Portable Magic

"Books make people quiet, yet they are so loud.” – Nnedi Okorafor

Tag: weeding

Collection Development Policies

Photo by Sindre Aalberg on Unsplash

As I near the end of ETL503 Resourcing the Collection, I feel the need to consolidate my understanding somewhere – and what better place than my blog?

I have written a blog post on the TL’s role in selecting resources; reflected on Sara Mosle’s post “What should children read?” and the debate about non-fiction vs fiction; mused about the limitations of a digital collection; reviewed online curating tools; discussed budget proposals and who should control the library budget; compiled information on various methods of evaluating the collections and the benefits and challenges of weeding; and considered self-censorship in light of student mental health and wellbeing (because that’s where my thoughts happened to take me at that time).

Photo by Mavis CW on Unsplash

In all of that, though, I find on reflection that I’ve skirted around some of the key points. Namely, why do we need a Collection Development Policy and how can it ‘future proof’ the collection?

Khan and Bhatti (2021) quote several sources in explaining what ‘collection development’ means, which can be synthesised (and simplified) as the plan for acquiring, maintaining and disposing of items in the library collection. A key distinction here is that it is a plan, a process, an outline that provides structure, and that it must be in response to the users’ needs. It is not the ‘how’ so much as the ‘what’ – the how belongs in a Procedures manual for library staff to follow. A Collection Development Policy is a guide, a framework – as a ‘policy’ it supports the decision-making processes of the library staff, both providing some direction and some support.

What’s telling is why this is needed in the first place. As Wade (2005, p. 12) says, “today’s librarian is a new breed that no longer keeps saying ‘quiet’ and is concerned with more than just how to catalogue items under the Dewey Decimal system.” With the increase in complexity of the information literacy sciences comes an increase in responsibility. Teacher Librarians (TL) must contend with various forms of technology – both using it, managing it and supervising it – as well as new and varied sources of information – in terms of quality and access.

Compounding this is the reduction of funding of school libraries, TL positions on staff – and the dearth of  TLs overall (in Tasmania, there are only a couple left!). So the TL must do more, often with less. Less time, less staff, less funding, less collaboration with teachers – because they too are time-poor, over-stretched and, when schools don’t even have a TL, there’s no one for them to collaborate. Many new teachers wouldn’t even know what a TL does because they’ve never worked with one. What a sad thought!

So, what can a TL do? Draft a solid Collection Development Policy to make it clear that they’re not just buying random books and that there’s more involved than just cataloguing, shelving and checking them out. And then shelving again.

Photo by Fallon Michael on Unsplash

A Collection Development policy is part of a larger process that begins with analysing the needs of the school’s users, and extends to budget, selection, acquisition, collection maintenance, evaluation and de-selection (Khan & Bhatti). Collection development, overall, includes planning, consultation, goal-setting, decision-making, promotion and sharing (Khan & Bhatti).

 

‘Planning’ is another way of saying ‘analysing users’ needs’, because that is always going to be the start and end point: the purpose and the outcome. When it comes to the students, so many things need to be considered, including the curriculum; the school context (e.g. socio-economic status; setting – remote/rural, inner urban; religious affiliation etc.); the diverse profiles of the student body (language, citizenship status, age, neurodiversity, interests etc.); the school’s goals and strategic aims; access to technology; and, encompassing it all, the library budget.

Planning must also exist within the purpose of the library. Fleishhacker (2017, p.31) says that TLs should provide resources that motivate students to read. The first standard for the teaching profession is “Know students and how they learn” (Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership, 2017); Mathur (2022) says that it is “imperative” that TLs support the variety of teaching and learning styles that exist in a school, and quotes Carrigan in Johnson (2009) in saying that “‘choice’ is the essence of collection development”.

It sounds simple but gets tricky – and this is where people don’t really understand just what a TL does. In providing ‘choice’, in selecting resources that engage, inform, present multiple perspectives and points of view, that represent diversity, educate and entertain, the TL must be aware of their own biases (the better to avoid self-censorship) and use a methodical approach to avoid challenges.

A “tightly written collection development policy that spells out how you approach deciding what goes in the collection (including how gift items are handled) and […] how to handle challenges to materials” will provide support for the TL (Shores, 2018, p. 175-6).

References

Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership. Australian professional standards for teachers. (2017). https://www.aitsl.edu.au/standards

Fleishhacker, J. (2017). Collection development. Knowledge Quest45(4), 24–31.

Khan, G., & Bhatti, R. (2021). An argument on collection development and collection management. Library Philosophy and Practice, 1-7. https://primo.csu.edu.au/permalink/61CSU_INST/15aovd3/cdi_scopus_primary_2012013622 

Mathur, P. (2022). Curate, advocate, collaborate: Updating a school library collection to promote sustainability and counter eco-anxiety. Scan, 41(2). https://education.nsw.gov.au/teaching-and-learning/professional-learning/scan/past-issues/vol-41-2022/issue-2-2022

Shores, W. (2018). Collection development in an era of “fake news”. Reference & User Services Quarterly, 57(3). DOI: 10.5860/rusq.57.3.6601

Wade, C. (2005). The school library: phoenix or dodo bird? Educational Horizons, 8(5), 12-14. https://search.informit.org/doi/epdf/10.3316/aeipt.144858

Weeding: Benefits & Challenges

[Module 5: Evaluating Collections]

Why weed? The benefits:

A key purpose of the library collection is to provide relevant and useful information and ideas in accessible formats to the staff and students of the school.

Yet, information becomes out-of-date, resources become old and unappealing, interests change and so do the available formats. In order to keep the school library collection engaging, current (as relevant), reflective of the community and curriculum (debmille, 2011), and in good condition, it is important to undergo the process of weeding as regularly as time and staffing allows.

More specifically, weeding is beneficial for the following reasons:

What to Weed: Subjective Weeding Criteria: • Poor physical condition • Poor format • Poor content • Inappropriate for co...

(debmille, 2011, slide 6)

CREW lists the six benefits of weeding as:

  1. space saving
  2. time saving
  3. improve the collection’s appeal
  4. enhance the library’s reputation
  5. keep up with collection needs
  6. constant feedback on the strengths and weaknesses of the collection

(Larson, 2012, pp. 15-16) 

In Rebecca Vnuk’s book The Weeding Handbook (2015), she outlines several benefits to weed the library collection:

  • To free up shelf space (p. 1)
  • To increase your knowledge of what’s in the collection (p. 1)
  • To purge outdated materials (p. 2)

Jennifer LaGarde’s blog post “Keeping your library collection smelling FRESH” (2013) specifies some excellent reasons for weeding the school library collection:

  • Old resources can include misinformation
  • The quality of the text and visual can be poor
  • Older texts can be so unappealing, students don’t want to try them
  • The content may be so out-of-date that it includes offensive stereotypes, outdated language and concepts – good as a teaching resource, but not reflective of the diversity of the cohort or inclusive or equitable
  • A dated, tatty collection makes the whole library seem dated and tatty, which is off-putting

Similarly, her “F.R.E.S.H.” poster – a guide for what to weed – can be interpreted as reasons to do so.

  • The collection should foster a love of reading
  • It should reflect the school community’s diverse population – each student should be represented
  • It should reflect an equitable world view, a variety of perspectives and “encourage global connections” (not be insular, inward-thinking, or foster an attitude of superiority)
  • It should support the courses offered at the school
  • The resources in the collection should be of high quality.

Weeding the collection ensures that it meets these standards. To do it in such a way as to avoid complaints or challenges, the New Zealand National Library (n.d.) stresses the importance of selecting (and sticking to) criteria for weeding. These criteria would be context-specific, and can be adapted from the benefits, above.

For instance, regarding the quality of the text, a criterion could be “the item is in poor condition”. Your library’s policy could expand on each criterion to provide specifics or examples – in this case, “the item is tatty, has poor/weak binding, is missing pages, has food or drink stains, is badly creased or dog-eared, is beginning to smell (e.g. from a breakdown of the resin/glue used in the binding).”

The challenges:

Vnuk (2015) says that while for many, ‘purging’ or weeding the library collection of unwanted, out-of-date, and worn-out books seems to go against the role of the librarian, it in fact lies at the heart of the TL’s role, as expressed by “S. R. Ranganathan’s Five Laws of Library Science: Save the time of the reader and The library is a growing organism.” (p. 2) Still, it can be hard to throw out books when so many librarians are drawn to the role partly from a love and/or appreciation of them. There are many ‘what ifs’, most especially:

What if I weed it and then someone needs it?

Another challenge might be the library’s budget: does the library have the funds to replace what is weeded?

Thirdly, there’s the challenge of deciding who is responsible for the job (Vnuk, 2015, p. 3). This needs to be spelled out in the collection development policy, along with the weeding criteria, timeframe/frequency, and what do to with the weeded books.

Which brings us to the fourth challenge: what to do with weeded books. The National Library of New Zealand (2014) has some useful suggestions in their video. Discarding books would need to be decided on a case-by-case basis. You can discuss literary books with English teachers to get their input, and any that they feel may appear on a future text list can be re-categorised and placed in the Stacks.

Duplicates could find a home in a classroom, as can books that haven’t been checked out in over 10 years. Many can be donated to the school fair’s book sale table, or similar. But those that are grungy and falling apart will need to simply be thrown out (unless the Art teachers want some for a project? Always good to ask around!).

 

References

debmille. (2011). Weeding not just for gardens [Slideshare].  http://www.slideshare.net/debmille/weeding-not-just-for-gardens

Larson, J. (2012). CREW: a weeding manual for modern libraries, Austin, TX: Texas State Library and Archives Commission. https://www.tsl.texas.gov/sites/default/files/public/tslac/ld/ld/pubs/crew/crewmethod12.pdf

LaGarde, J. (2013, October 1). Keeping your library collection smelling F.R.E.S.H! [blog post]. The adventures of Library Girl. https://www.librarygirl.net/post/keeping-your-library-collection-smelling-f-r-e-s-h

National Library of New Zealand, Services to Schools. (n.d.) Weeding your school library collection. https://natlib.govt.nz/schools/school-libraries/collections-and-resources/weeding-your-school-library-collection

NationalLibraryNZ. (2014, March 30). Weeding your School Library [Video]. YouTube  https://youtu.be/ogUdxIfItqg 

Vnuk, R. (2015). The Weeding Handbook: A shelf-by-shelf guide. Chicago, ALA Editions. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/CSUAU/detail.action?pq-origsite=primo&docID=4531556

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