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The Value of Libraries

September 14, 2010

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Is your campus library valuable?

Prove it.

At a time when tightening belts have prompted colleges to put various programs and practices under the economic microscope, this is a challenge more and more librarians have been facing. And they would do well to learn how to answer it, says a report released today by the Association of College and Research Libraries.

The report, titled “The Value of Academic Libraries,” is a hefty round-up of various ways that libraries have, so far, figured how to demonstrate the value of their services. While it is more of a literature review than a how-to guide, the ACRL hopes the report will serve as a useful point of reference for libraries that might soon need to justify — and perhaps reevaluate — the value of certain services relative to the mission of their parent institution, says Megan Oakleaf, an assistant professor of information studies at Syracuse University, who wrote the report.

“Community college, college, and university librarians no longer can rely on their stakeholders’ belief in their importance,” Oakleaf writes. “Rather, they must demonstrate their value.” Further, she writes, they must be able to express that value in a way that can be “clearly communicated to stakeholders” such as students, parents, administrators, and — particularly in the case of public institutions — government officials and taxpayers.

The report, Oakleaf noted in an interview, is not about learning to spin. It does not imply that the campus library is an albatross that must contrive to justify its existence. On the contrary, the library is certainly valuable, Oakleaf says. It’s just that measuring that value and presenting it to outsiders in a tangible way are not necessarily intuitive skills.

The report is heavy on citations, and much of it points outward. It refers to various papers, some decades old, that discuss how library services intersect with things like retention and graduation rates, teaching, learning, research, accreditation, and other pieces of the overall mission of the college. Based on the aggregate findings of that literature, Oakleaf makes general recommendations for libraries that have not yet learned how to articulate the value of their services. “It would be helpful to know that students who have participated in three or more library instructional episodes over the course of their college career have a significantly higher G.P.A.,” she writes. “Or it would be helpful to know that faculty who work with a librarian to prepare their tenure or promotion package have a 25 percent higher pass rate.” Putting mechanisms in place to gather these data should be high on the agenda of the academic librarian, she says.

One of the report’s more salient themes is its emphasis on assessing the value of the library relative to the goals of the college, rather than treating the library as an institution apart, says Roger Schonfeld, managing director of Ithaka S+R, a nonprofit that supports innovation in higher ed. “The great strength of this work is that it clearly frames the purpose and value of the academic library in the context of the parent organization,” says Schonfeld, noting that this view is not universally held. He points to a manifesto authored by several attendees of a conference last year at the Darien Library in Connecticut, which states that the library’s primary purpose is to “preserve the integrity of civilization,” and that “individual libraries serve the mission of their parent institution or governing body, but the purpose of the Library overrides that mission when the two come into conflict.”

Paul Courant, dean of libraries at the University of Michigan and a top researcher of library economics, says the ACRL report did well to affirm the library’s subservience to the mission — and budgetary pressures — of its parent institution. “If [people] think the university library is more important than the university, they are wrong,” says Courant — adding, notably, that he speaks from the perspective of a former provost and chief budget officer at the university.

Courant says the report — which he has skimmed — does not appear to prescribe or portend any fundamental changes to the way libraries go about their business, since he, like Oakleaf, believes that libraries are not currently failing to produce value, only that many are not armed with the data and vocabulary to articulate their value — and that as a reference for learning to do so, the ACRL report will probably prove “useful.”

He does, however, “concur vigorously” with Oakleaf’s conclusion that in learning how to show how they are valuable, libraries will probably learn how to become more valuable.

“When academic librarians learn about their impact on users, they increase their value by proactively delivering improved services and resources—to students completing their academic work; to faculty preparing publications and proposals; to administrators needing evidence to make decisions,” the author writes. “Indeed, the demonstration of value is not about looking valuable; it’s about being valuable.”

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Comments on The Value of Libraries

  • What planet does Oakleaf live on?
  • Posted by Jerry Shuttle , Electronic Resources Librarian at East Tennessee State University on September 14, 2010 at 1:00pm EDT
  • Oakleafs report suggests,
    “It would be helpful to know that students who have participated in three or more library instructional episodes over the course of their college career have a significantly higher G.P.A.,” she writes. “Or it would be helpful to know that faculty who work with a librarian to prepare their tenure or promotion package have a 25 percent higher pass rate.” Putting mechanisms in place to gather these data should be high on the agenda of the academic librarian, she says.

    The first suggestion would be a record keeping nightmare. How would it be possible to keep records of student names attending LI sessions and also gain access to their GPAs?

    The second suggestion suggests faculty need a librarian to help prepare tenure and promotion documents, which I think most faculty would find insulting. Additionally, gaining access to names of those denied tenure and promotion would be problematic.

    I think this is yet another instance of ACRL proposing things which are highly questionable in operational reality.

  • Libraries?
  • Posted by Dewey Decimal on September 14, 2010 at 3:00pm EDT
  • I have rarely met a more self-important group of pseudo-professionals than "librarians." The Library itself needs to get with the times or be left in the dust.

    The internet is forcing the turn-of-the-century mindset, so typical of "card catalog" librarians, off the road to higher education. Blogs, wikis, websites...pretending they don't exist or aren't REAL sources of academic reference (just because someone with a Masters in "Library Science" isn't involved) won't make the digital age go away.

  • Posted by Someone with a MLIS on September 14, 2010 at 4:15pm EDT
  • Thanks for the gratuitous insult, "Dewey Decimal." Most of the librarians I know do, in fact, make a good deal of use of the new sources of information available through the internet, and help patrons make better and more thoughtful use of those sources, too.

  • Libraries!
  • Posted by Not Dewey Decimal on September 14, 2010 at 4:30pm EDT
  • Wow, Dewey Decimal, I am sorry that has been your experience with librarians. I can't name a single colleague who doesn't use blog, wikis, Web 2.0, etc. as a professional librarian. I also can't name a single colleague who laments the passing of the card catalog and who doesn't wish that MARC format wasn't so behind-the-times.

    My experience in library school (in 2005-2006) was that of librarians grasping the digital age and using it to our advantage. I think you need find new librarians to hang out with.

  • Media literacy
  • Posted by Comm Prof on September 14, 2010 at 5:00pm EDT
  • I find that as blogs, wikis and other unmediated on-line sources proliferate, the more time I need to spend on course components to show my students how to separate the wheat of professionally written, peer reviewed material from the chaff of overheated wingnuts. I'll bet Dewey has his own website and that I can predict on which side of the above divide it falls.

  • we try
  • Posted by Community Colleges Make Good Use , IT Computer Lab and Blackboard Admin at Soth Mountain CC on September 14, 2010 at 5:45pm EDT
  • Our librarians meet and often exceed the requests of students, and we see the gamut of them to 99 years from 9. The spectrum of users vary, and having the "traditional" library resources and the most current and prospective future IT trend students can expect. Library staff are very useful no matter the IT trend.

  • Academic Library's Return on Investment
  • Posted by shin freedman , academic librarian/Library at Framingham State University on September 15, 2010 at 7:30am EDT
  • I wholeheartedly agree with and like Oakleaf’s point of providing evidence in a tangible way about the return on investment (ROI) of the academic library.

    It’s interesting to note the two diverging notions of whether academic library plays a subservient role to the mission of its parent institution or does the Library override that mission when the two come into conflict. Regardless of the outcome of this debate, we need to ask ourselves, how well are we doing and how do we measure what we do well in an objective manner.

    Since I am a librarian from an institution which was traditionally a teaching college, but is now in the process of becoming a university, I have found it particularly effective to help faculty prepare Promotion and Tenure materials by providing citation reports on their articles, by being an information consultant for program proposals, and by identifying possible journals for publication. Faculty members were genuinely delighted by such contributions. I find myself, as an academic librarian, playing a significant role in an institution at its transition from being a teaching-centered to a research/scholarship-centered institution.

    Being aware of the impact we have on students and teaching faculty by collecting data and presenting it to the stakeholders in terms of outcome improvement (value-added) is part of sound business practice. The process itself will certainly impact the entire outcome.

  • Maybe we should study value of librarians rather than libraries
  • Posted by Janice McCallum , Managing Director at Health Content Advisors on September 16, 2010 at 9:00am EDT
  • In many corporate environments, the physical libraries have been discontinued and librarians are working within departments as part of business intelligence and knowledge management teams. Maybe more decentralization is needed in academic environments, too. The value doesn't come from the building after all, even though a building can serve as a central meeting place.

  • Librarians playing a huge role in academic libraries
  • Posted by Romeo Matumba , National Librarian at Varsity College on September 20, 2010 at 10:45am EDT
  • Librarians and libraries in Academic institutions are playing a huge role in supporting all the stakeholders being lecturers, students and staff. these days as a Librarian, people (academics - lectures, prof etc) expect a lot from librarians and in many ways, we have responded in a much professional way that they (adademic, lectures...) didnt expect. librarians are leaders in teaching and learning and if more lecturers and professors, work with them (librarians), we will see high passing rates and successful students - not forgeting happy lecturers who will benefit a great deal if they work with librarians. DONT EVER UNDERESTIMATE LIBRARIANS AND THEIR SKILLS - Libraries drive access to knowledge with any community/institution.

  • What planet does Oakleaf live on?
  • Posted by Judith Baker , retired on December 1, 2010 at 1:15pm EST
  • Jerry, your comment that "most faculty" would find "insulting" the suggestion that a librarian could help prepare tenure and promotion documents is most curious. Your statement actually insults academic librarians, whom colleges and universities have seen fit to be given faculty status. If one professional's help of another is "insulting", the implication is that the helping professional is really a lesser professional, not really a "professional" at all.