| RSLP Project, |
| conducted
by the M25 Consortium of Higher Education Libraries
|
| Consortia
Borrowing Schemes
|
| Executive
summary |
| Access to library and
information collections in support of research is a key strategic
issue at both the regional and national levels. Access will be a
prime factor in the deliberations of the Research Support Libraries
Group where the need to support integrated access to resources and
to deepen the impact of access are articulated in the Group's terms
of reference. This is a report of a study of regional borrowing
schemes in consortia of higher education libraries and is of
particular relevance at the present.
|
| The RSLP funded this
study to evaluate |
|
(a) |
a pilot borrowing scheme for researchers
initiated by the M25 Consortium of Higher Education Libraries in
September 2000, and, |
|
(b) |
more mature borrowing schemes of
selected other consortia of academic libraries.
|
The findings show that:
- Consortia borrowing schemes for researchers
are beneficial and manageable.
- Borrowing schemes have the potential
to underpin, and to be mutually reinforced by, other forms of
regional and national collaboration, such as co-operative
collection development, collection development, collection
mapping and collaborative resource discover activities.
- Libraries could usefully extend the
promotion of borrowing schemes to encourage greater take-up on
the part of researchers.
- The case for the extension of these schemes
to other regions and on a national basis is supported.
- Greater inter-regional communications would
help in developing good practice with standardisation where
appropriate, and in encouraging other co-operative initiatives
to help develop the national research infrastructure.
- Users at all levels would benefit from the
development of an electronic web-based tool that would help
navigate between various access and borrowing schemes.
|
| 5 October 2001
|
| 1. |
Consortia
borrowing schemes: project overview key findings and recommendations |
| 1.1 |
Background
The development of access and borrowing
schemes in the regional academic library consortia has been a very
positive consequence of the trend towards regionalism. Schemes have
developed largely in isolation from each other and in response to
individual regional and historical circumstances.
Yet the value of the schemes in relation to
national strategic initiatives should not be underestimated even
given the advance of electronic access to resources. Borrowing
provides an added value service to researchers especially in those
subject areas where the need to consult monographs is important.
Access and borrowing schemes are, therefore,
and increasingly will be an essential component and building block
underpinning:
- The work of the Research Support Libraries
Group
- Developments towards the Distributed
National Collection, regional co-operative collection
developments and deep resource sharing.
- Developments towards a UK national union
catalogue (for researchers)
- The successful outcome and justification
for retrospective catalogue conversion as proposed by the Full
Disclosure exercise.
- Further regional and national collaborative
initiatives in learning and in research.
Despite all this there is almost always
concern and tension in advancing borrowing schemes. Libraries and
library staff who have typically had to bear funding cuts can feel
they are unable to absorb the extra work in receiving more visitors
from other HEIs. Others might feel that their collections are
already under strain. Yet researchers are all individuals or working
in very small groups and are unlikely to be in competition for the
same resources or make excessive demands since their time is scarce.
We also need to promote the use of the research collections in
universities as part of the distributed regional and national
resource. It was appropriate, therefore, that an evaluative study
should take place to review both strategic issues and the practical
aspects of implementing borrowing schemes.
|
| 1.2 |
Aims and
methodology
The aims of this RSLP-funded project were
three-fold:
- To monitor all aspects of the pilot M25
Consortium borrowing scheme which was introduced in September
2000, with a view to encouraging full participation in a
permanent scheme by all member libraries.
- To carry out a comparative evaluative study
of borrowing schemes developed by eight other regional academic
library consortia.
- To write a report for RSLP on the findings
of the study, with an eye to advising RSLP on the
feasibility/workability of such schemes in support of
researchers elsewhere in the UK.
The M25 Consortium1 was formed in
1993 with the aim of fostering co-operation amongst its member
libraries to improve services to users. It currently consists of
thirty-nine members. This RSLP funded project, led by the
Consortium, was carried out in support of two of the Consortium's
goals: namely those of improving access and collaboration. Access is
understood to describe the delivery of defined services to our users
with optimal access to our scholarly resources; collaboration and
partnership is defined as the development of mutually beneficial
cross-sectoral, cross-domain, and other alliances and relationships.
The M25 study was essentially an evaluative
exercise, intended both to monitor take-up and to encourage
participation. The original idea was to use the monitoring exercise
to encourage the early development of the M25 scheme, facilitating
the transfer of good practice and communicating ideas and progress
through a system of Consortium member contacts. This was a
satisfying exercise, which achieved its expected outcomes and
established a model of borrowing that has now been formally adopted
by the Consortium.
The parallel exercise comprised an assessment
of eight regional schemes offering some kind of co-operative
borrowing facilities within the Higher Education community. The
chosen schemes represented institutions from all parts of England,
Wales and Scotland
The project was broken down into the following
elements or work-packages:
WP1 Interviews with M25 librarians
WP2 Monitor ongoing promotion of M25 scheme
WP3 Analysis of usage data for M25 scheme
WP4 Survey of regional consortia by
questionnaire and follow-up
WP5 Interim report for M25 Consortium
WP6 Interim report for regional consortia
WP7 Final report for RSLP
The Project Director was Elizabeth Davison of
the London Institute and a member of the M25 Consortium's Steering
Group. The detailed work was carried out by Maria Hiscoe, a
consultant with extensive experience of higher education libraries.
The ready co-operation of the other regional library consortia has
been much appreciated
|
| 1.3 |
Key findings and
recommendations
The detailed work of the study is to be found
in the attached sections on (1) background information to the
project, (2) the M25 Consortium borrowing scheme and (3) the other
regional academic consortia schemes. As outlined above, borrowing
schemes can play an essential and important role in underpinning a
range of strategic initiatives to support research. Indeed, the
regional consortia part of the project began with a brief to
identify good practice and ended with a celebration of diversity
across the country, reflecting the ability of consortia to respond
to geographical, political and financial requirements. It was
possible to identify good practice as many schemes had reached
similar conclusions but no single "perfect system" was
identified as local conditions encouraged different approaches, both
to services and to administration systems. In this diversity,
however, there were seen to be two common threads: the general
support for widening services and the difficulties encountered in
administration and management. From the project viewpoint this grew
into a concern to develop a holistic, user-centred approach, which
would benefit regional as well as national developments in improving
library services for researchers. Other key findings and
recommendations are as follows:
|
|
(a) |
The evidence gleaned from the
detailed study described in the sections clearly demonstrates that
borrowing schemes are beneficial to researchers, manageable and do
not lead to any enormous imbalances in take-up between participating
libraries. (2.1.12, 3.1.3)
The RSLP is recommended (a) to take steps
to encourage all the regions to develop borrowing schemes as an
interim measure and (b) to work with SCONUL towards the development
of a national borrowing scheme for researchers.
|
|
(b) |
The detailed study suggests that
while the schemes are useful to researchers the take-up is not
enormous. (2.1.12, 2.1.13, 3.1.8)
Those who manage regional schemes are
recommended to consider promotional aspects and to encourage
individual participating libraries to publicise the schemes more
extensively in order to stimulate a wider take-up of the
arrangements that are in place.
|
|
(c) |
Many staff who are responsible for
implementing the schemes in local libraries have concerns over
organisational and administrative aspects, and the development and
collection of management statistics. The study suggests that there
is scope for some standardisation and exchange of good practice
amongst regions. (2.2.1, 3.2.3)
We, therefore, recommend that the regional
library consortia be encouraged to develop closer communication
links amongst each other with a view to exchanging experience and
good practice which would be beneficial not only for implementing
access and borrowing schemes but also in other areas of mutual
interest too. Moves towards standardisation in practices and in the
collection of statistics should be encouraged.
|
|
(d) |
The survey has evidenced a demand
for clearer information on borrowing and access entitlements for the
benefit of library staff and researchers alike. Access to research
materials can be greatly facilitated with the support of information
relating to the location of resources and entitlements of the user.
A user centred approach would enable researchers to locate materials
though a web interface and ascertain their eligibility to borrow or
use for reference only at particular libraries. It is feasible that
use of this interface could link regional as well as local schemes,
providing a step towards identifying availability of resources
nationally. (2.2.1.6, 2.2.7)
A recommendation arising from this study
that a web-based navigational tool be developed has already been
accepted by the M25 Consortium and the RSLP. Subject to the
successful outcome of a feasibility study being carried out by the
M25 Consortium, a small development project will commence in early
2002 the results of which will be made available to other regions.
This study has produced a number of key
findings relevant to strategic initiatives for the support of
research. The M25 Consortium's borrowing scheme has migrated from a
pilot to a full service. Much detail is given in the sections about
the M25 scheme and those of the other regions participating in the
study and this will be of relevance to other regions, who it is
hoped, will implement similar schemes pending the development of a
national scheme. Librarians should have confidence that these
schemes are manageable and provide an important service in
underpinning the co-operative efforts that are being made to support
research at both regional and national levels.
1See http://www.M25lib.ac.uk/
|
|
Section 1
Section 2
2.1
2.2
2.3
2.4
2.5
2.6
2.7
Section 3
3.1
3.2
3.3
3.4
3.5 |
Consortia Borrowing
Schemes Contents (of full document)
Executive summary
Project overview, key findings and
recommendations
M25 Pilot Borrowing Scheme:
detailed findings
M25 Pilot Scheme: final report
M25: Agreed action arising from the Pilot Scheme
M25: Questionnaire
M25: Membership
M25 Interim report February 2001
M25 Interim report May 2001
M25 Interim report Draft recommendations
The Regional Consortia Borrowing
Schemes : detailed findings
A Review of the Regional Consortia
Borrowing Schemes
Regional Consortia Borrowing Schemes:Conclusions drawn from survey
Regional Consortia Borrowing Schemes: Questionnaire
Regional Consortia Borrowing Schemes: Membership
Regional Consortia Borrowing Schemes: Interim report |