Showing posts with label Collaborative collection development. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Collaborative collection development. Show all posts

Saturday, March 6, 2021

Collaborative collection development: current perspectives leading to future initiatives

Peterman, Rhian 

Levenson, H. N., & Hess, A. N. (2020). Collaborative collection development: current perspectives leading to future initiatives. The Journal of Academic Librarianship, 46(5), 1-11. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acalib.2020.102201


The article presents collaborative collection development as a means to fulfill institutional needs during economically fraught times. Furthermore, the authors outline the potential benefits as well as potential complications, or challenges, that a collaborative collection development program may possess. The authors present a review of the literature regarding previously enacted collaborative collection development programs as well as a view for the future. This article notably frames the proposal within the context of a post-Covid-19 budgetary landscape.

The data-driven methods employed by the authors in this article need broader contextualization for other library system types, e.g., public library systems. However, the potential industry resilience garnered by enacting this collection development model cannot be understated. Further research regarding this topic is needed, especially as it relates to potentially mitigating broader environmental impacts.


Monday, May 11, 2020

Young Adult Use of Ebooks

Gray, R. & Howard, V. (2017, May 11). Young adults use of ebooks: An analysis of public library services and resources. Public Library Quarterly 36(3). Retreived from https://doi-org.libaccess.sjlibrary.org/10.1080/01616846.2017.1316149

In their survey of teen / young adult librarians across North America, Robyn Gray and Vivian Howard found that most librarians believe there is little to no interest in ebooks among the teen patrons they service at their libraries. However, these authors believe that the programming and promotion of ebooks is being done all wrong. Instead of focusing on advertising the titles and procedures for using the ebooks, libraries should be informing teenagers of the benefits of reading an ebook. Many teenagers are self-conscious about the types of books they read, or their reading level. By reading ebooks they can have more privacy, since their peers are not able to see the books they are reading. There are many advantages, and many disadvantages, to reading ebooks discussed in the books. However, one advantage that I can think of is the ability for students to immediately search for the definition of a word they do not understand, assisting in their vocabulary development and reading comprehension. There are many reasons that teenagers should have the option of ebooks in their accessible library collections.

Friday, November 23, 2018

Collaborative Collection Development for Specialized Collections

Dailey, Kaitlin
Carr, M. (2013). Crowdsourcing content to promote community and collection development in public libraries. Journal of Electronic Resources Librarianship 25(4), 313-316. 
DOI: 10.1080/1941126X.2013.847690 

Summary:
This article focuses on how important it is to reach out to community members in order to bring their own works into a collection. Specifically, this article focuses on chapbooks from poets which represent a difficult collection to work with for librarians because there is a constant tug between what is wanted and the quality. The idea is that by encouraging community members to voluntarily deposit their works into the library so patrons can get what they want and the collection can remain relevant to today's users.

Evaluation:
I rather enjoyed this article a lot because I think it is very important to include community members when selecting content for a collection. I noticed that with my library as well as other public libraries that there is a huge focus on the user initiating the process for collection development. Some libraries do have internal lists that they pull from, but they predominantly focus on the patrons for their development which does not always work. But, by utilizing a information community and creating a space for collaboration, Carr is demonstrating that development can occur at a local level for the collection that is still relevant and what is desired. I would have liked to have seen a broader study, but based on the scope it would have been problematic to focus on a larger collection.

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Cooperative Collection Development and ebooks

Micka, Tracy
INFO266, Fall 2016


Swindler, L. l. (2016). New Consortial Model for E-Books Acquisitions. College & Research Libraries, 77(3), 269-285.


Summary:
This article presents a sustainable model for the consortial acquisition of e-books and print titles needed to support multidisciplinary instruction and research. Using the model as a transitional program, the central goal was to shift the balance of monographic acquisitions to e-books over time, on a financially sustainable cost-neutral basis. The idea that ebooks and their print analogs complement one another for educational purposes is the underlying basis of the program.


How can they collectively acquire or share ebooks? Ebook sharing in a consortium is difficult, traditionally resulting in inequitable costs to the institutions involved, as price multipliers create limits to simultaneous access. Publishers, vendors, libraries, and users all have their own needs, some of which directly clash. Three important developments contribute to such difficulties: 1) changes in the means by which research libraries build collections; 2) eResources vastly expand the scale of a collection; 3) new metrics in measuring cooperative collection development in a digital environment (ILL doesn’t work for ebooks ).


One of the main principles for the model was to widely purchase multiple copies of ebooks, but limit print books to a single copy of a limited number of titles. Print books are stored offsite, and individual institutions have their own copies of eBooks. This acquisition mandate turned on its head the traditional notion of a successful shared collection as one that has a massive amount of unique titles. Since this new program is predicated on committing to automatically purchase the entire (monographic) output of participating publishers, success is measured by how efficiently money is spent to ensure each member institution can provide its users with immediate and unfettered access at a scale that would not be possible without the consortium. In this way, success is no longer measured by how many unique titles, but by how extensively titles have been duplicated within the consortium. Such metrics are based on the Association of Research Libraries’ call to think of collections as components instead of products (p. 273). As a result, the focus shifts from title-by-title purchasing decisions by individual subject librarians to wholesale block purchases dictated by policy-level decisions. Book vendors become critical partners for helping the consortium understand which publishers would work for their goals and for establishing new ways of sourcing, acquiring and processing ebooks and print books in tandem on a wholesale acquisition basis.


Problems encountered in the pilot program were numerous, and included:
  • Failure to take full advantage of the book vendor’s profiling capabilities when deciding which print books were the most important to purchase
  • Resource delivery mechanisms
  • eBook platform response time
  • Not always clear when print or eBooks had arrived / were available


Librarian & Patron Response
Interestingly, although patrons tend to report that they prefer physical books over ebooks, it was the librarians who tended to be more cautious / reluctant to duplicate eBooks. This is likely because users have come to expect instant access, and ebooks deliver this. Also, eBooks are a quick way for patrons to scope out if the title is even of interest, before having to go though the process of ordering the (off-site) print copy.


Shifting to eBooks is thus possible and acceptable, especially when you continue to purchase high-visibility/high-use titles and enable on-demand acquisition of print duplicates. Doing so through consortial cooperative collection development programs is also possible, with the following advice:
  • Understand how your patrons use eBooks, the devil of purchasing decisions is in the details, remain flexible.
  • The eBook publishing environment is unpredictable and evolving- again, remain flexible and willing to experiment
  • Individual institutions will have to compromise sometimes in order to preserve the value of the consortium
  • Librarians, publishers and vendors will have to to communicate with each other often and well
  • Librarians will have to invest time  in educating staff and developing new metrics


My comments:
The basic ideas of this article are very instructive, though without a working background in acquisitions and only a basic understanding of the modern publishing environment, many of details are lost. The take-home is important, though: the program allowed the consortium to “bypass the perennial format fetish debates about e-books versus print books” (p 280), supporting what previous research has already found- that it’s a false dichotomy. The pilot program proved that what patrons say they prefer (physical books) and what they will come to accept and learn to use (ebooks), are two different things. It’s a whole new world- patrons, librarians, publishers and vendors are all adapting dynamically. The old paradigm has been shattered, so examples like this pilot program help us envision a new way forward.


Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Collaborative Connection and Collection Development

Loertscher, D. & Koechlin, C. (2016). Collection Development and Collaborative Connection Development: Or, Curation. Teacher Librarian, 43(4), 52-53.
This article by our professor and his colleague resembles our course goals at this time in Spring of 2016.  Collaborative connection development using Open Educational Resources (OER) is presented as the next best practice for collection development. 
The premise of “It’s my job as a teacher librarian to develop the collection” is changed to “It’s OUR job as teacher librarians, classroom teachers, and students to curate the best education resources for the topic at hand.”  Using free resources such as Google Apps, teacher librarians, classroom teachers and students can use and add resources, and completed projects to a topic being studied.  Thus, a Virtual Learning Commons (VLC) is created with collaborative connection input from everyone.
Different levels of participation are presented for implementation:  Within a school, district, region or state, national, and on every level.  This level of participation can compete directly with Google and Wikipedia.  And, regardless of funding restrictions, as all resources are free, everyone can participate to build and use these resources.
G Thormann
Spring 2016

Monday, May 16, 2016

Weighing in on 21st Century Library Collection Development



OCLCVideo. (December 5, 2011). Library collections in the 21st century. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6bofpsEciiQ

VP for Information Services and University Librarian at Columbia University, Mr. James Neal describes what he thinks are the four most important aspects of 21st century library collection development.  See his short interview here.  My favorite and I think something that we have touched on quite a bit in this class is what he calls, radical collaboration; a notion of "rather than standing side by side, standing with one another".  It is not enough for libraries to survive by supporting one another independently, but forming groups and coalitions that share and support is fundamentally more sustainable.  What would this look like for school libraries, I wonder?  LAUSD libraries for example share database subscriptions and a digital library of both paid and free materials is supported at the district level, but what if other districts in the southern California area were to pool resources this way?  Or better yet, what if school librarians were to collaborate on digital curation of OERs?  Our profession is only strengthened by collaborations, and similarly is the service we provide to our patrons, in my case students.  The California History Project for Fourth Graders (curated by INFO 250 and 266 Information Science graduate students) is a good example of a project which calls for librarians and other educators to pool resources to benefit the whole.  Click the link here to see this example.

How else can radical collaborations enhance collection development?


J. Hasselberger
Spring 2016

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Students as library advocates



Mitchell, Lillie Gale

Deuink, A. & Seiler, M. (2006). Students as library advocates: The library student advisory board at Pennsylvania State Schuylkill. College & Research Libraries News 67 (1): 18-21.

Summary:

"Students, as library advocates, are a powerful marketing tool (Deuink & Seiler, 2006)”, and this article covers how having student advocates builds and benefits the development of a library's collection. A case study was used based on a small college campus establishing a student group attracting both residential and commuter students. The initial group was composed of student that had worked together before through other organizations, but not necessarily library users. The diversity of the club was communicated by recruiting library student workers, members bringing their friends to meetings, and the reputation earned as a fun and exciting club.

This student group was empowered to help spread a positive message about the library to the student body which improved the library’s collections and services. The group acted like a public library’s “friends group”. Their activities included purchasing collection materials such as books, DVDs, and a color printer; highlighting new themes each month, developing a “menu book” of campus restaurants; and acting as library volunteers when needed.
Additionally a summary on how to create a successful student advisory group based on the two years of experience with the club was included. Here are the key points of a successful student advisory group (Deuink & Seiler, 2006):


  •   Recruit new members throughout the year.
  •  Be available and responsive to the students, in person and in the virtual world.
  • Conduct monthly meetings to keep the ideas and actions flowing and to gain continuous feedback.
  • Listen to students’ ideas and suggestions and treat them with respect.
  • Take actions on ideas proposed by club members.
  • Show enthusiasm for the club and the library by letting your students be creative and not afraid to express their ideas.
  • Serve food at the meetings


Evaluation:
Even though this article applied to using advocates in an academic library setting as a marketing tool, certainly this process can also be applied to other library systems as well. Collaboration is key to having stakeholders buy into any organization, therefore this is a reminder that the library is a business. As mentioned in the article the student advocates group could be treated like a “friends group” therefore valued members of the library.

Thursday, May 5, 2016

The Educators Guide to Pinterest



O'Brien, Sarah

Muther, Sarah. (2015) The Educators Guide to Pinterest. Edudemic: Connecting Education and Technology. 

Now that learning is happening online, it’s no surprise that bulletin boards have moved online, enter Pinterest. Teachers, Librarians and Educators use the Platform for many reasons including staying organized, planning projects or collecting material for class discussions. Librarians are running reading programs and creating book lists on top of using it for creative purposes like story times, crafts and (actual) bulletin boards. With a guide for educators on how to use the application, Sarah Muther, provides an in depth outline including planning lessons, fostering collaboration, sharing ideas and providing a list of pinners to follow.

Although this article is very brief in its explanation on how librarians can use the Pinterest application, from the perspective of the (almost) children’s librarian at my library, I use Pinterest for a lot of ideas, whether working with volunteers or using it for personal projects. As the Youth Service Coordinator, I use it to build upon story hour and bulletin board ideas. The author points out that librarians use Pinterest to build book lists and even run reading programs. Just recently, I noticed an adult program called the Pinterest Club, I couldn’t help but join in. There are so many great ways to incorporate Pinterest into the workplace and the library is an excellent place to connect resources and information back into the collections and programs.    

Friday, February 26, 2016

Engaging a Wider Community: Connecting the Library to Its People


       In the article, Engaging a Wider Community: The Academic Library as a
Center for Creativity, Discovery, and Collaboration by Steven D. Shapiro of
Montclair State University (Montclair, New Jersey), he delves into the whats and hows of specific ideas from the Public as well as Academic Libraries that are garnering success through outreach, listening to their patrons and coming up with creative ideas to make the library a destination that is enjoyable and relevant to its communities.

“In stark contrast to academic libraries, public library usage, based on several indi-
cators (e.g., circulation, program attendance, and visitation), has been trending
upward over the past decade according to a report issued by the federal govern-
ments Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) in 2014 (Shapiro, 2014).”

The author mentions the New York, Brooklyn and Queens Public Libraries as innovative examples of utilizing technology such as lending e-readers and one on one training as well as library to increase circulation. Additionally recreating the library as a true source for information that is relevant and useful to its patrons through programs like NYStartup, an entrepreneurial business plan contest as well as utilizing cutting edge media software labs and makerspaces.

The academic libraries have taken a cue from the public libraries successes and incorporated interesting academic and cultural lectures that feature faculty book authors that are open to the public as well. This has helped to connect the communities to the university in a positive manner. Many academic libraries are finding that incorporating the arts is a fantastic way to revive the library by hosting art openings or concerts. Outreach is also a large part of successfully partnering with and engaging the wider community.

Reference:
Steven D. Shapiro (2016) Engaging a Wider Community: The Academic Library as a Center for Creativity, Discovery, and Collaboration, New Review of Academic Librarianship, 22:1, 24-42, DOI: 10.1080/13614533.2015.1087412