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Assessing our collection strengths. Maureen Pinder COSEELIS Conference 28 th June 2011. Why categorise collections?. Need to develop a coherent strategic approach to collection management and development at a time when resources are limited
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Assessing our collection strengths Maureen Pinder COSEELIS Conference 28th June 2011
Why categorise collections? • Need to develop a coherent strategic approach to collection management and development at a time when resources are limited • Need to be able to prioritise the use of scarce resources
What are the drivers? • Space / the pressure to weed • Physical condition of stock and need for preservation and conservation • Prioritisation for digitisation • Budget pressures • Aid decision making for collaborative collection management
And the scale of the problem? Space: • Libraries are full, new store will give only a few years’ growth Leeds survey of open access collections: • At least 55% are printed on acid paper • 10% at immediate risk, many more slowly crumbling • Poor quality of manufacture of many foreign publications • Particularly acute for material published 1850-1970 • Major research collections at risk almost in their entirety
We know about our collections, don’t we? • We’ve always assumed we knew our ‘best bits’ • But spread and pace of relegation and weeding has increased • And staff have changed over the years • So we decided we needed to take this seriously and act now
Group set up to concentrate on the issue First priority: to define ‘types’ of collection: Heritage: Significant and distinctive collections which continue to be developed Legacy: Significant and distinctive collections: historic strengths but no longer added to Self-renewing: Supporting current research & teaching Finite: No longer relevant - can be considered for withdrawal
Issues around describing collections • A collection can be dispersed around various classmarks, and on both open and closed access, not just in one place • It might contain material from Special Collections and the open shelves, for example • Terminology confusing – collection, subject, sequence, classmark? • All opinions are subjective • Can the status change at a later stage?
The process • Access database created to store findings/decisions • Methodology and workflow worked out for information gathering • Criteria established to judge collections against • Used old Anderson returns as a rough guide to get us started • Beginning to gather information from ‘experts’ – current and retired staff and academics • Using pilot COPAC collection management tool to benchmark collections against other libraries • Identified ILL data as another useful source • Still looking for more data sources and methods of assessment
To sum up • At the early stages of a long process • Is essential and valuable work to direct our resources to the right areas • Will raise our profile, define our distinctiveness, evidence our impact • Might lead to bids for external funding, promotional activities • Contribute to the University’s status and attract scholars