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Big Challenges

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Big Challenges & Opportunities for Academic Libraries A Community College Library: Facing Challenges, Finding Opportunities Facing Challenges, Finding Opportunities ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Big Challenges


1
Big Challenges Opportunities for Academic
Libraries
  • A Community College Library Facing Challenges,
    Finding Opportunities

2
Facing Challenges, Finding Opportunities
  • Facts about CCs and their Mission
  • More than 600,000 students enrolled in Texas
    CCs. In 2007, Texas community college students
    out-numbered students enrolled in 4-year
    institutions .
  • Texas CCs have more than 75 of the states
    freshman/sophomore level students and 78 of
    minority freshman.
  • CCs have higher percentages of first-generation
    in college and students taking at least one
    developmental course . Fifty-six percent of
    first generation in college attend two-year
    institutions.
  • Always had a mission of open enrollment / access
    to higher education.
  • Provide quality academic transfer and workforce
    educational programs.
  • http//www.tacc.org / Budget Hearing Texas Public
    Community Colleges 2/4/09
  • http//nces.ed.gov/programs/coe/2008/analysis/fig
    ures/fig10.asp?popuptrue / Special Analysis 2008
    Community Colleges NCES

3
Facing Challenges, Finding Opportunities
  • Question 1 Credible in the eyes of administrators
  • Question 2 Future of role of librarians in
    academia
  • How to be viewed as essential to the college
    mission and deserving of the piece of the pie.
  • Finger on the pulse and remain the heart of the
    institution and central to the scholarly and
    educational mission.

4
Facing Challenges, Finding Opportunities
  • Article Heartburn?
  • Panel of retired administrators agreed on one
    issue no library should be without a coffee
    bar.
  • Politely saying Librarys concerns are of
    lesser importance given the reality of other
    loud institutional voices.

5
Facing Challenges, Finding Opportunities
  • Its not easy being an academic librarian these
    days.  Speculation persists that we may soon be
    the higher-education equivalent of the Maytag
    repairman, as the Internet becomes the first
    place students and professors look for
    information.
  • Original Maytag commercial
  • Bell, Steven J. "Electronic Libraries Can't Be
    Academic." The Chronicle of Higher Education
    N.p., 30 Sept. 2005. Web. 30 Sept. 2005
    lthttp//chronicle.com/weekly/v52/i06/06b01401.htmgt
    .
  • In the future, faculty expect to be less
    dependent on the library and increasingly
    dependent on electronic materials.
  • Housewright, Ross, and Roger Schonfeld. "Ithaka's
    2006 Studies of Key Stakeholders in the Digital
    Transformation of Higher Education." Ithaka
    Ithaka, 18 Aug. 2008. Web. 20 Oct. 2009
    lthttp//www.ithaka.org/ithaka-s-r/research/faculty
    -and-librarian-surveysgt. Path http//www.ithaka.o
    rg/ithaka-s-r/research/faculty-and-librarian-surve
    ys.
  • Obvious question where do these faculty
    think these electronic materials are coming from
    and made available by?

6
Facing Challenges, Finding Opportunities
  • Credible in the eyes of administrators
  • Put your team and your programs out there. Dont
    just ask your users. Ask your non-users.
  • Provide administrators with information about
    your programs and how they support institutional
    goals.
  • Adapt and innovate programs and services based on
    your assessment.

7
Facing Challenges, Finding Opportunities
  • Credible in the eyes of administrators
  • Partner with other departments and support areas.
  • Tie your programs to funding.
  • Dont throw out the baby with the bath water. If
    it still makes sense, advocate for it.

8
Facing Challenges, Finding Opportunities
  • What do the studies say about the future?
    Assessing your own future.
  • Ithaka study indicated that faculty see the
    importance of the cultural preservation role as
    well as the importance of providing access to
    information resources. Disconnect with the
    librarys role in providing access to electronic
    resources.
  • OCLC study indicated that college students want
    more emphasis on tools for self-discovery.
    Libraries were heavily identified with books and
    not other avenues for information discovery. Only
    2 start their research with library resources
    and not search engine.
  • ECAR study indicates undergraduates rate
    themselves experts/very skilled at information
    literacy (79.5). Upperclassman rate themselves
    higher than freshman.
  • Peer assessments LibQUAL, NSSE, CCSSE
  • OCLC Perceptions of libraries and information
    resources.
  • Ithaka Ithakas 2006 Studies of Key
    Stakeholders in the Digital Transformation in
    Higher
  • Education
  • EduCause - The ECAR Study of Undergraduate
    Students and Information Technology, 2008

9
Facing Challenges, Finding Opportunities
  • Future role of academic librarians/libraries
  • Grow partnerships with instructional faculty and
    direct support of curricular goals.
  • Continue development of assessment that is tied
    directly to course learning outcomes.
  • Librarians will take a more active role in
    programs aimed at improving retention,
    persistence, and student success.

10
Facing Challenges, Finding Opportunities
  • Future role of academic librarians/libraries
  • Libraries will continue to morph into
    collaborative learning centers with mixed-use
    space.
  • Librarians will continue to adapt to the changing
    landscape of higher education.

11
Facing Challenges, Finding Opportunities
  • Librarians have been the real heroes of the
    digital revolution in higher education. They are
    the ones who have seen the farthest, done the
    most, accepted the hardest challenges, and
    demonstrated most clearly the benefits of digital
    information. In the process, they have turned
    their own field upside down and have
    revolutionized their professional training. It
    is testimony to their success that we take their
    achievement and their information-management
    systems for granted.
  • Ayers, Edward L. The Academic Culture and the IT
    Culture Their Effect on Teaching and
    Scholarship. Educause Review Nov/Dec. 2004 6 Oct
    . 2009 lthttp//www.educause.edu/EDUCAUSEReview/ED
    UCAUSEReviewMagazineVolume 39/TheAcademicCulturean
    dtheITCult/157939gt

12
Facing Challenges, Finding Opportunities
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