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Collection Management | 2016

Analysis of Print Purchase on Demand Titles Ordered via Interlibrary Loan: A Collection Development Perspective

Carol Kochan; Jennifer Duncan

ABSTRACT This article examines data from five years of titles ordered as part of an academic research librarys purchase on demand program (POD-ILL) for print titles originally requested through interlibrary loan. The study evaluates a variety of factors: patron departments, campus location, and status; the subject areas of the books acquired; cost; and publishers. Assessment of POD-ILL data may assist a collection management librarian to determine the value of having patrons contribute to collection development decisions. In addition, subject librarians can use the data to evaluate approval and demand-driven acquisition profiles.


Charleston Conference | 2015

We Sincerely Regret to Inform You That the Material You Have Requested Is Unavailable via Interlibrary Loan

Jennifer Duncan; Carol Kochan; Lars Leon

This paper outlines the preliminary results of the authors’ research study on one consortium’s interlibrary loan and collection development practices for returnable items. Local practices and policies that appear to have affected other member libraries are outlined. The audience will consider whether this analysis identifies concerns that they should investigate with their own consortium partners. Do local collection development decisions have an impact on consortium resource sharing agreements? And does it matter? This study looks at collection development and resource sharing budgets, practices, and policies for returnable items. It considers the possible effects of widespread changes in collection development practices on interlibrary loan operations, particularly within a consortium but potentially across all lending partners. The most basic collection development goal is to provide the materials that meet the research and teaching needs of the local institution. In terms of providing access to monographic materials, that means buying a (shrinking) core of print and electronic materials prospectively through firm orders and approval plans, leasing appropriate e‐ book packages that might disappear, and scoping a larger set of materials for potential demand‐ driven acquisition. Then, at the (ever‐growing) periphery is the content that is not have immediately available. Resource sharing is, for most libraries, an integral part of providing access to the corpus of information resources. However, most libraries make collection development decisions independently of others in their consortium. The ability for resource sharing officers to provide access to that global corpus is predicated on the idea that other collections officers have already identified and purchased materials that they are willing and able to share. Collection development officers claim to be radically scaling back, changing purchasing channels, and shifting formats. Because some of these decisions (e.g. moving to e‐book only purchasing, reducing prospective purchases, considering certain categories of materials out of scope, etc.) may reduce the content available to share with other libraries, the authors wanted to examine what effect these behaviors might have on interlibrary loan activity within a consortium. The assumption is that someone out there, hopefully in a preferred consortium, is surely buying that content and they can loan it. In the rush to move to new collection development models, will libraries have collections that can be shared sustainably? What, will that mean for the ability to provide a robust interlibrary loan service through a preferred consortium? Utah State University and the University of Kansas are both a part of the Greater Western Library Alliance (GWLA), whose mission is to deliver “cost‐ effective and high‐quality information services to its member institutions and their clientele.” Comprised of 33 academic research libraries, primarily west of the Mississippi, GWLA serves over 650,000 undergraduates, 150,000 graduate students, and 41,000 instructional faculty. In 2012 the shared collection was comprised of more than 130 million volumes and member combined materials budgets exceeded


Serials Librarian | 2008

Serials as a Public Service: We're One Big Happy Family

Jennifer Duncan; Sylvia McAphee; Lisa S. Blackwell

310 million dollars per year. The Greater Western Library Association has a long history of resource sharing and has developed and implemented policies that both speed material delivery and increase the convenience of the service. For example, GWLA Copyright of this contribution remains in the name of the author(s). http://dx.doi.org/10.5703/1288284315615 Plenary Sessions 75 uses expedited shipping and provides a twelve‐ week loan period. The underlying philosophy is for lenders to “treat other member libraries’ patrons the same as their own.” (Kochan, 2013) The GWLA Collection Development Committee also has a history of collaborative projects and group purchasing. More recently it has begun exploring what it might mean to do some kind of collaborative collection development. In determining if the project should be retrospective or prospective or both (or neither), it becomes clear that issues surrounding the unique needs of each institution, the size of the consortium, and the scope of the data for analysis are all very challenging for a group of volunteers to manage.


Serials Librarian | 2005

Serials Standards: Envisioning a Solution to the Online Serials Management Mess

Jennifer Duncan

ABSTRACT Jennifer Duncan and Sylvia McAphee exemplify career paths that differ from traditionally defined job descriptions and assigned responsibilities. In the course of their careers, both of these librarians have assumed simultaneous roles in Technical and Public Services departments. In this presentation, they challenge librarians working in traditional roles to embrace opportunities to serve in positions outside their assigned job descriptions in spite of barriers imposed by peer or administrative adherence to narrowly defined roles.


College & Research Libraries | 2008

The Role of Information Architecture in Designing a Third-Generation Library Web Site

Jennifer Duncan; Wendy Holliday

SUMMARY Whereas the transmission of data relating to the initiation, renewal, or cancellation of serial subscriptions has developed into a robust and standardized system based on Electronic Data Exchange (EDI), the ability of serialists to effectively exchange and manipulate information pertaining to data about the specific content and access rights to the subscriptions at a given library has become increasingly problematic. The rapid development of local and vendor systems designed to handle subscription data has necessitated that this data be standardized for smooth exchange. Ted Fons and Regina Reynoldss discussion of the standards work underway at NISO and EDItEUR, as well as the current ISO revision of the ISSN, provides an overview of the framework for potential resolution to this challenge.


College & Research Libraries News | 2008

Working from afar: A new trend for librarianship

Jennifer Duncan


Serials Librarian | 2006

Issues in Scholarly Communications: Creating a Campus-Wide Dialog

Jennifer Duncan; William Walsh; Tim Daniels; Joe Becker


Archive | 2010

Piloting Purchase on Demand: Collection Development Through Interlibrary Loan

Carol Kochan; Jennifer Duncan; Britt A. Fagerheim


Serials Librarian | 2008

Issues in Scholarly Communications

Jennifer Duncan; William Walsh; Tim Daniels; Joe Becker


Archive | 2010

An Entrepreneurial Approach to Librarianship

Flora Shrode; Jennifer Duncan; Wendy Holliday

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Joe Becker

New Mexico State University

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Tim Daniels

Georgia State University

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William Walsh

Georgia State University

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Lisa S. Blackwell

Nationwide Children's Hospital

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Sylvia McAphee

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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