Shameem Nilofar Maideen
Ford, D.B. (2015). To Weed or Not to Weed. School Library Journal, 61(8), 13.
Summary:
Ford, D.B. (2015). To Weed or Not to Weed. School Library Journal, 61(8), 13.
Summary:
The
article focuses on collection development for nonfiction library materials. The
author explores the Texas State Library and Archive Commission's "CREW
Method" (Continuous Review, Evaluation, and Weeding) and provides a list
of criteria for determining if a book should be kept or thrown out titled
"MUSTIE," which includes tossing items that are misleading, trivial,
or have been superseded by a new edition.
Devised by the
Texas State Library and Archive Commission, the CREW (Continuous Review,
Evaluation, & Weeding) Method* involves evaluating books by year of
copyright, last use, and condition. All are factors that must be considered
when weeding the library’s collection.
In addition,
MUSTIE is a list of criteria that helps to determine whether a particular title
should stay or go.
• Begin with
collection analysis. Most circulation systems and many vendors offer an
analysis component. Evaluate the results by identifying your collection’s
weakest areas.
• Target key Dewey
ranges. Areas such as technology, social problems, and the sciences (especially
health and astronomy) become quickly outdated.
• Weed the worst.
Start by discarding the oldest nonfiction material. Make room on your shelves
by tossing books with outdated covers and yellow pages.
• Use your senses.
Follow your nose. Books that smell musty or are moldy must be discarded to maintain
the health of the entire collection. Look at a book’s condition. Are the pages
falling out? Time to toss.
• Enlist your
colleagues. Host a weeding party and assign partners to sections that need
attention. Give them bottom-line criteria: “books more than 20 years old must
go,” for example. Teams can discuss individual titles and put them aside for
your final say.
• Fill the gaps.
If you target key areas for weeding, be sure to create wish lists for those
sections. Deleting a book about Pluto? Add a new one to your list.
• Ask the experts.
National organizations—beyond the American Library Association—choose the best
nonfiction titles in their subject areas. The National Council of Social
Studies and the National Science Teachers Association, for example, both create
annual Notable Trade Book lists for K-12. You might also ask your subject area
specialists to help you weed and shop for replacement titles.
• Judge for
yourself. The latest award-winning nonfiction titles incorporate many features
that support the Common Core State Standards. Look for the same features in the
books on your shelves. Is there a bibliography? A glossary? What are the
writer’s qualifications? What websites support the text? Are the graphics
appealing and informative? The same criteria
applies to gifts. Ask yourself: Is this material shelf worthy? If not, discard,
recycle, or add it to your book sale box.
In short, no
matter the size of your budget, it’s better to have no information than
misinformation. Discard books that are no longer accurate. Delete worn
materials. Free up space in your media collection for fresh, current resources.
As the “guardian” of your library’s collection, it’s your responsibility to
ensure that what you own is worth protecting.
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