Our structure is very similar to that of Mississippi State Universities as described below. Most librarians are assigned at least one academic department to assist with collection development as well as information literacy instruction. Our liaisons and the teaching faculty submit resource requests to the acquisitions department but do not order materials directly. As with the Mississippi State Universities, our liaisons are not necessarily subject specialists.
We do assign librarians in tech services and collection management to be liaisons as well as those in public services.
Lori B. Snyder, M.S.L.S.
E-Resource Cataloging Librarian/Acquisitions Librarian
Integrated Learning Resource Center
(434) 582-2815
lbsnyder_at_liberty.edu
LIBERTY UNIVERSITY
Training Champions for Christ since 1971
----- Original Message -----
> I am on a task force here at The UT Arlington Library working on a
> new structure for Liaison Librarians. Collection
> Development/Acquisitions will be one element of that role. We would
> like to pose two questions:
> 1. How are your Liaison (subject) Librarians structured?
> 2. How did you decide on this structure?
> Thank you,
> Debra Lou Carter
> Monographs Manager
> carter_at_uta.edu
> Universtiy of Texas at Arlington Library
> Information Resources
> 702 Planetarium Place
> Arlington, TX 76019-0497
> Ph: 817-272-1507
> Fax: 817-272-5804
> _______________________________________________
> ACQNET-L mailing list
> ACQNET-L_at_lists.ibiblio.org
> http://lists.ibiblio.org/mailman/listinfo/acqnet-l
_______________________________________________
ACQNET-L mailing list
ACQNET-L_at_lists.ibiblio.org
http://lists.ibiblio.org/mailman/listinfo/acqnet-l
Received on Fri Oct 05 2012 - 12:32:51 EDT