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Title: Are libraries finished? Five arguments for and against
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-12340505
Published: Feb 6, 2011
Author: Peter Jackson BBC News
Post Date: 2011-02-06 07:48:33 by Tatarewicz
Keywords: None
Views: 105
Comments: 7

With more than 400 public libraries under threat of closure, the campaign to save them is gathering pace. But in an age of downloads, cheap books and easy online shopping, can this great British institution survive?

Some of the UK's best-selling authors have joined the fight against "cultural vandalism" by backing a national day of protest read-ins against library closures on Saturday.

But no matter how eloquently Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy or author Colin Dexter extol their virtues, the fact is library visitor numbers - like their budgets - are falling.

Campaigners say they are irreplaceable doors to learning more relevant now than ever before, but for others the speed and breadth of the web has rendered them obsolete dinosaurs.

So what can the internet provide that a library can't, and when is there simply no online substitute for a trip to your local library? Here are five examples on either side: Only at a library

1. Specialist research As tempting as it is to view the web as a panacea for gathering information, there are gaps only library documents, books and maps can fill.

Local and family historians as well as academic and historical researchers are among those who still rely heavily on paper and print.

Historian and author Andrew Dalby, 63, who edits pages for online encyclopaedia Wikipedia from his home in France, says he still needs regularly visits to good libraries in England.

"It's amazing what you can find online and also amazing what nobody managed to produce yet," he says. Continue reading the main story New chapter for UK libraries

* 4,517 public libraries including mobile ones * 398 libraries plus 53 mobiles under threat or recently shut * 3.4 million fewer visits in 2010 than in 2009 * 188,000 fewer active borrowers in 2010 than 2009 * £1.09bn net spend on libraries in 2010 * 1,217 more volunteers last year than 2009 - a rise of 11%

Sources: Chartered Institute of Public Financing & Public Libraries News

"Those libraries that have managed to retain older collections need to go on retaining them... we need that evidence of ingenuity, originality and inspiration that we can lose if we only look at things produced in the last few years."

2. Environment to learn Sometimes there's no substitute for human contact. Mr Dalby says just being in a place surrounded by books and information with help at hand to access them is invaluable.

Whilst some will crave the refuge of silence libraries offer, others such as the vulnerable and isolated have a place to interact, learn and meet people.

Librarian and campaigner Lauren Smith, 23, says some lonely people would be even more isolated by being left on their own in a room trying to use the internet.

3. Expert staff Anyone who's spent five minutes trawling the thousands of medical and health websites will know the perils of misinformation.

Librarians have specialist knowledge and are trained to find reliable information and evaluate it - a skill as relevant in the digital age as it has always been.

Mr Dalby says simple Google searches are hit and miss, throwing up websites edited to varying degrees of academic rigour and professionalism. Librarians can help navigate through the "labyrinth" of information and around these pitfalls, he says.

4. Free internet access With 30% of the population still without a home internet connection, libraries are for many their first and last online experience. Books Libraries allow dialogue to flourish and enrich local democracy, supporters say

Although some charge after a certain period, all libraries should offer at least some free online access.

Ms Smith says libraries reduce the "digital divide" by offering free access to those who can't afford a pc or monthly subscriptions.

5. Engage in local democracy Community forums in libraries are the perfect place to meet and engage in local politics because they're neutral, non-judgemental spaces, Ms Smith says.

"The problem with the internet is people flock together and have similar views, there's no real dialogue between people who have different views," she says.

"Libraries do so much more than just give information, there are community discussion groups... and reading groups where you can talk about green initiatives or economic issues." Only online

1. Searchability The speed of research and interactivity of the internet make it an altogether richer experience than traditional libraries.

Mr Dalby says: "You can get lost in the world of information on the internet but we gain and lose.

"We tend not to read things all the way through anymore. You find a link, follow it and never go back to what you were originally reading, which is perhaps bad for the attention span.

"On the other hand, it's serendipity. It's wonderful that you can leap on from one source of information to another, from one question to another series of questions, it is a wonderful resource." Kindle E-readers like the Kindle take the weight off book lovers

2. Digital books Forget catching a bus to the library to carry home a limited number, yet heavy stack nonetheless, of books.

For those who can afford a portable reader like a Kindle or iPad, the convenience of accessing books on a beach, up a mountain, or anywhere else for that matter, can be irresistible.

But with sales of e-books fast catching up paperbacks, the full impact on traditional publishers has yet to be revealed.

3. Comfort in numbers OK, forums and social networks can be an impersonal way to interact, but sometimes magic happens. Mr Dalby explains: "Sometimes the right answer just comes when people ask each other questions on forums.

"One adds one bit of information, another something else, and that information could be questioned by a third or fourth person.

"You create something together like bees in a hive, like bees building a honeycomb".

4. Brings niches together If you had a niche interest in something, it wasn't always easy to find someone with the same niche interest, now it really is, says Mr Belam.

"If you were, say, a Leeds United fan in Croydon, you used to have to join a club or put leaflets in your local library, then hope you find people in common.

"Community activity used to revolve around notice boards in town halls and libraries, now your notice board is global."

5. Self-publishing Mr Belam says the traditional barriers to publishing have been shifted by the advent of do-it-yourself e-books on the internet.

Whereas information in libraries has been limited to the books on its shelves - the information which managed to get published, sites like Blurb allow you to print on demand, he says.

Various sites allow you to download software which will format your manuscripts.

"You used to only be able to publish news by owning the printed presses, and you needed a publisher to agree to publish your book, now you can publish books on demand," he says. Œ79;

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 4.

#1. To: Tatarewicz (#0)

Public libraries have taken a terrible beating in the past few decades. They were invariably among the first public services to be cut back whenever municipal budgets were in trouble. Even when the libraries were kept open, they were often burdened beyond normal endurance; schoolboards pressured the library system to spend its own money to buy up books that the schools wanted but didn't want to spend their own money for, various recreational and community centers were shut and the public libraries were turned into ersatz daycare centers and outpatient clinics and homeless shelters, etc.

At the same time, from mostly unrelated causes, the publishing industry was taking it on the chin. Serious books of lasting merit seldom got serious promotion from major publishing houses, and sometimes lived and died in obscurity, unbought by libraries. Public demand on the libraries from the people who voted usually meant an inordinate amount of budget spent on multiple copies of the latest romance or mystery - most of those copies would be thrown out within a decade. Libraries were also expected to offer free competition against the movie rental stores like Blockbuster.

Yes, research is possible on the internet, and sometimes it's possible to find stuff that even good municipal libraries wouldn't have ... but far too often this research isn't free but only available from subscription services. This means that most students, young and old, are denied these resources.

The situation isn't necessarily better or worse than it was before the internet, but it is different and it has different strengths and weaknesses.

Shoonra  posted on  2011-02-06   9:51:51 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Shoonra, Tatarewicz (#1)

Public libraries have taken a terrible beating in the past few decades.

Libraries? How about bookstores? For most research anymore, just subscribe to a local university's library services for a modest fee (there are other fee based research centers in the Internet as well) and if you want buy kindle software for your PC so as to purchase an ebook (if it is available) so as to not clutter up the home with those hard/softback books of the distant past.

Your local library and bookstore are destined the way of the dinosaur anymore because of the computing power of your home machine and the Internet.

buckeroo  posted on  2011-02-06   12:40:12 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: buckeroo (#2)

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Eric Stratton  posted on  2011-02-06   12:43:38 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Eric Stratton (#3) (Edited)

Using your computer, you get all stored away nicely in a categorized way (based on your own filing system) and can reproduce the same on flash, CD, HDD, whatever you want.

And, you can enlarge the font size without using glasses so as to minimize the strain on your eyeballs; bookmark the same away for future reference, highlight portions of text that are near and dear to your heart and easily plug that reference into your own work of research whether personal or professional.

The power of the home computer is phenomenal and that power is relegating bookstores and local libraries away into the distant past; much the way of the phonograph record player or the newspaper. BTW, the costs of new books are soaring as a function of the production costs with the exception of used books (if you can find them); but even then, you usually pay for shipping and handling.

buckeroo  posted on  2011-02-06   12:57:36 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 4.

#5. To: buckeroo (#4)

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Eric Stratton  posted on  2011-02-06 13:22:59 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: buckeroo (#4)

One of the drawbacks - yes, a drawback - to books on the internet or by way of kindle or a similar computerized method is that notes cannot be added by the reader even to his own computerized view of it.

Shoonra  posted on  2011-02-06 15:31:24 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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