Method for selecting a "purchasing board" from existing patrons?

Having a knowledgeable librarian selecting new purchases is almost always a wise idea. However, additionally allowing certain patrons the right and privilege to select which books and media the library will purchase can give a better sample of what will actually be popular.

Would basing the selection of patrons for the board solely on circulation statistics yield a stable, well-represented board? Selecting at random might get a better sample of patrons, but it would be difficult to gauge their interest without more data.

jonsca

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Answer by Tatjana Heuser

At our library, any Patron may suggest books for acquisition through a request form available directly from the home page.

In his request, the patron can choose if he wants to be noticed about acquisition, and if he wants to borrow the book once it's available.

The librarian responsible for that field of interest checks the request:

If he decides to buy a copy of that book, the patron gets informed if he wanted to, and the order gets processed further.

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Answer by Mary Jo Finch

At PLA this year, Joan Frye Williams and George Needham addressed the best ways to get community input (Tell Me Something I Don't Know: Meaningful Community Engagement). Using surveys was bottom of the list of choices - when you ask individuals for input, you get idiosyncratic information. Their suggestion, which would apply to collection development as well as any library service, is to talk to groups of people or individuals who represent groups of people. Instead of asking John Doe who happens to come into the library a lot what books he wants, ask the head of the local home-school association, the chairpersons of local HOAs, the local environmental group, area PTA presidents, the president of the Chamber of Commerce, area book clubs. These people can tell you what is on folks' minds. Individual library users, as Tatjana noted, will usually submit their personal choices through the library's request system.

The talk by Joan and George will be presented as a free webinar by Infopeople on June 12, 2012: http://infopeople.org/training/tell-me-something-i-don%E2%80%99t-know. I highly recommend it.

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