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Western Kentucky University Libraries
Collection Development Statement Adopted Fall
1992
Dr. Michael Binder, Dean of Libraries
Dr. Marvin D. Leavy, Coordinator of Collection Development
Faculty of the Department of Library Public Services
(22 July 1997)
Editorial Note: Continual change in University Libraries (UL) between
fall 1992 and fall 1997 compel a few changes in this document. Perhaps most
notable among these are:
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Science
library materials are now integrated within Helm-Cravens.
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Since
1992, the UL has updated its mission statement in accord with the
Moving to a New Level initiative enacted by the University in 1995-96.
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Consideration
of formula-based budgeting criteria in materials budget formulation
has been deferred indefinitely.
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The
Community College now has a books and serials account.
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The
expansion of electronic formats for federal/state government publications
and reference tools foreseen in 1992 has indeed occurred. Internet-based
tools (WWW or othrwise) has overtaken CD-ROM formats as a preferred
electronic mode of access.
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Audiobook
leisure-reading and magazine leisure-reading titles have been added
to the print leisure-reading book materials.
Given the pace of change, a decision as to the need to revise the Collection
Development statement is now under review.
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COLLECTION PARAMETERS TO PROFILE DEPARTMENTAL NEEDS FOR MATERIALS
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NARRATIVE
PROFILES OF ACADEMIC PROGRAMS IN THE COLLEGES
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(not
available on the web)
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APPENDICES
(not available on the web)
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Western
XXI Priorities for Academic Programs
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Narrative
Profile Sheet for Departmental Programs
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ALA/RLG
Collection Intensity Codes and Definitions
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WKU
Libraries Non-Print Materials Policy
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U.S.
College Book Prices, 1991 (CHOICE Table)
The
mission of the Western Kentucky University Libraries
is to provide essential services in support of the University's three
principal endeavors: instruction, research, and public service. The Libraries
assume a pivotal role in Western Kentucky University's commitment to excellence
through the efficient and effective selection, acquisition, and dissemination
of scholarly information. The selection of materials to meet current and
future needs of Western's faculty, staff, students, and the local citizenry
is a critical service element in the Libraries' mission and is the very
core of collection development.
The purposeof this Collection Development Statement
is to specify curricular and disciplinary priorities to guide the selecting
and acquiring of informational materials up to the twenty-first century.
A formal statement of the priorities which will energize and focus our
efforts will be a valuable blueprint for rational collection development.
Effective collection development will require sufficient funding to meet
the needs of an expanding student population, new courses and programs,
and changing faculty research interests. In addition, it will require
coping with escalating inflation rates for books, serials and resources
in newer formats such as compact-disc technology. Accelerating developments
in information technology exert a special challenge to conventional library
collection needs. The range of information format options is expanding
just at a time when funding stability (not to mention growth) is ever
more uncertain. All of these developments highlight the necessity for
efficient planning in developing the resources of Western Kentucky University's
Libraries.
This
statement is prepared in accord with Western Kentucky University's Spirit
of Excellence: Values and Directions for the Twenty-First Century, a document
approved by the University's Board of Regents in late 1990 (hereafter
referred to as Western XXI). It is also compatible with University Libraries:
A Five Year Plan, 1990/91-1994/95, also adopted in 1990 by WKU Libraries
(hereafter, Strategic Plan). The outline of the Statement relies upon
a Guide for Written Collection Policy Statements endorsed by the American
Library Association in 1989 (hereafter, ALA Guidelines ), especially pp.
4-6. Collection standards expressed in ALA's Standards for College Libraries
in 1986 (hereafter, ALA Standards) are taken into account as well. Lastly,
conformance with the 8th edition of SACS (Southern Association of Colleges
and Schools) Criteria, section 5.2 is also adhered to. Familiarity with
these materials, as well as with the Libraries' prior collection development
statement (adopted in early 1984), would enhance a reader's understanding
of this Statement.
While evaluation of the strength of existing collections is a major concern
of academic libraries (see Strategic Plan, p. 6 and ALA Standards, pp.
191-192), it will not be emphasized here. Instead, selection criteria
for future development, i.e. what will be selected and why, will be highlighted.
As stated in the ALA Standards, "the best way to improve quality in a
library collection is to adhere to rigorous standards of discrimination
in the selection of materials to be added." Assessment of quality in existing
collections is not to be ignored, merely delayed until this forward-looking
statement is adopted and implemented. (In passing, it should be noted
that this statement is not meant to delineate policies for development
of Special Collections resources in the Kentucky Library or University
Archives).
This policy statement departs from the Libraries' earlier statement (and
from many other university library collection development policy statements)
in two ways. First, as will be explained, a conspectus approach is not
directly applied to Library of Congress classifications. The ALA Guidelines
do not insist upon that application but allow application of the approach
instead to academic departments (and departmental programs) as it will
be deployed here. Second, this statement will explicate some factors to
actually be considered in distributing materials budget funds. The goal
in this statement is to underpin the need for a more systematic process
embodied in a formula, which once in place, would "drive" the materials
allocation process. In most collection development policies, the only
criterion which purports to affect distribution of the materials budget
is "collection intensity level." While "collection intensity levels" by
curricular program will be profiled in this document and may correlate
highly with allocation differences between departments, these intensity
levels for programs will not be the determining factor in allocation decisions.
Collection developmentis a planning function which involves the overall
molding of library collections to meet users' needs. It is implemented
at Western Kentucky University Libraries by a Coordinator of Collection
Development and several subject librarians (bibliographers) in the Department
of Library Public Services who are specifically charged with the responsibility.
In keeping with ALA Standards and SACS guidelines, however, the involvement
of teaching faculty in college departments is encouraged; they are the
best judges of their needs for professional materials. A faculty member
in each department is named by the Head of that department as its library
representative. This individual serves as liaison with the subject librarian
assigned primary responsibility for a host of collection development duties
for the programs and discipline(s) centered in that department. This liaison
channels book and serial requests from the department's faculty to the
appropriate subject librarian. The selection of materials deemed useful
for academic purposes in accord with precepts of academic freedom (primarily
with that of freedom of unrestrained pursuit of knowledge) is a major
duty of these librarians.
The Libraries contract with various book jobbers to receive prompt notification
of newly published academically- oriented publications (for books and
non-print items). One primary serials vendor (Faxon) serves as a broker
to sustain serials control over thousands of subscriptions to periodicals
and ongoing series. The Acquisitions and Serials units of the Department
of Library Automation and Technical Services process requests for books
and serials which are cataloged or registered upon receipt by the Catalog
and Serials units, respectively, to maintain an expeditious flow of desired
materials into the hands of users.
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Institutional
Environment
The
current WKU undergraduate and graduate catalogs (1991-1993) and Western
XXI set forth the context in which the Libraries of Western Kentucky University
create this statement. The historical background of the Libraries is drawn
from the former source and from its own Strategic Plan.
Western
Kentucky State Normal School, Bowling Green, was established by an act
of the 1906 Kentucky General Assembly. Prior to 1906, there had existed
in Bowling Green the Southern Normal School and Bowling Green Business
University, whose president was Henry Hardin Cherry. In 1907, the Southern
Normal School was transferred to state control and Dr. Cherry was named
as first President. In 1930, the school's name was changed to Western
Kentucky State Teacher's College and in 1948 to Western Kentucky State
College. In 1966, the Kentucky General Assembly designated Western as
a University and changed its name to Western Kentucky University. The
granting of university status gave the Graduate School (renamed the Graduate
College in 1969) the power to strengthen existing programs and to offer
a wider spectrum of programs. Currently, thirty-three degree- awarding
departments are distributed in four Colleges: the (Potter) College of
Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences: the College of Business Administration;
the College of Education and Behavioral Sciences; and the (Ogden) College
of Science, Technology and Health. In addition, Area Study Programs, a
Community College and Extended Campus teaching programs were developed
in the 1980's to further enhance educational opportunities for residents
of the Commonwealth.
Library collections date back to 1909 when a small collection was started
in Potter Hall. Gordon Wilson Hall housed library holdings for over thirty
years, beginning in 1931. In 1963, the facility moved to the former gymnasium,
renamed the Helm Library; in 1971 the Cravens Graduate Center and Library
was completed as a nine-story stacks tower. Margie M. Helm headed the
College Library from 1923 to 1965. Ms. Helm's successors were Ms. Sara
Tyler (1965-1969), Dr. Earl Wassom (1969-1985), and since 1985, Dr. Michael
Binder. At present, four library/resource centers
serve the Bowling Green campus. They are (1) the Helm-Cravens Library,
(2) the Kentucky Library and Museum, (3) the Science Library housed in
Kelly-Thompson Central Complex, and (4) the Educational Resources Center.
Western's Libraries hold more than one-half million books, over 1.2 million
microform items, approximately 100,000 bound periodical volumes and over
one-quarter million government documents. The Helm-Cravens Library, located
near the center of campus, houses the major circulating book collection
(in Cravens) and the main reference, government documents, periodicals
and microforms, and law collections (in Helm). The main circulation and
reserve desks, the technical services units, and the extended campus services
office are located in Cravens. The two buildings are connected via two
walkways. Four decks in Gordon Wilson Hall serve as a storage facility
for older, rarely used print materials.
The Educational Resources Center (ERC) primarily supports the needs of
faculty and students in the Department of Teacher Education and enriches
its instructional programs through provision of both print and non-print
materials. Textbooks, manuals, activity books, curriculum guides, and
tests, all keyed to application in grades K-12 are typical print materials
as are college-level methodology books and a few journal subscriptions.
Non-print materials include audio-visual software such as multi-media
kits, filmstrips, slides, audio and video recordings, pictures, realia,
and microcomputer programs. Appropriate electronic indexes (such as ERIC
and PsycLit on CD ROM) are housed here as well.
The Science Library provides books, periodicals, compact disc workstations,
and reference/circulation services vital for instruction and research
in the sciences and technology. Severe overcrowding there has necessitated
cataloging of all such books acquired since 1990 for the Cravens stacks.
A reference library housed in the Glasgow Campus managed by a full-time
librarian emphasizes CD-ROM reference assistance and TOPCAT
2000 access to collections on the main campus rather than developing
an independent circulating collection. An endowment fund supports purchase
of many of its reference materials. FAX service of journal articles and
frequent courier service of books to this campus (and to the Owensboro
center) are a boon to students at these sites. Access to the collections
for other off-campus students is coordinated by an Extended Campus Librarian
stationed in Cravens. The increase in the extended campus population has
served as a challenge for the Libraries to make collection access as equal
as possible for all WKU students.
A
multitude of technological networks tie these operations together. The
system software for acquisitions, cataloging, and circulation and the
online catalog are from NOTIS Systems, Inc. (Northwestern Online Total
Integrated Systems). The online catalog for the entire cataloged collection,
known as TOPCAT 2000 here at WKU, became fully operational in January,
1992.
While the Special Collections housed in the Kentucky Library and Museum
and the University Archives are not focused upon in this statement, a
brief statement of its purpose is in order. The Kentucky Library collects
print and non-print materials pertaining to the state's history in all
genres. The Folklife Archives and Manuscripts section contain unpublished
primary source materials with special emphasis upon Kentucky, while the
University Archives (housed in Helm) collects the records and correspondence
of administrative officials and faculty of the University. Both primary
research and instruction are facilitated in these special collections.
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Budget
Allocation Criteria In Collection Development
The
major unit of collection analysis is and will continue to be academic
program within academic departments. Allocating the Libraries' materials
budget to departments has evolved by what is called "The Historical Method"
in Guide to Budget Allocation for Information Resources, p. 9 (produced
by the Association for Library Collections and Technical Services of ALA
in 1991). It is remarkable that this method has thus far produced allocations
which fit as closely as they do the relative costs of available academic
books discipline by discipline. A Table in the Appendix attests to this.
If one compares the cost breakdown of books reviewed in CHOICE in 1991
with departmental allocations for the 1990-91 fiscal year, one will see
a close, albeit coincidental, correspondence. Nevertheless, a more systematic
approach to allocations is worthy of consideration and a serious review
of formula-based allocations is in process. Some criteria of potential
importance in a formula developed to apportion book and/or serials funds
department by department are:
- the
status of degree programs at baccalaureate and graduate degree levels
as enunciated in Western XXI. See the Appendix for a listing of
these priorities.
- the
number of students instructed in lower-division, upper-division,
and graduate-level courses as measured by student credit hours at
those levels.
- the
number of majors enrolled or degrees granted.
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the
number of Full-time Equivalent faculty.
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the
estimated cost of current publications available by discipline
which are appropriate to Western curricula and research foci.
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the
collecting intensity emphasis as stipulated in the collecting
level codes reported for programs in the departmental profiles.
See Collecting Level in the next section for explanation of these
codes.
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some
measure of use of the collection, e.g., circulation of books by
Library of Congress Class of book circulated. This measures collection
use, not collection users, however.
It should be observed that just as difficult as selecting the most appropriate
criteria for an allocation formula is deciding the proper weighting
of these factors in an equation. There is no magic formula awaiting
our discovery. No extensive justification of any of the potential components
listed above is necessary here, except for the first one. (All of the
others are mentioned in the Guide to Budget Allocation for Information
Resources for academic libraries cited earlier.) The assignment of Prominent,
Essential, Desirable, or Nonessential classifications to academic programs
at Western Kentucky University was the end-result of protracted deliberation
across campus and is the official framework for future university-wide
decisions, particularly the strengthening, enhancing, maintaining, or
deletion of programs. Thus, Western XXI will be incorporated into budgeting
decisions as soon as is practicable.
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The
Collection Parameters to Profile Departmental Needs for Materials
The
purposes and collecting needs of departmental degree programs are profiled
in this document. (A copy of the form employed to profile them is shown
in the Appendix.) These profiles were prepared by appropriate subject
librarians in conjunction with departmental liaison faculty in late
1991. In these narratives, Western XXI status and level of collecting
intensity are coded for each degree program above the associate degree
level. The parameters are described below.
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Subject:
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materials are selected in all areas of inquiry taught within university
departments, including interdisciplinary area programs and the Community
College. Degree programs (majors/minors at undergraduate and graduate
levels) essentially set these boundaries in their "Purpose of Degree
Program" statements.
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General (non-subject) Parameters:
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Language
- English Language materials will predominate in nearly all program
areas. The phrase "English predominates" will be specified in each
profile with exceptions noted in a few departments.
Date
of Publication - refers to emphasis upon current or retrospective
year of publication. Here again, current (i.e., still in print or
recent) years may predominate in most departments but great variance
between departments is to be expected.
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Chronological
Coverage - refers to the historical time periods of greatest interest
in a department. Here, too, variance between departments is to be
expected.
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Geographic
Coverage - the scope of interest (local, regional, national, or
international) will be specified in a department's profile; departments
will vary widely.
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Formats
Preferred - refers to the medium in which information is encoded;
paper versus various electronic media is a major decision-point.
Print-on-paper sources are still predominant in most programs. Also
specified here will be the relative emphasis upon monographs, journals,
edited works, etc. preferred by a department. In some departments,
emphasis upon government documents (in whatever format) will bear
specification.
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Formats/Excluded
- Generally, introductory level textbooks (aimed at 100-200 level
courses) will be excluded as will be master's theses and doctoral
dissertations (unless published by a recognized press). Copies of
Master's theses completed for degree requirements at Western are
cataloged in the circulating collection, however. Instructor's manuals
and student study guides keyed to particular textbooks (at any level)
will generally not be collected. Added copies of works will also
not typically be acquired. Each department may indicate its unique
mix of exclusions desired but the typical pattern just described
will be reported as the "Standard Exclusions."
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This
refers to the level of intensity with which materials in an area
of scholarly study at Western Kentucky University are sought for
the collections. As already implied, Western XXI priority and presence
of graduate degree programs will determine this level. For programs
leading only to undergraduate degree majors or minors, this level
will typically be what ALA Guidelines term the "Study or Instructional
Support Level (Introductory)"; for programs offered at both baccalaureate
and master's degree levels (or at master's level only), the typical
level will be the "Study or Instructional Support Level (Advanced)".
In the profiles, the former level is coded as 3a and the latter
is coded as 3b. Level 4 (the "Research" level) will be accorded
only a few programs offering post- Master's level degree programs
if the programs are identified as Prominent or Essential in Western
XXI and have a research component. See the Appendix for more detailed
definitions of these ALA/RLG Conspectus definitions.
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Treatment
of Special Formats
Before
turning to the profiles for academic departments, guidelines for acquiring
particular genres of publication and special policies appertaining thereto
are in order.
- Newspapers:
- The
WKU Libraries maintains a representative collection of international,
national (U.S.A.), and local (regional and county) newspapers in
hard copy. The most current two months of leading foreign newspapers
as well as of several major American dailies (including all eight
indexed in Newspaper Abstracts on Disc) are held. Microfilm backfiles
of the latter are obtained. Daily and weekly papers representing
as many regions of the state as possible are acquired for patron
enjoyment. The Glasgow Campus Library has acquired the New York
Times and Washington Post in full-text CD-ROM versions.
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An
extensive and diverse collection in this space-saving format is
held. Many retrospective sources of inestimable research value are
now available only in this form. The early backfile of many periodicals
is held only in microfilm. The Periodicals Librarian is consulted
prior to the purchase of costly microform sets. It should be noted
that federal documents (see Government Documents) are increasingly
issued only in this format.
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The
WKU Libraries collects contemporary, historical and thematic atlases,
predominantly in English- language editions. Housed in the Helm
Reference Room, atlases support a range of instructional and research
needs, particularly for area studies, study abroad programs, and
for the Department of Geography and Geology. The reference map collection
highlights topographic and geologic maps of the Commonwealth (received
as U.S. depository items) and maps of surrounding states but also
holds several other types for the United States, the world, and
selected regions. The ERC also holds a collection of maps which
circulate for use in elementary or secondary classrooms.
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The
Libraries adopted an audio-visual collecting policy in 1991 which
for the first time legitimized the acquiring of non-print materials
to be cataloged for the collection. (See the Appendix). Videotapes,
audio-tapes and sound recordings in a range of formats (e.g., compact
disc) and microcomputer software programs are judged in terms of
their support of the Libraries' mission and purchased in the same
manner and from the same budget lines as are books. The profiles
of the Art and Music departments set forth their priorities in obtaining
such materials. The ERC collects the widest array of non-print items.
The ERC, Science Library, and the Circulation Unit in Cravens will
oversee shelving and circulation of these materials in their respective
buildings.
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Sources
in this fast-evolving format already have had an impact upon the
reference collection (and service). An ongoing expense of this new
technology is the investment in and maintenance of new hardware
(not acquired via materials funds). In the 1980's electronic sources
could be divided into two categories: (1) online database searching
of offsite computerized files mainly to create specialized bibliographies.
Performed by librarians free of charge to faculty, the demand for
this service dwindled as the popularity of another technology, (2)
the searching of CD-ROM indexes by patrons arose. The popularity
of CD-ROM indexes among retrievers of information and the Libraries'
fixed costs for subscriptions to them insure that the Libraries
will increasingly prefer them as alternatives to both their print
and online counterparts. If the quality, ease of access, and currency
of CD-ROM indexes surpass print versions of the same or similar
tools, the Libraries will in many cases replace the print version
if cost-effectiveness can be demonstrated. In the 1990's, full-text
systems of periodicals on disc and electronic and electronic delivery
services for articles identified on disc will compel our attention.
Such systems are developing rapidly. Also, journals may increasingly
be in electronic format only.
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The
main reference collection in Helm-Cravens Library supports the academic
needs of the university community. the definitions of collecting
intensity as applied to departmental programs also apply to the
reference tools supporting those programs. Thus, support ranges
from "basic or minimal" for subject tangential to the curricula
here all the way to "Research" level for those programs whose level
of collecting intensity warrant. The research, general and recreational
needs of patrons willalso be addressed at appropriate levels. The
language of materials will be primarily English (even foreign language
dictionaries will emphasize those English-language definitions).
The Science library will house the major reference apparatus for
Agriculture, Biology, Chemistry, Computer Science, Engineering,
Industrial Technology, Mathematics, and Physics/Astronomy. Only
Ready-reference tools for those disciplines will be kept in Helm
Reference. The major reference collection for all other Ogden College
Departments will be held in Helm-Cravens because the entire circulating
collection (and periodicals) for those disciplines are held there.
Medical reference tools will continue to be split between the two
locations to facilitate the needs of Biology and the Allied Health
disciplines, respectively. The ERC houses most of the reference
works used by Library Media Education faculty and students in the
study of school media librarianship.
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The
University has been the site of a federal selective depository library
since 1934. The depository collection received a rating of Good
in an early 1992 federal inspection. Items are selected if they
are anticipated to fulfill the curricular and informational needs
of students, faculty and staff of the university and residents of
South Central Kentucky (2nd Cong. District). Currently, the library
selects about 48% of the Federal item numbers offered. Over 20,000
paper and microfiche items are added each year. More and more, items
are made available to us only in microform or electronic format.
If items are available in multiple formats, selection will be dictated
by usability and space considerations. Recommendations for selection
from the academic and local community are encouraged. Access to
the materials is facilitated by a CD-ROM index of the Monthly Catalog
and other specialized indexes. No documents are at present cataloged
into TOPCAT 2000. Kentucky state and local documents are collected
and displayed as are statistical series from adjoining states. United
Nations documents are not collected. Some commercially produced
titles to supplement Federal and state-level collections will be
acquired, as funds permit. Documents are housed in Helm Ground Floor.
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This
collection was a joint venture of the WKU Law Collection and Western
Kentucky University from 1965 to 2001, and continues to serves both
constituencies. The primary focus of the collection is the statutory,
adminisrative, and case law of Kentucky and the United States (case
law of other states may be found in the regional reporters, however).
The American Digest System provides access to case law and Shepard's
citators give subsequent judicial and legisative histories. As funds
permit, secondary source material (e.g., law reviews) is collected
along with topical materials and treatises in order to support curricular
needs or as recommended by the Warren County Bar Association Library
Committee. These latter materials are placed in "Law Reference"
and are accessible via TOPCAT 2000. The collection is supplemented
by WESTLAW and made available to WKU faculty and students for educational
use only. Other finding tools may be obtained but not textbooks
or international law materials.
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The
ERC maintains a large Juvenile Collection of books collected over
a long number of years. Selections for this circulating collection
will give even representation to all categories of books for pre-College
readers (from books for the young to young adult) as recommended
by ALA's Booklist and other sources. The collection is accessible
on TOPCAT 2000.
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SPECIAL
POLICIES
- Gift
Materials:
- The
University libraries will accept donated books and other materials
from individuals or organizations. If these materials match areas
of research and instruction within the University, they will be
considered for cataloging into the collections. If already held
or not deemed suitable for the Libraries' collections, donated works
will be surplused. One valued source of support is the Friends of
WKU Libraries. Membership monies may be designated by a Friend of
the Libraries for a work in a specific collection, and in so doing,
underwrite the Libraries' costs. A bookplate is inserted in a book
or periodical volume in honor of the donor, or as the donor stipulates,
as a symbol of this gift.
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Because
no one facility can hope in this age to house the text of all desired
materials, the exchange of publications with other libraries will
increase (at least until electronic means eliminate the need for
hard copy transfer). The OCLC Inter-Library Loan system serves to
rapidly identify the most expeditious loan sources for materials
needed by WKU faculty, staff and students at no charge. ILL policy
is based on state, regional, national, and international codes which
govern our procedures. Particpation in SOLINET, the Center for Research
Libraries, the British Lending Library and other consortia open
up the entire world of information to serve the research needs of
an active academic community. Commercial delivery of articles via
electronic means (e.g., via fax) is being explored as a service
to quicken access to needed materials.
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Community College Materials:
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Materials
are currently obtained in support of Associate Degree programs only
via allocations to the departments most closely affiliated with
the programs. This practice will undergo review in the near future
to determine if a separate account line is needed.
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Leisure Reading Collection:
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The
Libraries participates in a McNaughton Leisure Reading Plan with
Brodart, Inc. in which, as of Summer 1992, we receive approximately
40 popular new fiction and nonfiction books per month for an annual
subscription fee. These books serve the recreational reading interests
of our patrons; circulation periods are for two weeks. After one
year, the Libraries can decide to add some of the books to the regular
collection at a minimal cost; the remainder are returned to Brodart.
Approximately 600 titles may be held at any one time. Circulating
videotape and leisure magazine collections will be initiated in
1992-93.
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Withdrawal and Replacement Policies:
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Just
as evaluation of the present collection is not addressed in this
statement(see p. 2), neither will be review of the condition of
the existing collections. Weeding of "obsolete" or of brittle, unusable
materials is acknowledged as important and a policy statement addressing
this concern is currently under review. WKU Libraries will be guided
by the Guide to Review of Library Collections: Preservation,
Storage and Withdrawal, adopted by the American Library Association
in 1991. Currently, funds are budgeted by the Libraries to replace
copies of lost, missing, and damaged books.
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Serious
consideration of preservation of the collections must similarly
be given soon so as to retard natural processes of deterioration,
especially in print-on-paper materials.Currently, funds for repair
are allotted in the Libraries' budget, but preservation is a broader
concern.
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