Policies
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Users of Hedberg Library are expected to abide by the Carthage College Community Code, as explained in the Student Handbook. Of particular relevance to the library are the following sections in the General College Policies section:
- Computer Use Policy
- Dress
- Facility Usage
- Firearms, Weapons, Fireworks
- Honesty
- Identification Cards
- Sexual Assault Policy
- Solicitation Policy
- Student Records Policy
- Tobacco and Smoking Policy
The staff of Hedberg Library is firm believers in the American Library Association’s Library Bill of Rights as stated below:
The American Library Association affirms that all libraries are forums for information and ideas and that the following basic policies should guide their services.
- Books and other library resources should be provided for the interest, information, and enlightenment of all people of the community the library serves. Materials should not be excluded because of the origin, background, or views of those contributing to their creation.
- Libraries should provide materials and information presenting all points of view on current and historical issues. Materials should not be proscribed or removed because of partisan or doctrinal disapproval.
- Libraries should challenge censorship in the fulfillment of their responsibility to provide information and enlightenment.
- Libraries should cooperate with all persons and groups concerned with resisting abridgment of free expression and free access to ideas.
- A person’s right to use a library should not be denied or abridged because of origin, age, background, or views.
- Libraries that make exhibit spaces and meeting rooms available to the public they serve should make such facilities available on an equitable basis, regardless of the beliefs or affiliations of individuals or groups requesting their use.
If a patron wishes to challenge the inclusion of certain items in the collection, a formal complaint by the patron should be submitted to Carol Sabbar, Director of Library and Instructional Technology Services. The librarians will review the complaint. No action will be taken before staff have discussed the complaint and come to a resolution.
LIS would love to have a copies of published work by Carthage faculty. As a current faculty member, if you have published works that you’d like the library to have in our permanent collection please feel free to fill out the form below or bring an extra copy to the library for donation. For questions, please email help@agmjbl.com.
The collection development policy is designed for use as a planning tool for the library and as a means of communicating the collection goals and policies to the Carthage community. The policy helps provide administrative guidelines for decision making and the implementation of objectives. As a planning tool, this policy provides information necessary for budget preparation and expenditures and guidance for student/faculty requests, and outlines the philosophy that guides collection building. It aids in the standardization of activities, facilitates decision making, minimizes confusion, and co-ordinates the actions of various units within AIS (Academic Information Services).It is recognized that because programs and other information needs change, our policy must be subject to continuous review. Members of the Carthage Community are encouraged to suggest improvements to our policies and practices.
A. DESCRIPTION OF INSTITUTION AND CLIENTELE
Carthage is a residential, four year, liberal arts, ELCA Lutheran affiliated institution, with a full time equivalent enrollment of about 2,600 full-time students and about 150 full-time faculty. In addition to a strong liberal arts emphasis, substantial numbers of students major in business or elementary education. The college offers a master’s degree program in education. The vast majority of the students are traditional age, full-time, and residential, though a growing number are non-traditional, part-time, and returning students.
B. INSTITUTIONAL OBJECTIVES
Hedberg Library is committed to supporting the College mission of providing a strong foundation in the liberal arts for all its students and transmitting the human heritage in the arts, humanities, and sciences. The library also supports the College goals of fostering a love of learning, an openness to diverse ideas, a commitment to lifelong learning, the development of communication skills, and a facility for critical and constructive thinking.IN addition, the library supports the goals of preparing students to be licensed teachers and for other careers that offer opportunities for personal satisfaction and service to society. Last, but not least, the library supports the goal of encouraging active participation as informed and responsive citizens in seeking solutions to problems in the community, the nation, and the world.
C. COLLECTION DEVELOPMENT GOAL
The goal of collection development is to make as much information as possible available to the college community: students, faculty, administration, and staff. The information resources will consist of an on-site core collection of important and useful works of literature and scholarship. Supplemental to this will be access to other collections and databases by interlibrary loan and document delivery of appropriate items not owned by Carthage. We do not subscribe to the view that ownership is the only (or even primary) indication of the quality of a collection or of information service. In other words, bigger is not necessarily better. Rather, our goal is to achieve a balance between ownership of and access to information, with user convenience and budgetary limitations firmly in view.
All types of recorded information, including print and non-print material in all formats, may be acquired or made accessible. An important consideration will be whether access can be made available to users in the library, classrooms, faculty and staff offices, residence hall rooms, and from home or other off-campus locations. When appropriate, computer access over the campus wide network may be favored over traditional print resources. Access to and ownership of information will be consistent with our goal of creating an “electronic teaching library” or “virtual library” for the Carthage community and a “gateway” to information sources around the world.
A. RESPONSIBILITY
The responsibility for selection is shared jointly by the faculty and library staff. Recommendations from students and other members of the college community are also welcome. The final authority for selection rests with the Vice President for Academic Information Services, operating within the administrative framework of the College.
B. CRITERIA
Highest priority is given to materials that support the instructional program of Carthage College. General interest help students develop into well-rounded, knowledgeable citizens will also be provided within the limits of budgetary resources. The following criteria are used to evaluate materials considered for addition to the collection. All formats are evaluated using the same (or similar) criteria as appropriate.
C. GENERAL CRITERIA FOR SELECTION
- Additions to the library collection will be selected on the basis of:
- Support for curricular needs
- Appropriateness for undergraduate use
- Master’s programs that the College supports
- Strength of present holdings on a topic
- Faculty review and recommendation
- Demand and potential use
- Review and critiques appearing in standard selection sources
- Program requirements
- Budgetary resources
D. SPECIFIC REQUIREMENTS
- Authoritativeness (author, composer, director, issuing body, etc., significance and reputation)
- Style and quality of writing or presentation of subject matter
- Other materials available on the subject already in the collection
- Importance of subject matter as related to the collection and curriculum
- Permanence of scholarship or format
- Technical quality (particularly for media)
- Price relative to budget resources and anticipated use
- Timeliness of material
- Appropriateness of vocabulary and level of treatment
- Accuracy and objectivity of information
- Frequency of interlibrary loan/document delivery of the particular title, especially for periodicals
- Appropriateness of the medium
- Value as a classic of outstanding work in a field of discipline
- Size and shape of material
The library does not allocate specific amounts of its material budget to academic departments. Though some equity among programs is sought, consideration is given to the reality that the cost of materials is not the same for all disciplines. This allows the library flexibility to meet varying needs as well as unanticipated changes in curricula and in patron demand, ultimately providing better service in all areas. However, department heads and program directors should encourage and coordinate selection activities of their faculty and staff members.
A major source of review of materials suitable for college libraries is the periodical Choice. Additional recommendations should be based upon current scholarly reviews as well as personal/professional judgment. The library attempts to have a carefully selected collection that meets the needs of all departments, thus indiscriminate choices from publisher’s catalogs and blurbs should be avoided. In cases where an individual or department makes numerous requests, the requester(s) should be prepared to rank in importance or set priorities on the items desired.
A. GENERAL COLLECTION
Books
Books and monographs comprise a large percentage of the collection and budget allocation, and are bought on virtually all topics. Criteria for selection include the following:
- Current materials in English receive the highest priority
- Non-English language materials used as aids in the teaching and learning of a language currently being taught are purchased
- Materials for general information in subject areas not included in the curriculum are acquired as necessary. Current popular fiction and nonfiction that are non-course related are not considered high priority acquisitions.
- Books are purchased in paperback when available
- Hedberg is a “single copy” library; in general, only one copy of a title will be purchased
- Rare books are not purchased
- Research materials are not purchased solely for individual faculty or student use
- Out of print materials are low priority purchases
B. COLLEGE CATALOGS
The library will provide access to current information regarding other colleges and universities, undergraduate and graduate, with emphasis on those in the US
C. DISSERTATIONS AND THESES
The library does not routinely acquire academic master’s theses and doctoral dissertations completed at other institutions. The Master’s theses written as part of the Master in Education program at Carthage College are classified, cataloged, and added to the collection. Two copies are added: one for the general collection and one for the college archives.
D. ELECTRONIC RESOURCES
The library will provide access to a variety of electronic resources as deemed appropriate. In some cases they may supplement the core collection of print resources, in others they may be substitutes for specific print resources. These electronic computer based resources may take the form of on-line or CD-ROM databases, accessible from either on- or off-site hosts. These sources may provide bibliographic information, or they may be full-text in nature. When possible and expedient, Carthage holdings records may be attached to the data base so users can easily see which of the found citations are among our current holdings.
In general, selection of electronic resources will be subject to the same criteria as traditionally acquired materials. Additionally, the following criteria are considered in the acquisition of electronic formats:
- Ability to access the information through the campus network
- Simultaneous use by multiple users
- Cost relative to benefit over print materials
- Currency of information
- Availability of hardware or personnel to install and maintain electronic resources
- Availability of personnel support
- Compatibility with campus operating platforms
E. GOVERNMENT PUBLICATIONS
Hedberg Library is not an official depository library for federal or state publications. Purchases of government publications are made at the recommendation of faculty and AIS staff in accordance with the usual selection criteria.
F. MUSIC SCORES
The library acquires a working collection of scores that are needed for current instruction. It is not the role of the library to provide multiple copies for performance purpose.
G. NON-PRINT RESOURCES
Non-print titles are classified, cataloged and made an integral part of the existing collection. All formats, excluding periodicals, reference and microforms, are inter-shelved in order to provide easy patron access. All materials on the same subject, regardless of format, are found together.
Audiovisual
Audiovisual materials, including videocassettes, videodiscs, compact discs, audiocassettes, etc., are considered an important means of packaging, storing, and transmitting information. They are acquired for the collection on the same basis as all other materials, the basic criteria being curricular relevance. In addition to the relevant general criteria used for other acquisitions (cost, technical quality, subject content), selection for purchase will depend upon availability of appropriate hardware to use the resource. The library will strive to provide the equipment necessary for the use of these materials.
Computer Software
AIS will provide a variety of special purpose computer software and programs for academic use on the campus network or as part of the circulating collection, with preference given to those acquisitions that are used in the curriculum and classroom. Selection criteria will be the same as with other media: curricular relevance, prospective use, and availability of equipment and staff expertise will be considered.
H. RARE BOOKS
The library does not purchase rare books, but does accept them as gifts subject to the same criteria as other gifts. Rare books are defined as those materials which are so old or scarce that they seldom appear in the book markets. These materials include incunabula, sixteenth and seventeenth century imprints, early American imprints, first editions, specially illustrated editions, or books with particularly find bindings. Rare books that are old and fragile will be housed in the more protected environs of the College Archives.
I. PERIODICALS
Periodicals are defined as titles that are published over a period of time, at regular or irregular intervals. These include newspapers, journals and magazines, transactions, proceedings, and similar publications. Generally, information found here is more current than that found in other publications. These materials are selected to cover fields reflecting the curriculum of the college, thereby providing a core of current research for all represented disciplines. New title requests, including requests for back files, are carefully reviewed. Periodicals will be acquired and retained in various formats including print, microforms, CD-ROM, and on-line access. Selections are made at the request of faculty and AIS staff, with decisions based on criteria similar to other acquisitions.
J. NEWSPAPERS
The library provides access to current general news though printed newspapers and electronic news sources to meet the teaching and informational needs of the College community. Sources selected will represent local, state, national, and international coverage and a variety of perspectives. Selection of foreign language news will be influenced by the number of students on campus from that country and the needs of instructors teaching that language. Retention of back files will be decided on a title-by-title basis. Availability of storage space, storage format (microfilm, CD-ROM, etc.), reference value, and anticipated demand will be used to determine the extent of the files retained.
K. TEXTBOOKS
Textbooks are defined as books or materials required to be purchased by students for use in class. Such material, as well as lab manuals and workbooks designed to be written in, generally will not be purchased for the collection. Some textbooks may be acquired depending on the nature of the discipline, the way the text treats the subject, and the particular needs of the students in that class. As with other materials, our general selection criteria will be applied.
L. SPECIAL COLLECTIONS
Archives
Hedberg Library collects and organizes many of the document records of the College. Examples of such materials include minutes of the Board of Trustees meetings, reports of the College, College publications, committee minutes, and official files of the College Administration when available.
The Archive Collection also houses non-official materials such as pictures and photographs, yearbooks, course catalogs, clippings from newspapers and magazines, student publications, and similar items of interest and pertinence to the College.
M. CURRICULUM COLLECTION
Children’s Literature
Children’s literature (Library of Congress classification PZ), is shelved with the Curriculum Collection. Reading interests spans reading interests and levels from pre-school through junior high. Included in the collection are fiction, non-fiction, and picture books. It is not our intention to offer a full and comprehensive collection of children’s books; rather, the purpose of this collection is to support the curriculum of the Education Program. The best known classics in children’s literature and award winning books will be acquired, including winners of the Mildred L. Batchelder Award, the Randolph Caldecott Medal, the Coretta Scott King Award, and the John Newbery Medal. Selection of these materials will be based upon the same criteria used for other parts of the collection.
Curriculum Materials
The library attempts to acquire a sampling of elementary and secondary materials that are necessary to aid instruction in the undergraduate teacher education programs, graduate reading program, and master’s degree in education program. Preference will be given to those materials used in the local schools, particularly the Kenosha and Racine school districts.
N. MICROFORMS (MICROFILM AND MICROFICHE)
Microforms are selected because of their usefulness for undergraduate research, and the efficiencies gained from minimal space consumption. In general, monographic sets and series are not purchases. With any such purchase, viewing and reproduction equipment needs are taken into consideration.
O. REFERENCE MATERIALS
Materials will be selected for the reference collection based on their ability to meet both general and specialized information needs. The reference collection may contain titles that generally are considered to be reference tools, such as dictionaries, encyclopedias, indexes, directories, and similar genres .Usage will have a strong bearing on the decision to place materials in the reference collection of the general circulating collection. Electronic reference resources will be selected using the same criteria as other library materials and may be selected in place of the traditional print versions.
The nature of this collection will require frequent weeding and updating to remain authoritative, current, and trim. Criteria for deselecting will be similar to that applied to other parts of the collection.
The library welcomes gifts and donations of useful materials. However, the disposition of accepted gifts is subject to the discretion of the library. Gifts are subject to the same criteria for inclusion in the collection as are used for purchase decisions. Gifts that cannot be added to the collection are disposed of at the discretion of the Vice President for Academic Information Services. They may be discarded, sold, or given to students and faculty or non-profit agencies. Letters of acknowledgment will be sent to donors. The library staff does not make appraisals of materials, either for re-sale acknowledgment of donation for tax purposes.
There are certain items that generally will be considered unsuitable for gifts, although the library reserves the right to make exceptions when circumstances warrant. Unsuitable gifts might include:
- Materials in poor repair, worn out, or marked up
- Duplicates or older editions of materials already in the collection
- Broken and incomplete runs of periodicals
- Old back files of periodicals, particularly those in the sciences
- Old lab manuals, workbooks, and textbooks
- Old reference books such as outdated encyclopedias and directories
- Outdated legal or other sets requiring ongoing expense to update
Weeding is the process of discarding materials that are no longer desired or transferring them to another part of the collection (for example, from the reference collection to circulation stacks).Regular weeding helps maintain a useful, current, and authoritative collection that supports the Carthage community.
When a new edition (of reference materials, for example) is received, the old edition is evaluated and in some cases withdrawn. As materials are sent to Technical Services for repair, they are evaluated for retention or replacement. In consultation with academic departments, the thorough weeding of a specific Library of Congress classification section of the collection is periodically undertaken. Using established criteria and standard bibliographies, such as Books for College Libraries, items are earmarked for weeding. Lists containing those titles recommended by the library staff for withdrawal are sent to the relevant department for faculty recommendations. Faculty are urged to recommend for withdrawal those items they believe no longer serve the curriculum. The VP for Academic Information Services or his/her designee shall be the sole judge of the final disposition of discarded materials.
Materials will be removed from the collection when those items no longer seem useful because of the following:
- Inaccurate information
- Outdated information
- Lack of demand for material
- Physical condition
- Duplication of seldom used materials
- Superseded editions
- Newer material on subject
- Obsolescence of formats
- Incompatibility of format to equipment available
- Level of treatment
- Lack of space
- Other materials fulfill the same need better
- Language in which material is written
- Cost of continuing subscription or standing order
- Availability of indexes
Records of withdrawn titles will be retained for the Carthage Business Office annual auditor report.
A search for missing items will be conducted for up to a year before being declared lost. If not found, criteria for replacement will be similar to that applied for first-time purchases and will be done on a title-by-title basis. High demand items may be replaced sooner, while the search for the missing items continues.
This document is meant to reflect the needs of a changing dynamic institution. To meet the changing requirements of the curriculum, instructional methods and information technology, the policies will be subject to continuing review and revised accordingly.
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It is the policy of the Library and Information Services (LIS) Department at Carthage College to protect the privacy of library users and the confidentiality of their information. LIS has a responsibility to adhere to guidelines from the American Library Association, state and federal law, and the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA).
LIBRARY BILL OF RIGHTS AND LIBRARIAN’S CODE OF ETHICS
The American Library Association’s Library Bill of Rights and Librarian’s Code of Ethics protect a library user’s right to privacy and the confidentiality of their records. Article III of the “Code of Ethics for Librarians” (1995) states that library employees must “protect each library user’s right to privacy and confidentiality with respect to information sought or received and resources consulted, borrowed, acquired, or transmitted.” This means that LIS will not release user information to parties other than the account holder regarding library accounts. This includes, but is not limited to,
- Circulation records (including Interlibrary Loan records)
- Database searches
- Library fines
- Class or work schedules
- Password information
- Equipment checkout forms
- Reference or informational questions
- Correspondence
STATE AND FEDERAL LAW
The library at Carthage College must adhere to federal and state laws. Wisconsin Statute 43.30 states that “…records of any individual who borrows or uses the library’s documents or other materials, resources, or services may not be disclosed except by court order or to persons acting within the scope of their duties in the administration of the library or library system…” On the federal level the USA Patriot Act provides law enforcement and the federal government the ability to obtain search warrants and subpoenas to gain access to records from libraries. For more information on libraries and the Patriot Act, please see the American Library Association’s webpage on the Patriot Act and Intellectual Freedom. LIS staff will comply with law enforcement in possession of court orders if account information is requested.
FAMILY EDUCATIONAL RIGHTS AND PRIVACY ACT (FERPA)
The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) (20 U.S.C. § 1232g; 34 CFR Part 99) is a federal law designed to protect the accuracy and confidentiality of student educational records. FERPA applies to student records in educational institutions that receive funds under programs administered by the Secretary of Education. Carthage College falls under this category.
Student educational records are considered confidential and may not be released without written consent of the student. Once a student attends classes beyond the high school level, all privacy rights are transferred to the student alone, regardless of age. This means that at Carthage, parents or guardians no longer have the right to information protected under FERPA about their child if s/he is, or was a Carthage student. FERPA applies even if a student is under 18, and even if the parents are paying for their child’s education. Please refer to the Student Records Policy of the Carthage Community Code for more information.
What is considered an educational record?
Under FERPA educational records are defined as records directly related to a student and maintained by an educational agency, institution, or party acting for the agency or institution. Educational records may exist in any medium. Enrollment records, grades, class schedules, and exams are examples of student information that is considered a protected educational record (including the library-related items above).
What is not included in an educational record?
- Records that are in the sole possession of the maker.
- Law enforcement records created for a legal purpose.
- Employment records not based on student status.
- Medical/psychological treatment records (they are protected under HIPPA).
If you have questions regarding protected information and the FERPA law at Carthage College, please contact the Registrar’s Office at 262-551-6100.
Sections adapted from “The Faculty and Staff guide to FERPA” created by the Carthage College Registrar’s Office, August 2015.
Theft or mutilation of materials is a misdemeanor or felony and covered by Wisconsin Statute 943.61. Campus security will be called to handle all incidents in the library.
Complete Hedberg Library’s Incident Report Form
Please use this Incident Report Form to record events within the Hedberg Library building that you witness or are reported to you as an employee of Hedberg Library (this includes Donna’s Bytes, building sidewalks and entryways, and lobby bathrooms). Please be as detailed as possible to give staff a complete picture of events in the library. Include your contact information so staff may follow up with you after an event if necessary.
The following are examples of events for which you might submit the Incident Report Form (the list is not exhaustive; please use your judgment):
- Accident involving library staff or users of the library
- An altercation with a user of the library
- Flagrant violations of library policy
- Maintenance issue: broken elevator, large spill, bathroom problem
- A user being disruptive in the library
- Vandalism
- Violent or belligerent behavior
- Viewing pornographic material on a library computer
- Anything for which you needed to call Security (not lost and found items)
WHO SHOULD I CONTACT?
In addition to filling out the Hedberg Library Incident Report Form, also contact the following departments for specific situations as indicated below. Any incident that involves injury to an employee needs to be reported to both Public Safety and Human Resources as soon as possible and LIS will need to encourage the injured employee to initiate a worker’s compensation claim with Human Resources. (As a student employee, your supervisor would be responsible for this step.)
Public Safety
262-551-5911
Call the Office of Public Safety if there is an incident in the library related to safety or criminal activity. These incidents should never be investigated or handled by LIS staff. Public Safety is staffed 24-hours a day, 365 days a year.
Learn more about the Office of Public Safety
Maintenance
When a maintenance issue arises in the building, contact the Maintenance Department. They have an online Maintenance Request Form to submit work requests. For maintenance emergencies, contact the Dean of Students Office at 262-551-5800. If you have an emergency involving campus facilities after the normal office hours of the Maintenance Department, please contact Public Safety at 262-551-5911.