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Re: Building collections at all
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: Building collections at all
- From: "B.G. Sloan" <bgsloan2@yahoo.com>
- Date: Thu, 18 Jun 2009 23:53:28 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
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This reminds me of several conversations when we were building an academic library automated resource sharing system 30 years ago. A group of library directors was working with the Board of Higher Education to secure funds to improve interinstitutional document delivery. One of the higher ed guys was an engineer with experience in designing inventory control systems. I remember one time when he suggested that when a book was requested by an institution the book should just stay at the borrowing institution because the borrowing transaction meant that someone there was interested in the topic. Some of the other higher ed people were in favor of a real hard core cooperative collection development agreement where individual libraries collected only in designated core areas and relied on other libraries to fill in the gaps. These guys believed that the statewide "mega-collection" would be much richer if libraries spent less of their acquisitions dollars buying titles duplicated in other libraries. They had a lot of ideas about how improved interinstitutional resource discovery and document delivery could change library operations. The ideas basically centered on not buying a given title on the off chance a local patron might use it, if you knew that title would be available from another library if/when needed. They were taking a fresh look at collection building, and I thought some of their ideas made good sense. But most of the library directors came from backgrounds where the campus library was considered pretty much a "local" thing, and where collections were built "speculatively" just in case a local user might need the item. Some of the higher ed folks ideas made them nervous. They never really bought in. Bernie Sloan
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