Apponequet Regional High School Library
Collection Development and Mission Statements
Collection Development Collection development is a universal process for
libraries and information centers.
It is the process of identifying the strengths and weaknesses of a library's
materials collection in terms of patron needs and community resources and
attempting to correct existing weaknesses, if any. Collection development
is the process of making certain the information needs of the people using
the collection are met in a timely and economical manner, using information
resources produced both inside and outside of the organization.
Collection development on the whole is an art, not a science. It is subjected
to value judgments and is, at times, a highly personal process. The librarian
must constantly keep in mind the purposes of the library in which he/she
works, and the reason that the library exists: to serve the patrons of the
library's community.
The librarian's value judgments must be kept secondary to what the community
of patrons wants and demands. It is the community's values which are primary.
It may be stated then, that the framework of collection development is a
framework of values. These values are the values of the community which
the library/media center serves.
Collection development should be geared primarily to identified needs rather
than to abstract standards of quality. In order to be effective, it must
be responsive to the total community's needs, not just those of active users.
Careful thought must be given to selection of materials which might attract
non-users. Collection development, therefore, must be carried out with a
very active knowledge of the community; be that community one of a school,
a district, a university, or a city or town.
Collection development should be carried out with knowledge of and participation
in cooperative programs at the local, regional, national and international
levels. It should consider all information formats for inclusion in the
collection.
It should be further stated that collection development is not something
that one learns entirely in the classroom or from reading. As noted earlier,
it is a process -- a dynamic process in which those who are active in collection
development bring into play their experience and their knowledge -- knowledge
both of subject and of community.
Collection development is a process which is constantly fine-tuned and altered
to keep in step with the community and its needs: it ". . . is an exciting
challenge which requires lifelong learning." In order to approach collection
development in a systematic way, there is a need to minimize the variables
in the collection development process. To this end policies and statements
of intent, policies of selection, selection criteria, and evaluation procedure
must be narrowed and committed to the written form. Just as there is a need
for law to be codified and committed to writing in order for it to be a
valid and common reference point, so too must collection policies of libraries
be written. And, like "living law", collection development policies
should breathe life: ever capable of change and growth.
The gathered collation of all the policies and statements of community,
community needs, selection, acquisition, use, de-selection and evaluation
becomes the library's Collection Development Policy.
It is this policy which guides future collection, selection, de-selection,
and evaluation. The following is the Collection Development Policy Statement
of the Apponequet Regional High School Library, Freetown-Lakeville Regional
School District, Lakeville, Massachusetts.
Being a "living document," one which is capable of change and
one which is flexible enough to meet the changing needs of the community
of patrons, this document is open to comment and suggestion for change.
Such comments and suggestions are welcomed by the library staff and should
be directed to the School Library Media Specialist.
MISSION
The Apponequet Regional High School Library was established to support the
curriculum of the high school in which it is located.
All students, grades nine through twelve, are serviced. The library exists
to implement, enrich and support the educational program of the school.
It is the intent of the library to serve as the hub of intellectual activity
at the school.
It is therefore the library's mission ". . .to ensure that students
and staff are effective users of ideas and information."
GOALS
- 1. The library will serve the intellectual and educational needs of
the school in varied ways: "by providing intellectual and physical
access to materials in all formats;" "by providing instruction
to foster competence and stimulate interest in reading, viewing, and using
information and ideas;" through acquisition of and assistance with
new technologies of service and instruction; and through provision of materials
to incite and excite recreational reading.
- 2. The library will provide a facility to serve the intellectual and
educational needs of the school through the provision and coordination of
meeting areas, viewing areas, classroom and production areas.
- 3. It is a goal of the Apponequet Regional High School Library staff
to provide an atmosphere conducive to learning, yet one which is comfortable,
pleasing and relaxing.
- 4. It is a goal of the library to open its collection and facilities
to the communities of Freetown and Lakeville as a whole, and to the staffs
and students of the Freetown-Lakeville Middle School, the George R. Austin Intermediate School, the Freetown Elementary
School and Lakeville's Assawompset Elementary School.
- 5. It is a goal of the library to work "with other educators to
design learning strategies to meet the needs of individual students."
OBJECTIVES
In order to service the library's community of patrons and achieve the goals
enumerated above, the following objectives are established for the Apponequet
Regional High School Library:
- 1. The library will provide materials which will support the individual
curricula of the school through a comprehensive selection process which
involves library staff, students and teachers.
- 2. The library will provide materials which will support the educational
enrichment needs of students: materials which will amplify and expand upon
the curriculum which is offered and materials which go beyond the scope
of the present educational curriculum.
- 3. The library will provide for materials which offer remedial assistance
to students. It will provide for low-reading level, high interest level
materials which will spark interest amongst users of such materials.
- 4. The library will provide for career-oriented materials which will
assist students in making career choices.
- 5. The library will provide for materials for students seeking information
on institutions of higher learning; it will provide material assistance
for those seeking information on college applications, college essays, finances
and scholarship availability.
- 6. The library will provide for recreational reading interests of students
through the provision of materials in fiction and non-fiction -- for all
students at all levels of reading development and shall include works which
fall into many genres: classics as well a popular fiction.
- 8. The library will provide auxiliary materials which will assist teachers
in the implementation of their curriculum, in conformity with objectives
enumerated in Information Power: Guidelines for school library media programs.
- 9. The library will provide intellectual access to information through
systematic learning activities which develop cognitive strategies for selecting,
retrieving, analyzing, evaluating, synthesizing, and creating information
at all age levels and in all curriculum content areas.
- 10. The library will provide physical access to information through
(a) a carefully selected and systematically organized collection of diverse
learning resources, representing a wide range of subjects, levels of difficulty,
communication formats, and technological delivery systems; (b) access to
information and materials outside the library media center and the school
building through such mechanisms as interlibrary loan, networking and other
cooperative agreements, and online searching of databases; and (c) providing
instruction in the operation of equipment necessary to use the information
in any format.
- 11. The library will provide learning experiences that encourage users
to become discriminating consumers and skilled creators of information through
introduction to the full range of communications media and the use of new
and emerging information technologies such as distance learning and the
Internet.
- 12. The library will provide leadership, instruction and consulting
assistance in the use of instructional and information technology and the
use of sound instructional design principles.
- 13. The library will provide resources and activities that contribute
to lifelong learning, while accommodating a wide range of differences in
teaching and learning styles and in instructional methods, interests, and
capacities.
- 14. The library will provide a facility that functions as the information
center of the school, as a locus for integrated, interdisciplinary, intergrade,
and school-wide learning activities.
- 15. The library will provide resources and learning activities that
represent a diversity of experiences, opinions, social and cultural perspectives,
supporting the concept that intellectual freedom and access to information
are prerequisite to effective and responsible citizenship in a democracy.
It is the responsibility of the school library media specialist to take
the lead in translating the mission, goals, and objectives into programs
that make effective access to information and ideas a reality.
However, achievement of this mission at the school level also requires:
- full integration of the library media program into the curriculum,
- a partnership among the school library media specialist, district-level
personnel, administrators, teachers and parents;
- the serious commitment of each of those partners to the value of universal
and unrestricted access to information and ideas.
POLICIES ADOPTED
The following policies and statements of the American Library Association
are hereby adopted for use at Apponequet Regional High School and are induded
in the Library's Collection Development policy by reference.
These policies and documents constitute the foundations of this Library's
philosophy and should be read in that context.
The following policies and statements of the American Library Association
are hereby adopted:
- Library Bill of Rights
- Free Access to Libraries for Minors
- Regulations, Policies, and Procedures Affecting Access to Library Resources
and Services
- Statement on Labeling
- Library Access for Children and Young People to Videotapes and Other
Non Print Services
- Expurgation of Library Materials
- Diversity in Collection Development
- Evaluating Library Collections
- Challenged Materials
- Restricted Access to Library Materials
- Library-Initiated Programs as a Resource
- Access to Resources and Services in the School Library Media Program
- The Universal Right to Free Expression
- Dealing with Concerns About Library Resources
- Freedom to Read
- Policy Concerning Confidentiality of Personally Identifiable Information
about Library Users
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