Maud Rozee and Eric Cohn took a look into some book news.
For those of you living under a rock who haven’t heard: Barnard will soon be replacing its library with a new Teaching and Learning Center (TLC). Lehman Hall is scheduled for demolition in December 2015, and construction is predicted to take about three years. When it is finished, the new TLC will have less square footage dedicated to books than Lehman Hall had, a fact which has raised concerns among faculty members about the decision-making process and priorities of the new building’s planners.
At their most recent meeting, faculty were told the details of the plan for the approximately 198,000 books in Barnard’s collection during and after construction of the TLC. Barnard’s librarians are currently selecting around 12,000 outdated, unused, or duplicated books to donate to charity, as part of a routine cull. During construction, 20,000 unique titles from Barnard’s library will be housed at Columbia, similarly to how the Milstein Library is housed in Butler. The remaining approximately 166,000 books will be sent to “dark storage,” where they will be inaccessible during construction.
After construction is completed on the new TLC, Barnard library’s onsite collection will be made up of the unique titles which were housed at Columbia and only 75% of the books in dark storage. What access will be provided to the remaining 25% (approximately 41,500 books) left in dark storage has not yet been determined by administrators. Faculty were also told that there will be no room for growth of the library’s physical book collection.
Administrators have planned other uses for the rest of the TLC’s space. A message from Provost Bell assured that “there are no plans to replace books with digital content” and that “the library will be modern and house student study spaces and labs that permit digital content to be readily accessed.”
Religion Department Professor Elizabeth Castelli says that faculty members are concerned about how priorities for the use of space in the TLC are being set. Many feel that shrinking the library’s physical holdings is opposed to the mission of a college, and the centrality of a library to that mission. They are also unsure of who exactly is making the decisions, and feel that Barnard’s librarians should be partners in the planning process, which purportedly has not been the case so far.
The involvement of librarians in the planning process is hindered by the recent resignation of Dean of the Barnard Library and Academic Information Services Lisa Norberg. The official statement at the last SGA meeting was that she stepped down to form a 501c. Castelli pointed out that when Lisa Norberg leaves, there will be nobody with her expertise and qualifications as a librarian to help plan for the library’s future.
“For Barnard to continue to be a first-rate college, it needs a robust library for teaching and research. We’re at a point where that can mean different things [in terms of ways to access library materials],” Castelli said. Faculty members know that changes to Barnard’s library are unavoidable, but the opacity about how decisions are being made, with what expertise, and by whom have given them cause for concern.
Editor’s Note, December 9, 5:25 pm: Our post previously stated that the TLC will have less square footage for the library than Lehman had. It was brought to our attention that this statement requires some clarification. The TLC will have less square footage dedicated as space for books than Lehman, although in terms of total square footage the TLC will be slightly larger than Lehman. We apologize for the confusion, and the post has been updated for clarity.
The British Museum’s Reading Room via Wikimedia
26 Comments
@Yerk Colby College’s Miller Library and its “renovation”devastated the campus with a majority of its collection sent to storage, and the stacks replaced by “lavish offices.” See the coverage by Rebecca Schuman in Slate http://www.slate.com/articles/life/education/2014/05/college_libraries_should_keep_their_books_in_the_stacks.html
and http://librariesincrisis.wordpress.com/2014/05/13/growing-trend-warehoused-libraries/
See the excellent Colby Faculty response at to the controversial Miller Library renovations at http://www.thecolbyecho.com/opinion/an-open-letter-from-the-faculty-concerning-miller
Faculty need to stand up for their right to control their own scholarly means of production.
@Anonymous Seriously, who or what did make this decision?
@anon re: the pic caption: the town bookseller says this to belle during the first musical number–the beast just surprises her with the library. #truth
@Anonymous This is about ethics in Disney journalism.
@barnard girl came to barnard for the “barnard experience” advertised to me in high school… would have chosen a different school if i knew that experience was a lie.
came here for a small liberal arts college — take 100% of my classes at a major research institution because barnard does not offer the classes i want to take.
barnard is selling a lie. merge or be honest with prospective students.
@Arianna Friedman Yeah I chose a small liberal arts school and was surprised to find big university bureaucracy, though I suppose I’d find that almost anywhere…
This downsizing library/TLC thing is ridiculous since it just seems to make Barnard more dependent on Columbia’s space and resources for no real reason. Barnard needs the opposite of this.
@other barnard girl Barnard does have some of the small school benefits, like less bureaucracy and a more connected and cohesive student body, but they need to offer a wider range of better classes. Yeah, if I was an English or Econ major I’d have my pick of delightfully liberal-leaning electives with awesome professors, but anything even close to the STEM realm and you’re screwed.
As a math major, I’m stuck taking 4/5 classes at Columbia. I
If Barnard were to offer better STEM (which doesn’t include psych and econ…) classes, it’d be awesome. The few that I’ve taken here have been great.
At Barnard I thought I’ve found a great community, but academically it hasn’t been the greatest. And I think it’s solely because I’ve had to take so many classes at Columbia. Columbia has a horrible toxic culture, and Barnard should distance itself…I wish I could.
@anon This sort of silliness about building a $150 million SMALLER (for books) library will be the straw that breaks Barnard’s back. DSpar going and announcing the plans to build it while literally saying “we don’t know how we will pay for it” is the last step towards the end of Barnard as an independent college (financially or otherwise).
@Alum That was a while back, when the plans were still tentative. She also said the project wouldn’t go forward until Barnard knew how to pay for it. The fact that they’re proceeding shows that they’ve figured out the financials.
@anon alum Don’t be naive. Nothing is figured out. This is about raising money and not in the best interest of the school academically. It’s the bottom line and DSpar’s legacy of raising money and building a building, even if it does nothing to improve the student experience, academics, ranking, support faculty, etc. Ego Ego Ego
@Anonymous faculty need to shut the fuck up.
@Anonymous I thought the whole point of building a new big building was to make the library and study spaces LARGER. It is already one of the smallest libraries in the nation for a top college. This makes no sense. Plus no room to grow. Is Barnard now going to completely relay on Columbia’s libraries and study spaces?
@Anonymous *rely. No wonder you go to Barnard.
@Good work! Yes, because routine typos can so easily reveal one’s affiliation.
Or is it because only Barnard students make typos? That must be it.
@Anonymous Please stop your PMSing.
@Anonymous Hey! It worked! The menstruation process just stopped entirely!
Thank you, miracle anon-poster!( Thumbs up!)
@Anonymous From my understanding, the TLC will be A LOT larger than the current library and will include lots of modern study spaces and computer labs, etc. This article is only talking about the space allocated for books, which will be less than the size of the current library. In other words: more room for people, less room for books.
Personally I can see how you can justify that decision. I’ve never checked out a book from any cu library before (I’ve only had to use assigned textbooks or made due with material online), but I’ve definitely wandered around campus for a half hour looking for a spot to collaborate or study.
@Anonymous While utilitarian, that’s a bit anti-intellectual. I actually find that I check out Barnard materials more for assignments because they tend to have more copies of widely read academic works.
@Anonymous It also fits into a whole theme that doesn’t reflect well on this decision: “girls don’t need books, they just need somewhere to hang out and talk!” and all that.
@Anonymous Top college is a big claim to make. Barnard is top 100 or 200, but certainly not a top college.
@a Barnard librarian “The involvement of librarians in the planning process is hindered by the recent resignation of Dean of the Barnard Library and Academic Information Services Lisa Norberg.”
Lisa hasn’t hindered librarian involvement by resigning. However, her expertise will be sorely missed. Everything Lisa did and does is professional, shrewd and thoughtful.
@Anonymous Replacing Barnard’s library with a building that can hold even fewer books makes absolutely no sense. Who is making these decisions?
@Anonymous I bet there is plenty more space for administrative offices. That’s the top priority in academia these days. Not books, not faculty, not students. Check out the “student center” Lerner Hall or the “alumni center” on 113th Street. “Administrative center” more correctly describes both of them.
@Nagred Nagerstein Whatever it takes to get barnard students out of butler, I’m okay with
@TLC no scrubs pls
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