Managing Change in Academic Libraries

Managing Change in Academic Libraries helps academic librarians plan, implement, and manage changes to the fundamental structure of their organizations. It shows readers that in academic libraries the two driving forces behind most change are economics and technology. Declines in funding for education and in the purchasing power of libraries have made it impossible to maintain the status quo, let alone realize growth, in traditional information services and collection development. Add to this downward trend in library economics, the explosion of new information technology and its potential for radically altering communications and knowledge management, and one has the ingredients for some amazing changes in libraries.To help manage these many changes, chapters in Managing Change in Academic Libraries approach change with a mixture of radical and rational ideas. Readers learn academic librarians’views on dealing with change as they read about:

  • an environmental scan which identifies both internal and external forces that are increasing the amount and scope of change in academic libraries
  • technological change and its impact in academic libraries
  • the academic library director’s role as an agent of change
  • how two large library systems managed to change in some very fundamental ways when faced with serious economic and political challenges
  • difficult personnel issues faced by academic libraries as they move into new organizational structures and adopt new management styles
  • the future of traditional reference services in light of rapid developments in computing and networking
  • how to change bibliographic control to better serve the changing expectations and needs of user communities
  • conducting a restructuring study and recommendations for organizational change in a large research library systemEach chapter shows academic librarians how they can respond imaginatively and nimbly to economic, political, and technological change that envelopes their professional work life. Academic librarians will refer to Managing Change in Academic Libraries again and again as a survival tool as they meet with challenging and unpredictable changes.
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Managing Change in Academic Libraries

Managing Change in Academic Libraries helps academic librarians plan, implement, and manage changes to the fundamental structure of their organizations. It shows readers that in academic libraries the two driving forces behind most change are economics and technology. Declines in funding for education and in the purchasing power of libraries have made it impossible to maintain the status quo, let alone realize growth, in traditional information services and collection development. Add to this downward trend in library economics, the explosion of new information technology and its potential for radically altering communications and knowledge management, and one has the ingredients for some amazing changes in libraries.To help manage these many changes, chapters in Managing Change in Academic Libraries approach change with a mixture of radical and rational ideas. Readers learn academic librarians’views on dealing with change as they read about:

  • an environmental scan which identifies both internal and external forces that are increasing the amount and scope of change in academic libraries
  • technological change and its impact in academic libraries
  • the academic library director’s role as an agent of change
  • how two large library systems managed to change in some very fundamental ways when faced with serious economic and political challenges
  • difficult personnel issues faced by academic libraries as they move into new organizational structures and adopt new management styles
  • the future of traditional reference services in light of rapid developments in computing and networking
  • how to change bibliographic control to better serve the changing expectations and needs of user communities
  • conducting a restructuring study and recommendations for organizational change in a large research library systemEach chapter shows academic librarians how they can respond imaginatively and nimbly to economic, political, and technological change that envelopes their professional work life. Academic librarians will refer to Managing Change in Academic Libraries again and again as a survival tool as they meet with challenging and unpredictable changes.
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Managing Change in Academic Libraries

Managing Change in Academic Libraries

by Joseph Branin
Managing Change in Academic Libraries

Managing Change in Academic Libraries

by Joseph Branin

eBook

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Overview

Managing Change in Academic Libraries helps academic librarians plan, implement, and manage changes to the fundamental structure of their organizations. It shows readers that in academic libraries the two driving forces behind most change are economics and technology. Declines in funding for education and in the purchasing power of libraries have made it impossible to maintain the status quo, let alone realize growth, in traditional information services and collection development. Add to this downward trend in library economics, the explosion of new information technology and its potential for radically altering communications and knowledge management, and one has the ingredients for some amazing changes in libraries.To help manage these many changes, chapters in Managing Change in Academic Libraries approach change with a mixture of radical and rational ideas. Readers learn academic librarians’views on dealing with change as they read about:

  • an environmental scan which identifies both internal and external forces that are increasing the amount and scope of change in academic libraries
  • technological change and its impact in academic libraries
  • the academic library director’s role as an agent of change
  • how two large library systems managed to change in some very fundamental ways when faced with serious economic and political challenges
  • difficult personnel issues faced by academic libraries as they move into new organizational structures and adopt new management styles
  • the future of traditional reference services in light of rapid developments in computing and networking
  • how to change bibliographic control to better serve the changing expectations and needs of user communities
  • conducting a restructuring study and recommendations for organizational change in a large research library systemEach chapter shows academic librarians how they can respond imaginatively and nimbly to economic, political, and technological change that envelopes their professional work life. Academic librarians will refer to Managing Change in Academic Libraries again and again as a survival tool as they meet with challenging and unpredictable changes.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781135838799
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 01/11/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 152
File size: 427 KB

About the Author

Joseph Branin

Table of Contents

Contents
Introduction

  • Libraries in an Environment of Change: Changing Roles, Responsibilities, and Perception in the Information Age
  • Reinventing Alexandria: Managing Change in the Electronic Library
  • The Library Director as Change Agent
  • Budget Stringency as a Stimulus to Innovation: The Cases of Louisiana and Ohio
  • Managing Changing Roles: Professional and Paraprofessional Staff in Libraries
  • Managing Technological Change by Changing Performance Appraisal to Performance Evaluation
  • Changing Roles for Reference Librarians
  • Bibliographic Control in the Electronic Age
  • Organizational Restructuring in Academic Libraries: A Case Study
  • Index
  • Reference Notes Included
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