Knowledge Ontario | |
Type: | Non Profit |
Industry: | Information Services |
Foundation: | 2006 |
Fate: | dissolved |
Location City: | Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Homepage: | knowledgeontario.ca |
Knowledge Ontario was a non-profit organization supporting a number of related province-wide initiatives in Ontario, Canada, providing library and information resources, learning experiences and related services to people across all ages, locations, education levels and cultural institutions. It comprised five projects: Ask Ontario (or askON), Connect Ontario, Learn Ontario, Our Ontario and Resource Ontario, as well as the eResources Portal, which was launched in 2010. Knowledge Ontario ceased operations on December 31, 2012.[1] [2]
Knowledge Ontario, formerly known as the Ontario Digital Library, was first conceptualized in the early-2000s during consultations between the Ontario Library Association (OLA) and provincial stakeholders representing Ontario's public libraries, colleges, universities, public schools, and government ministries. In 2003, OLA and the Knowledge Network for Learning (OKNL) submitted a business plan for the proposed organization to the Government of Ontario,[3] and in 2004 the Ontario Ministry of Culture provided the organization with an initial grant of $750,000 to further develop project plans. Knowledge Ontario remained an entity under OLA until its incorporation in 2006.[4] In the same year, the organization received $8 million in provincial funding from the Ministry of Culture and launched its first three services: Our Ontario, Ask Ontario, and Resource Ontario. Since then, Knowledge Ontario has also launched Connect Ontario, Learn Ontario, and the eResources Portal.
Also known as askON and ONdemande, Ask Ontario was launched in 2008 as Ontario's first collaborative chat-based virtual reference service with partner libraries from universities, colleges, and public libraries. Through the service, Ontarians can chat in real-time with an information specialist who can help them find research and other web-based information materials.[9] [10] Each partner contributes staff time towards a collaborative schedule.[11] Today, askON is a college library chat and SMS service managed by the Ontario Colleges Library Service (OCLS).
Connect Ontario is currently partnered with BiblioCommons and BC Libraries to create and promote its next generation online public access catalogue. The service is unique in that it merges search catalogue capabilities with easy-to-use social media tools.[12] Oakville Public Library, the first institution to pilot the catalogue, went live with BiblioCommons in July 2008. Since then, more than a dozen Ontario public libraries have rolled out the BiblioCommons catalogue.[13]
"Bibliocommons is attempting to transform online library catalogues into social discovery environments," said the Globe and Mail's Jennifer Hollet in 2009. "Think Amazon.com for libraries. The Bibliocommons technology is able to decorate catalogues with member comments, ratings, lists, suggested similar titles, and quotes."[14]
Learn Ontario (http://learnontario.ca) provides online tech tutorials for a wide range of software, applications, and social media tool sets. The service was officially launched in 2010, and is currently partnered with Atomic Learning.[15]
Our Ontario is a collective undertaking that aims to centralize access to the historic collections that are part of the province's libraries, archives, museums, and other cultural institutions. The project's online portal (http://ourontario.ca) officially launched in 2007 as an access point to digitized documents, images and objects from Ontario's past. Since then, the portal has grown to include historic newspapers and government documents, and now features more than 1.4 million records.[16] [17]
The back-end of the portal is managed by VITA, a web-based software tool developed by Knowledge Ontario to provide cultural organizations with the means to create and manage data, digital objects, and collections.[18]
Our Ontario also works in collaboration with the Southern Ontario Library Service (SOLS) and Ontario Library Service-North (OLS-N) to digitize objects at the local level. SOLS currently funds the digitization project through a $15 million grant from the Ontario Government.[19]
Resource Ontario licenses a selection of e-resources on behalf of Ontario's school boards, colleges, and universities. The current list of content includes more than 50 academic and general-interest databases from Career Cruising, EBSCO, Rosen Publishing, and the Gale Group.[20] The sector representatives that sit on Resource Ontario's steering committee conduct surveys and work with partnering organizations to ensure that the content licensed by Knowledge Ontario reflects a balance among the disciplines.[21]
Launched August 2010, the eResources Portal (http://eresources.knowledgeontario.ca) makes the e-resources available through Resource Ontario freely accessible to all Ontarians.[22]
Libraries and other educational and cultural institutions | |
6500 organizations[23] including:
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Professional Associations | |
Public Library Federations | |
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Academic Library Federations | |
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School Library Associations | |
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Vendors | |
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Knowledge Ontario is governed by a 13-member Board of Directors. Eight of these members are appointed by and are intended to reflect the interests of lead stakeholder groups (public libraries, university and college library systems and school libraries/school boards). The remaining five members of the Board include the executive director of the Ontario Library Association, a representative of the broader cultural sector and three other members designed to reflect additional strategic considerations as they change over time.[24]
The current board of directors members are:
Sam Coghlan, CEO, Stratford Public Library
Gladys Watson, Director, Learning Resource Centres, Centennial College
Janice Beatty, Vice President, Human Resources and Student Services, Sault College
Ken Hernden, Chief Librarian, Algoma University
Sharon Brown, Chief Librarian, Wilfrid Laurier University
John Stadnyk, Director of Education, Huron-Superior Catholic District School Board
Philip Jeffrey, Manager of Library & Information Service, Hamilton Wentworth Catholic District School Board
Shelagh Paterson, Executive Director, Ontario Library Association
Peter Rogers, Chair Person (former Chair of Management Group)
Michael Bator, CEO, Catholic Curriculum Corporation
Jessica Kamphorst, Director of Advancement, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research
In 2008, Wendy Newman, a Senior Fellow and Lecturer at the University of Toronto's iSchool,[25] released a report commissioned by the Ontario Ministry of Culture titled Third Generation Public Libraries. In the study she concludes that Knowledge Ontario is one of the keys to advancing the province's knowledge-based economy.
From the report:
The opportunity posed by Knowledge Ontario is not just provision of information and content services equitably across Ontario, but the platform for collaboration within a sector (public, school, post-secondary) that encompasses formal and informal learning, in an Ontario economy that must become ever more knowledge based. It is also the natural foundation for private sector partnership (e.g., in software development). Knowledge Ontario began with one-time funding. It will require a stable financial foundation and a policy commitment to additional partnerships with education and post-secondary ministries, with which it shares a community of interest, to reach its full potential.[26]
Knowledge Ontario has ceased operations, effective December 31, 2012.