Questia is an online commercial digital library of books and articles with an academic orientation. It claims to be "the world's largest online collection of books and journal articles in the humanities and social sciences".[1] The great majority of items are under copyright, for which Questia has paid a fee to the copyright owners. All the text in all the Questia books and articles is available to subscribers. The similar service Google Book Search has 7 million books scanned in their library, but users can only see small parts of copyrighted books.
Questia offers some information for free, including several public domain works, publication information, tables of contents, the first page of every chapter, Boolean searches of the contents of the library, and short bibliographies of available books and articles on some 6500 topics.
Questia does not sell ownership to books or ebooks, but rather sells monthly or annual subscriptions that allows temporary online reading access to all 76,000+ books, and 2,000,000+ journal, magazine, and newspaper articles in their collection.[2] The books have been selected by academic librarians as credible, authoritative works in their respective areas. The librarians have also compiled about 7000 reference bibliographies on frequently researched topics. The library is strongest in books and journal articles in the social sciences and humanities, with many older historical texts. Original pagination has been maintained, critical for those wishing to cite the materials. The Questia service also features tools to automatically create citations and bibliographies, helping writers to properly cite the materials.
A limitation to the Questia library is that new additions are available in a "beta" version only. Unlike Questia's earlier publications, these prevent the user from copying text directly from the cursor. A page from the publication can be printed for free. A charge is made for printing a range of pages.
Questia has been criticized by The Chronicle of Higher Education for falsely referring to itself as an academic library.[3] Questia does not employ academic librarians or faculty. Although some of its employees have advanced degrees, they do not work or collaborate with faculty to develop collections that serve distinctive student populations.
Tim Harris, Questia president and CEO, said in May 2010 that Questia has been purchased by Gale, part of Cengage Learning.[4]
Questia launched their Q&A blog on September 21, 2011. [5] Q&A is divided into "Education news," "Student resources" and "Subjects" categories. "Subjects" is further broken down so readers can find specific content based on their academic needs. [6]