1 / 11

Skokie Public Library

Skokie Public Library is a village library located in Skokie, Illinois. With a population of 64,000 people, the library serves a diverse community and promotes lifelong learning, discovery, and community building through a wide range of materials, technologies, and experiences. The library has received national recognition and has a budget of $13.2 million. It offers extensive resources, programs, and services to meet the needs of its diverse population.

haynesm
Télécharger la présentation

Skokie Public Library

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Skokie Public Library Carolyn A. Anthony, director Nick Casas LIS 771 Midterm

  2. “World’s Largest Village” • Diverse population of 64,000 people • Transportation convenience of Skokie • I94, CTA Yellow Line, near O’Hare Airport • Major businesses in a small area • Ethnic groups: white, black, Hispanic, Assyrian, Eastern European, Jewish, Korean • Always changing

  3. SPL is a village library – has a board and only one central location Very independent and a lot of freedom, unlike city libraries with branches Carolyn A. Anthony – director for 26 years Mission: “Skokie Public Library promotes lifelong learning, discovery, and enrichment through a broad spectrum of materials, technologies, and experiences. Serving a diverse population, the Library facilitates access to information, the exchange of ideas, and the building of community.” Skokie Public Library – Village Library

  4. National Recognition • 2008 Winner for the Nation Medal for Museum and Library Service by the IMLS presented by Laura Bush • First public library in Illinois to be awarded the prestigious honor

  5. Budget and Organization • See handout • Budget: $13.2 million for 2011 – 2012 • Books are still the highest cost for the library • Organization Chart • Relies heavily on department heads and managers

  6. Library Usage of 2011 • Circulation: new record at 2.2 million items (up 4.6%) • Reference: 260,000 information transactions (down 2.6%), reference questions down 5% (192 questions per day) • Registration: up 2%, half who are children five and older • Collection: over 600,000 items (over 400,000 print and over 200,000 audio/visual) • Technology: up 1% of logged computer usage; more people bringing in laptops or tablets • Personnel: roughly stayed the same from last year

  7. Library as a Place • Extensive audio/visual department • Art exhibits and music venues • Under construction: large meeting rooms for churches and businesses (Skokie is home to Pfizer, Peapod, and Rand McNally

  8. Communication and Strategic Planning • The director holds Monday meetings with department heads about issues, progress on projects, etc. • Has an intranet communication system to get a hold of staff electronically • Strategic Planning Staff: 10 people – 2 board members, 2 department heads, 2 staff members, and 4 community members

  9. E-Books • Skokie Public owns all of their hard copy books through purchase, but e-book licensing is still a problem • HarperCollins – 26 circulations and library must re-purchase • Championing e-books

  10. Continuingly growing Jewish population New group to serve: Assyrians Unique culture Young families Declining Korean and Eastern European population Many books on Judaism and in Hebrew A Celebration of the Assyrian People – program for January to March 2012 Still carry books in Korean, Polish, and Russian Diverse Programs for Diverse Population

  11. SWOT Analysis • Strengths: brilliant and stable leadership, independence as a village library, established itself as a community necessity and not just a luxury, backing from both community and businesses • Weaknesses: department heads, staff, and director are all very broad and dispersed so lacks opportunity for face-to-face and close communication • Opportunities: diverse population (which they have taken advantage of) and perhaps need to get involved more on the national stage • Threats: emphasis on library for a place for books rather than library as a community space

More Related