[SCC_Active_Members] FW: [DIGLIB] combining college & public,
	in Clermont-Ferrand
    H.M. Gladney 
    hgladney at pacbell.net
       
    Thu Mar 17 08:09:09 PST 2005
    
    
  
The attached note suggests thinking that seems to me pertinent for the
future CHM virtual visitor. 
Best wishes, Henry
 
H.M. Gladney, Ph.D.   http://home.pacbell.net/hgladney/
-----Original Message-----
From: Jack Kessler [mailto:kessler at well.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 15, 2005 1:25 PM
To: diglib at infoserv.inist.fr
Subject: [DIGLIB] combining college & public, in Clermont-Ferrand
FYI France: combining "college" & "public", in Clermont-Ferrand
Digital library work tends to gloss over traditional library
boundaries: "academic" versus "special", either of those versus
"children's", any of the above versus "public", and all the rest.
In the modern digital world though, it seems, everything and everyone too
often still gets poured into, and sometimes out of, the same pot -- one size
fits all -- or so far, anyway.
Librarians long have worried about combining their traditional categories.
The worries have been various: for instance that different reading
behaviors, and general behaviors, and book and media tastes and usages, just
don't mix -- that "children" are too noisy for "grownups" -- that "student"
study halls, and student needs for multiple copies of academic texts, don't
go well with "general public" pulp fiction preferences -- that "special"
libraries are not general enough for most readers, nor "general" libraries
special enough for specialists.
So institutions offering imaginative combinations of the traditional
categories are interesting. And comparing these across cultures -- as well
as just across "media" and "platforms"
-- may yield something useful, too, for the time when "one size"
no longer fits "all", in digital libraries.
In France at Clermont-Ferrand, for example, the city and the two
universities there all combine forces in a single library system:
* the Clermont-Ferrand official city population is 140,000, although
including the surrounding area the population now exceeds 300,000. It is a
major agricultural and industrial
center: Michelin has been based in the city since 1832, and other tire
companies are there -- other city industries include chemicals and clothing
and bottled water.
* and the city is home to two universities, 5 "Grandes Écoles", and over
35,000 students.
* the Clermont-Ferrand library, then -- since 1902 --
	"La Bibliothèque municipale et interuniversitaire"
	The City and Inter-University Library of Clermont-Ferrand
	-- "a service-in-common of the City and of the University
	of Blaise Pascal [Clermont-Ferrand II, founded 1974,
	currently 16,000 students] and the University of the
	Auvergne [Clermont-Ferrand I, founded 1806, currently
	13,000 students]."
		W3: http://bmiu.univ-bpclermont.fr/sommaire.htm
		Catalogs: http://clercat.univ-bpclermont.fr/cgi-bin/abweb
	* 8 university libraries plus two additional branches (at
	Montluçon et Aurillac)
	* A library service devoted to individual academic
	departments (Faculty of Letters)
	* A Local History department
	* A Public Library department, including 2 médiathèques,
	a "bibliobus" service, and 3 children's libraries
	* An Archives department (Centre Henri Pourrat)
	* A Documentation department (Centre international Blaise Pascal)
	* A Copyright Deposit department (centre de dépôt légal imprimeur)
	* A center for Cinema and "court métrage" ["shorts": see
	"La Festival de Très Courts", at http://www.trescourt.com/]
	* L'école des Beaux-Arts
The US has a new library system which is trying to achieve much the same
sort of "academic" / "public" library combination as that offered by
Clermont-Ferrand: in San José, California --
* the San José California official city population is about 1 million;
although recently San José has become the unofficial but functional capital
of a rapidly-growing San Francisco Bay Area "urban region", of 7 million
inhabitants, in which San Francisco itself is only one outlying inner city
neighborhood now... and that region encloses both the old Silicon Valley and
the newer Biotech development which rapidly is engulfing it... so there is
nothing at all "typical" about San José California...
* and San José is home to one campus of a California state-wide university
system -- one of two such systems, the other being the "University of
California" -- and "San José State University"
educates about 27,000 students, year-round. Again, though, and very unlike
Clermont-Ferrand, San José's "Bay Area Region" is home to dozens of other
universities, as well, and colleges, and institutes, and their students:
among these 5 other campuses of the California State University system, 19
campuses of the California Community College system, 5 campuses of the
University of California, Stanford University... So, plenty of students:
plenty more than in Clermont-Ferrand -- not all of whom might use the San
José Library, but true comparisons can be difficult...
* the San José library, then -- since 2003 --
	"SJLibrary.org"
	-- "...bringing you the combined resources of San José
	Public Library System and San José State University..."
		W3: http://www.sjlibrary.org/
		catalog: http://mill1.sjlibrary.org/search/
	* Book Browser -- [An online "pathfinder" providing
	user-assistance for finding "a good book to read"]
	* Bookmobile -- ["Bibliobus"...]
	* Computer Access -- [Laptops, printing, the Ouebbe -- it
	seems that "computer" cuts across all library user
	groups, that all need it, but do they all need it in
	exactly the same ways?]
	* Course Reserves -- [Books for student classes: the
	"academic" side, in the San José experiment.]
	* Disability Services -- [Like computers, a library
	service which appears to cut across all library user
	groups: all need it, but do they all need this service in
	exactly the same way?]
	* Distance Learning -- [An interesting innovation, at San
	José: "distance learning" has taken off, in the US, as a
	new and exciting although in many ways problematic
	departure in education generally. (The highly-successful
	Apollo Group and their University of Phoenix -- stock
	symbol APOL, now 30,000 employees and over 250,000
	students -- originally was the idea of a professor at San
	José State...) The Library offers, to San José "distance
	learning" students,]
		* Welcome to the SJSU Distance Learning Library!
		Here you will find links to services and
		resources to help you complete your distance
		coursework successfully.
		* Distance Learning Services
		List of distance education services, including
		Interlibrary Services and Course Reserves.
		* Connect from Home
		How to manage your library account and access
		databases online.
		* Research and Writing Aids
		Tips for starting your research, obtaining
		materials, and writing your papers.
		* Contact Your Subject Specialist
		SJSU reference librarians listed by subject.
		* Distance Education Curriculum
		Link to eCampus, SJSU's distance education website.
		* Distance Learning Faculty
		Faculty-specific resources and services.
	* Faculty Services -- [for example,]
		* Purchase Requests for Library Materials
		* Faculty Publications Database
		* Contact a librarian in your subject area
	* Instruction & Training Classes -- [library & Internet]
	* Literacy Services -- [The US is home to many people,
	now, who cannot read, and / or who cannot read in English. ]
		* For Adults
		* For Families
		* For Parents Seeking Quality Early Care and Education
		* For Child Care Providers
		* For SJSU Students and Faculty
	* Meeting Rooms -- [for student study, community meetings]
	* Reference Help -- [one traditional "library" function]
	* Request Material Beyond SJLibrary -- [Inter-Library Lending]
	* Youth Services -- [not just "students"...]
So, how does all of this work? And how well does it work
_together_: in Clermont-Ferrand? or in San José?
Are there fundamental cultural and political and institutional differences
between the two examples, French and American? Yes.
A "bibliothèque municipale" in France and the "public library" of an
American city are very different, in fundamental respects -- just as a
French "bibliothèque universitaire" and an American "academic library" are
very different -- historically, institutionally, culturally, financially.
But are there also bases for comparisons, and for each side learning tricks
from the other, and for each avoiding costly mistakes which the other might
already have made? Yes, as well.
For instance San José's "distance learning" projects might be of great
interest to the people at Clermont-Ferrand... And the experience of over 100
years, at Clermont-Ferrand, in combining "general public" users with
"students", might be reassuring -- or in some respects distressing, but at
least for interesting and useful reasons -- to people in San José, and
elsewhere, who might be trying the same sort of thing, now...
And, online, digital library developers might look at both situations --
both the French and the American "academic/public"
library combinations -- before trying too nimbly and glibly to offer simply
a "one size fits all" digital solution, to some strange amalgam of Internet
library users.
The idea is not new but old. And it has been carefully considered and even
studied in depth: both by very new projects using the latest techniques, and
by very old projects benefiting from the accumulated experience of a century
or more. Mistakes might be avoided, and money saved, by considering the
history.
Two references, then, to a literature on combining different sorts of
"libraries" which is as fascinating as it is extensive:
-- for Clermont-Ferrand, and the French experience --
* Annie Le Saux, "Bibliothèques d'étude, bibliothèques de lecture
publique: Complémentarité, coopération, fusion ?" in _Bulletin des
Bibliothèques de France_ (Paris : Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Sciences de
l'Information et des Bibliothèques / ENSSIB,
2005) t. 50 n° 1, p. 93-94, ISSN 0006-2006.
http://bbf.enssib.fr/bbf/html/2005_50_1/2005-1-p93-lesaux.xml.asp
	The BBF's Le Saux reports here on an Association des
	Bibliothécaires Français / ABF (Paris group) meeting,
	held at the Bibliothèque Nationale de France last October
	14, on the general question of "the separation of
	'bibliothèques universitaires' and 'bibliothèques de
	lecture publique'". She says that Brest, Strasbourg, and
	Clermont-Ferrand were offered as examples of different
	approaches.
	Le Saux credits Claudine Lieber (Inspection générale
	des bibliothèques) for a typology of 3 results: 1) mere
	nearby-neighbors ("voisins de quartier") who complement
	but don't really combine, then, 2) next-door neighbors
	("voisins de palier") who cooperate on mutual projects &
	economies, and finally, 3) true combinations ("fusion")
	-- they have all 3 in France -- perhaps we have all 3 in
	the US -- and perhaps we all need all 3, plus other
	approaches as well, for our upcoming digital libraries?
-- and, for San José and the US experience --
* John N. Berry III, "The San Jose model: Gale/Library Journal Library of
the Year 2004: San Jose Public Library and San Jose State University
Library" in _Library Journal_ (New York: Bowker, June 15 2004) v129 i11
p34(4) ISSN 0363-0277 (Library Of The Year 2004)(Cover Story).
http://www.libraryjournal.com/index.asp?layout=articleArchive&articleid=CA42
3793
	The writer here observes,
	"A marriage of convenience?
	"Both [city librarian] Light and [university librarian]
	Breivik agree it is not a merger. 'In merger,' says
	Light, 'one side or both lose their personality, their
	identity. In a marriage, they remain two different
	entities, and each brings different strengths and talents.'
	"As Breivik points out, these two libraries, like so many
	publicly supported institutions in troubled California,
	have faced steady erosion of support, almost since the
	passage of Proposition 13, the infamous antitax measure
	of 1978. Both university and city needed larger, more
	technologically up-to-date libraries. Neither one had a
	ghost of a chance of getting a building anytime soon..."
Note: two observations of my own --
a) perhaps San José's library is an example, then, of Claudine Lieber's #2,
in her 3-part typology (Le Saux in BBF, above),
	"next-door neighbors ('voisins de palier') who cooperate
	on mutual projects & economies"
-- not simply #1, in other words -- they _used_ to be that --
	"mere nearby-neighbors ('voisins de quartier') who
	complement but don't really combine"
-- but not yet #3, as perhaps the Clermont-Ferrand library is,
	"true combinations ('fusion')"
and,
b) it's about the money... And very often that is it, isn't it, the money...
Ironic, that in a fabulously-wealthy place which invented the information
revolution, like California, entire library systems are closing (the city of
Salinas, this summer), and others are "combining", perhaps primarily to save
on money...
But there are other reasons, too, and so money -- even if it is significant,
as it always is -- at least is not the only one.
Saskia Sassen and others are pointing out now that our information
revolution is producing Global Cities, which no longer decentralize but in
some ways do the opposite. (See her précis, in the latest issue of the
_Michigan Journal of International Law_, of her forthcoming book,
_Denationalization:
Economy and Polity in a Global Digital Age_, Princeton 2005).
And in these emerging Global Cities we need physical public institutions, to
facilitate the "face-to-face" communication at last made possible by digital
information's New Productivity...
So maybe _that_ is what a central city "library" is going to be... perhaps
what the new, combined, library at San José will be, and / or what the older
one at Clermont-Ferrand will be....
			--oOo--
FYI France (sm)(tm) e-journal                   ISSN 1071-5916
      *
      |           FYI France (sm)(tm) is a monthly electronic
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        	Copyright 1992- , by Jack Kessler,
	all rights reserved except as indicated above.
			--hjlm--
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