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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cubberley, Carol W.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1983
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED286532
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author Cubberley, Carol W.
author_facet Cubberley, Carol W.
Cubberley, Carol W.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents An Examination and Analysis of Circulation Patterns in the Nursing Books of an Academic Library. Cubberley, Carol W. Academic Libraries Books Higher Education Library Circulation Library Collection Development Library Collections Library Material Selection Nursing Publishing Industry Statistical Analysis Use Studies User Needs (Information) This report describes a use study designed to facilitate the selection of books that will be needed and used by identifying heavily used subjects and publishers in an academic library's collection of nursing books. Discussions include the study background and significance, study limitations, and basic assumptions. In addition, the procedures for data collection are described, including an inventory of the entire collection of 522 nursing books to ascertain their availability for use; the identification of classifications with average circulations higher than the average for the entire collection; and the analysis of publishers to determine those whose books circulated heavily. Based on the findings of this examination, it was considered prudent to purchase all the nursing output of those publishers who most frequently publish nursing books and to purchase duplicates in those classification areas which receive heavy circulation. It was also decided to test the significance of the study findings by monitoring the use of the books purchased as a result of the study and to conduct a user survey to determine user perceptions of collection adequacy. In addition, the use of Spearman rank order correlation to compare sample analysis with complete set analysis indicated that sampling would not be an acceptable technique for examining collections of this size. Statistical results are presented in three tables, and eight references are provided. (KM)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED286532
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1983
record_format eric
spellingShingle An Examination and Analysis of Circulation Patterns in the Nursing Books of an Academic Library.
Cubberley, Carol W.
Academic Libraries
Books
Higher Education
Library Circulation
Library Collection Development
Library Collections
Library Material Selection
Nursing
Publishing Industry
Statistical Analysis
Use Studies
User Needs (Information)
An Examination and Analysis of Circulation Patterns in the Nursing Books of an Academic Library. Cubberley, Carol W. Academic Libraries Books Higher Education Library Circulation Library Collection Development Library Collections Library Material Selection Nursing Publishing Industry Statistical Analysis Use Studies User Needs (Information) This report describes a use study designed to facilitate the selection of books that will be needed and used by identifying heavily used subjects and publishers in an academic library's collection of nursing books. Discussions include the study background and significance, study limitations, and basic assumptions. In addition, the procedures for data collection are described, including an inventory of the entire collection of 522 nursing books to ascertain their availability for use; the identification of classifications with average circulations higher than the average for the entire collection; and the analysis of publishers to determine those whose books circulated heavily. Based on the findings of this examination, it was considered prudent to purchase all the nursing output of those publishers who most frequently publish nursing books and to purchase duplicates in those classification areas which receive heavy circulation. It was also decided to test the significance of the study findings by monitoring the use of the books purchased as a result of the study and to conduct a user survey to determine user perceptions of collection adequacy. In addition, the use of Spearman rank order correlation to compare sample analysis with complete set analysis indicated that sampling would not be an acceptable technique for examining collections of this size. Statistical results are presented in three tables, and eight references are provided. (KM)
title An Examination and Analysis of Circulation Patterns in the Nursing Books of an Academic Library.
topic Academic Libraries
Books
Higher Education
Library Circulation
Library Collection Development
Library Collections
Library Material Selection
Nursing
Publishing Industry
Statistical Analysis
Use Studies
User Needs (Information)
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED286532