Breathe New Life into Your Science Reference Collection Previous   Contents   Next Issues in Science and Technology Librarianship Spring 2007 DOI:10.5062/F48K771F URLs in this document have been updated. Links enclosed in {curly brackets} have been changed. If a replacement link was located, the new URL was added and the link is active; if a new site could not be identified, the broken link was removed. Viewpoints Breathe New Life Into Your Science Reference Collection Angela M. Gooden Head, Geology-Mathematics-Physics Library University of Cincinnati Cincinnati, Ohio GOODENAM@ucmail.uc.edu Copyright 2007, Angela M. Gooden. Used with permission. Spring brings about the revelation that change is apparent and necessary. Thoughts of reorganization kept bouncing around in my mind as I pondered ways to make the library more inviting, appealing, and user-friendly. As I surveyed the first floor it hit me. The reliable associate I rarely take time to visit -- the reference collection. Apparently, according to a 2005 study, I am not the only one. J.T. Bradford et al. found that "the total number of reference titles used to answer questions was less than 2% of the total number of reference titles owned" (Bradford 2005a). Isn't it time to send science reference books to the stacks? Don't they deserve to be exposed to settings outside the library? With more and more libraries creating information commons it is apparent that we are attracting the patrons, but how many are willing to leave their coveted seat, walk to the reference area, and thumb through an encyclopedia or dictionary? Quick. Think fast. Can you name five print reference sources in your collection that patrons use often? Frankly, I am finding that most of my patrons rarely even peruse the reference collection. Alas, dust collects daily on these colorful tomes. Tyckoson's shelving statistics describe a 75% reduction in volumes that were reshelved during his study period (Tyckoson 2004). Bradford's assessment was even more shocking -- "less than 10% of the print reference collection was used once" (Bradford 2005b). During my literature search I discovered that the Baltimore County Public Library integrated their reference collection into their circulating stacks (Frase 2007). The reference team at their Dana Medical Library successfully shrunk and revitalized their paper reference collection by weeding or moving titles to the stacks or to an off-site storage facility (Delwiche 2006). Not ready to completely give up yours? Me neither, but here are some places to start: Examine your collection for duplications. Did you buy the online version of Encyclopedia of Mathematics? Well, send that older print copy to stacks. Can those handbooks and tables be found somewhere else? Is there really that great a demand for the 1961 copy of the Tables of Integrals and Other Mathematical Data? Be proactive. Start limiting the purchase of less-used print dictionaries and general encyclopedias, especially if you have a subscription to a resource such as Access Science. Here are few titles to which my library has online access that I moved to circulating stacks: International critical tables of numerical data, physics, chemistry and technology: accessible via Knovel McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science & Technology: accessible via Access Science Minerals Yearbook: accessible via USGS Standard Mathematical Tables and Formulae: accessible via {MATHnetBASE} By taking the steps above, I have lightened my reference collection and made it more visually appealing. The specialty dictionaries have more room to breathe and the more current reference books (e.g., Encyclopedia of Caves, 2005 or Oxford User's Guide to Mathematics, 2004) get to have their fifteen minutes of fame. References Bradford, J. T., Costello, B. & Lenholt, R. 2005a. Reference Service in the Digital Age: An Analysis of Sources Used to Answer Reference Questions. Journal of Academic Librarianship 31(3), 263-272. Bradford, J. T. 2005b. What's Coming Off the Shelves? A Reference Use Study Analyzing Print Reference Sources Used in a University Library. Journal of Academic Librarianship 31(6), 546-558. Delwiche, Frances A. & Bianchi, Nancy A. 2006. Transformation of a Print Reference Collection. Medical Reference Services Quarterly 25(1), 2:21-29. Frase, R. M. & Salit-Mischel, B. 2007. Right-sizing the Reference Collection. Public Libraries 46(1), 40-44. Tyckoson, D. 2004. Facts Go Online: Are Print Reference Collections Still Relevant? Against the Grain 16(4), 34-36. Previous   Contents   Next