Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

LIS510 lecture 6 Thomas Krichel 2006-10-25. today discussion vaguely based on Rubin chapter 9 Should also add something from the second part of Rubin’s.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "LIS510 lecture 6 Thomas Krichel 2006-10-25. today discussion vaguely based on Rubin chapter 9 Should also add something from the second part of Rubin’s."— Presentation transcript:

1 LIS510 lecture 6 Thomas Krichel 2006-10-25

2 today discussion vaguely based on Rubin chapter 9 Should also add something from the second part of Rubin’s chapter 7.

3 library as an organization Every organization like any living creature, wants to survive. Current threats to libraries include –increased cost of material –increased staffing cost –reluctance to fund libraries –increase in diversity –pressure to computerize and digitize –increasing power of publishers to go directly to the public.

4 information infrastructure Recall that libraries are part of an information infrastructure that also includes –publishers –educators –users –archives Libraries need to serve specific functions that the others don’t. Otherwise they will slowly die.

5 current functions selecting materials developing and storing collections ordering and acquiring documents making documents available conserving and preserving documents programming of events and instruction

6 overall organization A standard organization, as Rubin suggests is –board –administration –public service units –technical services –support units (details follow)

7 public service units This section comprises –reference department –circulation department –audiovisual department –archives and special collections –special services

8 technical services units These are themselves divided into –acquisitions department –serials department –cataloging and classification department –preservation department

9 support units maintenance (heating, plumbing …) public relations security unit it systems

10 bureaucracy An organization is bureaucratic if it is composed of a series of positions that are independent of their holders. Each position is characterized by –a set of responsibilities –a set of authorities –a set of required qualifications for the post holder There are (usually) hierarchical relationships between positions

11 hierarchy Though hierarchy is not innate to bureaucracy, it is often accompanying it. Once installed, it survives –top level people are weary of changes –top level people don’t believe in collective decision making –top people see participation as them abdicating responsibility

12 hierarchical bureaucracies They perform best if the environment is stable. They tend to be too slow for a rapidly changing environment. This forebodes badly for information infrastructure participants placed within a rapidly changing digital information environment.

13 public libraries They have a broad organizational goal. The public library association has recommended that a public library should only select some of the following roles –community-activities center –community-information center –formal education support –independent learning support –popular materials library –pre-school learning help –reference library –research center

14 major issues in public libraries Political climate is a big issues as public libraries depend heavily on the public purse. Recently increasing public debt has put library spending under pressure Pressure to provide computer access is on, but help is provided by the Gates Foundation.

15 major issues in public libraries benefits of public libraries are not easy to quantify –there are some attempts at cost benefit analysis and the pressure there will increase. censorship issues can be contentious there is a quality vs. popularity debate service to multicultural, rural, disabled populations remains difficult.

16 major issues in public libraries With the Internet competing as an information provider, libraries have turned to educational programs. They thrive on the idea that literacy has to start early. –in house programs such as lap-sit –outreach programs with daycare centers –cooperation with school media centers move towards combined school/public library is possible.

17 school library media centers They have it easier when it come to their goals –support the curriculum of the school But they may be governed by the school and belong to an administrative unit with other school media centers. Emphasis has shifted away from librarianship towards education.

18 roles of school media specialist ALA’s book “Information Power” talks about four roles –serves as a teacher –serves as instructional partner with teachers –serves an information specialist to evaluate resources –serves as program administrator Book insists on the importance of the School Media Center for the School.

19 importance of the sector In 2002 there were 94k School Media Centers in the US. Most current school media specialists are quite old. A shortage is forecast. Combined with legal constraints, this raises wages. School media certification is the easiest way to a stable well paid job in LIS, but you have to like kids.

20 importance of technology The effective school media specialist will play an increasingly important role in the IT administration of the school –managing computer labs –working on school network infrastructure –provide the school’s web site.

21 academic libraries In academic libraries many professional staff are treated as faculty. They are subject to a tenure regime. They usually hold a Master’s degree in another subjects as well as a library Master’s degree. Recently, academic libraries have started to hire humanities PhD without library degree.

22 preservation This is an important issue in all large libraries that hold material that is old. It is particularly a problem with acid paper that brittles. Most academic libraries are now involved in digitization efforts. Modern book scanning technology will probably mean in increase in such activity. But copyright is a constant problem.

23 scholarly publishing crisis The most pressing concern in academic libraries is access to research literature. Most of these is written by authors for free and then published in journals. Many of these journals cost an outrageous amount each year. –Journal of Economic Studies at some stage cost more than $5k for a library subscription. –Totally useless journal.

24 other publisher tricks Phil Davis (Cornell) found that Emerald published the same article several times in different journals. Libraries bought the same paper twice. Worse duplications occur in –journal aggregators –abstracting database

25 implications of cost explosion Library budgets have been pretty much flat. Cost explosion in the STM domain puts big strains on other parts, such as monographs. Libraries try to fight back –convince authors to publish in low-cost outlets –create low-cost competition –build institutional archives with local research papers without much success.

26 digital disruption This is a big issue for all libraries. Web contents that is easily searchable is a disruptive technology for libraries. Basically disruptive technologies are technologies that don’t do as well as existing technologies, but are a lot cheaper. Established organizations tend to dismiss disruptive technologies to their peril.

27 http://openlib.org/home/krichel Please shut down the computers now. Thank you for your attention!


Download ppt "LIS510 lecture 6 Thomas Krichel 2006-10-25. today discussion vaguely based on Rubin chapter 9 Should also add something from the second part of Rubin’s."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google