In Information Professional Stuff / Tags: academia, Information Resource Centres, Kevin Sharpe, Loud Libraries, rebranding libraries, Times Higher /
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In my other life as a drummer I have, improbably, played a lot of live hip-hop. Iāve lost count of the amount of times Iāve heard an MC shout āMake some noooiiiise!ā, but I can count on the fingers of one hand the amount of times Iāve heard library staff actually telling people to be quiet. (Not at a hip-hop gig, obviously; in a library.) This may partly be because society is generally getting a bit more raucous so itās not realistic to tell everyone to ssshh all the time, but itās also because thereās been a shift towards noisier libraries ā even in the short-time Iāve worked in them (four years, give or take). When I started, everywhere was silent. Then group study areas were introduced, where noise was allowed. And now weāve actually got silent areas (which implies noise is expected everywhere else). In a few years, I wouldnāt surprised if chatter were the norm in academic libraries, but with a few rooms where people can go to work in quiet if they wish.
There has been some reaction against this, both from within our profession (in CILIPās Update mag a couple of weeks ago) and from without, in the form of Kevin Sharpeās article in the Times HigherĀ - he is an academic at the University of London. Iām a little lateĀ to this partyĀ as thewikiwife gets the Times Higher (rather than me), and sheās only just catching up with that issue, so pointed the article out to me on the train this morning⦠(Thanks wikiwife!)
I have a tendency to be swayed by strong arguments, even if I previously held an opposing view. I like to think Iām flexible and open to ideas; a less charitable interpretation is that Iām fickle or easy led (or perhaps just a bit thick). Anyway, I thought Professor Sharpe made some very good points, even though in general I am in favour of noisier libraries and quite happy to embrace them as the future. His basic argument is that there has been a little too much enthusiasm (on our part) for rethinking libraries as buzzy places of social interaction, coffee bars etc. He claims libraries of old (ie quiet ones) were more conducive to learning than draughty student houses or noisy kid-filled lecturerās homes ā this is a good point, I definitely worked better in the library during my MA, not because of the cold but because the general scholarly air of the place helped me stay disciplined. He also says some libraries allow ipods and food now, so the day is punctuated by the rustle of crisp bags and the tinny sound of music in headphones ā Iāve not experienced this, but that is indeed a sad state of affairs. Certain types of sound are far more disruptive to working than others, and while I find it easy enough to work through the murmur of general conversation, I think Iād be more acutely aware of someone eating noisily or the leaked sound of someone listening to the Take That song off the Morrisonās ad on repeat throughout the day. And he concludes that some people are being driven away from the library, and consequently from the scholarly resources that it holds, by the noise etc, and so their research suffers. Again, this is a real shame.
So, am I to demonstrate my usual fickleness and revise my opinions on the modern trend for louder libraries? Well no, Iām not. There are a few points that I take issue with, and Iām going to go into them here. They are mainly points borne of ignorance of why libraries do things ā thatās fine, he shouldnāt have to know everything about what we do, just as I donāt know everything about academia. But nevertheless, we deserve a bit more credit for taking constructive decisions based on the evidence we have and the circumstances we are in. Ā (In fact, literally seconds after I wrote that sentence, the Staff Bulletin came through with news of a User Behaviour Group meeting to talk about what we should and should not allow to happen in the library. You see? We do actually think these things throughā¦)
Firstly, thereās a lot of use of quotation marks to show how little Professor Sharpe thinks of our contemporary terminology: āLibrarians (or āInformation Service Managersā)ā, āLibraries ā or āInformation resource centresā as they are now calledā and so on. I occasionally adopt this slightly sneery tone myself about stuff, and I donāt think it really covers anyone in glory or helps their arguments. Sharpe bemoans our take up of the āfashionable business jargon that has so damaged other areas of the academyā ā as if us shallow Information Professionals pick our terminology based on the corrupting influence of fashionable business, rather than because what we do and where we do it is changing, so we need to find ways to communicate this. It is easy to criticise jargon, everybody does it. But we have to have names for things, and the old names are no longer fit for purpose. A lot of libraries are in dire straits ā so itās change or die, and all that.
Sharpe understands the need for new computer terminals, but thinks there are too many now that so many students have laptops, and regrets that the electronic revolution has banished books and journals to inaccessible off-campus repositories. With regards to the first point, we have to at least try and democratise Ā information insofar as we can, so while many students do indeed have laptops it is very important to cater adequately for those who do not. As for the second point ā here we are meant to infer that to make room for the PCs, weāve got rid of the stock!
This is an extremely misleading, gross oversimplification. Firstly, many libraries which undergo a transformation into a learning resources centre or similar end up with more room for books ā the redesigns and extensions that incorporate the group discussion areas and the computer rooms and the place to buy a latte also incorporate more shelves (as is happening with York public library at the moment). Secondly, pretty much all libraries have huge difficulties in accommodating all the books and journals required of its users. In academic libraries in particular, demand from faculty for new stock far outstrips the shelf-space a library has (and most libraries built 40 or more years ago simply werenāt conceived as needing to hold so books on such an epic scale as is now commonly required ā even in the 60s and 70s it wasnāt possible to predict just how many essential library purchases would be published every single day in the noughties). Ā The reason we put stock into off-campus repositories is because something has to give Ā - we cannot fit in new books and continue to house all of the old ones; we are already full. (At my place of employment, we take on around 700 metres of new shelving’s worth of stock each year, or 25,000 + orders, with the actual number of items much higher than that due to multiple copies.) We go through a painstaking process, often in full consultation with the academics, of establishing exactly which stock would be least damaging to move out of the library, and even then we have mechanisms by which weāll go and retrieve the stock for you if you ask us to. Thirdly, it is the revolution in e-Resources which requires the PCs, and it is that same revolution that allows us to have e-only subscriptions to many journals which allow us to do away with the stock entirely, making more space in the library. So if anything, the computers save us space. But letās be absolutely clear ā huge amounts of stock needs to be got rid of one way or the other every single year as all academic libraries built before the year 2000 are basically running at full capacity (80% is considered optimum) so cannot squeeze anything else in, and that would be the case whether we put just one computer terminal into the library or 100.
And finally (anyone still reading..?) he doesnāt like the fact that we boast about increased ācustomer uptakeā in light of all these new changes, saying that āby that yardstick alone, Starbucks and student nightclubs are even more successful; but it is not an appropriate criterion.ā The analogy with Starbucks is lazy and unproductive, and footfall in a library IS a valid criterion, very much so. When the academic community successfully negotiates a 5% pay-rise and all the Universities have to scramble to save 5% elsewhere to accommodate them, it is areas like the library who have to work hard to justify their continued level of funding ā showing that people are actually visiting our sites and using our resources is vital in showcasing our continued relevance to modern study.
Sharpe finished by asking, āPlease may we have our libraries back?ā The answer, really, in these difficult economic times, is that you can have a redefined, reinterpreted and revitalised version of your library, or you may have to make do with no library at all.
- thewikirant





















9 ResponsesLeave a comment ?
Interesting post. I agree with you about the rather irritating tone of the THE piece – the writer clearly had no understanding of how and why these decisions are taken. I suspect (though I admit I’ve absolutely no evidence for this) that most people who like to throw up their hands in despair at the thought that libraries allow such evils as food and conversation probably haven’t actually used a library themselves in a very, very long time.
That being said, I do have some sympathy with the view that noise in libraries is not always a completely good thing. I’ve actually had a blog post about that sat in my drafts folder for a couple of weeks – haven’t posted it because what started as a fairly rational post (for me) quickly turned into an angry rant about the many failings of my university library!* I may revisit it, see if I can re-word it into something a bit more sensible…
Oh, and by the way, I saw the THE piece the day it was published. It’s not something I generally read, but wouldn’t you know, someone tweeted about it!
*Note that my rant was not about the library staff, who are ace – more about the continuous lack of investment and rushed, cack-handed decisions that have made the library an increasingly difficult place to work in.
Listen, tweet-face… I am going to join Twitter. Probably. Probably soon.
Can I just join it read stuff and not tweet anything? I’m going to get an iPhone now they’re available on Orange – I don’t want to become someone who furtively gets their phone out all the time and starts tweeting on it.
About the noise – I don’t think there’s much chance of any pro-noise people convincing the quietaphiles, and vice versa. And I do sympathise with some of what Prof. Sharpe says. But my main purpose was just to illustrate why high up library people take difficult decisions they do, and to point out that whatever you (not YOU you, Woodsiegirl, but people generally…) think of modern libraries, some change is neccessary for survival, so something has to give somewhere.
But generally, his comments about noise were what I had the least issue with in the whole article..
[...] hold off on publishing for a while. Been inspired to come back to it by the wikiman’s excellent post on this THE article on noisy libraries. I think the THE piece was particularly snooty and [...]
Tweet-face?? Not sure what to make of that… Am sure I’ve been called worse…
And yeah, plenty of people just lurk on Twitter. Probably an idea to at least tweet once to say why you’re there, and put something on your profile that explains who you are, else people will assume you’re a spam-bot (I tend to block anyone who’s following lots of people but has never tweeted and has a blank profile).
Just wrote up the blog post I mentioned before – have tried to make it a bit less ranty than it was! Think my main issue is that yes, it’s pointless to enforce a silency policy in libraries – besides anything else, that’s really unfair on people who are doing group work and have nowhere else they can all meet – but that group study spaces shouldn’t be provided at the expense of silent study areas. I understand that library planning involves some tough decisions, but I would question how those decisions have actually been made at my own uni library.
Tweet-face was the best I could do at short notice!
I see you as the ring-leader of the group of evil Info Professionals gradually propagandising (my own word) me in the direction of Twitter, one subtle prompt at a time…
I agree with you, probably (thefickleman strikes again!) – silent areas shouldn’t be sacrificed for group work areas; not entirely anyway. But you’ll be the one making tought decisions soon enough, just you wait! I think lots of management types make decisions they know seem crass or unfeeling but basically have to do anyway. I don’t want to be a bad-management-decision apologist, but there’s a lot of scenarios I’ve railed against and then been a bit more sympathetic towards when I’ve understood / been shown why the other options weren’t taken up…
That said, many people do indeed just make rubbish choices.
Re: Twittage – I’m starting a new job soon, so perhaps that will be push I finally need to go over to the dark side. Thanks for the spam-bot tip..
I’m definately in the pro-noise camp and the article wasn’t helpful in bringing round those in Public Library land who are sat very stubbornly in the anti-noise camp.
Along side this you also have the traditionalists who want to go back to checking hands before touching books and handing out gloves and not letting those who are socially excluded from using a Library and making them exclusive institutions, just the way the Victorians devised them to be
Yes – antidemocratisation, as it were…
More debate on the subject here: http://oxfordtrainees.wordpress.com/2009/11/19/how-quiet-should-libraries-be/
[...] Kevnin Sharpe has been blogged about everywhere (including by the Oxford Trainees, Woodsiegirl and thewikiman)so I’m probably quite late and behind the times but anyone who knows me will know that noise [...]
[...] I wrote a piece of comparable length to the original Sharpe one, based on a distilled version of my own rant, and submitted to the editor. Lesson 1 ā the editor does not deal directly with opinion pieces [...]