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Libraries Make it Personal

September 28, 2010

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At a time when technology is said to be creating a gulf between librarians and students, a handful of libraries are trying to make their relationships with undergraduates a bit more personal.

Drexel University made headlines earlier this month with its new “personal librarian” program, which assigns each incoming undergraduate a specific member of the library staff to serve as a first point of contact.

Wesleyan University also started assigning students “personal librarians” this fall. Both institutions drew on the example of Yale University, which in 2008 began reaching out to undeclared undergraduates after providing the service to medical and law students for years. Libraries at University of Richmond and the University of Chicago started similar programs for undergrads about a decade ago.

There are small differences, but these programs share a basic template. The library contacts incoming students, usually a few weeks before orientation, with a personalized letter, along with a business card, from a specific librarian introducing them to the library. The librarians might e-mail their assigned students periodically, reminding them of what services the library offers.

The obligations are not nearly the same as those between academic advisers and advisees; in fact, students are not required to meet with their personal librarian, or even acknowledge them. The important thing for the library is that students know the library has not just books but also familiar-looking people who know their names and want to help them. The idea is that getting that name might make students more likely to schedule a sit-down meeting to learn how to use the library's various interfaces, collections, and specialists. Sit-downs, or even e-mail correspondence, are much more effective than group orientations, says Patricia Tully, the university librarian at Wesleyan.

If personal librarian programs are a trend, the trend is a recent one. Barbara Rockenbach, director of undergraduate and library research at Yale, frames the movement toward “personalization” as a foil to technological forces that have made the library seem more impersonal. With many libraries canceling subscriptions to printed journals, shuttling underused books off to remote storage, and making more of their resources available on the Web, students might increasingly view the library as a database they can use from a solitary dorm room rather than an actual place populated by helpful humans.

“We weren’t seeing students at the reference desk anymore,” Rockenbach says. “…It feels for us that technology is the driver.”

It was not, however, the driver at the University of Richmond, which was the first institution to assign personal librarians to undergraduates — at least as far as any of the recent practitioners can remember. According to Lucretia McCulley, director of outreach services at Richmond’s Boatwright Memorial Library, the motivation was simpler and had less to do with cultural tectonics.

“The bank I had at the time had personal banking,” McCulley says. “I had always really liked my personal banker, so I thought, ‘Why can't we do this for students?’ ”

The library building at Richmond still sees plenty of traffic, McCulley says. The personal librarian program was just another outreach effort. Same with Drexel and Wesleyan, officials there say. “We want to reach out to students who might feel a little intimidated — particularly students from small schools, or international students,” says Tully, of Wesleyan. Sending personalized letters with business cards to incoming students does not require a huge investment, notes Danuta Nitecki, dean of libraries at Drexel. It was not so much a question of “Why” as “Why not?”

At Chicago, where undergraduates share the library with the university’s considerable graduate population, putting a face to the building serves as a hedge against alienating the younger students, says Rebecca Starkey, a reference librarian there. Personal relationships with library staff generally are more common among graduate students, whose library use is frequent and well-defined, and undergraduate juniors and seniors, whose research interests have begun to narrow along the lines of a declared major, she says. First-year students are less likely to develop personal relationships with librarians.

“We’re a large research library — our undergraduates don’t always know who they need to talk to for the right things,” says Starkey. “This allows us to sort of cut through that.”

Still, the “personal librarian” service is curious in that it only works if it is low-impact. Depending on the university, librarians might be assigned 50 or 500 students to serve personally. In most cases, if all or even half of those students availed themselves of the service, the librarians would be swamped. Yale says only 10 percent of students actually contact their personal librarian; a higher yield, and the program would not work.

Meanwhile, the extent to which the program is actually bringing new students into the library is hard to pinpoint, since the students who take care to avail themselves of a personal librarian might have sought out the help of the library staff anyway, adoptive librarian or no.

But the general view among the librarians who have adopted the practice is that another step toward demystifying the library is a good thing, even if the effect of the personal librarian program turns out to be marginal. “There’s a lot of adjustment happening in that freshman year for students,” says Jim Rettig, the university librarian at Richmond. “And if we can make it a little easier for them, that [means] a better experience.”

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Comments on Libraries Make it Personal

  • Desperation
  • Posted by Former Librarian on September 28, 2010 at 9:15am EDT
  • Let's face it, academic librarians are fast becoming irrelevant except as personal assistants to faculty, and even there, technology is exposing their weaknesses. The "personal librarian" effort is a last ditch effort by the librarian community to stem the relentless trend toward academic libraries serving essentially as archives and librarians as archivists.

  • Personal librarians
  • Posted by Betty D. Johnson , Library Director at Stetson University on September 28, 2010 at 9:30am EDT
  • We started our Personal LIbrarian Initiative at Stetson University in the summer of 2006. When I get the final list of incoming freshmen and transfers, each is assigned to one of our librarians - it averages about 80-90 per librarian. Each librarian sends his/her students a personal letter, business card, and a small 12-page illustrated booklet outlining services available in the library (web version at http://www.stetson.edu/library/welcome_students.pdf). We generally receive a few responses before classes start and some later. In October, we send email followups, offering help again. We have continued the process each year, and we think it has paid off in making us appear more accessible. An added bonus is that by sending all of the information and the booklet to their homes, their parents find out what is available.

  • Archivists?
  • Posted by An Archivist on September 28, 2010 at 9:45am EDT
  • Former Librarian seems to have a misguided view on what an archivist actually does. Whether or not you approve of the personal librarian model, archivists work on a broad spectrum of activities, from arranging and describing collections to reference services to outreach to managing born-digital content. There's nothing in the personal librarian model that makes librarians "archivists." The idea of an archive being a static and unused collection is not borne out by full reading rooms and the active work of archivists to make collections accessible in person and online.

  • reaping the benefits of personalized service
  • Posted by Julie Chapman , Coordinator of Library Instruction at Technical College on September 28, 2010 at 9:45am EDT
  • I am experiencing just the opposite of what Former Librarian posits. Due to a combination of increased enrollment, advisors referring students to us, targeted marketing to faculty, customized LibGuides, and student word of mouth, our library instruction sessions statistics are up over 100%. I am also holding more research consultation sessions with both students and faculty.

  • Libraries as civic spaces
  • Posted by Cecilia Orphan , National Manager, American Democracy Project at AASCU on September 28, 2010 at 11:00am EDT
  • I'm pleased to hear about these efforts to personalize the library experience for students. Some of my fondest moments from college were spent in my university's library, and the librarians were always immensely helpful when I was researching topics for my classes. I'd also like to encourage librarians to reclaim libraries as places for citizens to strategize and do meaningful public/civic work. Historically this has been an important function of libraries. As we see the increasing digitization of books, I’m concerned that we’ll lose libraries as civic spaces. Nancy Kranich is a leader in the movement to preserve the civic importance of libraries.

  • "Personalized" services aim at strategies as well as resources
  • Posted by Laura Horne-Popp , Social Sciences & Humanities Librarian at University of Richmond on September 28, 2010 at 11:15am EDT
  • Another item to note is that these personalized services aim at teaching students research strategies than just how to find resources. Now that there is a plethora of information in the world, we are teaching students about evaluating the audience and authority of the resources they find. We teach them how to determine if the information is appropriate for their research needs and to reinforce critical thinking skills emphasized at the college level. We do this in the classroom setting too, but being able to dialogue one-on-one about these strategies is a great boon for students.

  • Personal librarians
  • Posted by Lisa Johnston , Associate Director, Libraries at Sweet Briar College on September 28, 2010 at 12:00pm EDT
  • We assign a student a personal librarian as soon as she declares her major. We send a personalized note complete with links to our Facebook pages. It's up to the students to contact us, and they do.

  • Personal Librarian Program
  • Posted by Keith Rocci , Information Literacy Librarian at Washburn University on September 28, 2010 at 2:45pm EDT
  • At Washburn University we implemented a personal librarian program last fall for about 31.5% of our freshmen. Each librarian (2009 - 4 librarians, 2010 - 6 librarians) teaches a group of freshmen in a one unit college course. The course, IS 170 - Library Research Strategies, paired with a college success course to provide the students with a three unit experience.

    I came into this profession two years ago because of the opportunities as an academic librarian. I have superior technology skills and see this as the value I bring to the university library. I have very little to do with print materials.

    The opportunities I saw was based on a trend in the profession that included a focus on librarians teaching information literacy skills. I currently teach seven units (111 students), serve as the liaison for the science majors, and participate on three universities committees. We will have a total of six different information literacy based courses next academic year. More importantly, information literacy is a new core learning outcome and our courses will be required for graduation at some point.

    I see opportunity for the academic librarian with these kinds of retention improving measures.

  • Ref stats increased when we ended the traditional ref desk model
  • Posted by Courtney Mlinar , Academic Support Services Librarian at Nova Southeastern University on September 28, 2010 at 5:15pm EDT
  • Our medical library followed the personalization model beginning last fall, with a Liaison Librarian assignment by colleges within the health professions division. We removed the reference desk and made the Liaison Librarian office a part of the Information Commons, with open glass doors and easy access to students. The amount of reference questions and faculty interactions has increased exponentially and continues to increase! We find that both students and faculty need assistance in using databases, accessing full text to articles and curriculum support and the librarian staff appears much more transparent and accessible without the ref desk model.

  • Being a "Course Librarian" provides a close tie to instruction
  • Posted by Cheryl Wells , Reference Librarian (Outreach and Marketing) at Lone Star College -- Tomball Campus on September 30, 2010 at 6:00pm EDT
  • I provide traditional library instruction as well as serve as the Course Librarian for a health sciences instructor in a community college. Although I am new to this position, I can already see that serving as a Course Librarian will provide better research instruction to students. My preference would be to provide a general orientation session to the library for the class (on-campus) and then to stay connected with the students via their online learning system for the rest of the term. (The class I am helping meets on-campus, but the instructor puts his assignments and resources in the online system.) Many students aren't ready to jump into the complicated world of databases with only one research session. As a Course Librarian, I answer email questions from students, and I can also email students suggestions for completing specific assignments. In addition, I encourage students to schedule time with me (either individually or in small groups) for research help. As time goes on, I think more students will realize how helpful this is.

    Teaching as a Course Librarian is very powerful because I have access to the instructor's syllabus and assignments, and I can showcase the skills I bring to the table as an instructor/faculty member. I can provide instruction at the point-of-need, not just at the beginning of the term when students may not even have an assignment. Although most students have access to electronic resources, many find these resources frustrating to use -- often because they do not have the vocabulary to phrase searches or the experience to formulate a good search strategy. They develop their research abilities by completing actual assignments, and I can expedite the learning curve in this area -- much more so than in general library instruction.

    I think it is worth the extra time it takes to serve in this capacity. To cut down on the time required, It is helpful for librarians to specialize in subject areas and to work with the same instructors so that they become familiar with specific classes. If I work with the same classes each term, I can create Word documents with my introductory email and other suggestions that relate to that course. I can pull up these documents and cut and paste what is needed for each term. The PowerPoints I create can be tweaked and added to the Resources area in the online learning system. This is a new world for me, but I see that it has great potential.

     

     

     

  • I'm busier than ever
  • Posted by Data Librarian on October 1, 2010 at 11:00am EDT
  • My primary job responsibilities are to help researchers find data and use various data repositories/databases. I'm busier than ever.

    The biggest problem with data librarians is that like 95% of library administrators don't understand it and don't want to deal with it as a main service area. It's their loss.

    It's an area of tremendous growth where librarians can help researchers enormously. And the area is only getting more challenging, which keeps it interesting.

  • Personal Librarians: Ours Rock!
  • Posted by Marva , Humanities at Parkland College on October 1, 2010 at 1:00pm EDT
  • Love the article, but disagree that this is a fairly recent trend, especially for community colleges. For example, here and at the community college where I taught 10 years ago,
    prior to my tenure at my current institution, the librarians stayed constantly busy with creating ways to interact on a more personal leve, one-on-one level with not only faculty, but, more importantly, the students.

    Our librarians here go out of their way to assist faculty. For instance, our department is assigned a wonderful librarian who assists us by teaching students how to find credible research sources, as well as assists us in numerous other ways.

    More importantly, all of our librarians go out of their way to help students with academic questions, as ell as refer them to other campus and community resources when the need arises. We even have an "Ask the Librarian" link on the library website to help students, faculty, staff, community should any of us have questions.

    http://www2.parkland.edu/library/pro.html.

    International students gravitate to our library because we have created an International Reading Lounge which contains a significant number of study spaces, but also room for guest speakers to come in and address a relatively good-sized audience.

    Also, if I am not mistaken, our library is integrated into our New Student Orientation program.

    Ms. Wells, there is, indeed, great potential for librarians who work in community colleges, as well as universities.

    I, too, disagree with Former Librarian. New technologies have only served to cement the need for more librarians who are not simply personal assistants. I am sad that you feel this way.

    Finally, it may prove more useful to many of us if a more holistic/balanced approach was taken in illustrating how libraries assist our students,not only in universities, but also their sister institutions: private colleges and comunity colleges.