that
are readily available through open access, this use of staff time may have
impacts on resource sharing and the library’s ability to fill ILL requests. The
author identifies benefits of using OA resources, including an increased
ability of staff to fulfill ILL requests, especially when providing grey
literature, theses and dissertations, and conference papers and reports.
Another identified benefit was the decreased turnaround time for securing
materials, with immediate availability via OA saving 1.15 days to deliver materials
to the user. Finally, the library estimates cost savings of over $27,000 (USD),
based on estimated traditional per unit ILL costs.
Commentary
This research reinforces the need for
additional user training around locating OA materials. In particular, the
results reveal that information literacy education that includes the use of
open access materials might be of particular use to undergraduate or graduate
students, especially since the majority of OA ILL requests identified in this
study came from those user groups. Keane (2012) revealed that while
approximately 70% of surveyed academic librarians believe it is important to
educate students about OA, nearly 60% of respondents indicated their
institutions “do not do any promotion, much less education” around OA (p. 348).
More recently, Allen and Weber (2014) identified the need for instruction
librarians to teach open access searching just as they teach traditional
library search sources. The researcher does indicate that ILL practitioners may
have a role to play in enhancing instruction efforts that improve user skills
for finding OA materials.
Much of this report is dedicated to
explaining operational considerations and workflow processes aligned for the
library setting. This information might be significant for understanding
project background, but does not contribute much to the overall discussion of
the research. Moving beyond these sections reveals insights that make the study
useful. Using Glynn’s (2006) critical appraisal tool to test for validity, the
use of a large, localized dataset is appropriate for this study’s outcomes, as
are the inclusion criteria and overall methods used. It is worth noting that
the data collection relies on the library’s vendor products and applications
alongside locally customized ILL routines, potentially limiting the opportunity
for other institutions to conduct similar research using their own ILL request
data, at least not without some modification to the methods. The study is
strengthened by the author’s previous research, allowing for the use of a
previously tested method and for an informed comparative analysis.
This research has implications for
understanding and enhancing a library’s ILL user services and overall customer
service goals. Filling requests for OA materials using ILL staff may seem a
misallocation of resources, but the opportunity to assist users with their
information needs, and in a timely manner compared to traditional ILL, has a
direct benefit for the user and indirectly may benefit the library’s image as
being helpful and user-focused. Until such time as users are knowledgeable
about finding and accessing OA materials, to the point where ILL requests for
OA sources significantly decline, individual libraries can use this research to
help determine whether the benefits to end-users outweigh the potential local
resource impacts. There is opportunity for future and ongoing research to
understand trends and developments regarding OA material ILL requests, user
satisfaction, and budget and resource sharing, as well as room for research on
improving user OA search skills and the resulting impact on ILL and document
delivery services.
References
Allen, E. J., & Weber, R. K. (2014). The library
and the web: Graduate students' selection of open access journals for empirical
literature searches. Journal of Web Librarianship, 8(3),
243-262. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19322909.2014.927745
Baich, T.
(2012). Opening interlibrary loan to open access. Interlending & Document Supply, 40(1), 55-60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/02641611211214305
Glynn, L. (2006). A critical appraisal tool for library and
information research. Library Hi Tech, 24(3), 387-399. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/07378830610692154
Keane, E. P. (2012). Librarian viewpoints on teaching open access publishing principles to college students. Serials Librarian, 63(3-4), 333-349. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0361526X.2012.724377