Collection Evaluation in Academic Libraries: A Practical Guide for Librarians
Librarians have long used data to describe their collections. Traditional measures have simply been inputs and outputs: volumes acquired, processed, owned, or circulated. With the growth since the 1990s of cultures of assessment, librarians have sought statistics that are evaluative rather than simply descriptive. More recently, exponentially increasing journal prices and an economic recession have intensified the need to make careful purchasing decisions and to justify these to administrators. A methodical evaluation of a library collection can help librarians understand and meet user needs and can help communicate to administrators that the library is a good use of the institution’s money.

Collection Evaluation in Academic Libraries: A Practical Guide for Librarians equips collections managers to select and implement a method or several methods of evaluating their library collections.

It includes sections on four tools for evaluation:

• Comparison to peer institutions
• Core lists
• Usage statistics from circulation and ILL
• Citation analysis

Chapters on each of these approaches present the advantages and disadvantages of each method, instructions on data collection and analysis—with screenshots—and suggested action steps after completing the analysis. With a unique combination of step-by-step instructions and discussions of the purpose and role of data, this book provides an unusually thorough guide to collection evaluation. It will be indispensable for collection development librarians and anyone looking to strengthen the culture of assessment within the library.
1121263015
Collection Evaluation in Academic Libraries: A Practical Guide for Librarians
Librarians have long used data to describe their collections. Traditional measures have simply been inputs and outputs: volumes acquired, processed, owned, or circulated. With the growth since the 1990s of cultures of assessment, librarians have sought statistics that are evaluative rather than simply descriptive. More recently, exponentially increasing journal prices and an economic recession have intensified the need to make careful purchasing decisions and to justify these to administrators. A methodical evaluation of a library collection can help librarians understand and meet user needs and can help communicate to administrators that the library is a good use of the institution’s money.

Collection Evaluation in Academic Libraries: A Practical Guide for Librarians equips collections managers to select and implement a method or several methods of evaluating their library collections.

It includes sections on four tools for evaluation:

• Comparison to peer institutions
• Core lists
• Usage statistics from circulation and ILL
• Citation analysis

Chapters on each of these approaches present the advantages and disadvantages of each method, instructions on data collection and analysis—with screenshots—and suggested action steps after completing the analysis. With a unique combination of step-by-step instructions and discussions of the purpose and role of data, this book provides an unusually thorough guide to collection evaluation. It will be indispensable for collection development librarians and anyone looking to strengthen the culture of assessment within the library.
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Collection Evaluation in Academic Libraries: A Practical Guide for Librarians

Collection Evaluation in Academic Libraries: A Practical Guide for Librarians

by Karen C. Kohn
Collection Evaluation in Academic Libraries: A Practical Guide for Librarians

Collection Evaluation in Academic Libraries: A Practical Guide for Librarians

by Karen C. Kohn

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Overview

Librarians have long used data to describe their collections. Traditional measures have simply been inputs and outputs: volumes acquired, processed, owned, or circulated. With the growth since the 1990s of cultures of assessment, librarians have sought statistics that are evaluative rather than simply descriptive. More recently, exponentially increasing journal prices and an economic recession have intensified the need to make careful purchasing decisions and to justify these to administrators. A methodical evaluation of a library collection can help librarians understand and meet user needs and can help communicate to administrators that the library is a good use of the institution’s money.

Collection Evaluation in Academic Libraries: A Practical Guide for Librarians equips collections managers to select and implement a method or several methods of evaluating their library collections.

It includes sections on four tools for evaluation:

• Comparison to peer institutions
• Core lists
• Usage statistics from circulation and ILL
• Citation analysis

Chapters on each of these approaches present the advantages and disadvantages of each method, instructions on data collection and analysis—with screenshots—and suggested action steps after completing the analysis. With a unique combination of step-by-step instructions and discussions of the purpose and role of data, this book provides an unusually thorough guide to collection evaluation. It will be indispensable for collection development librarians and anyone looking to strengthen the culture of assessment within the library.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781442250659
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 06/24/2015
Series: Practical Guides for Librarians , #16
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 204
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

Karen Kohn is the Collection Development Manager at Landman Library, Arcadia University, where she has conducted a usage-based collection evaluation and an analysis of student bibliographies. She has a MS in Library and Information Science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and an MA in Sociology from Temple University. Ms Kohn has published articles in College&Research Libraries and the Journal of Web Librarianship and has presented on collection evaluation at the Charleston Conference: Issues in Book and Serials Acquisitions and the Acquisitions Institute at Timberline Lodge. Slides from both of these conferences are available online, and links are available on request.
Karen Kohn is Collections Analysis Librarian at Temple University in Philadelphia, where she serves on the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Collections Committee and the Open Education Group. She also teaches Introduction to Collection Analysis through Library Juice Academy and serves on the editorial board of portal: Libraries and the Academy. She is the author of Collection Evaluation in Academic Libraries: A Practical Guide for Librarians (Rowman&Littlefield, 2015) and has published articles in College&Research Libraries, Journal of Academic Librarianship, Journal of Documentation, Collection Management, and portal.

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments

Chapter 1. How Collection Evaluation Can Benefit Your Library
Chapter 2. Approaches to Evaluating Your Collection
Chapter 3. Before You Start
Chapter 4. Benchmarking – Collecting and Analyzing the Data
Chapter 5. Benchmarking—Interpreting and Acting on the Data
Chapter 6. List-Checking — Collecting and Analyzing the Data
Chapter 7. List-Checking – Interpreting and Acting on the Data
Chapter 8. Usage Statistics—Collecting and Analyzing the Data
Chapter 9. Usage Statistics—Interpreting and Acting on the Data
Chapter 10. Citation Analysis – Collecting and Analyzing the Data
Chapter 11. Citation Analysis—Interpreting and Acting on the Data
Chapter 12. Sharing What You Found

Index
About the Author
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