According to the article, major shifts in areas libraries once controlled are taking place. Here are the major challenges: Shifts in collection development - publishers are wresting this away from librarians by refusing to offer econtent to libraries; Access - license agreements dictate length of checkout and even number of checkouts before an item must be "discarded"; Preservation - this is a scary one because no one really "collects" content that isn't in an analog (paper) format because no one "owns" the items in a digital world; and finally, Privacy - librarians have long been the guardians of patron's privacy and in the digital realm that is simply no longer the case.
So what is a poor, meek librarian to do? First off, fight to shed the poor, meek stereotype. I think ALA would do well to hire a Madison Avenue ad agency and change our collective image. Afterall, image is everything and perception is reality.
The article linked earlier finishes up though with a great suggestion: That libraries should embrace the core of a report by Roger Levien written in June 2011 for ALA’s Office for Information Technology Policy Confronting the Future: Strategic Visions for 21st-Century Public Libraries (PDF file). The core idea is this:
- People. Librarians provide unbiased services and advice based on expertise and professional norms.
- Place. Libraries are physical spaces conducive to individual or group contemplative work.
- Price. Library services are generally provided at no charge to the user, and access is available regardless of individual ability to pay.
- Principles. Library services are provided under the rubric of intellectual freedom, privacy, and trust.
- Pride. An excellent library is an indicator of a community with quality public services and high quality of life.
- Package. Libraries provide successful integration of information services across disparate functions.
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