{"title":"从伟大的想法到真正的谈话:组织重组时代新馆藏角色的前沿视角","authors":"Meg Ecclestone, Sally A Sax, Alana Skwarok","doi":"10.5703/1288284317175","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Academic libraries across North America are restructuring to meet user needs in an\n e-preferred environment, resulting in major changes to traditional collection\n development roles and workflows. Responsibility for collection work is increasingly\n assigned to functional librarians dedicated to collection development activities across\n a broad range of subject areas, often serving an entire faculty or college. This paper\n discusses the history, process, and outcomes of the transition to functional collection\n development roles at two mid-sized universities. Both Carleton University and the\n University of Guelph support a wide range of undergraduate and graduate research needs\n from a single central library, but have implemented a different type of organizational\n design and are at different stages in the restructuring process. One year into their new\n functional roles, Carleton’s librarians are preparing to assess the state of change\n around collection development in their organization, and identify next steps for the\n restructuring process. By contrast, the University of Guelph has worked with a\n functional team model for ten years, and is undertaking a 10-year review to assess\n whether the original goals of the reorganization were met. How does collections work\n compare under a functional team model, compared to a traditional liaison model? Both\n perspectives offer strategies for consultation and change management that may be helpful\n to other institutions restructuring their collection development activities.","PeriodicalId":287918,"journal":{"name":"\"The Time Has Come . . . to Talk of Many Things\"","volume":"23 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"From Big Ideas to Real Talk: A Front-line Perspective on New Collections Roles in\\n Times of Organizational Restructuring\",\"authors\":\"Meg Ecclestone, Sally A Sax, Alana Skwarok\",\"doi\":\"10.5703/1288284317175\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Academic libraries across North America are restructuring to meet user needs in an\\n e-preferred environment, resulting in major changes to traditional collection\\n development roles and workflows. Responsibility for collection work is increasingly\\n assigned to functional librarians dedicated to collection development activities across\\n a broad range of subject areas, often serving an entire faculty or college. This paper\\n discusses the history, process, and outcomes of the transition to functional collection\\n development roles at two mid-sized universities. Both Carleton University and the\\n University of Guelph support a wide range of undergraduate and graduate research needs\\n from a single central library, but have implemented a different type of organizational\\n design and are at different stages in the restructuring process. One year into their new\\n functional roles, Carleton’s librarians are preparing to assess the state of change\\n around collection development in their organization, and identify next steps for the\\n restructuring process. By contrast, the University of Guelph has worked with a\\n functional team model for ten years, and is undertaking a 10-year review to assess\\n whether the original goals of the reorganization were met. How does collections work\\n compare under a functional team model, compared to a traditional liaison model? 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引用次数: 0
摘要
北美各地的学术图书馆正在进行重组,以满足用户在电子首选环境中的需求,导致传统馆藏开发角色和工作流程发生重大变化。收集工作的责任越来越多地分配给功能性图书馆员,他们致力于跨广泛学科领域的收集开发活动,通常为整个学院或学院服务。本文讨论了两所中等规模大学向功能性馆藏发展角色转变的历史、过程和结果。卡尔顿大学和圭尔夫大学都通过一个中央图书馆来支持广泛的本科生和研究生的研究需求,但实施了不同类型的组织设计,并且在重组过程中处于不同的阶段。卡尔顿图书馆的图书馆员在担任新职能一年后,正准备评估其组织中馆藏发展的变化状况,并确定重组过程的下一步。相比之下,圭尔夫大学(University of Guelph)已经用职能团队模式工作了10年,并且正在进行为期10年的审查,以评估重组的最初目标是否实现。与传统的联络模式相比,集合在职能团队模式下的工作如何?这两种观点都为协商和变革管理提供了策略,可能有助于其他机构调整其馆藏发展活动。
From Big Ideas to Real Talk: A Front-line Perspective on New Collections Roles in
Times of Organizational Restructuring
Academic libraries across North America are restructuring to meet user needs in an
e-preferred environment, resulting in major changes to traditional collection
development roles and workflows. Responsibility for collection work is increasingly
assigned to functional librarians dedicated to collection development activities across
a broad range of subject areas, often serving an entire faculty or college. This paper
discusses the history, process, and outcomes of the transition to functional collection
development roles at two mid-sized universities. Both Carleton University and the
University of Guelph support a wide range of undergraduate and graduate research needs
from a single central library, but have implemented a different type of organizational
design and are at different stages in the restructuring process. One year into their new
functional roles, Carleton’s librarians are preparing to assess the state of change
around collection development in their organization, and identify next steps for the
restructuring process. By contrast, the University of Guelph has worked with a
functional team model for ten years, and is undertaking a 10-year review to assess
whether the original goals of the reorganization were met. How does collections work
compare under a functional team model, compared to a traditional liaison model? Both
perspectives offer strategies for consultation and change management that may be helpful
to other institutions restructuring their collection development activities.