STUDY
VISIT REPORT
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SINGAPORE STUDY VISIT
24TH – 27TH SEPTEMBER 2013
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Name: Nadine Bailey
Student Number: 11510358 Subject: INF407
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INSTRUCTIONS
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You are required,
as part of your subject assessment, to complete the attached Study Visit
report. You need to submit the report within 7 days of the end of the study
visit via EASTS as directed in
your subject outline.
Please use ONLY the space provided. You have been
given spaces to assist you to be concise and to analyse each visit and not merely describe the contents.
Your report will be read by the study visit leader,
and will be assessed as Satisfactory
or Unsatisfactory. Your report will
be returned within three weeks of the due date of your report. If your Report
is unsatisfactory, you will be asked to complete a second Report.
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Reflection Guidelines
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This Reflection
section should be a concise summation
of your reflections on the visits
made during your study visit. For each visit, in the space allocated, you
should comment on the value of the visit to you i.e. what you learned from
the visit and how this added to your knowledge of libraries in general or of
this particular type of library. This should be written in a narrative style.
You can write in first person and you are not required to provide references.
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Evaluation Guidelines
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Please write some
notes on each visit you made during the study visit, indicating what you
thought the strengths of the visit were and highlighting any weaknesses.
Also, please rate the facility from 1 to 5, with 5 being the highest rating.
This evaluation will be used by staff to judge the value of each visit and
whether that library should be visited again in future study visits. Your
notes can be presented in point form.
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Monday: Tanglin Trust School
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Reflection
The libraries are
extremely well resourced both in personnel and in materials. It clearly shows the advantages when the head
of the library is seen as a partner in information and knowledge rather than
just someone who manages online and offline resources. What struck me most
was when the head librarian mentioned that she’d been consulted on the design
and layout of the library prior to construction and also that she counted (in
power terms) as a head of faculty and was present in all meetings and part of
the school’s decision making process. This explains a lot why and how the
library came to be so well resourced, staffed and laid out.
In the senior library It
was interesting to see how the library constructed and managed the balance
between interactive (busy / noisy) and reflective (study / quiet) zones. The virtual space (http://libguides.tts.edu.sg/) was equally well
resourced. The primary and infant
libraries were very welcoming spaces where one can assume children will feel
at home and foster an early appreciation and love for reading.
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Evaluation Rating 5_/5
A very interesting visit. In our course we have had quite a few forum
discussions on the potential of libraries and library officers that often end
with what appears to be bureaucratic issues and powerless non-networked
library personnel. This is an
excellent example how someone who is not only extremely competent in what she
does can succeed in “her” world in the library space but can also be seen as
a powerful member of the decision making and resource allocating team. I would be interested to see if this
translates into better results academically for the school.
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Monday: Ngee Ann Polytechnic – Lien Ying Chow
Library
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Reflection
Once again Ngee Ann Polytechnic showed how a competent
library team paired with abundant resources and a supportive principal can
result in a very welcoming and well functioning space. Research has often indicated that students
in the vocational sector may be reluctant users of libraries. Their choice in making the entry area
the “lifestyle” part of the library
with an integrated café / bookstore concept and plenty of interactive
opportunities (TV / interactive table / game zone / Exhibition space) seems
to have translated in good visitation and loan statistics.
The library team seemed justifiably proud of the
many “firsts” they had booked. I was
struck by the enthusiasm of the staff, and was also impressed by the number
of staff training days (12 x 5 day training per year).
Good thought has gone into integrating Information
Literacy into the curriculum with a combination of library and lecturer
involvement. I liked the fact that it
involved not only classroom learning but also experiential learning such as
the knowledge hunt activity, some online learning and mobile learning.
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Evaluation Rating 5/5
Enthusiastic staff is contagious! If as visitors we had a good feeling about
the library I’m sure that also translates to how students feel about their
library. Well worth a visit, given the
debates in the library world about the café / bookstore concept versus the
academic library sec.
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Monday: Singapore Polytechnic Library
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Reflection
The library had been
extensively renovated in parts and it was clear that considerable thought had
gone into the design aspects within the library and it was really nice to see
how the various schools had contributed to the hardware and software of the library. The elephant in the room is their physical location;
the library suffers from being an early structure in an old and expanding
institution. One has to wonder what
the status is of the library and the librarians on campus. The campus is also
undergoing considerable renovation – but the whole concept of what a library
is and where it should be has not been challenged. Definitely a contrast with Ngee Ann and
Tanglin.
This has implications for
its footfall and the emphasis that needs to be put on promoting the
library. It is making use of mobile
technology (BYOM sessions) which makes sense given the physical constraints
the library faces. In my opinion the library could be far more radical in its
outreach with satellite library and satellite librarians and self-checkout or
mobile checkout.
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Evaluation Rating 3/5
The way in which the library was making extensive
use of its students abilities and knowledge, was good.
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Tuesday: Singapore Management University
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Reflection
I was interested to hear they had a “compulsory”
but non-credit bearing orientation, as the tour leader explained this was definitely
a cultural aspect of Singaporean students being compliant and not questioning
the enforcement of a policy.
While quite a few of the other libraries were
using social media as a promotion / academic information platform, SMU
libraries used Facebook, 4square and twitter purely for social interaction
with students. This is an interesting choice and I assume requires some
discipline not to “interfere” by including academic or promotional information.
Despite SMU and its library being relatively new
they had encountered problems with physical preservation related to the
Singapore climate, something that was a theme again later in the trip at the
Institute of South East Asian Studies.
Mould is contagious to other books and materials and also creates
health and safety problems.
Elimination of mould is costly, and the “obvious”
answer of digitisation of those parts of the collection have copyright and
ownership issues. I had to consider that some problems don’t have a simple in-house
solution that is cost-effective.
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Evaluation Rating
2/5
While SMU definitely gets the prize for the best
roof top view of “old” Singapore I’m not sure the visit had much added value
to the tour. Although they did teach me how to use Google scholar with links
to CSU library which was really valuable.
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Tuesday: National Library Board – Reference &
Public Library
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Reflection
As the NLB is a government
run organisation I was struck by just how innovative and artistic they were
in their displays and particularly the design and conception of the
children’s library as a “green” space. It appears that the government places a lot
of emphasis on the availability and accessibility of books to the population
by the employment of the hub and spoke method – with 3 large regional
libraries and 25 local libraries, some of which (10) are located in shopping
centres (following their opening hours).
The reference section was
very impressive but also very imposing, as was the exhibition space. As a
Singaporean resident I had actually never ventured up to this part of the
library which made me think about the role of a library in inviting people
into its sanctuary. Large spaces with
high ceilings are aesthetically striking, but studies in airport design for
example have shown that people feel less comfortable in them – this is used
deliberately in airports, but one would assume that libraries would want the
opposite. The children’s library is a
contrast with its cocooning space with low and lowered ceilings.
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Evaluation Rating
4/5
Interesting library, very enthusiastic staff. Nice
to see how a government can be behind information and learning and put its
money where its mouth is.
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Tuesday: National Library Board –
Chinatown Library
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Reflection
We had an interesting discussion on how there
never were enough newspapers for the senior citizens visiting the
library. It led me to wonder about how
a society goes about meeting the information needs of its elderly. I have noticed in Hong Kong queues of 100s
of pensioners in the early morning in order to get one of the free daily
newspapers. Here one has a physically
beautiful library which is well resourced with a special collection and the
issue is newspapers which don’t even cost that much. There is a philosophical question behind
this that seems to be a silver thread through libraries throughout the ages
which is whether one gives patrons what they want, what they can’t access or
afford themselves or what you think they should have. The UWCSEA visit later in the week added
the dimension of giving them what you feel embodies your identity and
purpose.
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Evaluation Rating
4/5
Of course the fact it's a volunteer run library is
noteworthy as are the logistics involved. It was nice to see one of the shopping
mall libraries and also a special collection and how that was managed.
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Wednesday: Temasek Polytechnic
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Reflection
According to the library
about 70% of students use the library and they monitor unique visitors
through a patron tracking system, I’d not heard of this before and I thought
it a worthwhile exercise in order to make choices both on the promotion side
i.e. do you want this number to be bigger, or is it appropriate, and also to
ensure there is congruence between the users and the collection.
I liked the fact they used
Pinterest for book displays and was generally impressed by their (student
designed) signage and interactive booth.
It was clear they didn’t have the level of budget of the other polytechnics,
but were doing a good job with what they had.
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Evaluation Rating
2/5
The added value was as a contrast /foil to the
other 2 polytechnics that had been renovated more recently and were better
(and privately topped up) resourced. I’d rather have spent more time at
UWCSEA or the library supply centre.
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Wednesday: United World College of SE
Asia - EAST
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Reflection
The presentation focused on the philosophy of
library / spatial design and building community identity through a
collection.
Since the library was purpose built for a new
campus of a school with an existing ideology and value system, the librarian
could incorporate both the latest thinking about library design and have a
chance to build a collection from scratch.
This was a unique opportunity to see how such thinking translated to
very practical aspects such as having classes of 22 pupils throughout the
school resulted in tables, rooms and chairs seating exactly 22 people right
down to applying the theories of Thornburg on learning spaces to the physical
space.
As far as collection development was concerned,
the school mission, educational goals and multi-cultural diverse community
were used in guiding the acquisition of materials and the consideration of
their format in a very idealistic way with careful consideration particularly
to the concepts of culture. I found it
made me think a lot about how identity of an organisation is expressed – in
contrast - the Tanglin Trust Schools very clearly identify themselves as “the
British” school in Singapore.
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Evaluation Rating
5/5
Would have liked to spend more time at UWCSEA for
more esoteric and philosophical discussion.
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Wednesday: National Library Board Supply Centre
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Reflection
The informative talk
raised a number of ideas and discussion of the current trends around the way
in which material is catalogued, tagged and linked to other information. The contrast between the “think tank”
nature of the office doing the acquisition and describing and the back-end “industrial
machine” of the physical processing, distribution and storage system was
fascinating.
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Evaluation Rating
3/5
Visit was a little rushed.
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Wednesday: Singapore Press Holdings
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Reflection
SPH had a couple of aspects that differed from
other libraries, including the need to be open and available for longer
hours, participation in the editorial meetings, a very proactive approach to
the information needs of their ‘clients’ and the merging of the English and
Chinese libraries.
I personally have difficulty in tagging, storing
and finding material in my limited family video footage, so I could identify
with the issues of Razor TV where they add 40 terabytes of footage every 3
weeks and need to cut around 70% of it and tag and store the rest using a new
content management system. I felt
there was a little bit of disjoint between the questions I had on information
retrieval – particularly from the visual and audio-visual side and the
presentation which was more focussed on traditional print and picture media.
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Evaluation Rating
4/5
Interesting to see a corporate library after the
other academic /public libraries.
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Thursday: Nanyang Technological University – Lee Wee
Nam Library
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Reflection
I was surprised at the library response to the
topic / question of Open Access, it appears to be an area that none of the
libraries are prepared to take a strong stand on, either morally or
conceptually – I’m not sure who drives the debate in Singapore, the academic
institution, its libraries or the central government.
It is interesting they had a special promotion /
outreach program and I was impressed by their personalisation of approach to
the students and the good response it received. Each library we visited seems
to have spent a lot of time and effort into ensuring that the libraries are
accessible and welcoming to the students.
They also made it very clear that their focus was on the students and
not faculty, something I’ve not heard verbalised so strongly in other
university libraries.
In terms of reference librarians there was a
strong presence of subject specialists, which I can imagine is well received
by students particularly the technical areas. Since I’m doing INF406
Information Sources and Services I found learning about the ways in which
they were creating subject guides by the subject librarians, the assistance
with metadata, taxonomy and website and blog design very worthwhile.
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Evaluation Rating
3/5
It was good to include a university academic
rather than vocational library. I’d include it over Temasek for a more
balanced visit.
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Thursday: Institute of South East Asian Studies
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Reflection
One has to question the continued existence of
this type of niche library that appears to duplicate the collection of other
institutions and struggle both with preservation of its materials and its own
identity. It will take a very strong
and politically and academically connected individual to make something of
the potential of this library. Browsing the shelves one could see that a huge
weeding exercise would have to be undertaken – for example having the
encyclopaedia Britannica and various yearbooks is very questionable for such
a specialised collection on a very limited budget.
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Evaluation Rating
3/5
Interesting from the preservation – physical
collection and existence – aspect.
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Summary Reflection (What you learned overall)
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I wish I had done this tour before I started my
course as I learnt so much. On the other
hand, having completed a couple of courses, it made all the subjects I’ve
been doing in abstract fall into place and make me even more enthusiastic
about my career change.
The most interesting “take away” for me was the
idea of organisation identity and philosophy and how that translates into
collection development, space design and the staffing of the library. While most of the libraries had many things
in common – quiet spaces, communal space, collections of print and digital
material, it is fascinating how each differentiated themselves and carved a
niche in the organisation of which they were part, and collectively as a part
of the Singaporean society as a whole.
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