and the impact on alliance libraries jim kopp, lewis & clark college doug erickson, lewis &...

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and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade Alliance Council July 12, 2007

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Page 1: and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade

and the Impact on Alliance Libraries

Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark CollegeDoug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College

James Fox, University of Oregon

Orbis Cascade Alliance CouncilJuly 12, 2007

Page 2: and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade

So, George, what do you think

about the state of cultural

institutions in the Pacific Northwest?

What’s the Pacific Northwest?

Page 3: and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade

Other researchCarolyn Singer, “The Future of History Organizations,”

History News Vol. 61, No. 4 (Autumn 2006): 18-20.

D. T. Mix, “Letter from Austin -- Final Destination: Why Do the Archives of So Many Great Writers End Up in Texas,” The New Yorker (June 11 & 18, 2007): 58-71.

John H. Falk and Beverly K. Sheppard, Thriving in the Knowledge Age: New Business Models for Museums and Other Cultural Institutions (Lanham: Alta Mira Press, 2006).

RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts and Cultural Heritage – Spring 2007 issue

Page 4: and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade

What is a cultural institution?“Cultural institutions are those places that carefully develop and organize collections (of art, of books, of animals) according to scholarly principles and make them freely available to the public. Examples of cultural institutions are museums, zoos, art galleries, historical societies, botanical gardens, and libraries of all kinds. Read that last part one more time: libraries of all kinds.”

Kim Campbell“The secret cultural institution in your school: The school

library”Learning NC

(http://www.learnnc.org/lp/pages/kimcampbell20050926

Page 5: and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade

Libraries as cultural institutions A favorite professor of mine once wrote “libraries are places

where learners are destined to become free to live on their own horizons; they are our most lasting institutions for the exploration of possible worlds.” In the same piece, he also wrote about places that assist “the free explorer of the emerging senses…without external evaluations, impersonal curricula, artificial boundaries, constraining agendas, or ringing bells. This informality permits serendipitous discoveries and unplanned knowing to change the learner’s mind.”* My professor, Dr. David Carr, was writing about the nature of learning that is possible in cultural institutions, including the cultural institution that lies within the heart of the school: the school library.

*Carr, David. “Living on one’s own horizon: cultural institutions, school libraries, and lifelong learning.” School Library Media Quarterly, Summer 1991: 217–22.

Page 6: and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade
Page 7: and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade

What’s your mission?

The Alliance question:20 out of 33 present “mission” in some manner

5 mention “mission” on library home page 12 mention “mission” after 1 click 3 mention “mission” after 2 click 13 did not seem to identify a mission

Page 8: and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade

State of Cultural Institutions in the Northwest

Historical SocietiesOregon Historical SocietyLocal Historical Societies

Museums/Art GalleriesZoos/Botanical GardensLibraries

AcademicPublic

Page 9: and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade

Oregon Historical SocietyDodging a bullet“$2.8 million puts Oregon Historical Society on

solid footing”“OHS aims to triple school children attendance by

marketing to teachers, creating ‘learning center’” OREGONHERITAGE.COM: Now that the state has provided $2.8 million in funding

for the next two years, OHS has options.  Has the Board charged you with an overall strategic plan to implement?  Have you developed tactics yet? What is the probability for the return of the OHS Oral History Program? OHS Press? The Oregon History Project (OHP)?

GEORGE VOGT: The plan is still in discussion, and there will certainly be consideration of expanding programs; however, prudence dictates that we first balance the existing budget.  The state money helps a lot but we still have a gap to close through regular fundraising and earned revenue.  It does not automatically put a lot of cash on the table for restorations and new visions.

Page 10: and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade

OHS OREGONHERITAGE.COM: Regarding OHP (Oregon History Project, currently

directed by MaryAnn Campbell), have you decided how to move forward? What is the Society's vision for the OHS Research Library? What is the status of OHS's web-searchable database?  Obviously this is a great e-commerce opportunity, what with the 50,000 or 60,000 photos and museum artifacts, but actually implementing the program takes scanning, and a commercial web-interface so users can order prints.  How’s this going?

GEORGE VOGT: We're probably making the most progress in this area.  OHP continues under MaryAnn's supervision, and the grant to produce the Timeline addition to that website is well under way.  Ned and Sis Hayes have given us a large grant to update the IT systems, making possible Ned's dream of a significant e-commerce operation.  We expect to have about 20,000 historical photos in a web-searchable data base by early 2008, with the ability to handle orders over the net. The museum collection database will not be far behind.

OREGONHERITAGE.COM: I recall you mentioning last December that Wisconsin led a regional digital networking program with other libraries. Is this a possibility here in Oregon and the Pacific Northwest?

GEORGE VOGT: I've asked some questions about this.  There's moderate interest, but a lot of the energy is behind the Northwest Digital Archives (NDA) project.

Page 11: and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade

OHSBand-Aid or Tourniquet?Still MANY issues

Longer term viabilityTrustLeadershipAttitude

Competition vs. cooperationAbility to process materialsAvailability/Use

Page 12: and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade

Local Historical SocietiesAurora Colony Historical Society

Longer term viabilityTrust/LeadershipInadequate spaceAttitude

Competition vs. cooperationAbility to process materialsAvailability/UseLimited budget

Page 13: and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade

Other agenciesState Libraries

Washington State Library Washington State Digital Library Resources

Oregon State Library?Oregon State Historical Records Advisory

Board?

Page 14: and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade

Other factors

Page 15: and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade

Questions for Alliance Libraries?What are the realistic roles of the other

agencies?How do we know/ensure that other institutions

(even within Alliance) can/will handle collections in a way that benefit other Alliance institutions?

What products do/should we deliver?What is the priorities of digital projects?What is the role, if any, of the Alliance?What is our role for serving as the legacy of

cultural heritage in the region?

Page 16: and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade

Why is this important?“Read that last part one more time:

libraries of all kinds.”-- We are cultural institutions.

Page 17: and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade

Acting Locally, Thinking Strategically“The Future of History Organizations”

(2006 Getty Leadership Institute/AASLH)

“As history museum professionals heroically attempt to manage their institutions with appallingly few resources in terms of finances, personnel, and data, it is understandable why our attention has focused on immediate rather than long-term procedures. Yet, as a profession we must look to the long-term sustainability of the field as well as how emerging trends are affecting museums.”

“The history museum field needs a systematic and system-wide understanding of itself, a thorough analysis of where it is today, how the sector is changing, why those changes are taking place, what they imply for the future, and what policy issues are involved.”

Page 18: and the Impact on Alliance Libraries Jim Kopp, Lewis & Clark College Doug Erickson, Lewis & Clark College James Fox, University of Oregon Orbis Cascade

One final question?What is your legacy at your institution?