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The Librarian's Crystal Ball

June 23, 2010

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Colleges with lucrative online arms will get their nonprofit statuses revoked! All library functions will be outsourced! Campuses will be replaced by temporary versions in rented spaces that are built and disassembled at the beginning of each term! Scholarship will become more efficacious than ever before -- or will stagnate entirely!

Welcome to the future -- or, rather, to a series of many of possible “futures” posited in a new study released this month by the Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL).

The association culled journal articles, blogs, newspapers, conference talks, and the expertise of its staff to develop 26 (not necessarily mutually exclusive) scenarios based on possible developments in higher education over the next 15 years. The association then surveyed 404 of its members to determine which scenarios library specialists thought would have the most impact, were most likely to happen, and were likely to happen most quickly.

The idea was to get some sort of consensus on how the higher education landscape is likely to change in the next decade and a half so that libraries could start figuring out now how to adjust.

The full report, called Futures Thinking For Academic Librarians: Higher Education in 2025, can be found online, but here is a sampling of what its members consider some of the more plausible scenarios:

  • Breaking the textbook monopoly: Most states have passed legislation that requires textbook publishers to make textbooks affordable. Faculty members, sympathetic to their students, have embraced online open educational resources (OERs). More faculty create and share openly their course materials, modules, streaming videos, tests, software, and other tools. Although widely accepted seminal OERs exist for introductory courses, faculty create materials for advanced courses based on their own knowledge and interests, inviting student contributions.
  • Bridging the scholar/practitioner divide: Open peer review becomes the norm for many fields, speeding application of discoveries. Online publications, by scholarly societies in partnership with trade organizations and professional associations, are open access. They support robust community-based dialogue on articles as soon as they are accepted via traditional editorial procedures. Scholars and practitioners alike discuss the findings, how the theory would apply in practice, and suggest additional research needed.
  • Everyone is a "nontraditional" student: The interwoven nature of work/life/school is accepted in higher education as life spans increase and students are unable to fund tuition in one lump. Co-op education is widely embraced and faculty increasingly value students' life experience. Knowing what the work force wants, students are active in designing their own learning outcomes, and the personalized curriculum becomes the norm. Faculty members evaluate students on demonstrations of learning -- such as policy documents, marketing plans, or online tutorials -- rather than old measures based on “seat time” and “credit hours.”
  • Meet the new freshman class: With laptops in their hands since the age of 18 months old, students who are privileged socially and economically are completely fluent in digital media. For many others, the digital divide, parental unemployment, and the disruption of moving about during the foreclosure crisis of their formative years means they never became tech savvy. “Remedial” computer and information literacy classes are now de rigueur.
  • Right here with me: Students “talk” through homework with their handheld devices, which issue alerts when passing a bookstore with material they need to cite. Scanning the title page, this information is instantly embedded in proper citation style with an added endnote. Checking in on location-based services, students locate study team members and hold impromptu meetings without the need for study rooms. Their devices have whiteboards and can share notes with absent members.

David W. Lewis, dean of the library at Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis, who has also done extensive research into the future of libraries, has a prediction of his own: the report will not be very useful to libraries planning for the future.

“All in all, the report is an interesting effort that I suspect will not be widely used because the scenarios are too abstract and beyond what most academic libraries can control or influence,” Lewis told Inside Higher Ed.

A more useful report would have focused more narrowly on the shift from print to electronic collections, and how libraries might consider modifying how they purchase, manage and deliver electronic content, Lewis says, rather than on “broad future trends in the academy.”

The ACRL did recently release another future-oriented document that falls along those lines: the 2010 edition of its perennial list of top ten trends in academic libraries. The items on that list are a tad less sensational, although it did highlight certain themes -- such as the disaggregation of library resources, the rise of mobile technology, and growing pressure on libraries to demonstrate their value in the face of shrinking budgets -- that the “futures” report followed to logical extremes.

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Comments on The Librarian's Crystal Ball

  • Posted by abellafiore on June 23, 2010 at 7:45am EDT
  • "the scenarios are too abstract and beyond what most academic libraries can control or influence”

    Hmm - and no one thought that the blow out preventer would fail either...

    The ability to consider alternative futures and plan for possible scenarios is essential for all organizations in this time of dramatic shifts in education and technology, "surprising" black swan events, and challenges to traditional models of funding, usage, and need.

  • Glad the Report Discusses the Textbook Problem
  • Posted by StevenB on June 23, 2010 at 8:45am EDT
  • I recall responding to the survey, and I too think it's a worthwhile exercise to develop and contemplate different future scenarios - even if they may not have impact this year or the next. I was pleased to see that the textbook issue was included in the study. I think it is a good example of a potential change that can happen much sooner than suggested in the study - and like many of the scenarios it will be up to the academic librarian community to push for/contribute to the change at their institutions. I shared my views on this one recently at http://bit.ly/bH0mEg

  • Posted by Ryan on June 23, 2010 at 10:45am EDT
  • While the scenarios described are often outside of the control or influence of an academic library, understanding the larger environment in which we operate is very useful in planning.

  • Press/library collaboration & open peer review
  • Posted by Sandy Thatcher at Penn State on June 23, 2010 at 12:30pm EDT
  • I'm surprised that neither in this list of trends or the other one developed by the ACRL referenced in the story is there any mention of the increasing collaboration of libraries with university presses. In a number of instances, presses have actually become administratively merged with libraries (Michigan, Penn State) while at other universities (the California system) the collaboration has deepened and broadened in recent years. The AAUP certainly is paying attention to this trend as it has just reestablished its Library Relations Committee after many years.

    The prediction about "open peer review" seems far too optimistic, in light of the experience we've been having getting faculty to review manuscripts even when they are paid. How many do you really think will spend their time reviewing monographs online when they have no incentive to do so other than some vague obligation to the profession as a whole? What will happen, as often happens with comments to InsideHigherEd stories, is that people with axes to grind will speak up while the vast majority will remain silent. Open peer review can only succeed when the most qualified scholars actively engage in it. I do not see this happening anytime soon, if ever.

    ---Sandy Thatcher, former AAUP president, 2007/8

  • OERs and CRSs
  • Posted by Former academic librarian on June 23, 2010 at 1:30pm EDT
  • For comments about faculty-created substitutes for textbooks, look at the comments about Steven Bell's article in IHE on June 11, 2010 (Taming the textbook market). The gist is: faculty do not have the time to create them, whether they are called OERs or Curriculum Resources Stratgies;the skills needed to create quality textbook substitutes--and the will by academic institutions to pay for those skills--are not there now and will not be there in the near future; some faculty who receive academic promotion and/or tenure based on textbook writing or editing will resist--let alone give up the (albeit minimal) compensation they receive for this work.

    One question I have not seen studied is the increasing reliance on textbooks in higher education. In my undergraduate studies 30+ years ago (granted in a liberal arts program), once you completed 100 level intro courses, there were no textbooks--you read the literature of the field. The faculty lectured and created student research assignments that linked the readings and lectures and research into a coherant whole as long as the student read the materials, listened well in class, spent time on the assignment and actually thought about the subject.

    Maybe faculty should rethink reliance on textbooks that do the summarizing and synthesizing for the students and develop those skills in their students instead. Of course the students would have to do a lot of independant reading.....like that is going to happen!

  • Other Predictions for Higher Ed
  • Posted by Ashley Thorne at National Association of Scholars on June 23, 2010 at 4:45pm EDT
  • Last fall the National Association of Scholars gave its own forecast for higher education over the next 20 years (includes the demise of academic libraries). See http://www.nas.org/polArticles.cfm?doctype_code=Article&doc_id=1019. Our predictions are already coming true: http://www.nas.org/polArticles.cfm?doctype_code=Article&doc_id=1316.

  • libraries?
  • Posted by Jeremiah on June 23, 2010 at 5:45pm EDT
  • I retire in seven years and leave my college to the jargon-spouting educationists who won't have to know anything except how to push buttons in the name of information management. I quiver for the future and for the professoriate huddled in "work-stations" feeding seamless data to clients they'll never meet much less know.