Salutations!
Rather than the goals of collection development having changed drastically since the early days, the difference between collection development of then versus now lies in the process, materials, and formats having changed (Howard, 2011, p. 10). The first of these linked statements has truth woven in it, even when taking into account the historical views of quality compared to quantity of the collection and whether the librarian was acting in a predominately educational role for the community by offering “good” books (Huynh, 2004, p. 20-21). Regardless of philosophical views, the overarching goal of collection development is “building a coherently connected selection of appropriate items intended to serve an easily identifiable body of users” (Disher, 2014, p. 2). The ultimate goal of almost every library collection can well be said “to check out its material” (Disher, p. 94)!
The process, materials, and formats have changed. It is true that the materials and formats have shifted to include a wider variety than librarians dealt with in previous decades. Since collection development encompasses “all the steps from preparing a budget to eventually placing the book or material in the collection” (Howard, p. 10), the process has remained virtually unchanged, based on what I see in the literature. Materials and formats have definitely expanded over time. Libraries, once only dealing with print books, experience shelves holding audiovisual materials, including DVDs, audio books, and compact discs (Disher, p. 58), and links in OPACs to various electronic versions of items on the shelves for circulation. Within the non-book materials available, my public library offers kits patrons can borrow from the Teen collection, such as a waffle iron, popcorn machine, ukulele, and crochet hooks, akin to the “American Girl dolls” available for circulation in “Washington,” “fishing equipment in Minnesota,” and the “bicycles in Ohio,” all of which are contributing to the growing “library of things” movement across the United States (Mead & Dankowski, 2017). Formats of books and audiovisual materials have also changed over time, with print books morphing into eBooks, books on cassette moving to CDs then streaming, and VHS tapes becoming DVDs becoming Blu-rays and streaming.
RLGing,
Sarah Hope
PS. This was originally written in INFO 5040: Developing Library Collections during Summer 2023.
References
Disher, W. (2014). Crash course in collection development. Westport: Libraries Unlimited.
Howard, J. K. (2011). Basic selection tools: 21st-century style. School Library Monthly, 28(3), 9–11.
Huynh, A. (2004). Background essay on collection development, evaluation, and management for public libraries. Current Studies in Librarianship, 28(1/2), 19–37.
Mead, B., & Dankowski, T. (2017). the LIBRARY of THINGS. American Libraries, 48(6), 48–51.