I have come to the same conclusion as Tiffany regarding the vastly greater number of sessions vs searches for some titles/databases.
Georgia Baugh
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Georgia A. Baugh, M.A., M.A.L.I.S.
Associate Professor/Electronic Resources Reference Librarian
Pius XII Memorial Library
Saint Louis University
3650 Lindell Blvd.
St. Louis, MO 63108
Phone: 314-977-3598
baughga@slu.edu
http://libguides.slu.edu/profile/baughga
In my experience, the resources that have a lot more sessions than searches are generally accessed via the link resolver. Students are doing their search elsewhere and accessing full text directly in the resource (hence creating a session with no search).-TiffanyTiffany LeMaistreElectronic Resources and Collection Management LibrarianThe University of Texas at Tyler, Robert R. Muntz LibraryOn Mon, Jul 16, 2012 at 1:31 PM, Reid,Diana L. <diana.reid@louisville.edu> wrote:Hi All,
Does anyone have any wisdom for me about sessions vs searches on DB1 reports? I am wondering why I see so many reports with vastly more sessions than searches.
If a session is recorded when a user requests a service, say to connect to a particular database, it doesn't make sense to me that in many instances the majority of users are basically choosing a resource
and then not searching at all. What am I missing?
Thanks in advance,
Diana Reid
Serials Acquisitions Librarian
University of Louisville
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Tiffany LeMaistre | tlemaistre@uttyler.edu
Electronic Resources & Collection Management Librarian
The University of Texas at Tyler, Robert R. Muntz Library
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