Collection Development Policy Statement: Packaging
I. General Description of the Collection and Its Users
The packaging science collection is an interdisciplinary collection serving
the study and research needs of undergraduate and graduate students in the Department
of Packaging Science. Faculty also use the collection but the emphasis is on
undergraduate student needs. Students from the School of Art and Design and
the School of Printing also utilize the collection.
The packaging science program is unique in the northeast and one of very few
in the country. As such, the majority of the materials needed to support the
program should be available in-house with Information Delivery supplying only
the more obscure or esoteric materials.
II. Description of the Programs Served by the Collection
A. Undergraduate
The Department of Packaging Science offers a B.S. in Packaging Science.
Three areas of concentration are offered: a management option, a technical
option, and a printing option.
B. Graduate
An M.S. degree in Packaging Science is offered. In addition, the department
offers an Executive Leader M.S. Program to practicing packaging professionals.
The program consists of four two-week summer sessions conducted over two consecutive
summers.
III. Subject and Language Modifiers
A. Geographic Areas
The geographic focus of the collection is primarily on the United States.
B. Chronological Periods
No restrictions. Emphasis, however, is on current developments or analysis
of recent events.
C. Languages
No restrictions. Emphasis is on English-language materials. Only selected
foreign language statistical sources and multilingual dictionaries/encyclopedias
are acquired.
IV. Date of Publication
General emphasis for acquisition of new titles is on current publications
in all subject areas. Acquisition/retention of material older than ten years
is based upon importance of the work to the discipline; usefulness for historical
information/perspective; extent of current publishing in the discipline; curriculum
needs for new program development; usage of existing material of same age; and
physical condition of the material. Retrospective acquisition of serials to
meet new program needs will be extremely selective and limited to the past five
years. Document delivery will be utilized instead to meet these needs whenever
feasible.
V. Treatment of Subject Matter
A. Level of Treatment
Emphasis is on a collection which supports curriculum driven needs of students(primarily
undergraduate) and faculty. The special needs of the NTID students are considered
where relevant. Major published source material appearing in core collection
bibliographies or recommended lists will be included. Pertinent reference
sources will also be acquired. Every effort is made to accommodate faculty
requests for specific curriculum related titles.
B. Textbooks
Textbooks are not routinely acquired unless useful as general surveys or
handbooks for a particular area not otherwise represented.
C. Serials
Serials are of major importance in this field of rapid advances.
D. Newspapers/Newsletters
This material is acquired when content is appropriate to the scope of the
collection.
E. Government Documents
Government publications are acquired when the content is appropriate to
the subject scope of the collection; not maintained separately.
F. Maps/Atlases
Acquired selectively when appropriate for specific representations.
G. Multiple Copies
Multiple copies of monographic titles are acquired only when heavy use is
anticipated or demonstrated or at the curriculum-based request of a faculty
member. A select few journals are retained in both paper and microfilm for(up
to) five years, if use justifies, then in microfilm only. (See Bindery Policy/Procedure-Periodicals)
H. Other
Pamphlets are selectively acquired if sufficiently important to warrant
cataloging; no separate pamphlet/vertical file is maintained.
VI. Cooperative Collection Development Arrangements
No contractual cooperative collection development agreements for this discipline
have been made between RIT Library and any other library. Informal working
relationships with other member of the RRLC exist and closer associations pursued
in the future.
Where faculty and student research needs fall outside the primarily undergraduate
curriculum- based scope of the onsite collection, access to this information
will be provided through traditional, as well as, commercial document delivery
services.
VII. Publication Formats
A. Microforms
Journals are routinely retained in microfilm with the exception of titles
containing substantial graphical material or mathematical notation. (See Bindery
Policy/Procedure-Periodicals)
B. Non-Print Materials
Acquisition of traditional non-print materials (slides, videotapes, video
discs, films, sound recordings, slide/tape programs) is very selective and
made in consultation with the Media Resource Center Media Specialist, usually
at the request of a faculty member. Non-print materials are generally housed
in the Media Resource Center.
C. Software and CD-ROM
Indexing and abstracting services and other specialized sources will be
acquired in these formats where they meet subject collection criteria, as
well as, the Electronic Resources Policy criteria (in process).
VIII. Collection Maintenance
Continuous maintenance of the collection is carried out based upon systematic
evaluation of the collection in light of curriculum shifts, use statistics,
core bibliographies, physical space limitations and alternative availability
of information. Periodical titles will be reviewed annually prior to their renewal.
All other areas of the collection should be reviewed every three to five years
to remove materials no longer relevant to the curriculum in this discipline.
Included in the process is weeding of materials no longer relevant to curriculum
needs, elimination of superfluous titles where information is duplicated in
more current or authoritative sources, and the ordering of replacement copies
of damaged/ heavily used items still relevant to curriculum needs.
A. Weeding
- Duplicates Only Weeded
At least one copy in good condition of standard and classic titles listed
in major general bibliographies and special subject lists, such as Hanlon's
Handbook of Package Engineering should be retained in the collection.
- Selective Weeding
a. Monographs
In general, packaging materials should be reviewed every three to five
years to remove materials no longer relevant to the curriculum, older
materials where sufficient coverage is provided by more contemporary titles,
and multiple copies of materials where high use is no longer a factor.
b. Serials
- Indexing and Abstracting Services
Indexing and abstracting publications need to be available to cover
all curriculum-based topics and periods of study. Publications should
only be discarded when equivalent or improved coverage is available
through new sources, printed or electronic (i.e. covers approximately
same or more pertinent journal titles in the field and/or provides
enhanced search capabilities pertinent to our programs).
- Scholarly Publications
Long runs of key scholarly journals in all aspects of packaging that
meet the criteria given in the introduction to this section should
be retained indefinitely. Priority for retention should be given to
titles accessible through indexing and abstracting services available
at RIT Library and titles not available in any other Rochester-area
library. Short runs and broken runs should be scrutinized more carefully
and retention decisions should be based on the collecting levels assigned
in Section IX: Subject Divisions, usage statistics, importance of
title to discipline, and alternative availability.
- Trade Journals
Retention of trade journals should be carefully scrutinized. Those
that provide, primarily, timely information (industry and organization
news, new products, etc.) should be discarded after a period of one
to five years. Those that include articles of more lasting value should
be considered for longer retention, particularly if they are accessible
through indexing and abstracting services available at RIT Library.
- Current Edition/Year Only Retained
a. Monographs
- Textbooks
- Manuals of practice
- Career guidance and professional information
- Standards and policy guidelines
b. Serials
- Newsletters, calendars, other current awareness services providing
timely information about events and activities of organizations and
institutions, and employment opportunities
- Membership directories
B. Replacement of Materials
- Lost or Mutilated
Every effort should be made to replace lost or heavily mutilated titles
if they are judged to be of continuing relevance to the collection. When
mutilation is confined to a few pages, replacement copies of these pages
should be requested through the Information Delivery Service.(See Bindery
Policy/Procedure-Periodicals & -Monographs)
- Gifts
Gifts which duplicate existing holdings should be used to upgrade the
condition of the collection by replacing worn circulating copies with
more sound gift copies.
C. Stacks Maintenance
Packaging materials are found through-out the circulating collection but
concentrated in "TS" and "HF" areas. These areas should
be shelf-read frequently and the condition of items shelved in these areas
should be monitored to ensure that those in need of repair of rebinding are
attended to before they are damaged beyond repair.
IX. Subject Divisions
The packaging collection is interdisciplinary and draws on a number of subject
areas. The subject divisions include the following:
| |
Support Level
(see Introduction for key) |
| A. Packaging materials, e.g. plastics, ceramics and thin-films. |
C-1 |
| B. Packaging design, e.g. design for specific products. |
C-1 |
| C. Packaging and the legal environment, recycling and tamper-proof packaging. |
C-1 |
| D. Packaging economics. |
C-1 |
| E. Packaging administration and management. |
C-1 |
| F. Packaging distribution. |
C-1 |
[rev. 7/94]
Maintained by Sheila Smokey
|