College and Research Libraries JAMES E. GAINES, JR. Reclassification in the Libraries of the Great Lakes Colleges Association A comprehensive survey of the reclassification situations in the libraries of nine reputable colleges was made by questionnaire. This summary of the findings shotvs that approaches to reclassification differ con- siderably according to institutional financial support and available professional skills. Besides defining the general pattern that library reclassification appears to be taking at this time, the survey also indi- cates the means by which reclassification is supported financially, an apparent shortage of catalogers experienced in the use of the LC Classification system, and a possible trend toward the further over- burdening of cataloging department staffs. T H E G R E A T L A K E S C O L L E G E S Associa- tion, incorporated in 1961, is composed of twelve liberal arts colleges located in Ohio, Indiana, and Michigan: Albion, Antioch, Denison, DePauw, Earlham, Hope, Kalamazoo, Kenyon, Ohio Wesley- an, Oberlin, Wabash, and Wooster. The association is probably best known for its program in international education under which its students study in cer- tain foreign universities and receive transferable academic credits for their work. Until recently, the program has been mainly concerned with non-West- ern areas: the Far East and Latin Amer- ica. The special language programs nec- essary for such study—Chinese, Hindi, Japanese, and Portuguese, in addition to the usual ones—are available at desig- nated home campuses. There are other cooperative programs in the humanities, urban studies, social and natural sci- ences, and there is a sharing of ideas Mr. Gaines is Reclassification Director in the Antioch College Library, Yelloiu Springs, Ohio. among the schools' admissions personnel, business officers, and librarians. Communication among the GLCA li- braries has been good from the start and has been aided by the GLCA Li- brarians Newsletter, edited by Richard W. Ryan, librarian at Denison. Reflect- ing the current interest of academic li- brarians in the possible adoption of the Library of Congress Classification sys- tem, the member libraries sponsored two conferences on reclassification. The first conference was held at Ohio Weselyan University on October 16-17, 1966, and the second at the College of Wooster on April 28-29, 1967. Both were well attended and included a large number of non-GLCA librarians from the tri- state area. A survey by questionnaire was made in October 1967 to determine the respective catalogers' experience with the Library of Congress Classifica- tion system and to find out, in as much detail as possible, how the various li- braries were approaching reclassification. This report is a summary of the findings. Of the twelve GLCA libraries, nine 292/ Reclassification in the Libraries of the GLCA / 293 T A B L E 1 R a n g e A v e r a g e M e d i a n Total library budget $105,084-217,033 $169,479 $171,000 Enrollment 889-2,540 1,756 1,806 No. of volumes classed in Dewey . 78,100 (est.)-285,000 138,602 133,610 Volumes added last year 4,789-9,189 6,933 7,000 No. of professional librarians, including 4,789-9,189 reclass. directors 4-8 5.9 6 (Albion, Antioch, Denison, DePauw, Earlham, Hope, Ohio Wesleyan, Wa- bash, and Wooster) have changed to LC since mid-1966. One (Kalamazoo) has been using LC for over thirty years, and two (Kenyon and Oberlin) are pres- ently continuing with Dewey. The latter three have been excluded from this dis- cussion because they are not in the process of changing to LC and, to a less- er extent, because Oberlin's library is so large (over six hundred and thirty- five thousand volumes and with a budg- et of more than $450,000) as to skew the institutional data summarized in Table 1. All of the figures are for 1967- 68. Almost within a year's time, all nine libraries had changed to LC. Six of them changed between May 1 and December 27, 1966, and the other three between January 1 and May 10, 1967. All of the libraries which began using LC in 1966 waited from somewhat less than a month to a full year before beginning their various reclassification programs. The average time elapsed was slightly more than four months and the median time three months. Of the three libraries starting in 1967, two began to reclassify at the same time they began using LC for new acquisitions. Reasons for chang- ing to LC, listed according to the fre- quency with which they were mentioned are: ( 1 ) the possibilities for national cataloging, cooperation, and automation; ( 2 ) economy; (3) greater suitability of LC; ( 4 ) speed; ( 5 ) inefficiency of Dewey; and (6) opportunity to re-eval- uate the collection, a reason which is more closely related to reclassification alone. It is interesting that none of the libraries had previously approached their college administrations about a possible change to LC and that their cataloging staffs had never approached their head librarians about the matter. All nine libraries presented some sort of report or program to their respective college administrations before the change to LC was made. With only two excep- tions, those included cost estimates (ranging from $30,000 to $94,000) and time tables (two to ten years) for re- classification. One of the libraries (Anti- och ) asked for and got an initial ap- propriation of $80,000 to set up a special reclassification unit with its own direc- tor to make all possible speed in getting the job done. Another (Albion) was au- thorized to hire a cataloger experienced in the use of LC Classification to head its project. At least one of the libraries did not ask for a lump sum to take care of reclassification. That library, and probably most of the others, reached some sort of agreement with its admin- istration whereby it got permission to change to LC but at the same time agreed to make no large demands for reclassification funds. Thus in eight libraries reclassification cjosts (less the reclassification director's salary, in the case of Albion) are being carried, for the time being at least, by the library's regular operating budget, strengthened by whatever extra funds the librarian can garner. Several libraries 294 / College b- Research Libraries • March 1968 reported that they are getting various budgetary increments for additional per- sonnel, equipment and supplies, most of which are connected with reclassifica- tion. Aside from the two reclassification directors, additional personnel include typists, full or part time nonprofessional assistants, and students—but mostly stu- dents. Only in one library (Wooster) is a high-output reclassification project being carried out without additional professional catalogers being hired. In seven of the libraries, the reclassifica- tion is being done mostly by the regular cataloging department staff, reinforced to various degrees, in its own office space. The proposed time tables have been revised according to forthcoming finan- cial support. Two of the libraries have no announced completion date. Three have kept theirs, and one has extended its completion date. The remaining three say that they will probably declare re- classification effectively completed when the most-used Dewey-classed books have been done. It seems likely that others will join that category as the work progresses and the eventual cost becomes apparent. The priorities under which materials are reclassed generally follow the same pattern in all the li- braries : ( 1 ) continuations, older edi- tions of added titles, and older materials which the catalogers must handle for other reasons; ( 2 ) parts of the collec- tion already designated by a letter such as B (Biography) or R (Reference); and ( 3 ) block by block (usually in areas where the shelves are overcrowded or where shifting is the most practical) and/or as books are returned from cir- culation. Reclassification speed and costs vary considerably, and unfortunately com- parison is made even more difficult be- cause some of the libraries do not keep careful statistics. Apparently reclassifi- cation costs are so inextricably bound up in the regular operating budgets of most libraries that it is almost impossible to establish the true unit cost. Not, of course, that the unit cost figure is worth anything without a detailed description of the operation itself—there are just too many factors which affect the cost. All such factors can best be summarized as the library's standard for cataloging. If the library is going to adjust to LC's choice and form of entries and subject headings, do the necessary recataloging, regularize its treatment of series, mend, weed, and initiate binding and replace- ment, then the cost will be high. If the library retains book pockets and cards, they will add to the cost also. Three of the libraries are just getting started at reclassification, but the output and available unit cost of the other six are given in Table 2. The nine libraries have a total of 14/4 professional catalogers (including the two separately financed reclassification directors), but only four of them have had any previous experience classifying with the LC system. One of the reclassi- T A B L E 2 I N S T I T U T I O N R E C L A S S E D P E R I O D C O V E R E D U N I T C O S T I N S T I T U T I O N V o l u m e s T i t l e s P E R I O D C O V E R E D V o l u m e T i t l e Wooster 64,754 49,930 one year c.520 c.670 Antioch 46,402 37,524 one year 84.60 $1,046 Ohio Wesleyan 35,000 n.a. one year n.a. n.a. Wabash 29,000 26,000 eight months n.a. n.a. Earlham 17,500 n.a. fifteen months 580 n.a. Denison c. 11,000 n.a. nine months c.530 n.a. Reclassification in the Libraries of the GLCA / 295 fication directors came to his job after three years of the same work in a small university library. The experience of the other three catalogers is less extensive. One worked for one year classing gov- ernment documents as separates in a major university library eight years ago. Another recataloged a departmental li- brary in a major university more than twenty years ago, and the third catalog- er worked for one year as a cataloger in a small university library twenty-five years ago. Five of the libraries have cata- logers with no previous experience in classifying with LC. When the four catalogers with experience in LC are added to the other members of the professional staff who have previously worked or studied in an LC-classed li- brary, the libraries have only sixteen out of a total of 53/4 librarians who have some practical familiarity with the sys- tem—30 per cent. As the following practices indicate, the actual standards for cataloging vary considerably within the group of li- braries. The extent of recataloging ranges from "whenever necessary" to "very lit- tle," but only one library admits that it is doing nothing other than changing the call numbers on the books and cata- log cards. Five say that they are not re- vamping their series authority files as they reclassify—indeed, several do not even have them. Only one library main- tains a clipped file of the quarterly Addi- tions and Changes to the L C schedules, although one other annotates the litera- ture schedules. Except for one library which does not presently have a sub- scription, the others examine each issue when it arrives and keep it on hand for consultation when necessary. Accept- ance of LC's classes PZ 3 and PZ 4 (Fic- tion in English) also varies. Three of the libraries accept it without alteration, and one always assigns numbers from the national literature classes. The re- maining five libraries compromise to various degrees, the most common prac- tice being to use PZ 3 and 4 only when the schedules and the L C Printed Cata- log do not give an official author num- ber in the national literature classes. All of the libraries except one (Antioch) use permanent, self-adhesive paper labels as the major means of changing the call numbers on their catalog cards, a meth- od which seems to have originated with the library at California State College at Long Beach. Whenever new cards are required they are usually run off on the library's Xerox 914, as Antioch does for all its reclassed cards. The specific difficulties that the cata- logers have experienced in the use of LC are, according to the frequency of times mentioned: ( 1 ) lack of a compre- hensive guide to interpret the schedules and tables; ( 2 ) use of the schedules and application of the special tables; ( 3 ) the rationale of LC's Cuttering and the ar- rangement of translations and other editions in relation to the original work; ( 4 ) unavailability of literature Cutter numbers for authors classed in PZ 3 and 4; ( 5 ) separation of older and newer material caused by LC's revision of the schedules; ( 6 ) frequent necessity to do original classification when LC classes a title within a series; and ( 7 ) lack of the K (Law) schedule. Strangely enough, three of the libraries reported no specific difficulties using LC. One of those li- braries has the cataloger with some ex- perience with LC, but the catalogers in the other two libraries have no previous experience with the system. Most of the advice that the nine li- braries would give to other libraries con- sidering the change to LC and/or re- classification has to do with reclassifica- tion. In the order of frequency, those replies are: ( 1 ) investigate and con- sider all available methods and costs; ( 2 ) plan ahead; ( 3 ) start slowly; ( 4 ) remain flexible; ( 5 ) use student help to full advantage; ( 6 ) take full advantage 296 / College b- Research Libraries • March 1968 of labor-saving techniques and materials such as the Se-lin labeler, Xerox, and Avery labels; and ( 7 ) do as much proc- essing as possible during the summer when extra labor is available and when the books are not in heavy use. A few observations might well be made on the implications of the survey findings. Apparently it is accepted prac- tice in many libraries for catalogers to run a more or less modest reclassification program with the time that they have saved by the change to LC. Ultimately that time gain becomes eroded by acqui- sitions increases and more permanent arrangements for reclassification are necessitated—which means that at some point extra funds will have to be found or the work will bog down. How- ever, even large expenditures cannot al- ways buy the sound standards and con- sistently good work that experienced and well-trained personnel bring—obviously, there are not enough experienced cata- logers to go around. Not all smaller aca- demic libraries, of course, have had particularly high cataloging standards, and in many instances the cataloging personnel are not prepared to cope with burgeoning acquisitions, much less with a reclassification program. What the individual library must do is to keep careful records of its own procedures and costs and check them regularly against those of comparable institutions. With accumulated data it will be possible to project time and cost figures for various aspects of technical services work, not just for reclassification projects. It would be helpful if the pro- fession were to collect and publish in- structional material on the use of the LC Classification system and to stan- dardize and publish the best and most economical procedures dealing with all aspects of technical services work. With- out those standards to guide them, many libraries will fail to use this opportunity to establish the firm base that is needed to enable them to meet the demands of the future. The libraries surveyed in this study are comparatively good, sound ones in that most of them have a tra- dition of adequate financial support and staffing. But what is going on in the academic libraries that are patently under-financed and less competently staffed? • •