Skip to content

Breaking Down a Collection, Building Up Community

April 30, 2024

The Pennsylvania State University Engineering Library is undergoing a major transformation. In October 2021, PSU announced that the Engineering Library would move to the Engineering Collaborative Research and Education (ECoRE) Building, a new construction set to be completed by Fall 2024. However, there was a catch to receiving a new space: we will not be taking our collection with us. The new Engineering Library will be bookless, except for our reserve and reference collections. Faculty and staff sprung into work to prepare for our move to a new building and a new service model. The most important factor in preparing for this move was what to do with the over 30,000 books in our collection that we cannot take with us. After three and a half years of hard work, the Engineering Library successfully emptied our stacks in March 2024. By the end of the project, approximately 12,850 items were redistributed to other PSU libraries on the University Park campus and to other campuses across the commonwealth and 24,660 items were deselected from our collection to be donated or recycled. While losing a collection and gaining a new space has been a bittersweet journey, the process had an unforeseen consequence: community building.

Departmental Community

The Engineering Library is a part of the STEM Branch Libraries Department at the University Park campus. In preparation for this change, the Engineering Library employees relied on institutional knowledge and support from the other libraries in the STEM department. Engineering Library employees worked most intimately with the STEM employees at the Pattee and Paterno Library, as this library received over 10,000 items from our collection. Monthly meetings and nearly daily communication between the two libraries forged strong relationships that allowed for the clear communication, strong collaboration, and mutual trust that resulted in a .01% error rate when transferring items.[1] As the PSU STEM Libraries prepare for any future collection changes, they can continue to draw on the relationships and workflows established during the Engineering Library collection move.

University Wide Community

The Engineering Library asked for help from every library location at Pennsylvania State University. Items in the Engineering Library collection were offered to other PSU library locations across the commonwealth. When library locations accepted items, employees worked closely together to ensure the accurate and timely transfer of items. Additionally, the Engineering Library conducted a university wide search for every lost item in our collection. The cooperation of every library location allowed for the Engineering Library to be fully confident in the accuracy of our holdings during this time of drastic change. Furthermore, Engineering Library employees relied on the knowledge and expertise of collection maintenance, cataloging, and library IT services departments (to name a few).

Engineering Move Party

The collaborative spirit of the Engineering Collection move culminated in Spring 2024. By March, the Engineering Library had deselected, donated, recycled, and relocated every item in our collection, except for the approximately 10,000 items that were scheduled to move to the Pattee and Paterno Library. In order to pack and process the vast number of items, the Engineering Library called upon our library community for help. Volunteers from PSU library locations across the commonwealth gathered on the first Monday of Spring Break, to help us move our collection in a “Goodbye” Moving Party. Our enthusiastic, meticulous, and diligent volunteers exceeded our expectations: the Engineering Library packed all 10,000 items by the end of the day.

After three and a half long years, the Engineering Library has whittled our collection down from 30,000+ items to a few hundred reference and reserve items. This monumental task could not have happened without the support from across the commonwealth. In the process of moving our collection, the Engineering Library faculty and staff grew closer not only to our departmental partners, but to the entire library community. In our new location, the Engineering Library is primed to continue to develop the communication, trust, and collaboration we have curated across our library community.

Katie Woods
Engineering Collection Move Project Manager
Library Services Associate — Penn State University Libraries
MSLIS, expected May 2024


[1] When moving over 10,000 items to the Pattee and Paterno Library, employees only missed processing one item that stuck to another in transit. This item was quickly found and the error fixed.

Growing as a Political Science Librarian

April 22, 2024

In my capacity as a liaison librarian, one of the departments I serve is our Political Science department. Over the past six years I’ve gotten more involved with political science librarianship via the ACRL Politics, Policy, and International Relations Section (PPIRS). In 2018, I answered a call for volunteers for an ad-hoc PPIRS information literacy committee which would create a new companion document to the ACRL Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education. The companion document and its accompanying LibGuide were published in 2021. I’m really glad I volunteered for this committee, as it’s been rewarding in several respects.

First, it gave me the opportunity to get to know my excellent committee members. We are very fortunate to have a positive, dedicated group that has worked very well together. Writing the PPIRS companion document was time-consuming, but I wouldn’t call it difficult since we were able to make decisions about the text quickly and everyone met their deadlines. I enjoy catching up with these colleagues in meetings and at conferences and I look forward to working with them again in the future.

Second, it’s given me an opportunity to better understand the ACRL Framework. Before joining the ad-hoc committee, I was familiar with the Framework, but it wasn’t tightly integrated into my work with students and faculty. As we developed the PPIRS companion document, I got to know the Framework intimately and grew to value its emphasis on metacognition and threshold concepts. After working with the Framework for so long, I feel that it informs my reference and instruction in all disciplines at an almost subconscious level.

Third, I’ve gotten much more familiar with how political science is best taught and what instructors hope students learn. The committee began the companion document with a review of what political scientists have said about the Framework and information literacy, thus putting it in conversation with the discipline. Committee members also spoke with political science faculty at their respective institutions about their teaching so we could better ground the document. I enjoyed these conversations and have kept them going.

For those interested in learning more about the work of the ad-hoc committee, we wrote a chapter for Teaching Information Literacy by Discipline, to published this fall by ACRL. Here are some resources if you’re interested in political science teaching and learning:

To continue this growth, I’ll be attending the 2024 APSA Annual Meeting in Philadelphia in August. If you’re attending, I look forward to seeing you there!

Don’t Forget – CRD Workshop

April 22, 2024
by

Registration to attend the 2024 College and Research Division Spring Workshop is open until this April 29th. Generative Artificial Intelligence (AI) and large language models are hot topics within academic librarianship. While these tools will likely have a transformative impact on our profession, it is still an open question as to how to best use them in everyday library work. In light of this, the CRD Spring Workshop focuses on how AI can support and enhance our everyday practice of librarianship.

Investment: FREE Members | $15 Non-member

Register: https://www.palibraries.org/event/CRD2024SpringWS
Deadline to register is Friday, April 26, 2024.

What: Artificial Intelligence in Academic Librarianship
When: Wednesday, May 1, 2024 – 9:00 am – 12:30 pm
Where: Virtual Workshop (via Zoom)

Click Here! For an Agenda

We look forward to a lively discussion!

Learning How To Say Goodbye

April 15, 2024

As an early career librarian, I often think of myself as a seedling as I try to absorb as many nutrients of knowledge and experience as possible while figuring out how and where to put down roots. I recently have decided that I will be transplanting to new soil in New England. That means that I am spending much of the end of this semester, which is often a time for farewells to graduating students, figuring out how to say goodbye and thank you to the place where I was first planted professionally.

I feel very grateful to have had so many opportunities to work with students, colleagues, and faculty to grow programs relating to the Library’s instruction, reference, and outreach during my two academic years at W&J. I am doing my best to document that work so that it can hopefully continue after this semester, and minimize any loss of institutional knowledge or connections by getting out ahead of my departure. It is a fascinating reflective exercise that has allowed me to appreciate what I’ve been able to accomplish and how I’ve grown as a librarian. Despite all of this, I often find myself wondering if I should be doing something else.  I would love to hear from others if there are other things that you wish your predecessor had done or wish you had done as you closed one chapter of your career.

This transplant is similar to the one that I made when I moved to Pittsburgh for my current position – I am not only saying farewell to this chapter of my career, but also to my life in this city. My museum checklist may or may not get completed, but I am so grateful to this city that gave me so much joy. I am beyond excited to move back to New England and for all of the opportunities with this new chapter in my career. If anyone has any recommendations for out-of-state moving, I would also love to hear them.

I hope to be able to still contribute to this engaging online community, but I also would like to thank you, the community of “It’s Academic” for sharing your innovative ideas and the reality of your day-to-days negotiating campus politics, new technologies, and more. Reading your articles, contributing my own, and being a part of this community has helped me to grow as a librarian. Thank you!

WPWVC-ACRL Conference Call for Proposals

March 29, 2024

The Western Pennsylvania/West Virginia Chapter of ACRL’s Program Committee is excited to invite proposals for the chapter’s annual Spring Conference to be held in person on Friday, June 14, 2024 at Slippery Rock University. The Call for Proposals has been extended to Tuesday, April 9, 2024.

The Committee invites proposals for:

  • 30-minute presentations (20-25 minute presentation with 10-5 minutes for questions)
  • 5-minute lightning talks
  • Poster presentations

Proposals from long-standing library professionals as well as those who may be new to the region and/or the field of academic libraries are welcome. Chapter membership is not a requirement for consideration.

Read more…