Using Evidence in Practice
Isabel Vargas
Ochoa
Stockton
Campus & Web Services Librarian
California
State University, Stanislaus
Stockton,
California, United Sates of America
Email: ivargas2@csustan.edu
Received: 23 Aug.
2022 Accepted: 7 Dec.
2022
2023 Vargas Ochoa.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative
Commons‐Attribution‐Noncommercial‐Share Alike License
4.0 International (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use,
distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is
properly attributed, not used for commercial purposes, and, if transformed, the
resulting work is redistributed under the same or similar license to this one.
DOI: 10.18438/eblip30230
This article
describes the use of evidence to inform the development and growth of library
services on a regional campus in the diverse city of Stockton, California. The
Stockton Campus Library (SCL) at the Stockton Campus, a regional campus of the
California State University (CSU), Stanislaus, serves nearly 12% of the
school’s 8,847 FTE student population, and serves 20 full-time Stockton based
faculty (California State University, Stanislaus [CSU], 2021). CSU Stanislaus
is a Hispanic-serving and minority-majority university with ethnic minorities
making up 70% of total enrollment and three-fourths of our undergraduates are
first-generation students. Out of the Stockton students enrolled in fall 2021,
48% are Hispanic/Latino, 17% are Asian, 8% are Black/African American, and 24%
are first-generation students (CSU, Stanislaus, 2021).
The SCL
strives to offer the same services that are provided at the main campus located
in the city of Turlock. The SCL is committed to providing equitable access to
all Stanislaus State students, faculty, and staff. The J. Burton Vasché Library at the Turlock campus is a newly renovated
building featuring 3 floors, over 380,000 physical books, 19 study rooms, and
more than 1,000 study seats. The SCL on the Stockton campus currently occupies
a 1,400 sq. ft. suite and offers 300 print books and 56 study seats. The
re-establishment and expansion of the SCL is an ambitious goal, and reaching
the current stage is an encouraging accomplishment.
The SCL was
established in 1999 after the University formally founded the regional campus
in Stockton in 1998. The first Stockton library was named Stockton Library
Access Center (LAC) and was allotted a suite of 2,700 sq. ft., funding for a
print collection, a full-time staff member, and a librarian. The Stockton LAC
flourished for almost a decade, providing full library services to the growing
Stockton campus community. The direction of the Stockton campus took a sharp
turn when the United States economy was hit by the 2008 housing market crisis.
Under the pressure of a sharply reduced budget, the University decided to
partially close the Stockton campus. The LAC became primarily a remote service
as onsite staff were re-directed to the main campus. In 2012, when the
University was attempting to establish self-support programs and a
well-situated library space at Stockton, the LAC was moved to an 840 sq. ft.
room. It took almost another decade for the University to revisit the potential
of the Stockton campus. In 2020, the Stockton Campus Library returned to a
1,400 sq. ft. library suite and opened in person services in fall 2021.
When the SCL
opened in fall 2021, we were under specific safety regulations due to the
COVID-19 pandemic which made offering in-person services challenging. However,
our goal was to offer equitable access despite these challenges. In describing
a post-pandemic future for library services, Dave Shumaker (2021) has explained
that “effort to overcome unequal access to information and technology will
continue to be a top priority” (p. 15). To offer equal access to virtual and
in-person library services that the Turlock campus offers, the SCL, as well as
many other university departments, needed additional funding. However, there
was a decline in student enrollment throughout the university, at both Turlock
and Stockton campuses (CSU, Stanislaus, 2021), which impacted available
funding. For the SCL, funding was an issue even before the pandemic. Now as we
return to in-person services, SCL is fighting to stay present and to continue
expanding while working with limited resources.
To start
re-establishing the new space and library, I assessed the design and structure
of the library space to better fit the needs of the Stockton students and the
services to be implemented. Deciding where elements of a new library space
would go prompted anticipated challenges. A complex obstacle for library
managers in similar situations, is to “plan for a new or renovated library
space,” and determine “how to incorporate as much flexibility as possible,” (p.
410) as Mary Augusta Thomas (2000) explained in her article on redefining
library spaces. Flexibility in services and design relies heavily on the needs
of the community that the library serves. The challenges for a library
re-design and transformation increase when there is a shortage in personnel and
funding. Currently, the SCL has one full-time librarian hired in spring 2021,
and one full-time library staff hired in spring 2022.
Priorities
for the library also align heavily with traditional library services: access to
books, study spaces, computers and printing, and research or reference help. A
front desk for check-outs and research help was necessary. Study space and
computers and printing were other necessities when designing the space. Because
the SCL re-opened with no browsable print collection, building a library
collection was fundamental as well.
Considering
the limited space in the library suite, it was crucial to document the necessary
programs and services the library wanted to offer to students. This also meant
surveying the Stockton campus community, preferably those primarily serviced,
like students and faculty, and aggregating their responses.
Connecting
with the community at Stockton is the foundation to building the library at
Stockton and implementing services. After I was hired as the Stockton Campus
Librarian, my objective was to build a print collection, since the initial
collection was lost after the recession in 2008, and to design services for the
opening in fall 2021. A survey was conducted, and students and faculty were
invited to participate.
Surveys were
created and shared with Stockton faculty in April 2021, and with Stockton
students in May 2021, to aid in the planning and implementation of in-person
library services for the start of the fall semester in August 2021. Emails were
distributed to both parties with a survey deadline included, and an incentive
(gift card) was offered to students who completed the survey.
Both faculty
and students were offered separate surveys. They were given four weeks to
complete the survey, and for the students, to also be considered for the gift
card drawing. In total 11 Stockton based faculty and 83 Stockton students
participated in the survey. The following were the questions asked in the
student survey:
The following
were the questions asked in the faculty survey:
The majority of Stockton students who participated in the survey were psychology,
nursing, business, liberal studies, social sciences, and criminal justice
majors. 82% of the student participants were undergraduate students, and 18%
were graduate students.
Figure 1 illustrates
students’ preference to visit the SCL during the afternoon shifts. Many
Stockton and distance learning students work during the day,
thus most courses are taught in the evenings. As expected, students would also
like the library to be open in the evenings. Similarly, students are looking
forward to receiving research help in the afternoons (Figure 2). Student
preference was split when it came to how they would like to receive research
help from the librarian, as seen in Figure 3. Most students preferred
walk-in research help, followed respectively by email, in-person appointment,
and a virtual appointment.
Figure 1
Student
survey: Time visitation preferences.
Study spaces
and computers and printing were unsurprisingly the most requested services for
the SCL to offer. Students were primarily interested in having a study space or
area in which they can utilize Wi-Fi, research, and print course assignments
and papers (Figure 4), although it is also important to note that students were
also looking forward to checking out books as well.
When students
were asked if they had any questions or suggestions, most asked for study
spaces, including reservable study rooms, and for extended opening hours.
Figure 2
Student
survey: Time preferences for getting research help.
Figure 3
Student
survey: Preferred methods of getting research help.
Figure 4
Student
survey: Services students are looking forward to.
Similar to students,
Stockton faculty chose afternoons as the preferred time for the library to be
open, followed closely by evenings, then mornings (Figure 5). Faculty also
preferred weekend hours, as opposed to students who did not rank the weekends
so highly.
Faculty were
asked to provide the SCL with feedback regarding collection development and
materials they would like to see at the library. There was a general response
from Stockton faculty wanting to see literature in all subjects offered at the
university at the SCL, including a reference section and a children’s book
collection.
Figure 5
Faculty
survey: Time preferences for library hours.
Faculty and
students were eager to have a space to study and a print collection with
literature relevant to their major programs and departments. Gathering from the
survey’s open-ended feedback, students and faculty expressed gratitude for an
on-site full-time librarian to conduct research help and offer information
literacy instruction. Students and faculty were also eager for study spaces, a
library collection, and Wi-Fi-access, as well as computers and printing.
These results
helped us design the library space and services in our preparation for our
re-opening in fall 2021, the first time in-person services were offered at the
SCL since the pandemic. The survey results also serve as proof that the SCL
needs consistent and unwavering attention and funding. Offering the same services
and materials that are part of larger university libraries, like print
collections, study spaces, and computers, is the necessary initial step to
rebuilding and connecting with the community in a regional campus.
We planned
our library hours based on the feedback received from the survey. Although
weekend hours were not offered due to staffing, in fall 2021 the library opened
from 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday through Friday. After a library staff member was
hired, evening hours were implemented in spring 2022 from 9 a.m.-7 p.m., Monday
through Thursday, and Fridays from 9 a.m.-5 p.m..
Following the request from students and faculty to have a diverse collection,
we purchased print materials utilizing the one-time academic collection fund of
$10,000. Given the need for study spaces, we designed the layout of the library
suite to make use of the library spaces as much as possible which included
adding a printer, copier, and computer tables with six computers that were
spaced out to practice social distancing. Finally, we offered a research help
desk and research help hours for virtual and in-person consultations.
There were
both successful and unsuccessful changes in the library. Evening hours had
twice as much patron count and usage as the morning hours. Because most classes
are held in the evenings, students and faculty appreciated the extended opening
hours.
In terms of
the library layout, the arrangement of the bookshelves proved to be a success.
We assembled the bookshelves against a wall in a hallway that crosses the
center of the library. When students, staff, or faculty walk across the
library, they are met and drawn to the books displayed. It has since prompted
the community to stop and browse the collection.
The initial
layout arrangement of the reading room in the library, meant to be a quiet
lounge area, did not attract many students at the start of the 2021-2022
academic year; however, I was unsure of whether this was because the library
initially opened in the fall semester when many classes were held online and in
hybrid formats, or if the open space layout was not attractive to students.
Nonetheless, at the start of the fall 2022 semester, the reading room was
reconceptualized and rearranged to remove empty spaces and provide a much more
intimate study space area. In spring 2022, after the study space was
rearranged, students used the lounge area more than they did in fall 2021.
During fall
2021, laptops, webcams, and other technology equipment check out statistics
were low. The library promoted library technology equipment for check out via
the library website and through social media to encourage students to utilize
technology equipment. However, students often asked for laptops they could
check out for the semester and the library offered laptops to check out for up
to four hours daily. Yet in spring 2022, technology check out statistics grew.
As we offer more in-person services and academic courses, we anticipate higher
usage in the upcoming academic year.
It is
important to continue to work with students to grasp the community’s needs and
help with the extended design of the library space and services. It is not only
critical to have students involved in the initial planning process but having
students as partners is essential. This type of student-as-partners approach
will include shared decision making and will foster inclusivity (Salisbury,
2020). As we re-establish our presence, our true focus is in supporting the
success and research of the students.
The survey
provided the library with data utilized for identifying and confirming services
necessary for student success. Since the survey was conducted virtually and
during the COVID-19 pandemic when most students had not visited the library or
used its resources, I plan to conduct an in-person study as well. An in-person
survey with students, while they are physically using the library space and
services, may reveal new insights and provide us with alternate and relevant
feedback.
Our next
steps for the SCL are to continue developing the collection and continue to
design the library space and library programs and services. For future design
and management of library services, the SCL will follow a similar project
management style as that of the National Health Service Library’s redesign. In
the case study for the National Health Service Library, the redesign
transformation followed a four-stage approach for project management: start,
plan, implement, and close (Scott, 2021). The SCL is currently in the implement
stage and will re-route to plan and implement a couple more times over, until
the transformation of the SCL is complete and ready for its “close” stage.
Until then, the library will connect with the community and strive for a new
and enhanced library presence as the campus offers in-person services again.
California State University,
Stanislaus. (2021). Enrollment. https://www.csustan.edu/iea/institutional-data/enrollment
Salisbury, F., Dollinger, M.,
& Vanderlelie, J. (2020). Students as partners in
the academic library: Co-designing for transformation. The New Review of
Academic Librarianship, 26(2-4), 304–321. https://doi.org/10.1080/13614533.2020.1780275
Scott, R. J. (2021). A best-it
solution: Transforming an NHS library and knowledge service in readiness for a
new hospital building without a traditional library space. Journal of the
Medical Library Association, 109(3), 483–489. https://doi.org/10.5195/jmla.2021.1167
Shumaker, D. (2021). The next
normal: The post-pandemic future of library services. Information Today, 38(4),
14–16.
Thomas, M. A. (2000). Redefining
library space: Managing the coexistence of books, computers, and readers.
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