GUIDING PRINCIPLES
by Alice H. Yucht
originally published in
Teacher-Librarian, June 2001
In 1931, S. R. Ranganathan published his “Five Laws of Library Science”:
1. Books are for use.
2. Every reader his/her book.
3. Every book its reader.
4. Save the time of the reader.
5. The library is a growing organism.
Over the years, many writers have expounded on those basic precepts
within the contexts of the different ‘genres’ of library
services. If we consider the term “book” to cover all forms
of “published knowledge,” (e.g., print, digital, artistic, etc.)
Ranganathan’s Laws still effectively summarize what should be every
school library’s operating guidelines.
BOOKS ARE FOR USE. No school library can afford to be an archive of obsolete objects.
If any part of your collection is gathering dust, you need to figure
out why. Is that subject no longer part of the curriculum, or is
what you do have now outdated and/or irrelevant?
Too often we hear administrators or Board members say “You don’t need
more money for books; your shelves are already full.” That kind
of statement has to be the best impetus for constant weeding
and collection maintenance — to ensure that what you DO have is what
your patrons need and can/will use. (Sometimes even the physical
condition of the resource may be a problem: if it LOOKS musty and
dusty, most contemporary kids won’t touch it!)
Availability, access, and ease of use are equally important; is your
library ‘open’ as needed, so that readers have easy access to all your
resources, or are your materials too often ‘chained’ with
restrictions? Are your reference books really earning their
keep, or are they languishing untouched, just because they cost so
much? Do you still have laserdisks, but no working
laserdisk player? Does everyone in your building know how to
access your subscription databases, or is that considered
privileged/restricted information, available only within the walls of
the library?
EVERY READER HIS/HER BOOK. Libraries should reflect the needs and
interests of ALL their patrons, not just a select few.
Does your collection have something for everyone? Do you
provide a wide variety of ideas, interests, and formats, beyond what
you personally prefer and/or believe in? Do you have materials
for both the advanced AND the remedial readers on all grade levels, for
appeal to the different kinds of intelligences and learning
styles? Do you know how/where to borrow or access additional
materials as needed? Interlibrary loan is one of the best-kept
secrets — and financial bargains — in the library world; use it to
supplement your own collection (and impress your customers) at minimal
cost.
EVERY BOOK ITS READER. Are your resources getting used, or do they need to be promoted?
Several years ago, after a major weeding, I re-arranged my library
collection and noticed a marked increase in circulation. I
increased the space between shelves, left more room at the end of
each shelf, and put up lots of eye-catching subject markers.
Materials that had been ‘lost’ on previously-packed shelves were now
easier to find and display. Although I hadn’t really made any
major new purchases, many of my students thought they had discovered
lots of ‘new’ resources!
Do you send out notices of new acquisitions to both faculty AND
students? Do you offer workshops/demos of new online resources to
faculty, students AND parents? Do you have a constantly changing
shelf/display of new books (into which you occasionally sneak some
older, but neglected, titles)? Do you email teachers with
hotlinks to new websites they might find useful? Go beyond booktalks
and bulletin boards to make sure that every part of your collection is
being used.
SAVE THE TIME OF THE READER. As the world of information
grows, it’s easy for students to become overwhelmed with an
overabundance of resources, or a lack of knowledge about how to use
what’s available. Helping our students become effective and
efficient information consumers is one of the most important functions
of our job. In addition to teaching information literacy skills,
we can also make the library an easier/friendlier place to use by
eliminating arbitrary — and often artificial — barriers.
As librarians, WE know how the physical collection is arranged, but our
patrons don’t always know, especially if they are not habitual
library-users. Simple directional signs are a necessity in every
library; not just call number shelf-markers but also
subject/format/location identifications. Color-coded spine labels
for different fiction genres help my students browse the fiction
section for their favorite kinds of books, while artifacts on top of
the shelving sections identify different subject areas. When I
re-arranged my book collection, I interfiled all the subject reference
books with the ‘regular’ books. Only the general
encyclopedias, almanacs, and dictionaries remain in a separate,
centrally-located Reference section. Now students can find
almost everything on a subject in one place… and instantly compare
what’s available and most useful for their purposes.
Instead of bookmarking frequently-used websites on each of the
library’s computers, I put up webpages with hotlinks to those URLs, as
well as ‘Project Pathfinders” with pre-selected quality resources
for specific mass assignments. These online ‘ready
references’ help students spend more time actively researching
instead of aimlessly re-surfing their topics. And because access
to these resources are now available wherever my students are (home or
school), the old “but the library was closed” excuse no longer works!
THE LIBRARY IS A GROWING ORGANISM. Does your library still look
exactly the way it did ten — or even five — years ago? New
technologies, information formats and imaginative products, community
structure and social conditions, even shifting grade levels all impact
both the physical features and cognitive climate of the spaces we work
in.
Change is a constant for us, whether we like it or not. Choosing
between print and electronic formats means a whole new set of budgeting
guidelines; while teaching new online search strategies builds on the
traditional research skills we’ve been teaching for years.
Because we see kids grow and mature as they advance through the grades,
we also get to see how their minds develop and interests change, and
we’ve got to be ready to supply the resources to keep them learning. .
. even if some of those new ideas didn’t even exist ten years
ago!
Ranganathan’s Laws may be seventy years old, but they’re still worth
keeping in mind as guiding principles for contemporary school library
services.
GUIDING PRINCIPLES
by Alice H. Yucht
originally published in
Teacher-Librarian, June 2001
updated March 10, 2005