[Web4lib] Be Concerned, Be Very Concerned: Scholars' View of Libraries as Portals Shows Marked Decline

McKiernan, Gerard [LIB] gerrymck at iastate.edu
Thu Sep 4 17:37:16 EDT 2008


Colleagues/

FYI: Scholars' View of Libraries as Portals Shows Marked Decline

/Gerry

By JENNIFER HOWARD <mailto:jennifer.howard at chronicle.com>  / Chronicle of Higher Education / Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Know your library user-and worry about who's not using the library. That's the main advice to librarians in a new white paper that notes "a growing ambivalence about the campus library" among faculty members as more and more knowledge goes digital.

The report was released last week by Ithaka, a nonprofit organization that promotes the use of technology in higher education. The paper probes the relationship between libraries and the faculty at institutions of all sizes, and how the digital shift is altering that relationship.

The authors, Roger Schonfeld and Ross Housewright, pulled together the highlights from two surveys conducted in 2006: one of American faculty members and another of librarians in charge of collection development. Mr. Schonfeld is Ithaka's manager of research; Mr. Housewright is a research analyst. Ithaka conducted similar faculty surveys in 2000 and 2003, so the new report is able to examine trends over a six-year period. 

The report confirms what everyone already knows-that electronic resources are ever more central to scholarly activity. It emphasizes that scholars still value libraries as buyers and archivers of scholarship, and many still use them as gateways to scholarly information. However, it also confirms that researchers increasingly find what they need through Google Scholar and other online resources, a trend the report's authors anticipate will accelerate as more and more knowledge goes digital. 

Since 2003, faculty members across the disciplines have shown a marked decline in how devoted they are to libraries as information portals. Eighty percent of humanities scholars are still devoted to library research-although that may be not because they're traditionalists but because they can't yet get what they need in digital form. But only 48 percent of economists and 50 percent of scientists value libraries as gateways.

That should worry librarians whose budgets are eaten up by high-priced science journals. What if the designated users of those materials are sidestepping the library altogether? 

[snip]

The report, "Ithaka's 2006 Studies of Key Stakeholders in the Digital Transformation in Higher Education," is available [from < http://www.ithaka.org/research/faculty-and-librarian-surveys <http://www.ithaka.org/research/faculty-and-librarian-surveys>  > 

T A B L E O F C O N T E N T S

INTRODUCTION................................................................................... 4

RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE LIBRARY AND THE FACULTY........ 5

DEPENDENCE ON ELECTRONIC RESOURCES.................................. 13

THE TRANSITION AWAY FROM PRINT ............................................ 17

FOR SCHOLARLY JOURNALS ........................................................... 17

FACULTY PUBLISHING PREFERENCES............................................ 20

E-BOOKS ............................................................................................ 22

DIGITAL REPOSITORIES ................................................................... 24

PRESERVATION OF SCHOLARLY JOURNALS .................................. 27

RECOMMENDATIONS........................................................................ 30

CONCLUSION..................................................................................... 33

[ http://chronicle.com/daily/2008/08/4351n.htm <http://chronicle.com/daily/2008/08/4351n.htm>  ]

/Gerry

Gerry McKiernan
Associate Professor
Science and Technology Librarian
Iowa State University Library
Ames IA 50011

gerrymck at iastate.edu

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