Definition: A collection of materials shelved or stored together as a group. Typically their catalog number/shelf location would not have caused them to otherwise be stored as a group in one location.
Background: Some of the major reasons often used for creating such collections have been:
In many cases these were legitimate reasons for having special collections in the past, and some instances may justify them today. However, until the advent of automated records and the timely, accurate information such records provide, quite often special collections were generated for one major reason: the records of the library concerning the collection of materials were so out of date, and perhaps misfiled if the library was on a card catalog, that the records were sometimes as much a hindrance as a help in locating specific materials or determining if the materials were even supposed to be in the collection. If a library grouped materials that were frequently requested into a special collection and continued adding new titles to that collection, then they formed a way around the inadequacies of the library records.
The automated records, including the online catalog, of the Metropolitan Library System have eliminated this major reason for many of the old special collections. The printed records generated by automation also help eliminate the need for such collections.
Today the online records for use by library staff provide staff a complete, accurate, up-to-the-minute record of materials owned, at what libraries owned, and whether or not the materials should be on the shelf at that instant in any library. They may also determine what materials are currently on order but not yet received. The library user has a Computer Output Microfilm (COM) catalog for their use that lists all inventoried holdings of the library system, accessible through subject, author and title entries. These films are completely updated every three months. Yet another avenue available to the library user in locating nonfiction books is the printed Subject Locator Guide. This printed and bound guide alphabetically lists all subject entries in the library catalog, and under these headings lists all of the catalog number/shelf locations that materials on this subject may be found. By the entries the user can immediately discern what shelf locations have the least and most number of books in that given subject. Today, in the last quarter of 1986, the library system is conducting pilot test sites for an online catalog for use by the general public, which will further enhance the immediacy and completeness of information concerning the materials collection to the library user.
The Problems: To a great extent, special collections have become a hindrance to managing the proper storage of the materials as well as locating them. In this era of immediacy and accuracy, they also present possibilities for justified complaints by library users.
Special collection designations do not appear in the Subject Locator Guide for users who are seeking nonfiction materials by subjects. Thus, any nonfiction materials shelved in a special location will be misplaced for the user of this Guide.
Special collection locations do not appear in the catalog number/shelf information placed on materials by which library staff shelve them. Therefore, libraries must rely on special markings generated locally. Quite often these markings are in the form of small, colored paper dots that re glued to the books or other media.
Special collections, then, contribute to the possibilities of individual materials being improperly shelved/stored. Mis-shelving creates an environment for poor library service and management. Following are some of the major factors affected:
Given the current environment, problems with staff errors in handling materials and difficulties of library users in using the materials collections can be expected to increase geometrically with either an increase in the number of special collections in the libraries and/or an increase in the overall size of the materials collection.
Special collections require additional staff time to order, catalog and process materials when compared to the same processes involved in dealing with materials that are not part of a special collection.
A proliferation of special collections can be expected to cause problems for library staff who work Sunday at a library that is unfamiliar to them. They may fail to locate requested materials that are filed in special collections, and they will run a high risk of
shelving special collection materials in the wrong place.
A memorandum requesting consideration of a new special collection should be submitted to the Director of Public Services. These requests should at least contain the information shown on the Required Information Memorandum that follows.
Links:
[1] https://my.metrolibrary.info/drupal/policy-amp-procedure-revisions/administrative
[2] https://my.metrolibrary.info/drupal/tags/access-materials
[3] https://my.metrolibrary.info/drupal/tags/collection-organization
[4] https://my.metrolibrary.info/drupal/tags/materials
[5] https://my.metrolibrary.info/drupal/tags/special-collections
[6] https://my.metrolibrary.info/drupal/sites/default/files/policy_procedures/new/files/am342_specialcollections_1986.doc
[7] https://my.metrolibrary.info/drupal/sites/default/files/policy_procedures/new/files/am342_specialcollections_1986.pdf