Using Reading List to communicate learning resources

UNE uses Reading List to store and manage your unit's learning resources. Third party copyright material reproduced under the Educational Statutory Licence must be communicated using Reading List to ensure the university is compliant with the conditions of the licence.

What resources can go in Reading List

Reading List can store many types of learning resources, including:

  • digitised book chapters
  • digitised complete books (where copyright permits)
  • digitised articles
  • links to library subscription resources such as eBooks, articles, AV material
  • links to public websites
  • sound and AV material e.g. a CD accompanying a print resource which has been format shifted to a digital file by permission or under a copyright exception
Benefits of using Reading List
  • compliance with the Educational Statutory Licence: Reading List automatically detects and manages copying limits for material reproduced under the Educational Statutory Licence
  • links to electronic subscriptions can be automatically and systematically be updated when there are vendor platform upgrades
  • copyright warning notice for material reproduced under the Educational Statutory Licence is automatically applied
  • students are directed to a single source for all their unit's learning resources
Customise and control your learning resources
  • organise your Reading List into groups according to week, topic, theme etc.
  • view statistics about student engagement with the resources in Reading List, using the data to better customise future Reading List
  • identify under or over utilised resources