The goal of the library is
to support the mission of UW-L by providing access
to a collection of materials which best serves the
classroom and research needs of the undergraduate
and graduate students. The collection must provide
resources to support and enrich classroom
instruction for the UW-L curriculum, and when
financially possible, should provide some
materials to meet the general and recreational
needs of the University community. Faculty
research efforts will be supported by providing
access to information as well as making document
delivery services available to fulfill specific
information needs. The library recognizes the need
for the active participation by the faculty in the
development of the library collection.
The library collection includes all formats,
i.e., books, periodicals, microforms,
audio-visual materials, electronic resources,
etc. The University Library upholds and promotes
the following statements from the American
Library Association:
-
Bill of Rights
-
Freedom to Read Statement
-
Intellectual Freedom Statements
Objectives
- To provide resources to
support and enrich classroom instruction.
- To anticipate and fulfill
the information and curricular needs of the
primary user group (students and faculty) by
actively seeking and maintaining communication
through the faculty liaison program, purchase
requests, and meetings with the faculty.
- To be cognizant of the resources in subject areas
taught at UW-L, and to acquire these materials
as funds permit.
- To be aware of and
responsive to the dynamics of curriculum
change based on the course descriptions
provided by the undergraduate and graduate
curriculum committees.
- To maintain and develop current and
easily accessible collection through judicious
weeding or de-selection, plus continuously
review the scope and depth for adequacy
of support. Whenever possible,
qualitative and quantitative measures
are employed in the evaluation
(selection/de-selection) of resources.
- To budget the resources
allocated to Murphy Library in order to best
meet the instructional needs of each
department.
- To emphasize the purchase
of materials which correspond to the UW-L
mission statement.
- To subscribe to online
information services related to the
disciplines of each college.
- To acquire electronic and
citation services which will support faculty
research and scholarly work.
- To develop and support a
number of services to provide faculty with
access to information and research related to
their research and scholarly work.
Responsibility for
Selection of Materials
All materials acquired with
library funds are university property available
for the use of the entire campus community.
The collection development
rationale is informed selectivity rather than
comprehensiveness.
It is the responsibility of
the library faculty with the advice of the
departmental liaisons, to maintain a library
collection which conforms to the collection
development guidelines.
Librarians will consult with
the faculty and departments in the selection of
specific information services.
Scope, mission relatedness,
annual fees, and startup cost will have a bearing
on the selection process.
Faculty Liaison
Each academic department
will select one faculty member to serve as its
Library Liaison. The Liaison will maintain
communication between the department he/she serves
and the library by relating departmental needs and
issues to the library's collection management
librarian. As the library's communication resource
within each department, the Liaison:
- will serve as the channel
through which departmental requests for
library purchases will be made;
- will review and clarify
the category of each book purchase request;
- will respond to questions
from the library on the status of departmental
purchase requests;
- will receive reports from
the library on the status of departmental
purchase requests and budget allocations;
- will receive and
circulate a periodic list of books received by
the library as the result of departmental
orders;
- will meet with the
collection development librarian to discuss
existing and evolving departmental needs.
The assistance of the
teaching faculty is solicited in the selection
process to assure appropriate strength in the
subject areas of their teaching. The final
responsibility for selection rests with the
library.
Recommendations for purchase
may be initiated by any member of the UW-L
academic community: faculty, academic staff,
staff, or students.
New academic programs should
be communicated to the library faculty so that
acquisition of the needed resources may be
accomplished in an orderly and timely way.
Additional
funds will be needed.
The library is committed to
making diverse viewpoints fully and freely
available. No material will be excluded because of
social, political, cultural, or religious views expressed.
The library faculty carries
the responsibility for the correction of
imbalances and weaknesses in the collection. It is
the library's responsibility to ensure the
adequacy and quality of selection and the building
of a balanced collection. The library has the
ultimate responsibility for collection development
and acquisition policies and for the co-ordination
of resource development of the library as a whole.
Collection Depth
It is recognized that the
requirements for library materials vary in
different subject areas. The UW-L catalog and the
mission statement will be consulted to aid in
establishing the selections. The faculty liaison
will be consulted in determining the depth and
breadth of the collection.
Definition of Levels of
Selection:
- Minimal. A subject
area in which few selections are made beyond
very basic works and reference sources. No
course work is offered at UW-L.
- Basic Information
Levels. A collection of up-to-date general
materials which serves to introduce and define
a subject and to indicate the varieties of
information available elsewhere. A basic
information collection is not sufficient to
support any advanced undergraduate course or
independent study in the subject areas
involved.
- Instructional Support
Level. A collection that is sufficient to
support undergraduate and some graduate
instruction and research. A collection
adequate to maintain knowledge of a subject
required for limited or generalized purpose.
It includes a wide range of basic monographs,
complete collections of the works of more
important writers, selections from the works
of secondary writers, a selection of
representative journals, access to appropriate
non- bibliographic date bases, and the
reference tools pertaining to the subject.
- Research Level. A
collection that includes the major published
source materials required for dissertations
and independent research including materials
containing research reporting, new findings,
scientific experimental results, and other
information useful to researchers. Older
material is retained for historical research.
UW-L will not collect at this level.
- Comprehensive Level.
A collection in which a library endeavors, so
far as is reasonably possible, to include all
significant works of recorded knowledge
(publications, manuscripts, other forms) in
all applicable languages, for a necessarily
defined and limited field. This selection
level is one that seeks to maintain a
"special collection". The aim, if
not the achievement, is exhaustiveness. UW-L
will not collect at this level.
Guidelines for the
Selection of Library Materials
The library requires that
all
purchase requests are
categorized before submitting them.
- Essential - Needed at Library regardless of duplication around UWS.
- Desirable - To be purchased if funds are available, or must be readily available in another UWS library (delivery via Universal Borrowing).
- Remotely Accessible - available via interlibrary loan (or Universal Borrowing) and not likely to be purchased.
The library will not
purchase:
- Reprints of articles
already in the library
- Textbooks
- Expensive and
infrequently used materials
Multiple copies will be
purchased only if heavy demand and continuous use
as evidenced by circulation and verifiable patron
request can be demonstrated.
Generally, library materials
are acquired in those languages in which academic
programs are taught. English language materials
will predominate.
Faculty Publications
The library acquires faculty
publications according to the collection policy
that determines book selection in general, i.e.,
those works that are appropriate for an academic
library are acquired.
Gifts
Murphy Library welcomes donations of books and other
library related materials as a way of enhancing our
collections.
It is important to note that the scope and size of
Murphy Library’s collection is due in part to the
generosity of past and present donors.
Materials are evaluated and accepted for inclusion in
our collections based on their relevance to the university
curriculum and research needs of library users as
determined by the library’s collection policies. Murphy
Library reserves the right to decline or dispose of
donated materials in a manner that best benefits it.
Conditions of Acceptance:
Please keep in mind that not all donations can be added
to our collections. In such cases, gift materials are
disposed of as follows:
- Item transferred to other UW library.
- Donations are sold in bi-annual book sale. Proceeds
are used for library acquisitions, library programming,
and staff enhancement.
- Disposed/recycled in another way as deemed
appropriate.
All donations become the property of the University of
Wisconsin-La Crosse and the State of Wisconsin, and may
not be re-claimed at a later time. Murphy Library does not
accept gifts on long-term loans or can we accept gifts
where the donor places restrictions or limitations on use
or disposal of such gifts. Generally, library policy
dictates that gift material becomes integrated into the
existing collections and is subject to the same conditions
of use.
Appraisals:
Murphy Library is prohibited by law from appraising
donations for tax deduction purposes. However, the Library
does provide letters of acknowledgment, which include a
list of the donated materials.
Contacts:
If you are interested in donating materials to UW-La
Crosse’s Murphy Library, please contact:
7/18/95 (Gift Policy
revised 9/10/2002)
Acquisitions/Collection
Development Department Home Page