As far as I am concerned, this is an intellectual engagement policy that Tutt Library at Colorado College needs to setup.  Of course, the College has to support such policy in the first place.

The academic library community has to define if we would like to nourish our relationship with the users in such category.  We've seen social media sites using all kinds of techniques to attract usage traffic to their sites.  If library has the potential to be the center of a learning community, isn't this an opportunity to setup the intellectual engagement policy and effort?

If the college supports the policy and such kind of community engagement effort is approved by the library community, can the Library collect and double its library usage statistics as the online employees are using both the physical space of the library and network bandwidth of the campus?  This could be another fund raising opportunity for the Library.

Sincerely yours,

Amanda Xu  


On Fri, Sep 16, 2011 at 5:42 PM, Danny Jones <djones@txbiomed.org> wrote:
It seems to me this should be addressed by whoever at your library is responsible for the library policy enumerating what library services are available to the public and getting institutional buy-in for enforcing it.  Then everybody sings from the same songbook when enforcing the policy.  But you've got to start with what is the policy.  It's not so much a matter of kicking people out as it is saying "this is what your allowed to do as a visitor."

My wife is director of the public medical center library here and they had no problem restricting the public from using rooms and most computer workstations.  The students were the best advocates for limiting public access.

Danny

Daniel H. Jones, M.L.S.
Director of Library Services
Preston G. Northrup Memorial Library

Daniel H. Jones, M.L.S.
Director of Library Services
Preston G. Northrup Memorial Library



From: SERIALST: Serials in Libraries Discussion Forum [mailto:SERIALST@list.uvm.edu] On Behalf Of Diane Westerfield
Sent: Friday, September 16, 2011 3:00 PM
To: SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU
Subject: [SERIALST] Random Friday question: online university employees hanging out in academic libraries?

Hi,

This may not be the appropriate LISTSERV but as I'm not on any public service or reference lists, thought I would throw this out to my SERIALST compatriots.   I must not be the only librarian with "Serials" in the job title who spends time at the reference desk and has an office in a public area.

My institution is a small private liberal arts college.  Our library is open to the public and there are study rooms in the stacks which are neither locked nor closely monitored.  We have a free wireless network on campus.  The guest network does not permit access to our licensed databases, but it is fine for regular browsing.

We had a couple guys coming in, staking out study rooms with laptops and cellphones.  They said they were working for an online university.  They were kicked but one has returned.  In fact I saw him come in today.

So I'm wondering, has anybody else had online university employees coming into the library, taking over study rooms and using the wireless network?  Is this just a one-time thing here, or do online universities recommend their operatives use (abuse) their non-profit competitors' resources?    It begs the question, why doesn't this online university rent an office with a phone line and internet connection?  Or have the guy work from home, go to Starbucks, the public library, etc.

Thanks,

Diane Westerfield, Electronic Resources & Serials Librarian
Colorado College, Tutt Library
diane.westerfield@coloradocollege.edu
(719) 389-6661
(719) 389-6082 (fax)

Effective February 1, 2011, the name of Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research changed to the Texas Biomedical Research Institute to better reflect our organization and its mission.  There is no change in control, tax exempt status, tax ID, or ownership.

Texas Biomedical Research Institute
Enhancing Lives Through Discovery



--
Amanda Xu

Apprentice to Information Artistry & IT Librarian for Collection Management
Still In Progress
P.O. Box 650295
Fresh Meadows, NY 11365
718-316-8787 (cell)
ax211@nyu.edu(office mail)
axu789@gmail.com (personal email)