TABLE OF CONTENTS
Purpose of the Policy
General Description of the Institution and Clientele
Served
Library Mission & Purpose
Collection Development Responsibility
Intellectual Freedom Statement
Selection Guidelines
Collection Areas
Reference Collection |
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Pacific Northwest Collection (PNW)
-
Maps
-
Government Information
-
Periodicals
-
Audio Recordings, Audiovisuals & Video
Recordings
-
Browsing Collection
-
Special Collections/Archives
-
Curriculum Collection
-
General Collection
|
| Subject Selection Areas |
| General Policies |
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Gift Materials – Policies & Procedures
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Collection Maintenance
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Multiple Copies
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Replacement of Lost Books
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Other Considerations
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PURPOSE OF THE POLICY
The purpose of this policy is to
provide a framework of procedures and guidelines for the
librarians responsible for developing and managing the
collection at Lewis-Clark State College
(LCSC) Library. Collection management includes the
selection, acquisition and deaccessioning of library
materials in all formats, as well as the ongoing review of
the existing collection. The main objective of collection
development is to have a useful collection that reflects the
goals of the
LCSC Library and the curricular and information needs of the
LCSC community. This policy is a working document that will
change and develop in response to the needs of the College
community.
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
OF THE INSTITUTION AND COMMUNITY SERVED
Founded in 1893, Lewis-Clark State
College (LCSC), located in Lewiston, Idaho, is a public
undergraduate college with more than 3,000 students from
more than 30 states and 20 countries. The college offers
undergraduate instruction in the nursing, education,
business, humanities,
natural sciences, as well as in professional and applied
technical programs through the Lewiston campus and LCSC’s
various outreach centers including Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. The
LCSC Library is
a member of the North Idaho Academic Libraries consortium
which also includes the University of Idaho Main Library,
the University of Idaho Law Library, and the North Idaho
College Molstead Library in Coeur d’Alene. The Library
primarily serves the students, faculty and staff of LCSC.
However, members of the Lewis-Clark Valley community can
also make use of the Library’s
collection on a limited scale.
LIBRARY MISSION AND
PURPOSE
Through the selection,
organization, and dissemination of information, the Library
supports the academic and vocational programs of the
College. It seeks to fill the information needs of its user
community by developing a conceptually coherent and rational
collection of print and non-print materials which support
the School's teaching and research functions.
To fulfill this mission, the Library
faculty participates in the development and review of the
curriculum and works closely with teaching faculty and
students to analyze their curricular,
research and recreational interests. Staff also teach the
bibliographic structure of knowledge and the means of
gaining access to that knowledge, explore and implement new
technology to expand and improve information resources and
services, and test new ways to extend service to the broader
community. The Library encourages the formation of
cooperative programs and arrangements with other libraries
through networking and consortia to share ever-expanding
information resources.
In all of its activity, the Library seeks
to support the designated programs of the College and to
respond to the unique information demands generated by the
College mission.
COLLECTION DEVELOPMENT RESPONSIBILITY
Final responsibility for implementation of
this policy rests with the Director of the Library who has
been delegated budgetary authority for expending the
resource funds for the Library. Overall responsibility for
the selection, development and maintenance of the collection
rests with the Library faculty who are familiar with
appropriate selection tools and the specific information
needs
of library users. The Library faculty will work in
consultation with the teaching faculty to ensure they have a
voice in collection development which supports the LCSC
curriculum. While the library faculty welcomes the teaching
faculty’s participation in the selection process through
recommendations of materials for the Library’s collection,
the final selection responsibility lies with the library
faculty who will, using their discretion, determine if the
materials recommended will fit
the Library’s selection guidelines.
INTELLECTUAL FREEDOM
STATEMENT
In accordance with the American
Library Association’s
Library Bill of Rights and the
American
Library Association’s
Freedom to Read Statement, the
LCSC Library’s collection shall endeavor to provide for the
free exchange of all ideas. The collection will offer the
widest possible range of viewpoints, regardless of the
popularity of the viewpoint, or the sex, religion, political
philosophy,
or national origin of the author(s). No censorship shall be
exercised on the basis of language or controversy of topic
related to religious, political, sexual, social economic,
scientific or moral
issues.
SELECTION GUIDELINES
The LCSC Library shall use its funds to develop a collection
which reflects the educational objectives, and supports the
educational and service programs of the college. LCSC
Library will acquire representative materials in all areas
of knowledge focusing on subject areas relating to LCSC’s
academic curriculum, and appropriate to the level of
instruction. Every effort shall also
be made to acquire materials which are broader in scope than
any particular discipline or field of
study defined in the College's academic program. The Library
should focus on acquiring books targeted at lower-division
undergraduates, particularly those with “Essential” or
“Highly Recommended” evaluations by Choice. The Library
shall exercise care in the purchase of highly specialized
research materials solely for individual faculty use.
Interlibrary loan shall be recommended for the occasional
need of esoteric, limited-use materials.
Criteria
for selection of library materials shall include the
accuracy and authority of the material;
the lasting value of the content; the anticipated use of the
material; the authoritativeness and reputation of the author
and the publisher; the appropriateness of the level of
material, the strength of present holdings in the same or
similar subject areas; exact or similar items held by
the other libraries within the North Idaho Academic
Libraries consortium; the social and/or artistic merit or
importance of the materials, cost, favorable reviews in
reputable sources such as Choice and Books in
Print, and the professional judgment of the teaching
faculty and library faculty.
COLLECTION AREAS
Reference Collection
-
Selection of reference materials is the collective
responsibility of all of the librarians. The focus of
the reference collection is to provide materials needed
to conduct research and
shall contain the standard
reference works useful in the fields covered by the
undergraduate curricula of the college. A variety of
resources, in both electronic and print format are
available to users. The types of materials collected
include: almanacs & yearbooks; directories; general &
specialized dictionaries; major encyclopedias;
geographical resources such as maps, atlases and
gazetteers; handbooks; and style manuals. Items in the
Reference collection cannot be removed from the library
or be borrowed by other libraries. Materials in the
Reference collection will be reviewed annually by the
subject selectors for currency and relevancy to the
collection.
Pacific Northwest (PNW) Collection
-
The PNW Collection focuses on materials related to the
history, geography, environment, economy and people of
the Pacific and Inland Northwest (Idaho, Montana, Oregon,
Washington and Alaska).
-
Items related to the Lewis & Clark expedition will be
added to the PNW Collection if they specifically pertain
to Idaho, Montana, Oregon or Washington. Items that
pertain to the expedition in general and do not
specifically relate to the PNW region will be cataloged
as
part of the Library’s General Collection.
Electronic Resources
-
The focus of electronic resources is to provide online
resources needed to conduct research in the fields
covered by the undergraduate curricula of the College.
-
The Library currently provides access to the LiLI
databases from the Idaho Commission for Libraries and
other electronic databases that support the LCSC
curriculum. Database descriptions can be found on the
Journals, Newspapers, Indexes
Library web page.
Maps
-
Maps related to Idaho and those areas of Montana, Oregon
and Washington that immediately border Idaho will be
added and cataloged for our collection.
Government Information
-
The
LCSC Library is a "select depository" library for United
States federal government publications and Idaho State
government documents. Criteria for selecting government
documents shall be the same as those applied to other
materials. Since depository status imposes the
obligation of serving the public, documents of general
interest to the
community shall be selected.
Periodicals
-
The Library strives to provide the most current and
up-to-date periodicals of value and interest to LCSC
Library users. In addition to in-house holdings, the
Library provides
extensive access to periodical and
journal subscriptions through the Idaho statewide
database project (LiLI) and through other database
subscriptions.
Audio Recordings, Audiovisuals and Video Recordings
-
LCSC Library shall acquire and make available recordings
of the spoken word, audiovisuals
and video recordings (both VHS and DVD format) in
support of the curriculum. Criteria for
selecting
audiovisuals shall be the same as those applied to other
materials. LCSC will aim
to collect only those materials in which public
performance rights are granted.
Browsing Collection
- The LCSC Library shall
collect a small, revolving collection of current fiction
to provide
recreational reading for our students and faculty.
The collection will
consist of bound
fiction books of lasting literary value that will
eventually go into the general collection
and paperback books that will eventually be recycled (if
the book is damaged beyond
repair) or sold. The collection will be reviewed
by the selector once a year to see
which titles should go into the general collection or be
withdrawn.
Special
Collections/Archives
-
LCSC
Library shall not develop a collection of rare books and
manuscripts. However,
the Library will exercise careful
guardianship of those manuscripts, rare books, and other
valuable items which might be donated to it.
Curriculum Collection
-
The LCSC Library serves as a public depository for
curricular materials for Grade K – 12
that are currently
under adoption in the State of Idaho. Teachers, student
teachers,
principals, superintendents, curriculum
directors, parents, etc., are able to utilize
and/or
review these approved materials.
-
Curricular materials are adopted by the State Board of
Education and sent to LCSC by the Idaho State Department
of Education. The Curriculum Collection is a circulating
collection housed at the Lewis-Clark State College
Library for a period of five (5) years. The subject
areas are reading, English, spelling, speech,
journalism, languages other than English, art, drama,
social studies, music, mathematics, business education,
career education and counseling, vocational/technical
education, science, health, handwriting, literature, and
driver education. Materials are made available for use
by LCSC Education faculty and students, as well as any
educator in north central Idaho, including those who
home-school.
-
Curricular materials that have been housed at LCSC for
the allotted 5 years are withdrawn each year in July.
The withdrawn materials are offered to LCSC Education
faculty, local
area teachers and the general public at
no cost.
-
The approved subject areas for adoption arrive at LCSC
annually. The materials are processed and added to the
online catalog database so that the public can access
the materials. Duplicate items are weeded from the
collection, and lost or stolen items are
not replaced.
Items are not available for circulation through
interlibrary loan.
General Collection
Goals/Objectives:
-
To purchase the top 5% of US academic publishing in the
subject areas relative to the curriculum of the college.
-
To insure that subject quotas for acquisitions are met
through careful examination of publishing rates, number
of credits generated in a subject area, and the usage
rates established within subject areas identified by
Library of Congress classification schemes.
Each
criterion is weighted and calculated as part of a
formula to produce a selection quota
for each subject.
-
To meet key professional ratios of volumes/FTE, volumes
added/FTE/yr, and to meet expenditure recommendations
for journals and books as a % of library and
institutional
budget.
-
To improve user satisfaction in locating appropriate
materials for their research needs,
as identified in the
Library’s annual user satisfaction surveys.
SUBJECT SELECTION
AREAS
Selection is made in the following
subject areas in support of the College’s curriculum and
instruction needs. Below is a summary of the areas of
curriculum focus:
Agriculture
Focus on Idaho and the Pacific
Northwest. general agriculture, conservation of natural
resources (land), plant culture, forestry, animal culture,
aquaculture & fisheries, and wildlife management.
Anthropology
Curriculum focus includes cultural
anthropology; world prehistory; Native American studies;
North American Indians; culture and environment, health,
education; comparative religion; and ethnography.
Art & Architecture
Topics of focus in the curriculum
include art history; art criticism; fine arts; composition;
drawing; painting; sculpture; printmaking; ceramics; art
methods for the elementary teacher; visual communication and
design.
Biology
Topics of focus in the curriculum
include environmental live science; human biology; cellular
and molecular biology; diversity of life; zoology; botany;
microbiology; anatomy and physiology; evolution;
pathophysiology; ecology; genetics; immunology; development
biology.
Business/Economics
Topics of focus in the curriculum
include management and leadership; entrepreneurship;
accounting; marketing; finance; economics; hotel and
restaurant management; business communications; business
law. The Library collection should support the above
coursework,
as
well as societal and ethical issues related
to business and economics.
Chemistry
Curriculum focus includes
preparatory chemistry; introduction to chemistry; organic
and biochemistry; principles of chemistry; physical
chemistry; and inorganic chemistry.
Children’s Literature
Collection (CLC)
The children’s literature
collection is a special collection which primarily supports
the elementary
and secondary education curriculum of the
campus. The collection will include all of the annual
American Library Association (ALA) award winners. Books
with starred reviews in the Bulletin of
the Center for
Children’s Books and School Library Journal will
receive strong consideration.
Computer Science
Topics of focus in the curriculum
include foundations of programming; object-oriented design
and methodology; algorithms and data structures; scripting
languages; net centric computing; databases; advanced visual
basic; operating systems; information and knowledge
management; software engineering; web-database interfaces;
theory of computation; intelligent systems: artificial
intelligence and information; usability: human-centered
design and evaluation.
Education
Topics of focus in the curriculum
include elementary and secondary education; reading; subject
specialties, such as teaching social studies or mathematics;
special education; early childhood education; gifted
education.
The Library collection should include materials supporting
coursework in the above areas, as well
as standards
published by accrediting bodies and materials on college
student success, on
distance education, and on societal
issues related to education.
Engineering/Technology
Curriculum focus includes
pre-engineering to include engineering graphics; engineering
fundamentals, analysis, & design; engineering statics; &
engineering dynamics.engineering technology focus includes
computer aided drafting (CAD) and geographic information
systems
(GIS).
Geography
Curriculum focus includes
geographic information systems, digital remote sensing, and
other
special topics in GIS.
Geology
Curriculum emphasis in geology
includes environmental earth science; historical geology;
geology
of Idaho and the Pacific Northwest; earth materials
including mineralogy, sedimentary rocks, geochemistry of
weathering & soil formation, ore mineralogy, geologic
mapping; hydrogeology;
earth surface processes including
tectonics, fluvial & glacial geomorphology, quaternary
geology; structural geology; and special topics in geology.
History
Coursework in history at LCSC
includes history of civilization; U.S. history; Native
American history; Nez Perce tribe history; Africa and the
world; history of Idaho, the Pacific Northwest, and the
American West; history of social welfare in the U.S.; U.S.
and Pacific Rim affairs; American foreign policy; and the
history of Europe.
Law
The primary curriculum emphasis
includes the legal assistant & paralegal programs.
Collection areas also include general law; law of the United
States; and Idaho state law.
Literature & Languages
Topics of focus in the curriculum
include composition; general American, British, and world
literature; nature and Western literature; Shakespeare;
literary analysis; history of the English language;
technical writing; creative fiction and non-fiction writing;
poetry; book publishing; Spanish and Nez Perce language
training; communication; film history; video production.
The Library should also collect annual National Book Award,
Pulitzer, and Booker prize winners,
as well as a
representative selection of publications by the Nobel
Laureates for Literature and
the
Poet Laureate of the United
States.
While books constitute the majority of materials purchased
in this area, the Library will purchase
for the collection
audio-visual materials that meet any of the following
criteria:
-
Support one of the courses being taught in the subject
area;
-
Current or previous recipient of an Academy Award for
“Best Picture,” “Feature
Documentary,” or “Foreign Language Film;”
-
Nominated for “Best Picture” (U.S. or foreign) in any 2
of the following categories:
Academy Award, Golden Globe, Critics’ Choice (from the
Broadcast Film Critics Association);
-
Critically acclaimed (e.g., top ratings from TLA Guide
or Video Librarian) dramatization of classic literature.
Mathematics
Topics include algebra; finite and
discrete mathematics; calculus; geometry; trigonometry;
linear programming and game theory; differential equations;
probability; real and complex analysis; math for technology;
applied mathematics.
Music
Topics of focus in the curriculum
include music appreciation; music history; and music
technique.
Since there are no majors in music offered at LCSC, the
Library focuses its collection on music history and music
appreciation. While the Library doesn’t purchase music
scores, it will accept donations of materials in good
condition.
Library collection in this subject should be weighted
heavily toward recorded performances of
music, rather than
books. Some examples include:
-
Grammy recipients in the categories of: Classical
Music, Jazz, Opera, World Music, and
Long-Form Video;
-
Recommended recordings from a published source, such as
an NPR Guide.
Nursing/Health
Science
Topics of focus in the curriculum
include health assessment; fundamentals of nursing; health
theory; pharmacotherapeutics in nursing; nursing
informatics; public health nursing; transcultural health
care; health care finance; leadership/management theory;
neonatal resuscitation; nursing research; radiography;
radiobiology; imaging modalities.
Performing Arts
Topics of focus in the curriculum
include theater production, acting, and dance.
The Library should
purchase books that support the above coursework. In
addition, the Library should purchase recorded performances
in this subject, such as:
-
Critically acclaimed (e.g., top ratings from TLA Guide
or Video Librarian) productions of dance or opera;
-
Surveys of the history of theater;
-
Technique instruction that support one of the courses
being taught in the subject area.
Philosophy & Religion
Collection emphasis is on basic
ethics; social and political philosophy; and logic.
Physical
Education/Recreation
Topics of focus in the curriculum
include individual and team sports; sports officiating;
survey of human movement; techniques and methods for
coaching; fitness and wellness; physical education for the
elementary teacher; youth sports and recreation; adaptive
teaching in physical education; biomechanics; physiology of
exercise; motor learning and motor development; sports
psychology; history and principles of physical education;
kinesiology; organization and administration of health,
physical education, recreation, athletics; social-cultural
aspects of sports.
Physical Science
Curriculum emphasis in physical
science includes general physics, descriptive astronomy,
engineering physics and modern physics.
Political Science
American government; social and
political philosophy; international politics; constitutional
law;
public policy; international political economy;
American foreign policy; comparative politics; &
Idaho
politics.
Psychology
Topics of focus in the curriculum
area include developmental psychology; biological bases of
behavior; historical and contemporary issues in psychology;
group dynamics; political psychology; statistical methods;
abnormal psychology; assessment of learning; social
psychology; educational psychology; peace, conflict and
violence; issues in abusive relationships; research methods;
sports psychology; counseling theories and techniques;
chemical dependency and pharmacology;
cognitive psychology;
crisis intervention; HIV/AIDS critical issues.
Social Work
The focus of the Social Work
program at LCSC is to prepare students to be general
practitioners. Courses in the BSW program include the
history of social welfare; human behavior; social welfare
services and policy; families and children; and child
welfare.
Sociology & Criminal
Justice
Criminal Justice/Justice Studies
is offered as a major within the Social Sciences Division at
LCSC. Coursework focus includes juvenile delinquency;
deviant behavior and society; family; criminology; criminal
law; criminal procedure and investigation; comparative
criminal justice; and police and corrections in America.
Sociology is a minor program and includes coursework in
religion in contemporary society; current social problem;
and social change.
GENERAL POLICIES
Gift Materials –
Policies & Procedures
The LCSC Library welcomes
donations of books, relevant journals and other appropriate
materials. Gift materials of good quality that don’t fit our
policy for purchasing materials may be added to
our
collection, at the discretion of the Collection Development
Librarian. If these materials become lost or damaged after
they begin to circulate, they will not be replaced. Because
of space limitations and processing costs, we cannot add all
gifts to the collection. Duplicate titles and textbooks -
especially those more than 5 years old - may not be added to
the collection unless
are deemed to be the best or only
source of information on a particular topic. We also
consider other factors such as condition, age, or subject.
The Library will also not add items which have been
designated by a publisher as a free copy not for re-sale.
When a gift is not added to the collection, we include it in
our library book sale, which help generate a small amount of
money to help support the library. We always send a letter
to donors acknowledging the gifts and the
number of items
donated. However, because of limited staff time, the Library
cannot provide an itemized list of contributions. The
appraisal of gifts to the library is the responsibility of
the donor. The library will not be responsible for providing
a monetary valuation statement to the donor for
tax or other
purposes, but will acknowledge receiving the gift.
Collection Maintenance
A systematic and periodic program of weeding or removal of
materials from the collection shall
be carried out by the librarians. Criteria used to evaluate
materials include existence of duplicate copies; physical
condition of the material; outdated or inaccurate
information; extent of Library’s holdings in the subject
area; date of publication; materials no longer appropriate
in LCSC Library's collection; availability of newer or
revised editions; demand and usage of the material;
potential future use; and importance for historical
purposes. Items shall be withdrawn from circulation and
discarded. Materials beyond repair shall be discarded and
replacements, if available, shall be acquired. Decisions
regarding weeding of the collection may be carried out in
consultation with
the teaching faculty along with consulting other sources
such as WorldCat to determine item
availability via interlibrary loan.
Multiple
Copies
LCSC Library
will purchase one circulating copy of a title. Duplicate
copies, either purchased or accepted as gifts, will be
acquired only under unusual circumstances as determined by
demand
and other relevant factors. Faculty members recommending
purchasing of multiple copies of the same title shall give
justification of need.
Replacement of Lost Books
Lost books shall be replaced,
if available and still deemed pertinent, if funds allow, or
upon recommendation of teaching faculty members or
librarians. Once a month, a lost items report will
be run
and the determination will be made at that time regarding
replacing the item, as per the above criteria.
Other Considerations
The LCSC Library does not
generally purchase required textbooks for the collection
which students are expected to purchase for class use.
Textbooks may be purchased if they are a classic in the
discipline or if they are the only or best source of
information on a particular topic.
Emphasis shall be on purchasing current items
with perceived long-term value, recognizing the
need at
times for retrospective items.
The Library will acquire materials in diverse
supported formats.
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September, 2006 |