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Main Authors: Carriuolo, Nancy, Reis, Tovah
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1075839
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author Carriuolo, Nancy
Reis, Tovah
author_facet Carriuolo, Nancy
Reis, Tovah
Carriuolo, Nancy
Reis, Tovah
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents The New Role of Librarians and Libraries: Removing the Silence Signs Carriuolo, Nancy Reis, Tovah College Libraries Librarians Library Role Library Services Electronic Libraries Printed Materials Library Materials Electronic Publishing Library Administration An increasing number of institutions are freeing up shelf space in their libraries and moving in student services as well as a coffee shop and other lures such as flexible seating arrangements. Librarians are taking down the silence signs in all but the quiet study room and urging members of the academic community to meet, talk, research and incubate new ideas collaboratively as well as to engage in more traditional activities. Of course, all of this change is jarring to traditional academics, despite many good arguments about saving space, saving funds, and drawing greater numbers of thinkers to the library to "create" new knowledge. The question is how to make the change and communicate the change successfully. As more libraries remove printed materials from shelves, few have shared their successes and mistakes in doing so. This article describes the processes instituted by the Rhode Island College (RIC), which included: (1) planning before purging; (2) beginning of a persuasive communication plan; (3) getting down to the hard work of deselection; (4) what to do with all those printed pages; and (5) after the deselected become dearly departed, then what?. With plans well underway, RIC is changing the old library space to include student services and a coffee shop where students will be able to learn with the assistance of a librarian who can help them not only to access prior knowledge (the traditional role of the library) but also to ponder new questions, solve problems, and "create new knowledge."
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1075839
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2015
record_format eric
spellingShingle The New Role of Librarians and Libraries: Removing the Silence Signs
Carriuolo, Nancy
Reis, Tovah
College Libraries
Librarians
Library Role
Library Services
Electronic Libraries
Printed Materials
Library Materials
Electronic Publishing
Library Administration
The New Role of Librarians and Libraries: Removing the Silence Signs Carriuolo, Nancy Reis, Tovah College Libraries Librarians Library Role Library Services Electronic Libraries Printed Materials Library Materials Electronic Publishing Library Administration An increasing number of institutions are freeing up shelf space in their libraries and moving in student services as well as a coffee shop and other lures such as flexible seating arrangements. Librarians are taking down the silence signs in all but the quiet study room and urging members of the academic community to meet, talk, research and incubate new ideas collaboratively as well as to engage in more traditional activities. Of course, all of this change is jarring to traditional academics, despite many good arguments about saving space, saving funds, and drawing greater numbers of thinkers to the library to "create" new knowledge. The question is how to make the change and communicate the change successfully. As more libraries remove printed materials from shelves, few have shared their successes and mistakes in doing so. This article describes the processes instituted by the Rhode Island College (RIC), which included: (1) planning before purging; (2) beginning of a persuasive communication plan; (3) getting down to the hard work of deselection; (4) what to do with all those printed pages; and (5) after the deselected become dearly departed, then what?. With plans well underway, RIC is changing the old library space to include student services and a coffee shop where students will be able to learn with the assistance of a librarian who can help them not only to access prior knowledge (the traditional role of the library) but also to ponder new questions, solve problems, and "create new knowledge."
title The New Role of Librarians and Libraries: Removing the Silence Signs
topic College Libraries
Librarians
Library Role
Library Services
Electronic Libraries
Printed Materials
Library Materials
Electronic Publishing
Library Administration
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1075839