1 / 33

Policies for Resource Sharing: Why they Matter and How to Rethink Them

Policies for Resource Sharing: Why they Matter and How to Rethink Them. Texas State Library & Archives Commission October 9, 2009 Anne Beaubien University of Michigan Library Past Chair, Rethinking Resource Sharing Steering Committee. Policies as Communication. Internal patrons

arnon
Download Presentation

Policies for Resource Sharing: Why they Matter and How to Rethink Them

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Policies for Resource Sharing: Why they Matter and How to Rethink Them Texas State Library & Archives Commission October 9, 2009 Anne Beaubien University of Michigan Library Past Chair, Rethinking Resource Sharing Steering Committee

  2. Policies as Communication • Internal patrons • External patrons • Staff

  3. Types of Policies • Request Management • Customer Service • Patron Privacy • Collections • Financial

  4. Overview • Why have policies? • Rethinking Resource Sharing Initiative and their vision • Changes in our environment • Resource Sharing Policies Review • Next steps

  5. What is the Rethinking Resource Sharing Initiative? an ad hoc group that advocates for a complete rethink of the way libraries conduct resource sharing

  6. Mission • Catalyst for systematic change • Inspiring a change in provision of services • Offer people options

  7. A White Paper “It’s Time Again to Think about Resource Sharing” • published February 2005 • by Brenda Bailey-Hainer, Eric Jung, Gail Wanner, Dan Iddings, Clare MacKeigan, Mark Needleman, Ted Koppel, Candy Zemon

  8. What’s Different? • Internet has changed user expectations • More people work outside the library context • Everyone manages information differently • More use of mobile devices • The publishing world is changing

  9. Policies Committee • Purpose • Manifesto for Rethinking Resource Sharing • Remove barriers • Reduce cost • Offer users options

  10. Manifesto #1 • Fewer restrictions • Imposed only as necessary • Lowest possible barriers to fulfillment presented

  11. Manifesto #2 • Users can choose from options • delivery format • method of delivery • fulfillment type • loan, copy, digital copy, and purchase

  12. Manifesto #3 • Global access • Use both formal and informal networking agreements • Goal is lowest barrier to fulfillment

  13. Manifesto #4 • Share resources from all types of cultural institutions • Libraries • Archives • Museums • Expertise of all types utilized

  14. Manifesto #5 • Reference service facilitates sharing • Use reference expertise to aid fulfillment • No findable object should be totally unattainable

  15. Manifesto #6 • Offer service for a fee rather than refusing service • Strive to achieve services that are not more expensive than commercial services

  16. Manifesto #7 • Everyone a library user • Registration should be as easy as signing up for commercial web services

  17. Manifesto for Rethinking Resource Sharing • Endorsed by: • ALA/RUSA/STARS Exec. Committee, January 2007 • ALA/RUSA/STARS Rethinking Resource Sharing Policies Committee, January 2007 • Rethinking Resource Sharing Steering Committee, February 2007 • IFLA Document Delivery and Resource Sharing Standing Committee, May 2007 • MAILL (Maryland Interlibrary Loan), October 18, 2007 • DELNET (Developing Library Network-India) January 2009 • Danish Research Library Association September 2009

  18. Rethinking Resource Sharing Policies Committee Checklist • Mark the things that your library is already doing or plans to do in the next twelve months

  19. Patron Privacy • Access to records • Share information with other staff? • Purge old e-mails? • Invoices

  20. Financial Policies • Check handling • Credit card safeguards • Record retention

  21. RRS Innovation Awards • Recognizes and honors an individual or institution for changes they made to improve users’ access to information through resource sharing in their library, consortium or state or country.

  22. RRS Innovation Awards $1,000 Cash Awards (up to two) We are grateful to OCLC and Relais International Each are funding an award in 2010

  23. RRS Innovation Awards • Factors considered in selection of award winners • Impact on users • Scalability • Sustainability • Ability for other libraries/consortia to replicate the idea • Initiative and risk taking

  24. Interoperability Committee Identify technical challenges in resource sharing Identify communities who are interested in building solutions Outreach to these communities (include systems vendors) to understand interoperability issues Promote fledgling solutions to libraries to gather feedback and make the solutions more effective

  25. Communications Committee • Created RRS logo design • Designed stickers for distribution • Tracked • Articles • Presentations • http://www.rethinkingresourcesharing.org/index.html

  26. User Needs Committee • Gain insight into the needs of the common user inside and outside the library environment • New co-committee chairs • User survey • Testing instrument • Will develop a tool kit for all types of libraries

  27. Delivery Committee • Physical and virtual delivery of materials is important • Current possible projects • Home delivery clearinghouse • International branding of home delivery • Investigating digitization • Participate in NISO Physical Delivery Task Force

  28. RRS Steering Committee • Revised vision • Rewrote the charter • Developed a three year strategic plan

  29. Forums • 2007 Rethinking Resource Sharing Forum, Chicago, April 2007 • ALA RUSA STARS Preconference, Anaheim CA, June 2008 • The 2009 Rethinking Resource Sharing Forum, Dublin, OH, May 2009 • ALA ASCLA Preconference, Washington DC June 2010

  30. Become Involved with RRS • Join the RRS listserve http://www.rethinkingresourcesharing.org/involve.html • Change things in your library/consortium • Volunteer to be on a working group • Find a way to share resources

  31. Next Steps • Identify 1-2 steps to take at your library • Review or write your policies • Measure success and user satisfaction • Communicate your policies

  32. Questions and Comments?

More Related