Internet
Boosts Attendance in Libraries
Washington, Feb. 15 2003 (VOA News) -- When television
took hold in the United States in the 1950s, pessimists
predicted it would be the death of books and reading.
Similarly, with the rise in the availability of the
worldwide computer Internet and its ready access to
millions of information resources, many observers
felt that libraries - the traditional home of books
and other information - would lose vast numbers of
patrons.
In
fact, the Internet is a big draw, attracting patrons
to public libraries and boosting their importance
to the community. Last year, library districts spent
almost $700 million on new buildings - the second-highest
total on record. And the last time figures were counted
in 1999, almost two billion items were checked out
of America's libraries. That's up 21 percent from
1990.
Maurice
Freedman is the president of the American Library
Association. He also directs the 38 independent libraries
that make up the library system in Westchester County,
New York, a wealthy suburb with almost one million
people just north of New York City. Mr. Freedman says
the Westchester libraries are connected through a
computer network of 600 terminals, 400 of which are
available to the public. "The more Internet access
we've provided, the more heavily the libraries have
been used," he said. "And the extraordinary
aspect of it is that it's book use that the Internet
has maximized."
The
Westchester library system opened the book reservation
process to computer access in 1999. Up till then,
using a cumbersome manual paper system, patrons reserved
4,000 books a month, on average. Now, the number of
books reserved each month tops 76,000. "Thirty
percent of the books that were borrowed were published
prior to 1990," said Maurice Freedman. "So
books that were never circulating are now circulating."
At
the libraries themselves, patrons - many of whom do
not have computers at home - use the library's Internet-connected
computers to send and check e-mail, to do heavy-duty
research, and to play games or gather information
about their favorite hobbies.
Maurice
Freedman says these functions have turned librarians
into what he calls "knowledge navigators,"
teaching patrons how to wade through the morass of
information that confronts them when they log onto
the Internet. "This story is not an apocryphal
story," he continued. "It's been verified
in different ways. The college student is in his dormitory
room, beating away on a computer terminal for an hour,
hour and a half, cannot find what he wants, goes to
the library, talks to the reference librarian, who,
like a good reporter, asks a number of pointed questions
and gets to what the person is really looking for.
She turns to her terminal, clicks a few keys, turns
the terminal around and says, 'Is that what you're
looking for?' And the student says, 'Yes, yes, yes.
That's exactly what I was looking for.' And then he
says, 'How come my computer didn't find it, but yours
did?'"
On
the other side of the country, in Washoe County, Nevada,
which includes the resort city of Reno, the appeal
of the Internet has been so profound that people line
up outside before county libraries open, waiting for
their chance to use one of the 52 available computers.
In addition to 12 physical branch locations, Washoe
County also maintains what it calls its "Internet
Branch," a virtual library with its own manager
and online website that gives patrons access not only
to the library collection but also to an assortment
of online databases and library links. The county
also operates a mobile library equipped with wireless
computers. From one location or another, patrons are
encouraged to e-mail reference questions to the library
staff.
Scott
Fifield, 39, who runs a carpet-cleaning business in
Reno, uses the library's internet terminals to check
e-mail and surf the Internet. He says he has no computer
at home, and besides, the library's system is faster.
"I race bicycles also, professionally, so I look
up a lot of different races and get registration forms
and such like that," he says. Asked if the library
saw much of him before the Internet, he responds,
"No, not at all. I probably wouldn't be here."
Tony
Gaulis, 60, is a retired Forest Service employee who
uses the Reno libraries' computers to keep up on government
information. He also uses the Net to follow fires
throughout the West each summer and has taken off
to help fight several of them. "The Washoe County
Library System gave some classes on it, and I went
to them. They were free, you know. And I got interested
in that way," he said.
Had
he thought about getting his own home computer? Yes,
but he seems in no rush, as long as the service is
available from the library. He agrees it's a whole
new world, and he's enjoying it very much.
Public
libraries across the United States are dealing with
a thorny Internet issue - what to do about patrons
who use the computer terminals to access sexually
explicit websites or other sites that offend community
standards. As Caroline Haythornthwaite, who runs a
library-science program at the University of Illinois,
puts it, "It's like going into a store where
everything is on the same shelf," she said. "There's
no back to the store. You don't have an index system
so that you can cut certain things out. You can't
go to the Children's Section, and you can't go to
the Adult Only Section. It's an interesting side effect
of just having this open bin."
A
few systems, like that in Raleigh, North Carolina,
have installed filters on all their computers to block
offensive material. Westchester County leaves the
decision up to its individual branch libraries. Director
Nancy Cummings says the Washoe County, Nevada, system
gives patrons a choice.
"Our
adult stations are unfiltered," she says. "With
the children, we feel it is the parents' responsibility.
So children under the age of 18 must have their parents'
permission to use Internet stations in the library,
and the parents choose whether or not they can have
unfettered access or filtered access, with or without
their presence."
If
they find people viewing pornographic sites, do they
make an effort to stop them? "We do remind the
patrons that they must conform to the same policies
that library staff does," says Ms. Cummings.
"We do have privacy screens, so it's very difficult
for people or staff to view what someone else is viewing
on a computer unless you're practically standing right
directly behind him."
Nancy
Cummings in Nevada and Maurice Freedman in New York
say the Internet has been the information salvation
for low-income people who cannot afford computers
at home, for new immigrants, and for foreign students
looking to stay in touch with people back home.
--
Ted Landphair
- Voice of America in Washington
-- Reprinted with the
permission of Voice of America
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