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Dear professionals,
kindly suggest me ,Is it necessary to keep the weeded documents in library?If yes ,please tell me the ways and methods to preserve it.
Tags:
NO
Dear sir,
I am unable to understand your reply.`No` means........
Pl go through below article source from: google
Weeding for Your Library’s Health
Webliography
Policies
Collection Maintenance/Weeding Policy for Wood Place Public Library
http://www.woodplacelibrary.org/Policy.html#Collection%20Maintenanc...
Ten criteria used to determine whether materials should be weeded are presented, along with information about who makes these determinations and what factors may override specific items’ identification as weeds.
Handbook of Federal Librarianship
http://www.loc.gov/flicc/pubs/federalhandbook.pdf
Section IIIB of this manual describes the rules, regulations, and processes surrounding weeding of Federal documents from depository collections.
Kansas Public Library Policy Manual
http://www.sckls.info/sysinfo/libpol/State%20Library%20Policy%20Man...
Part 3 of this manual, “Material Selection and Collection Development Policy,” includes, in Section VIII, detailed information about why and how to weed both nonfiction and fiction collections.
Miller Library, Keystone College
http://web.keystone.edu/Library/Policies.html
The brief weeding policy clearly follows from this small academic library’s collection development policy, demonstrating how the library’s mission guides both.
Morton Grove Public Library’s Collection Development and Materials Selection Policy
http://www.webrary.org/inside/colldevtoc.html
Morton Grove (IN) Public Library’s policy includes selection and weeding information for each part of the collection: each Adult materials Dewey number, each Youth subcollection, each audiovisual format, etc.
Reese Library, Augusta State University, Weeding Policy
http://www.aug.edu/libcirc/weed_policy.html
This model policy includes definition, rationale, criteria, and methodology involved in weeding the medium sized academic library.
Guidelines
California Department of Education: Weeding the School Library
http://www.cde.ca.gov/ci/cr/lb/documents/weedingbrochure.pdf
This small brochure, ready for copying, provides the very most basic terms and reasons associated with weeding school library collections. Included are a thumbnail set of criteria relevant to copyright dates, the cues offered by the acronym MUSTY, and suggestions for further guidance.
Collection Development Training for Arizona Libraries: Weeding
http://www.lib.az.us/cdt/weeding.htm
This site provides solid explanations of how to weed, both at the shelf and with the aid of examining circulation records, as well as responses to the typical reasons put forth for not weeding. Special collections for children, young adults, and reference, and of periodicals and audiovisual materials are addressed explicitly.
The CREW Method: Expanded Guidelines for Collection Evaluation and Weeding for Small and Medium-Sized Public Libraries
http://www.tsl.state.tx.us/ld/pubs/crew/index.html
The Texas State Library and Archives Commission has developed and updated perhaps the best known and certainly a comprehensive plan for developing, enacting, and maintaining weeding policies and schedules. “CREW” stands for “Continuous Review, Evaluation, and Weeding.”
Cumberland County College Weeding Policy: Audiovisual Materials
http://www.cccnj.edu/library/facultyContent.cfm?contentName=weeding...
Within this weeding policy, there is concise and helpful guidance related to maintaining healthy audiovisual collections. In addition to physical condition, these collections need to be tracked for content datedness and relevance of format to current users.
SUNLINK Weed of the Month - Archive
http://www.sunlink.ucf.edu/weed/
The Florida Department of Education built and continues to maintain in archived form a system for routinely weeding and reevaluating collections by Dewey topics. Specific Dewey ranges, the reasons to weed them, suggested specific titles to consider weeding, and more are indicated. An added value is simply the overall plan to examine specific areas—disabilities, the Olympics, stock market, computers, short stories, Africa, and dozens of other broad topics that suffer when regular reevaluation doesn’t occur.
Weed It! For an Attractive and Useful Collection http://www.wmrls.org/services/colldev/weed_it.html#Why
The Western Massachusetts Regional Library System offers advice on how to avoid publicity pitfalls when planning and undertaking weeding projects. While the much publicized and negative experience at San Francisco Public Library is given frequent reference, the guidelines offered transcend any single weeding project.
Press and Publicity
Beloit Public Library: Discarding of Library Materials Policy
http://als.lib.wi.us/BPL/discpol.htm
This Wisconsin public library places its weeding information on its Web page in a readily accessible place.
Books and Brew (Norfolk Public Library, VA)
http://www.npl.lib.va.us/press/releases/sep29_2004.html
Community event, fund raiser, and method for alerting the public to what happens to (some) weeded materials are combined in this announcement.
Marblehead Public Schools K-12 Library Media Centers Collection Weeding Policy
http://www.marblehead.com/staff/bowen/weeding.html
This explanation of why and how weeding should occur in the school library is imperfect, but it does offer aspects of public interest that should be addressed in a weeding policy message sent by any public agency library.
Why Do Libraries Weed…Even in Times of Reduced Budgets?
http://www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org/system/WHYWEED.pdf
Berkeley Public Library has mounted a Frequently Asked Questions page in response to organized—and uninformed—protests against any materials being weeded from its collections.
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