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Collection Development Policy Making: Research, Design, and Implementation at Texas A&M University

Mary Kay Donahue (Formerly librarian at Texas A&M, currently doctoral students and interns at IBM in Austin)
Deborah Brown (Formerly librarians at Texas A&M, currently doctoral students and interns at IBM in Austin)
Suzanne Gyeszly (Formerly Preservation Librarian at Texas A&M, is now a cataloger with the North Suburban Library System.)

Collection Building

ISSN: 0160-4953

Article publication date: 1 January 1985

164

Abstract

The magnitude of Texas A&M's revision of its collection policy is evident in the doubling of the student population to 36,000 over ten years and a 69 percent collection growth to 1.44 million volumes. The intensity of the change in demands on the collection, whether in titles purchased, variety of formats, or depth of subject representation, required a major effort on the part of collection development staff. Collection development staff surveyed the University's teaching as well as research arms involving the capabilities of all university librarians. The net result was an updated collection development policy, the development of a self‐teaching guide for future collection development undertaking, and an increased awareness on the part of the librarians about the university as well as on the part of the academic faculty about the university librarians' capabilities.

Citation

Kay Donahue, M., Brown, D. and Gyeszly, S. (1985), "Collection Development Policy Making: Research, Design, and Implementation at Texas A&M University", Collection Building, Vol. 6 No. 3, pp. 18-21. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb023155

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1985, MCB UP Limited

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