College and Research Libraries By J E A N M . S H A R P E Divisional Reading Rooms in the Small Liberal Arts College Jean M. Sharpe is librarian of the Rock- ford College Library, Rockford, Illinois. TRADITION has decreed for college and university libraries a conventional plan which emphasizes the large central reading room. If of late there has been some questioning, uncertainty, and even uneasi- ness w i t h this emphasis, w e must look for guidance, not only in the statements of our o w n profession but at the shift in educational methods and procedures w h i c h are compelling the library to assume a more important place in the educational scheme. W h e n the professor lectured and the student read a textbook, the library had its appointed place in the educational organization, but it w a s not one of first importance. M o r e recently w i t h the in- troduction of honors and independent reading courses, tutorial systems, and the stressing of the advantages of the small class, the education of the student has become a more individualized process w h i c h centers around teaching w i t h books. A s these new directions become appar- ent, librarians are discussing the type of library building best suited to fit in w i t h these methods. T h e y are studying the library f r o m the standpoint of "educa- tional effectiveness rather than its admin- istrative efficiency."1 T h e large reading 1 Branscomb, H a r v i e . Teaching with Books: A Study of College Libraries. Association of A m e r i c a n Colleges and A . L . A . , 1940, p. ix. room as opposed to small subject or divi- sional reading rooms is, of course, only one phase in the discussion. T h e size and type of the student body and the character of the teaching of the institution are deter- mining factors in the conception of the building, and the problem is one which must be solved independently by each library. T h u s , in the new library at R o c k f o r d College, servi-ng a community of 300 stu- dents and 45 faculty members, w e have chosen to omit the large reading room and to center our plan around the idea of divi- sional reading rooms. T h e general type of teaching to which this library contributes is best described in an editorial introduc- tion by Professor C a r l B e c k e r : Teaching and learning are most effectively conjoined when an alert and informed teacher engages in informal discussion with a small group of alert and informed stu- dents. If the subject be history, the stu- dents will on their own initiative and with mounting enthusiasm (it is an ideal we are describing) spend much of their time in the library, where they will be provided with tables and the necessary books for an in- dependent study of the subject. Once or twice a week the professor will meet his pupils. In so small a group he may dis- pense with lectures—those exercises in which students assemble, and amiably and passively sit while the professor, with great advantage to himself, clarifies his ideas by oral dis- course. T h e students also will have an opportunity to clarify their ideas by oral dis- DECEMBER., 1940 55 course. Teaching and learning will then be conjoined, as they always must be to be any way effective: professor and pupils, each according to his talent, will be both teachers and learners. . . .2 T h i s is not merely " i d e a l " ; it is the kind of teaching R o c k f o r d C o l l e g e seeks to offer and w i t h which the library must be closely integrated. Accessibility of Books T h e first requisite for independent study ( w e assume a well-selected book collection) is the accessibility of books. T h i s is possible w h e n everything is open to the w h o l e student body, stacks, reserves, art collection, periodicals, and these ma- terials arranged to be used most effectively. A t R o c k f o r d the four divisional reading rooms f o l l o w i n g the general plan of the curriculum are devoted to humanities, social sciences, arts, and science. T h i s is in no sense a radical departure from w h a t w e had already been doing. T h e old li- brary on the third floor of M i d d l e H a l l consisted of t w e l v e rooms which w e r e in reality subject reading rooms. T h i s ar- rangement w a s not planned but developed as an expanding library took over room after room. T h e reserves w e r e open and placed near books in the same field, thus breaking down some of the artificiality of the reserve shelf. T h e r e w a s a charm in the old uneven lines, the individual study nooks, and the general atmosphere of in- formality. T o quote from R a n d a l l and G o o d r i c h : Many students seem to prefer to study in a rather small informal room. T h e y choose such a room in preference to an imposing reading room. If it were possible to afford the necessary staff, a departmental system 2 F e r g u s o n , W a l l a c e K., a n d B r u u n , Geoffrey. A Survey of European Civilisation. U n d e r t h e edi- torial supervision of Carl L . B e c k e r . H o u g h t o n , Mifflin, 1936, p. vii. of reading rooms, similar to the Cleveland and Los Angeles public library plans, would fit into the present trend in instruction. . . .3 In our situation the "necessary s t a f f " w a s not available but its function w a s fulfilled in some measure by the faculty, in courses and in conferences, giving bibliographical training, and by the creation in the student body of a feeling of responsibility w h i c h made the use of small unsupervised subject rooms possible. W i t h a circulation of over thirty-five thousand books last year there w a s a loss of only f o u r . Grouping of Subjects That Belong To- gether In the new building it seemed wiser to have in place of many subject divisions a grouping of those subjects w h i c h naturally belong together and to place in the pre- ferred position on the first floor the hu- manities and social sciences, subjects for which the library serves as a book labora- tory, and on the second floor the arts and sciences w h i c h have their o w n studios and laboratories elsewhere on the campus. T h e reading rooms are divided by alcoves to preserve the feeling of the small room and to keep in so far as possible the direct and natural approach to books. T h e books and materials w h i c h are essential to these several fields have been placed in the read- ing rooms: information files, periodicals, reference books and bibliographies, and reserves. W e are also w o r k i n g on a "core collection" for each room w h i c h w i l l be selected by the f a c u l t y of each division in cooperation w i t h the librarian. In the central position on the first floor the circulation desk has been placed, and near by, the general catalog where every search for information begins. H e r e also 3 R a n d a l l , W i l l i a m M v a n d Goodrich, F r a n c i s L . D . Principles of College Library Administration. A . L . A . a n d the U n i v e r s i t y of Chicago P r e s s [ c l 9 3 6 ] , p. 171. 56 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES is space for exhibits, bulletin boards, and displays of new books. In the rare book room on the second floor the treasures of the library have been housed and w i l l be placed frequently on exhibit. Conference or study rooms are adja- cent to the reading rooms. W h i l e no classes w i l l be scheduled regularly in the library, small groups can, of course, at any time reserve one of these conference rooms w h e n the instructor wishes to con- duct the class near the books, but primarily they are w h a t they have been termed, "conference rooms." T h e divisional rooms w i l l also be available at certain times (perhaps between four and six w h e n the attendance in the library is usually very l i g h t ) for an occasional meeting of a larger class. In the old library this type of use was most successful. Conveniently located in relation to the reading rooms are the stacks, four tiers in height, where materials of perhaps less immediate importance are kept. T h e car- rels for students doing honors w o r k or special projects are ranged on t w o sides of the stack levels. T h e student typing room, the staff room, the w o r k space, as w e l l as three of the conference rooms are also in the stacks. A Friendly, Informal Air T h e furniture is in keeping w i t h the simple and direct lines of the G e o r g i a n building. Fireplaces in three of the read- ing rooms add to the friendly, informal air of the library and around them have been grouped comfortable chairs and occa- sional tables. In all the furniture enough variation has been presented to avoid the institutional appearance. Single study desks, for instance, have been placed near the wide w i n d o w s which look out over the river or across the north campus. T h e r e is no special room for leisure read- ing. T h i s seemed unnecessary not only because of the general informality of the entire library but because the book pro- gram of the college has always stressed the dormitory library for recreational reading and the browsing feature of the bookshop at M a d d o x House where the emphasis is on reading rather than on sales. T o administer this new library w i t h a small staff w i l l be quite definitely an ex- periment and w i l l call for the closest kind of faculty and student cooperation. T h e aim w i l l be to carry into the new and more formal building as much of the in- formality of the old as possible. B y in- formality w e mean the complete openness of everything, the simplified charging sys- tem, the privilege of all students to take out an unlimited number of books, the absence of a time limit (the books are checked three times a y e a r ) , the open re- serves, and the very liberal hours during w h i c h the library may be used. Experimental as the R o c k f o r d C o l l e g e L i b r a r y is in some of its features, w e be- lieve it fits the needs of our particular college. In its new and more spacious setting w e hope it w i l l continue to do w i t h even more effect that which it has done for many y e a r s — t o make accessible and as attractive as possible to the student the precious volumes which comprise her intel- lectual and spiritual inheritance, the ac- quaintance w i t h which w i l l guide and direct her in that difficult and eternal pursuit of significant and elusive truth. DECEMBER, 1940 x 57