Evidence Summary
Academic Libraries Should Consider Deselection of Some Electronic Books
A Review of:
Waugh, M., Donlin, M., & Braunstein, S. (2015). Next-generation
collection management: A case study of quality control and weeding e-books in
an academic library. Collection
Management, 40(1), 17-26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01462679.2014.965864
Reviewed by:
Robin E. Miller
Assistant Professor and Research & Instruction
Librarian
McIntyre Library
University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire
Eau Claire, Wisconsin, United States of America
Email: millerob@uwec.edu
Received: 22 May 2015 Accepted: 23 Jul.
2015
2015 Miller.
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.
Abstract
Objective – To describe and advocate for the development of a
procedure to discard electronic books from an academic library collection.
Design – Case study.
Setting – Academic library in the United States of America.
Subjects – 514 electronic books purchased from NetLibrary, a
subset of 52,000 NetLibrary titles collected by the investigating library
2001-2007.
Methods – The researchers examined a set of 514 electronic
books in the health sciences and medical field, specifically for qualities such
as currency and content relevance. An anecdotal case with limited validity, the
goal was to articulate why a particular set of electronic books failed to meet
the investigating library’s collection standards, and to remove these e-books.
Main Results – A set of 514 e-books
published by ICON Health Publications were found to be mass-produced, and
displayed other notable problems, including age over seven years, outdated or
irrelevant content, quality issues, and inclusion in an older platform no
longer favored for e-books. The ICON Health e-books were removed from the
library collection and, with some difficulty, the items were also removed from
the vendor platform. The authors recommended an e-book weeding procedure that
considers six potential problems: publication date; inclusion of defunct
Internet links; mass production; low quality works by the same authors or
publishers; e-book packages that appear to feature multiple low quality works;
and e-books from early packages, which may have integration problems.
Conclusion – Electronic books may take up little physical space
but libraries should not ignore them when making deselection decisions because
their content may be inappropriate for a library or for the disciplines the
library serves. The ICON Health Publications e-book package is an egregious
example of low-quality e-book content that the authors discovered and
subsequently removed from their collection, offering a set of recommendations
based on the experience.
Commentary
A thought-provoking read for any practitioner
considering the problem of e-book retention and deselection; the authors argued
that e-books are candidates for discard, just like print material.
As the authors explained, a package of 514 e-books
from ICON Health Publications came to their attention in 2013. Upon reviewing
the titles in this set, the authors determined that the e-books were candidates
for deselection because they were mass-produced, having been compiled by
algorithm to create formulaic texts that shared similar wording, layout, and
source citations. Each text shared similar templates, sources, and sentences.
To illustrate this point, the authors listed sample titles, and included a
table showing a side-by-side comparison of two texts from the collection. The
authors omitted the total number of ICON texts they examined, leaving the
reader to wonder if they drew their conclusions from a sample of e-books or
from a review of every title in the package. In addition to mass-production,
the authors identified other specific problems with the ICON Health titles: age
greater than seven years, outdated content, and low relevance to institutional
collection priorities.
The authors described the unexpectedly difficult task
of removing the e-books from the vendor platform so that their users did not
continue to encounter the texts. This problem may interest many practitioners,
though the article did not address whether or not this problem is common. The
ICON Health package appeared to be a particularly egregious example of low quality
e-book content, however, the authors did not compare it to other packages in
their library’s collection.
Many library professionals regularly encounter
troublesome material and choose to discard it. However, the line between
interesting anecdote and significant case is blurred by the authors’ own
account of how they discovered the ICON Health package and the recommendations
they developed after weeding it. Though subject selection is as important to a
case study as it is in empirical research, the authors stated clearly that the
“case” was selected when it came to the attention of a group of librarians, who
identified reasons to deselect the material and subsequently wrote
recommendations based on the experience. The authors made logical arguments in
favor of systematic weeding of library e-book collections, using the example of
the ICON Health package to illustrate their point. They recommended e-book
weeding procedures that librarians could apply in any e-book deselection
process, but the article omitted discussion of how these procedures were
replicated or modified in smaller or larger, more systematic efforts. The
absence of replication, or at least re-application of the authors’
recommendations, limits the validity of the authors’ recommendations.
The Glynn’s critical appraisal checklist (2006) was
used to determine that this study lacked validity as a case study. The
methodology was not clearly defined and the rationale for selecting the ICON
Health package as the single subject was unclear. The authors’ recommendations
would be strengthened if they had drawn them from at least one additional case
of e-books. In the absence of a comparative approach, an explanation of how the
authors have replicated their recommendations in other collection development
decisions would have strengthened the report and aided library practitioners in
applying the same procedure to their own collection development. Nonetheless,
in the absence of robust literature about best practices for e-book selection
and deselection, the authors’ experience may be instructive to many
practitioners as they shape their e-book collections.
References
Glynn, L.
(2006). A critical appraisal tool for library and information research. Library
Hi Tech, 24(3), 387-399. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/07378830610692154