Transcript Slide 1

Stocktaking
and
Weeding
Secret library business or essential
collection development activities?
Renate Beilharz
Bulding on essentials!
16 October 2006
Secret Library Business
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Library is ‘closed’ for stocktaking
No perceivable outcome to the average user
Weeding is rarely done flamboyantly
Weeded items are ‘hidden’ from staff
Lack of understanding of the purpose of
these activities
Collection Development Policy
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Purpose of the collection
Type of material in the collection
Selection criteria and processes
Budgeting policy
Weeding criteria
Stocktaking processes
Dealing with controversial material
Purpose of a School Library Collection
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Reflect needs of the users
Support and enrich the curriculum
Encourage and develop a love of reading
To be accessible to all users
A school library collection needs to be:
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Relevant
Accessible
Attractive
Stocktaking and weeding are complementary
activities necessary for achieving these goals
Stocktaking objectives
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Ensure that the database reflects the actual
collection
Identify errors in cataloguing and processing
Identify areas which have losses
Identify areas of strength and weakness for
ongoing collection development
Other purposes of stocktake
Each resource is handled at least once a year
 Perfect ordering resources
 Identify misplaced items
 Tidying the shelves
 Check links for electronic
Resources
 Finds the books that haven’t been checked in
correctly
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You want to do what???
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http://www.warriorlibrarian.com/HUMOUR/ag
ony.html
Stocktaking – Positive PR
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Write a Collection Development Policy,
including stocktaking
Talk to the school community about the
reasons for stocktaking
Consider alternative ways to stocktake that
do not involved closing completely
Involve members of the school community in
the process where practical
Hints for stress free stocktaking
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Read the manual
Check the equipment and clarify the physical
processes
Run a trial stocktake of a small collection
Ensure that processes are clearly
documented and understood by staff
Decide which collections are to be
stocktaken
More hints
Make a check list of collections and tasks
 Take the time to shelf read, this will help
when dealing with anomalies
 Leave enough time to rectify anolmalies
 Be realistic in what you can get done in the
time allocated – you don’t have to do all
collections each year
 Enjoy the task, it can be rewarding
After stocktaking
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Run all relevant reports and final procedures
Make sure you change the status of missing
items
Create a written report for administration and
staff
Celebrate another job well done
Weeding objectives
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To have a collection that is
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Current
Relevant
Attractive and presentable
To give an accurate picture of the quality of
the collection
To make room for new resources
It does not matter how many books you may have, but whether they are
good or not.
Lucius Annaceus Senecca
Weed!
Small, but high quality collections are infinitely
better. And this is why. Continuous, thoughtful
weeding:
 Rids your collections of sexist, racist and just plain
inaccurate materials.
 Makes the good stuff easier to find and more
appealing.
 Sends the message that the library may not be
adequately funded.
http://www.doug-johnson.com/dougwri/weed.html
Weeding criteria - MUSTIE
Misleading – factually inaccurate
Ugly – worn beyond mending
Superseded – new edition or better information
Trivial – no literary or scientific merit
Irrelevant – to needs of school
Elsewhere – material easily borrowed or available
from another source
Weeding criteria - Quantative
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Borrowing statistics
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Usage over a period of time
Date of publication
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Item older than a certain date
Excuses not to weed
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A large collection looks good
I hate throwing things away
If I pulled everything off that should go, I
wouldn’t have a collection left
My principal/teachers won’t let me weed
I haven’t the funds to replace discarded
items
Weed!
Poorly weeded collections are not the sign of
poor budgets but of poor librarianship.
Period. Only two things can happen if library
material replacement budgets are
inadequate. The collection ages if the
librarian does not weed. The collection gets
smaller if the librarian does weed. That’s it.
http://www.doug-johnson.com/dougwri/weed.html
Weed!
Whether fortunate or unfortunate, many people regard
books as sacred objects and have difficulty throwing
them away. An industrial arts teacher at Evelyn’s
school glares at me to this day, claiming he hurt his
back climbing out of the dumpster into which I had
thrown away some “perfectly good books.” What he
did not understand and we need to remember is that
it is not books that are sacred, but the thoughts,
inspiration, and accurate information they contain.
http://www.doug-johnson.com/dougwri/weed.html
Weeding – positive PR
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Including weeding criteria in your Collection
Development Policy
Talk to the school community, keep good
examples of weeded items to show
Involve relevant staff, using their expertise in
specialist areas
Use the opportunity to identify and advertise
under utilised resources, and promote newly
purchased material
Hassle free weeding
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Decide on clear, justifiable criteria
Don’t try to weed your whole collection at
once – do a little at a time
Get the support of at least one other staff
member
Do it in secret under the cover of a dark
moon, destroying all evidence as you go
Helpful hints
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Discard old editions of texts immediately
Be sure to weed AV material
Check online content of sites to ensure
relevance and currency
If in doubt about a subject area, weed with
teachers
After weeding
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If unsure about some items, have someone
else check them
Remember to delete records from the
catalogue
Stamp the items ‘DISCARDED’ or ‘WEEDED’
Remove any circulation stationary
Keep a record of number of discards
Getting rid of an item
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Donate it
Recycle it
Sell it
Discard it
Fun with weeding
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If it isn't clean, it will be thrown away
If it doesn't look good, it will be thrown away
if it can't be managed, it will be thrown away
If it is abused, it will be thrown away
If it can't be identified, it will be thrown away
If it has no use, it will be thrown away
If it needs batteries, it will be thrown away
If it needs bulbs, it will be thrown away
If it needs a manual, it will be thrown away
If it's operation isn't inherently obvious, it will be thrown away
If it was a gift from a faculty member who hasn't been seen since, it will be
thrown away
if it was a gift from the principal, keep it.
Lamb, Annette and Larry Johnson 2005, Collection maintenance and weeding
http://eduscapes.com/sms/weeding.html
Future
RFID tags
 Shelf reading, shelving,
sorting, searching,
weeding
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Resources
Baumbach, Donna J. and Linda L.. Miller 2006, Less is more: a practical guide to weeding
school library collections, American Library Association, Chicago.
Johnson, Doug 2003, Weed! http://www.doug.johnson.com/dougwri/weed.html
Lamb, Annette and Larry Johnson 2005, Collection maintenance and weeding
http://eduscapes.com/sms/weeding.html
Punshon, Marianne (ed.) 2006 Managing for learning: issues for primary school libraries, SLAV,
Carlton, Vic.
The SLAV website www.slav.schools.net.au has links to many relevant sites related to this topc.