Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Runyon, David, Steffy, Christina J.
Formato: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1318198
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
_version_ 1867181465280708608
author Runyon, David
Steffy, Christina J.
author_facet Runyon, David
Steffy, Christina J.
Runyon, David
Steffy, Christina J.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Making Your Own Luck: Academic Libraries and the Digital Shift Runyon, David Steffy, Christina J. Academic Libraries Computer Uses in Education Educational Trends Higher Education COVID-19 Pandemics Library Services Organizational Change COVID-19 did not disrupt higher education; it hastened the disruptions that have already been taking place. One particularly prominent disruption is the digital shift, or the move from primarily face-to-face operations to operations with a large digital component. In order to survive, higher education needs to fundamentally change. But how prepared is your library for these changes? You cannot simply wait for these changes to happen and hope to get lucky; instead, you need to make your own luck. Libraries are uniquely situated to lead the institution in this digital shift. This article will present an overview of student demographic and higher education trends such as decreasing enrollment, increasing diversity of the student body and its needs, technological disruptions, and changing workforce needs. Specific examples from two academic libraries in the United States will demonstrate how this information has informed practice, allowing these libraries to be ahead of the digital shift, to easily weather the COVID storm, and to be models for other campus departments. As humanity's response to the COVID-19 crisis transitions from reactive to proactive, higher education cannot return to pre-pandemic operational norms. Libraries must position themselves to nimbly adjust to disruptions of traditional services rather than rely on "getting lucky" when change is forced upon them. Instead, make your own luck by intentionally integrating more digital resources into the collection and more virtual services into the workflow, using patron data to inform workflow decisions, and flexibly adapting crisis mode operations to sustainable, permanent operations. Ultimately, this article will show how librarians can combine the tried-and-true with new library practices to adjust to the digital shift in a way that positions them to lead campuses into the future of higher education.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1318198
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2021
record_format eric
spellingShingle Making Your Own Luck: Academic Libraries and the Digital Shift
Runyon, David
Steffy, Christina J.
Academic Libraries
Computer Uses in Education
Educational Trends
Higher Education
COVID-19
Pandemics
Library Services
Organizational Change
Making Your Own Luck: Academic Libraries and the Digital Shift Runyon, David Steffy, Christina J. Academic Libraries Computer Uses in Education Educational Trends Higher Education COVID-19 Pandemics Library Services Organizational Change COVID-19 did not disrupt higher education; it hastened the disruptions that have already been taking place. One particularly prominent disruption is the digital shift, or the move from primarily face-to-face operations to operations with a large digital component. In order to survive, higher education needs to fundamentally change. But how prepared is your library for these changes? You cannot simply wait for these changes to happen and hope to get lucky; instead, you need to make your own luck. Libraries are uniquely situated to lead the institution in this digital shift. This article will present an overview of student demographic and higher education trends such as decreasing enrollment, increasing diversity of the student body and its needs, technological disruptions, and changing workforce needs. Specific examples from two academic libraries in the United States will demonstrate how this information has informed practice, allowing these libraries to be ahead of the digital shift, to easily weather the COVID storm, and to be models for other campus departments. As humanity's response to the COVID-19 crisis transitions from reactive to proactive, higher education cannot return to pre-pandemic operational norms. Libraries must position themselves to nimbly adjust to disruptions of traditional services rather than rely on "getting lucky" when change is forced upon them. Instead, make your own luck by intentionally integrating more digital resources into the collection and more virtual services into the workflow, using patron data to inform workflow decisions, and flexibly adapting crisis mode operations to sustainable, permanent operations. Ultimately, this article will show how librarians can combine the tried-and-true with new library practices to adjust to the digital shift in a way that positions them to lead campuses into the future of higher education.
title Making Your Own Luck: Academic Libraries and the Digital Shift
topic Academic Libraries
Computer Uses in Education
Educational Trends
Higher Education
COVID-19
Pandemics
Library Services
Organizational Change
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1318198