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SERIALS COLLECTION DEVELOPMENT POLICY
Periodicals and other continuations represent a long-term commitment on the part of the library. They are costly to purchase, process, house, and maintain. For the last several years the average annual percentage increase for a periodical has fluctuated around 10%, and the price of a foreign subscription may double in the space of a year due to the fall of the U.S. dollar. The Library must be conservative in adding periodicals whose cost may triple in three years and so careful consideration is important when making a request for a new subscription, or when reviewing current holdings.
The collection consists of all serials (journals, newspapers, indexes and abstracts, standing orders, loose leaf services, etc.) which come at least as frequently as once a year to the Case and Cooley libraries. The collection encompasses both paper, electronic, and micro formats.
II. Responsibility for Selection:
Any member of the faculty may request that an item be added to the college collection, but the final responsibility for the collection rests with the Library Periodicals Evaluation Committee which meets periodically to consider additions and deletions to the periodical collection. New titles will be added as the budget permits. The Committee is comprised of the Head of Collection development, the Serials Supervisor, the Head of the Science Library, and the Head of Reference.
III. Selection priorities:
1. The library's first priority is to serve the curricular needs of the students. Preference will be given to resources that serve either as required or supplementary readings for courses, or which fulfill the general aims of a liberal arts and sciences education.
2. Only those resources will be acquired whose level of maturity is appropriate to the needs of the undergraduate student and the faculty.
3. The purchase of research materials solely for individual faculty or academic support staff will be subordinated to the adequate fulfillment of the first priority of acquiring resources to support the curriculum. The library endeavors to serve the needs of faculty and academic support personnel primarily by providing access to specialized materials through the reference collection. When possible, interlibrary loan or commercial document delivery should be used to fulfill specialized needs. The Library subsidizes the direct ordering of articles from Ingenta by Faculty up to a limit of $30 per article. The library will not always be able to meet the needs of all Faculty members for their personnel research; but no Faculty member should have to depend upon another library for the preparation of lectures and teaching.
4. The Library also serves the entire college community through the purchase of a few magazines that meet recreational, cultural, and general information needs.
IV. General criteria for selection:
A) Our subscriptions are primarily intended to support the educational mission of the University. Titles directly related to the curriculum and useful for specific courses will receive first priority. Periodicals that support faculty research will be supported as the budget allows.
B) The number of students or faculty who might benefit from a title is a factor in the selection process. Periodicals which will be used in more than one department, or which will be useful to both lower and upper division students will receive strong consideration.
C) Requests from new faculty especially if these represent a new area focus which a department and the University Administration intends to continue supporting, will receive high priority.
D) The Committee will give strong consideration to a periodical that is indexed or abstracted in one or more of the indices and abstracts we own, since these titles will be accessible and more apt to be used by the Colgate community.
E) Volume of Interlibrary Loan traffic, an indicator of the degree of demand for titles not owned, will be checked on a regular basis for journal titles which should be considered for acquisition. The Library will monitor the list of journals on the Copyright watch list and will seriously consider ordering a journal if it appears on this list on a consistent basis and if it is more cost effective to own the journal than pay charges related to access and copyright.
F) Potential usage will also be measured by citation statistics. The number of times each title has been cited, and the number of times articles in each journal are cited will be noted.
G) Because space for the growth of the periodical collection is limited, especially in the Cooley Science Library, the availability of a title on microfilm, may be a factor in its selection.
H) The subscription price of the title will be considered particularly for titles that are priced in excess of the average cost of a journal. The cost of ownership will be continually weighed against the cost of access.
As often as possible, sample copies of requested journals will be examined along with reviews.
V. Requesting a new subscription
Prioritized requests that are submitted by a department as a whole, or by several members of the faculty will receive a higher consideration than requests by a single individual. This policy is in place to 1) insure that one professor or one specialized area of interest does not dominate a year's selection and budgetary limits, and 2) avoid duplication of requests and streamline the process.
Requests for new journal subscriptions, with a short explanation as to why they should be acquired, should be submitted to either the Head of Collection Development or the Serials Supervisor in Case Library. Complete bibliographic information, publisher's advertisements, and sample copies are all appreciated. The Periodicals Evaluation Committee reviews all requests.
If the request is approved, we will try to begin the new subscription with the first issue of the current volume or the first issue of the next volume. Please indicate whether back issues are also desired at the time of the request. Recognize that back issues may have to be obtained on microfilm rather than in paper format and will be added as the budget permits. Upon receipt of the first issue of a new subscription a notice will be sent to the selector, to the department's secretary for posting in the office, and to other faculty who may find the title of interest.
VI. Evaluation
New periodicals will be routinely evaluated during the first subscription year and requestors will be asked to help in this evaluation. Departments will be asked to help in evaluating periodical holdings in various subject areas at regular intervals. Journals will be accepted for cancellation up until the end of September in order to allow publisher time to register the termination of our subscription before the new year. Factors to consider in evaluating journals.
Relevance
Cost
Quality
Format
In principle, electronic subscriptions to journals and newspapers will be preferred over print when access, usability, licensing and cost considerations are resolved satisfactory. Reasons for this preference include broad and immediate access, support of users in remote locations or during the hours when the library is closed, availability of simultaneous users of a single article, ease of integration into electronic reserves, simpler copyright compliance for electronic reserves, the availability of usage statistics, cost savings for shelving and binding, and a general (though not ubiquitous) user preference for online access
Other
VII. Commitment to Intellectual Freedom
The Library adheres to the Library Bill of Rights (ALA, 1996). Sections I and II of this state that : "Books and other library resources should be provided for the interest, information, and enlightenment of all people of the community the library serves. Materials should not be excluded because of the origin, background, or views of those contributing to their creation. Libraries should provide materials and information presenting all points of view on current and historical issues. Materials should not be proscribed or removed because of partisan or doctrinal disapproval." For more information about intellectual freedom issues see the American Library Association Office of Intellectual Freedom web site or the Intellectual Freedom Manual Case Main Z711.4 .I57.
Access to library materials shall not be restricted because of age, race, religion, national origins, or social or political views.
updated July 2007