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Univ. of Colorado at Boulder. Research I, Doctoral granting institution26,500 FTELibraries hold ~3 million volumes (6/30/03)87,000 ILL requests in 200360,000 Lending Requests27,000 Borrowing Requests. Project Origins. Remote storage project at CU-BoulderCollaboration with OCLC mining WorldCa
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1. Collection Analysis with Circulation Data: What Usage Can Tell Us about Weeding and Collection Development Jennifer E. Knievel and Heather Wicht
University of Colorado
Lynn Silipigni Connaway
OCLC, Inc.
2. Univ. of Colorado at Boulder Research I, Doctoral granting institution
26,500 FTE
Libraries hold ~3 million volumes (6/30/03)
87,000 ILL requests in 2003
60,000 Lending Requests
27,000 Borrowing Requests
3. Project Origins Remote storage project at CU-Boulder
Collaboration with OCLC – mining WorldCat
Collection development study by John N. Ochola, Baylor University
Planning of pilot project
Identify data to be analyzed, collected in future
Assess usefulness of data to bibliographers
4. Purpose of Study Compare subject distribution of
UCB holdings
ILL borrowing requests
Circulation
5. Local Systems Software
Innovative Interfaces
CLIO Database
Data Gathering Methods
Innovative: Create Lists
CLIO: Microsoft Access Queries
6. Project Scope Books only
Law library excluded
Gov Docs excluded
Theses/dissertations excluded
Foreign language books excluded
20% of ILL requests
ILL borrowing transactions 1998-2002
Cancelled (owned) requests excluded
Circulations 1995-2003/1998-2002
Non-circulating items excluded
7. Data Collected ILL
Request Origin, OCLC #,Title, Author, Edition, Publisher, Pub Date, ISBN, Patron Status & Dept, Request Status
Circulation
OCLC #, Title, Author, Publisher, Pub Date, ISBN, LCC, Total # Checkouts
Holdings
OCLC#, Title, Author, Publisher, Pub Date, ISBN, LCC
8. Numbers 970,784 books held in WorldCat
318,517 books circulated 1998-2002
1,638,740 circulations on those books 1995-2003
22,064 borrowing requests for books 1998-2002
9. Data Manipulation ILL requests lacked LCC numbers
Mapped to WorldCat records by OCLC #
All data sets mapped by LCC:
600+ North American Title Count (NATC) subject categories
24 Research Libraries Group (RLG) Conspectus Divisions
10. Results Overall holdings
Total holdings
No multiple copies counted, just titles
Derived from OCLC WorldCat, but could be pulled locally
11. Interpretation Overall holdings
Some subjects have very high publishing output
Some are strongly dominated by journal literature or other non-book formats (e.g. scores)
12. Results Average transactions per item
Transactions in a subject
Items circulated in a subject
Transactions/items = average transactions per item
Example: 10,000 transactions, 5,000 items, average 2 transactions per item
13. Interpretation Average transactions per item
High average: 7.4 circs per item
Extremely active subject area
Where is activity occurring?
Low average: 3.1 circs per item
Low check out rate
Is collection relevant? What kind of usage?
14. Results Percentage of items circulated
Total items in a subject
Items circulated in a subject
Circulated /items in subject = percentage circulated
Example: 8,000 items in subject, 2,000 items circulated = 25% items circulated
15. Interpretation Percentage of items circulated
High percentage: 43.3%
Almost half of books circulated during study
Circulation is widely distributed across subject
Low percentage: 14.9%
Less than one quarter of books circulated
Circulation is very narrow, or use is mostly in-house
16. Results Ratio of holdings to ILL requests
Comparing apples to oranges, but still useful
Total items in subject
ILL requests in subject
Items in subject : ILL requests = ratio
Example: 12,000 items in subject, 1,000 requests = 12:1
17. Interpretation Ratio of holdings to ILL requests
High ratio: 9:1
Many requests in that subject area
Evaluate whether local collection is serving user needs
Low ratio: 144:1
Very few requests in that subject area
Various interpretations Could indicate needs met, low collection interest, dominance of undergraduates not using ILL, enormous held collectionCould indicate needs met, low collection interest, dominance of undergraduates not using ILL, enormous held collection
18. Example: Sociology Medium number of holdings: 43,437
High transactions per item: 6.0
High percentage items circulated: 41.0%
High ratio holdings : ILL requests: 26.0:1
Interpretation Extremely active subject area, both high circs and high requests. Requests do not indicate that collection is not targeted. High activity could be due to interdisciplinary nature of subject.Extremely active subject area, both high circs and high requests. Requests do not indicate that collection is not targeted. High activity could be due to interdisciplinary nature of subject.
19. Getting Your Data Define a book
Include or exclude gov docs, dissertations, microprint, non-circulating items, foreign language, branch libraries
Make sure definition of book matches for every data set
Identify a time period
What data is available for all three data sets?
20. Getting Your Data Figure out what you need
Holdings: bib records (not item records)
Circulations: transaction tallies, including dates if possible
ILL borrowing: initiated requests
21. Comparing Your Data OCLC numbers for all items
Combine data sets into a database (e.g. Access)
Use LCCs to classify into Conspectus and NATC Mention 65,000 limit in Excel.Mention 65,000 limit in Excel.
22. Questions? Jennifer E. Knievel
Humanities Reference Librarian, CU Boulder
303-492-8887
jennifer.knievel@colorado.edu