Title: Interlibrary Loan
1Interlibrary Loan Collection Development
- Using ILL Requests for More Than Just Borrowing
- Amy Fry
- 5th Annual MOBIUS Users Conference
- 3 June 2004
2ILL in Todays Academic Library
- ILL is an essential service! Why?
- Proliferation of resources
- Stretched budgets
- Breadth of teaching and research that academic
libraries support - Visibility of global research resources
- Streamlined ILL service
3- What can interlibrary loan statistics tell us
about our libraries and collections? - How can interlibrary borrowing requests aid
collection development librarians? - Using ILL to implement purchase-on-demand
programs what are the benefits? - ILL interaction with collection development at
UMK - Considerations for the future
4Lending and Borrowing
- Interlibrary lending refers to filling requests
from other institutions with materials from your
own collection - Interlibrary borrowing refers to obtaining
materials from other libraries to fill requests
placed by your own patrons
5UMKCs Miller Nichols Library
- Serves 16,336 patrons
- 9,918 undergraduate students
- 3,458 graduate students
- 2,960 faculty/staff
- Owns 3,210,539 resources
- 955,659 monographs government documents
- 3,756 currently received serial subscriptions
- 1,806,975 microforms
- 444,149 other materials
6ILL at UMK
- Has served nearly 2,000 patrons in 46 different
departments since 2002 - 53 are graduate students
- 24 are undergraduates
- 15 are faculty
- 8 other
7ILL at UMK, contd
- Who requests what? FY04 to date
- 63 borrowing requests placed by graduate
students - 15 borrowing requests placed by faculty
- 13 borrowing requests placed by undergraduates
- 9 borrowing requests placed by other
8ILL at UMK, contd
- Around half of borrowing requests come from 4
academic departments. FY04 to date - Psychology 18.84 of requests
- Education 12.84
- Conservatory 10.65
- Pharmacy 7.53
- Consistent with data from past years.
9Methods of Borrowing
Jun03-Apr04
- FY04 to date
- 7,979 requests filled through traditional ILL
- 10,347 requests filled through PIB
- 18,326 requests filled
- Same period FY03
- 9,202 requests filled through traditional ILL
- 8,265 requests filled through PIB
- 17,467 requests filled
Jun02-Apr03
10Requesting at UMK
- While traditional ILL borrowing at UMK has gone
down 13 from the same period last year, PIB has
gone up 20 and overall borrowing has gone up
nearly 5 - We find almost 18 of borrowing requests
available on-site, through full-text databases or
online journals, or through PIB
11Software at UMK
- Clio 3.0 is our ILL management system
- Ariel 3.3 is our electronic document delivery
software - We receive over 90 of articles electronically
- Patrons request using
- Our web form
- FirstSearch DirectRequest
- Ovid databases
- Our paper form
12What Can ILL Requests Tell Us About our
Collectionsand Services?
- Lending requests
- Can identify items missing in a collection
(Atkins Weible) - Can identify catalog records to update
- Can identify areas where finding items on the
shelf is difficult
13Borrowing Requests
- Collection management
- Research curriculum needs
- Serial collection development
- Monograph collection development
14Collection Management
- Borrowing requests
- Can identify user education needs (Murphy
Rupp-Serrano) - Can demonstrate overuse and underuse in
collection areas (Aguilar, Carrigan, Ochola)
15Research Curriculum Needs
- Borrowing requests
- Can identify areas of faculty or graduate
research that may become curriculum needs in the
future (Khalil) - Can identify future trends for research in an
academic discipline - Can identify interdisciplinary areas of research
where needs are not being met by traditional
collection development (Anderson)
16Serial Collection Development
- Borrowing requests
- Can identify serials that are high in demand,
costly to borrow, and should be considered for
subscription (Murphy Rupp-Serrano) - Can support cancellation decisions by comparing
access to subscription costs (Wilson Alexander) - Can identify serial needs for collection
development (Millson-Martula Watson)
17Monograph Collection Development
- Borrowing requests
- Can identify books that should be candidates for
purchase rather than ILL and implement programs
to purchase these (purchase-on-demand programs) - Can show requesting trends (by subject or
discipline) and suggest collection-appropriate
titles for purchase (Mellendorf, Lahmon)
18ILL Collection Development
- What can ILL data show?
- Provide a glimpse into what is being borrowed
- Point to gaps in the collection
- Point to specialized research beyond the
librarys scope - Help collection development greater customize
academic support - (Livingston Mays, 2004)
19ILL CD, contd
- What do ILL requests tell us?
- At-a-glance identification of the highest
concentrations of borrowing - Subject areas with greatest needs
- Needs by patron status
- Serial needs and usage related to costs
- (Livingston Mays, 2004)
20ILL CD, contd
- What is needed?
- Meaningful data
- A way to extract and manipulate the data to
provide value-added information - Use to fine-tune balance between access and
ownership - (Livingston Mays, 2004)
21ILL-CD Collaboration at UMK
- Clio Borrowing Requests by Department Report
(monthly) - Lists of borrowed items published within the last
five years (quarterly) - Request purchase of titles too new to be
available through ILL (as requested)
22Clio BRBD Report
23Clio BRBD Report
24Requests for Recently Published Items
- To share lists of requests
- Need a systematic method for data collection
- Need to package the information in a useful
format - Need to winnow down the information to essentials
- Need to disseminate the information regularly
- (Lahmon)
25Recently Published, contd
- Process
- Download IMS report from OCLC monthly
- Save in Excel format
- Sort to extract items by filled (yes/no),
publication date, format - Create three lists (books, articles,
dissertations) and summary sheet - E mail cumulative lists to CD librarians
quarterly/annually
26Download
27Save in Excel
28Create Summary Document
29Requests for New Books
- When patrons request books too newly published to
be available through ILL, we - Inform patron that we cannot obtain item
- Send e mail with book and patron information to
subject selector, head of collection development
and acquisitions librarian to request purchase - If subject selector authorizes purchase, ILL
informs patron that the item will be purchased
30Requests for New Books, contd
- Thank you for your Interlibrary Loan Request for
the following new book - Title TITLE
- Author author
- Imprint IMPRINT
- We were unable to obtain a copy of this book
through Interlibrary Loan because it is too new.
However, the Miller Nichols Library has decided
to purchase this book and add it to our
collection. Once it has been received and
processed, you will be able to check it out. - Please check the Merlin catalog for this title in
approximately 4-6 weeks if you still want this
item, or you can check back with the Interlibrary
Loan office and we will follow up on the status
of the order for you. - Thanks!
- If you have any further questions please contact
us at (816) 235-1586 or mailtoumkc-mnlill_at_umkc.ed
u. - Thank you,
- Interlibrary Loan Department
- Miller Nichols Library
- University of Missouri-Kansas City
31Purchase-On-Demand
- Bucknell University
- University of Wisconsin-Madison Book Express
- Purdue University Books on Demand
- University of Virginia Purchase Express
- Thomas Crane Public Library
- Other public libraries
32Purchase-on-Demand, contd
- Bucknell University
- implemented 1990-91 to reduce book borrowing
- every borrowing request treated as potential
purchase - 150 cap on item cost
- considered delivery time in determining if
purchase would be effective - Results
- average cost of books purchased was 35.00
- purchased 135 titles first year, 1,403 total as
of 1997 - 2 ½ weeks turnaround time
- (Perdue Van Fleet, 1999)
33Purchase-on-Demand, contd
- University of Wisconsin-Madison Book Express
- implemented 2001-02
- book must be in scope of collection
- current year monographs 3 previous years
- monographs or proceedings only
- cost under 250
- foreign language/foreign imprint titles
- Results
- average cost of books purchased was 36.86
- patrons 48 grad, 43 faculty, 9 undergrad
- 135 books purchased in first two years
- 8 day turnaround time
- (Ward, Wray and Debus-Lopez, 2003)
34Purchase-on-Demand, contd
- Purdue University Books on Demand
- implemented January 2000
- scholarly works in English
- published within last 5 years
- available to ship within 7 days
- max cost of 100 (later raised to 150)
- Results
- average cost of books purchased was 37.50
- patrons 52 grad, 36 faculty, 12 undergrad
- averaged 2.4 books per patron
- 1,943 books purchased in first two years, for 810
patrons - 8 day turnaround time
- (Ward, Wray and Debus-Lopez, 2003)
35Purchase-on-Demand, contd
- Thomas Crane Public Library in Quincy, MA
- implemented fall 1998
- considered
- availability (in stock)
- price
- subject matter
- suitability for the collection
- Results
- average cost of books purchased was 17.00
- 107 items purchased in 2001-02
- most purchased from vendors, 18 from online
booksellers - most published within last 2 years, but this was
not a criteria - 14 day turnaround time
- (Allen, Ward, Wray and Debus-Lopez, 2003)
36Results
- These libraries found that
- Books purchased through buy-not-borrow programs
subsequently circulate more than normally
purchased, approval-plan books - Alleviates worry that ILL requests will lead to
the purchase of very specialized titles of little
interest to patrons other than the requester
(Anderson) - Why? Probably because such specialized titles are
NOT the readily available, lower-cost titles that
fit the criteria of a just-in-time purchasing
model - Not just a few patrons get books
- Purdue averaged 2.23 titles for each of 652
patrons (mostly graduate students) (Anderson)
37Results, contd
- Price is not much higher than cost of an ILL
- 27.83 vs. 17-37 each
- increased use causes the item to pay for itself
in collection value - ILL has a better cost value than ownership, in
terms of lower cost per transaction, but poorer
value in terms of collection impact, as it
fulfills only a one-time use (Perdue Van Fleet) - Patrons with little say in CD process before
(grad students the highest ILL users) have
opportunity to provide input (Anderson) - Good way to fill gaps in interdisciplinary areas
of study (Anderson)
38Future of ILL at UMK
- Compare percentage of borrowing from a range of
subject areas to percentage of collection
holdings in those same subject areas possibly
relate to circulation statistics, to determine
over- and under-use of collection areas at UMK - Provide reference instruction librarians with
statistics on borrowing requests placed through
ILL that are turned back to PIB and/or electronic
full-text sources collaborate on user education
program and track these numbers over time - Notify patrons that purchased book has arrived
and been processed and put on hold for them - Import IMS reports into Access instead of Excel
and create macros that will append and update
data and run queries automatically - Make purchase requests more proactive implement
a purchase-on-demand program?
39Conclusions
- Need to work together to provide the best, most
cost-effective service to our patrons this
means using all of our data in order to know as
much as possible about our patrons, their needs,
their habits and their behavior.
40Conclusions, contd
- Think globally in terms of collections and their
value. As long as libraries continue to view
sharing primarily along the lines of borrowing
what is needed, rather than lending for the
regional or national benefit, efforts toward
local collection efforts will be frustrating, and
consortium-based collection development will
falter. All of our patrons will be served to a
lesser rather than a greater extent. (Sherrer,
1998)