“…Encouraged by technological and pedagogical developments, attention which earlier focused on the need to support academic 'reading lists', implicitly recognised as collations of print-bound, book-based materials (Sherwood, Lovecy, 1997;Stopforth, 1994) is refocusing on the need to manage multi-format, blended collections of integrated learning materials: the 'resource list' (Chelin, McEachran, 2005;McDowell, 2002;Rieger, Horne, Revels, 2004;Secker, 2005). Driven by the changing teaching practices of academics and the expansion in the range of teaching materials managed by academics libraries, this shift in emphasis has begun to be recognised by software providers developing next generation resource lists solutions (Boyle, 2004;Martin, Stokes, 2006;Stainthorp, 2011).…”