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Collection Development Working Group

Minutes:

Minutes from San Diego 2004

Minutes from Munich 2003

Draft Minutes from Toronto 

2003Philadelphia 2003

San Antonio 2000

Philadelphia 1999

 

Other Information:

Opfermann Collection

Working Group Members

Working Group Initiatives

Working Group Documentation

 

Mission Statement 
The Collection Development Working Group explores ways of increasing bibliographic and full-text (both remote and physical) access for North American research libraries, including but not restricted to selection of monographic and serial publications, in all publication formats, from the German-speaking countries of Europe.

     Collecting German-language materials poses unique challenges for North American research libraries. Since not even the largest institutions have ever been able to approach a comprehensive acquisitions program for German-language resources, libraries have been unable to satisfy the working needs of scholars with their own collections. This has meant that even those libraries traditionally relying on cooperative collection development programs and interlibrary loan have fallen short of their own goals. For these reasons the Collection Development Working Group, in meeting the challenges of German-language bibliography, will focus its efforts on promoting a higher level of inter-institutional and transatlantic cooperation, supported by technologies not existing until a very few years ago. Because of the issues related to German-language bibliography, area studies librarians will continue to carefully follow national developments and the work of their colleagues at other institutions, and resource-sharing will continue to be an important means of addressing issues unique to German-language bibliography.

The Collection Development Working Group focuses its activity on addressing these challenges through a variety of initiatives and development tools. To make the shift from collection ownership to access a more practical and therefore attractive option for participating institutions, the Working Group has shifted the focus of cooperative collection development to resource sharing and discovery. Going beyond attempting to collect the materials that a library anticipates a scholar will ask for, libraries are currently effecting a paradigm shift that focuses on securing the means of obtaining requested information. This is in great part a result of the electronic databases that are increasingly becoming available to scholars, representing powerful searching tools that allow them to explore the literature across disciplines. These databases may contain a significant percentage of the entire corpus of material available in a subject discipline, going well beyond what a library possesses or could ever collect. This shift to resource discovery, rather than resource availability (usually in the form of what a library physically owns), is putting noticeable pressure on libraries to find the means of procuring these materials for their patrons. For these reasons coordination, cooperation, and collaboration have become watchwords in the field of collection development. An important goal of the Collection Development Working Group is thus to promote the mechanisms and tools leading to more effective cooperation among libraries.

Technology is also playing an important role in the transformation of other traditional collection development functions. The Internet is radically changing the way materials are being made available to scholars, as primary resource materials  are being digitized and made accessible in new publication forms. These materials are proliferating far more rapidly than any single library can control, and here too librarians must coordinate their activities in creating organized gateways, or portals, to scholarly resources. A good example of such a gateway is the German Resources Page of WESSWeb, created and maintained by Reinhart Sonnenberg (UC San Diego) and other colleagues of the Western European Specialists Section of the Association of College and Research Libraries.  An important objective of the Collection Development Working Group is thus to research and develop mechanisms for bringing the rapid growth in digital resources under bibliographic control.

 

"GRP Partners Forum."
GRP Partners Forum is hosted by ARL.  Please post all 
messages intended for the other members of this list to:
GRP-PARTNERS@ARL.ORG
The roster of currently appointed subject liaisons has 30 names, all of whom are subscribed to this list. See the Forum's Website for further information:Another "duty" of US subject liaisons is to identify 3-5 leadingUS collections in your particular subject area, preferably together withthe location of a WWW description of these collections. This informationwill be posted to our website and is intended to help our German colleagueslocate resource concentrations that will aid them in their work.

 

The WESS studies of collection development patterns in German studies

Kerstin Koch's survey of selection patterns for German-language materials

EROMM: European Register of Microform Masters in RLIN

EROMM access in G_ttingen

webis: Distribution Scheme of the DFG Special Collection Areas

WESSWeb

 

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(Last modified June  2004)