C&RL News December 2019 600

N e w s  f r o m  t h e  F i e l dDavid Free

UNC-Chapel Hill, SAGE announce OA 
agreement
The University of North Carolina (UNC)-
Chapel Hill University Libraries and SAGE 
Publishing will enter into a pilot agreement 
enabling researchers at UNC-Chapel Hill to 
publish open access articles in SAGE jour-
nals at no cost to the researcher. 

Under the agreement, part of the sub-
scription fees that the library will pay for 
SAGE content beginning in 2020 will cover 
the costs of open access publishing for a 
number of UNC-Chapel Hill authors in SAGE 
publications. This comes at no additional 
cost to the library and will preserve ac-
cess to all content that the library currently 
licenses from SAGE. Articles covered by 
this agreement will be fully open and will 
also undergo the same peer review and 
editing process as other scholarly articles 
from SAGE.

The pilot agreement will also allow UNC-
affiliated SAGE authors to deposit copies 
of their articles in the Carolina Digital Re-
pository. The repository is an open access 
home that the library operates to preserve 
and share work produced at the university.

OpenAthens, Yewno begin strategic 
partnership to facilitate knowledge 
discovery
Global identity and access management 
specialist OpenAthens and Yewno, a Sili-
con Valley-based artificial intelligence pro-
vider with a mission to transform infor-
mation into knowledge, have announced 
a strategic partnership to provide mutual 
users with unparalleled access to knowl-
edge discovery. Committed to empower-
ing library users spanning a wide range of 
industries, OpenAthens ensures institutions 
can provide quick, easy, and secure access 
to online resources. 

Through the partnership, universities and 
other institutions using OpenAthens’ single 
sign-on solutions will now be able to offer 

Yewno Discover online without the need 
for separate login credentials, improving 
end-users’ experience. 

Yewno Discover is a research tool that 
helps students, researchers, and educators 
surface relevant scholarly content and make 
connections across interdisciplinary fields. 
Powered by artificial intelligence, Yewno 
Discover reads and stores full-text content 
and displays it in a visually intuitive knowl-
edge graph that allows users to dictate what 
is of interest to them and to quickly navigate 
between related concepts, making connec-
tions as they go.

Nominations sought for ACRL Board 
of Directors
Be a part of shaping the future of ACRL. The 
ACRL Leadership Recruitment and Nomina-
tions Committee (LRNC) encourages mem-
bers to nominate themselves or others to 
run for the position of ACRL vice-president 
/president-elect and director-at-large in the 
2021 elections. The deadline for nomina-
tions is February 15, 2020.

To nominate an individual or to self-nom-
inate, submit the nomination form at www.
surveymonkey.com/r/acrlboardnominations. 
LRNC will request a curriculum vita and/or a 
statement of interest from selected individu-
als prior to developing a slate of candidates.

If you have any questions about the 
nominating or election process, contact 
LRNC Chair Sarah McDaniel, sarahmcdaniel 
@csufresno.edu. More information about the 
ACRL Board of Directors is available at www.
ala.org/acrl/resources/policies/chapter2.

Michigan Publishing, LYRASIS partner 
to deliver ACLS Humanities E-Book 
Collection
Michigan Publishing, a division of the Uni-
versity of Michigan Library, and LYRASIS, 
an innovative full-service technology and 
services nonprofit, recently announced a 
new partnership to advance the work of 

http://www.surveymonkey.com/r/acrlboardnominations
http://www.surveymonkey.com/r/acrlboardnominations
http://www.ala.org/acrl/resources/policies/chapter2
http://www.ala.org/acrl/resources/policies/chapter2


December 2019 601 C&RL News

New books from ACRL cover copyright, teaching and learning communities
ACRL announces the publication of Copy-
right Conversations: Rights Literacy in a 
Digital World, edited by Sara R. Benson, 
and Building Teaching and Learning 
Communities: Creating Shared Meaning 
and Purpose, edited by Craig Gibson and 
Sharon Mader. 

As the scholarly communication universe 
continues to change and expand, it’s increas-
i n g l y  i m -
portant for 
librarians to 
understand 
and be able 
t o  a d v i s e 
o n  c o m -
p l i c a t e d 
cop yr ight 
issues in an 
accessible 
and relat-
able matter. 
E v e r y d a y 
cop yr ight 
law affects 
the way academic libraries provide information 
to students, researchers, and faculty, as well as 
librarians own use of research materials. 

In four sections, Copyright Conversations 
provides detailed explanations of the issues 
and considerations and offers prescriptive 
tips and advice for teaching and applying the 
information. 

Building Teaching and Learning Com-
munities asks each of the authors to address 
this question: What do we as educators need 
to learn (or unlearn) and experience so we 
can create teaching and learning communities 
across disciplines and learning levels based on 
shared meaning and purpose?

Teaching and learning communities are 
communities of practice in which a group of 
faculty and staff from across disciplines regu-
larly meet to discuss topics of common interest 
and to learn together how to enhance teaching 
and learning. Since these teaching and learn-
ing communities can bring together members 
who might not have otherwise interacted, new 
ideas, practices, and synergies can arise.

B u i l d -
ing Teach-
i n g  a n d 
Learning 
C o m m u -
nities is an 
entry into 
s o m e  o f 
the most 
i n t e r e s t -
i n g  c o n -
versations 
in higher 
education 
and offers 
w ay s  fo r 

librarians to socialize in learning theory and 
begin “thinking together” with faculty. It 
proposes questions, challenges assump-
tions, provides examples to be used and 
adapted, and can help you better prepare 
as teachers and pursue the essential role of 
conversation and collaboration with faculty 
and students.

Copyright Conversations and Building 
Teaching and Learning Communities are 
available for purchase in print and as an ebook 
through the ALA Online Store; in print through 
Amazon.com; and by telephone order at (866) 
746-7252 in the United States or (770) 442-
8633 for international customers.



C&RL News December 2019 602

ProQuest One Literature launches
ProQuest recently announced the launch 
of ProQuest One Literature, part of the 
ProQuest One initiative. Developed in col-
laboration with faculty and librarians from 
universities with renowned literature de-
partments, ProQuest One Literature brings 
together the largest, most inclusive litera-
ture collection ever curated with a wealth 
of additional multimedia, multiformat re-
sources. The product has a unique focus on 
diversity, with a large collection of works 
by authors who have been marginalized 
throughout history. 

The resource contains multiformat re-
sources to help researchers and students 
gain a deeper understanding of literature. 
ProQuest One Literature users have access 
to more than 3 million literary criticism cita-
tions, 14,000 dissertations, 20,000 ebooks, 
1,300 videos, and 1,200 full-text journals, 
along with 500,000 primary texts written by 
authors from more than 65 nations, including 

the American Council of Learned Societies 
Humanities E-Book (ACLS HEB) collection. 
ACLS will continue to oversee the selection 
of content but will transfer responsibilities 
for the operation of the collection to Michi-
gan Publishing, which has provided techni-
cal hosting for ACLS HEB since 2002. LY-
RASIS will support Michigan Publishing and 
keep overhead low for libraries and consor-
tia by providing a single sales, licensing, and 
customer service channel.

ACLS HEB is a collection of more than 
5,000 backlist books selected by ACLS schol-
ars from the publication lists of the leading 
academic publishers, including university and 
scholarly society presses. Under its agreement 
with ACLS, Michigan Publishing becomes 
the legal and organizational home for the 
collection starting in fall 2019, collaborating 
with organizational and individual rights-
holders, overseeing marketing, and managing 
operations. More information on ACLS HEB 
is available at www.humanitiesebook.org/.

Choice Outstanding Academic Titles coming this December

Each year Choice, a publishing unit of ACRL, 
announces the editors’ selections of the best 
academic nonfiction titles reviewed dur-
ing the year that just ended. Selection as a 
Choice Outstanding Academic Title (OAT) is 
a recognition of the work’s excellence and 
scholarly significance 
by the academic library 
community’s oldest 
and most prestigious 
review publication.

N e w  t h i s  y e a r, 
Choice editors will 
release the list in De-
cember, a month ear-
lier than previously, 
thereby aligning the award with other annual 
retrospective and “best-of” reading lists. At the 
same time, Choice is again poised to present 
a weekly series of sneak peeks into the OAT 
list. In the coming months, an ongoing series 
of specially created mini-lists will provide 

fascinating points of entry into the full list.
Reflecting on the decision to continue 

releasing select portions of the list again this 
year, Bill Mickey, Choice editorial director 
remarked, “The list is of great utility to our 
academic library subscribers, but we also 

see an opportunity 
to share recognition 
of these works with 
a wider cross-section 
of professionals, fac-
ulty, and like-minded 
readers in and around 
the academy. After all, 
who doesn’t like a 
good book?”

Visit the Choice website at www.
choice360.org/librarianship/outstanding 
-academic-titles to read the themed selections 
of the 2019 OATs—featuring themes such as 
top 10 titles, subject-specific titles, or timely 
collections. 

http://www.humanitiesebook.org/
http://www.choice360.org/librarianship/outstanding-academic-titles
http://www.choice360.org/librarianship/outstanding-academic-titles
http://www.choice360.org/librarianship/outstanding-academic-titles


December 2019 603 C&RL News

Tech Bits . . .

Brought to you by the ACRL ULS 
Technology in University Libraries 
Committee 

Want to know what the latest re-
search trends are on a topic, or find 
out which researchers, institutions 
or journals are leading the research 
discussion in a specific subject area? 
Take a look at Wizdom.ai. Wizdom.
ai is a data analytics resource that 
collates billions of data points and 
generates analytical data results on a 
wide variety of topics, research institu-
tions, and publications/journals. Users 
can interpret the data through a range 
of graphical visualizations and with 
an account, you can save and share 
the data results for later use. Wizdom.
ai is available through individual and 
institutional account access and offers 
a 30-day free trial period. Access it 
through the website, desktop-based 
Windows, Mac and Linux apps, or 
mobile iOS and Android apps.

—Samuel Dyal
Roseman University of Health Sciences

. . . Wizdom.ai
https://www.wizdom.ai/

the ProQuest Black Writing Collection and 
World Literature Collection. More details 
are available at www.proquest.com/go 
/pq1literature.

EBSCO releases 2020 Serials Price 
Projection Report
The 2020 Serials Price Projection Re-
port from EBSCO Information Services  
(EBSCO) is now available. The report 
projects that the overall effective pub-
lisher price increases for academic and 
academic medical libraries are expected 
to be (before any currency impact) in the 
range of five-to-six percent for individual 
titles and four-to-five percent for e-journal 
packages. 

EBSCO releases the Serials Price Projec-
tions based on surveys of a wide range of 
publishers and reviews of historical serials 
pricing data to assist information profes-
sionals as they make budgeting decisions 
for the renewals season.

The Serials Price Projection Report looks 
at market dynamics highlighting many top-
ics and trends that impact the scholarly 
information marketplace, including library 
budget challenges, e-journal packages, 
open access, government mandates, and 
country economic conditions. To read the 
2020 Serials Price Projection Report in 
its entirety and view the Five-Year Jour-
nal Price Increase History, visit http://
jour nals.ebsco.com/products-services 
/explore-content.

Resources for College Libraries 
seeks new subject editors
Are you passionate about collections? Do 
you want to apply your bibliographic se-
lection skills to a Choice/ACRL publication? 
Resources for College Libraries (RCL), the 
bibliography of essential titles for under-
graduate libraries, is seeking new subject 
editors. 

RCL subject editors manage the ongoing 
development of the core collection, with 
responsibilities including selecting new 
title additions, including web resources; 

updating, reviewing, and weeding current 
selection; integrating peer review recom-
mendations; and maintaining and refining 
the subject taxonomy.

Successful subject editors balance broad 
and deep subject expertise, familiarity with 
undergraduate teaching and research, and 
discerning judgment to develop the RCL 
bibliography of current and canonical works 
for academic libraries. 

For further information or details on how 
to apply, contact RCL Project Editor Anne 
Doherty at adoherty@ala-choice.org. Learn 
more about RCL, a copublication of Choice/
ACRL and ProQuest, at http://rclinfo.net. 

https://www.wizdom.ai/
http://www.proquest.com/go/pq1literature
http://www.proquest.com/go/pq1literature
http://journals.ebsco.com/products-services/explore-content
http://journals.ebsco.com/products-services/explore-content
http://journals.ebsco.com/products-services/explore-content
mailto:adoherty%40ala-choice.org?subject=
http://rclinfo.net