Association for Library Collections and Technical Services
Encyclopedia
The Association for Library Collections and Technical Services (ALCTS) is a division of the American Library Association
American Library Association
The American Library Association is a non-profit organization based in the United States that promotes libraries and library education internationally. It is the oldest and largest library association in the world, with more than 62,000 members....

 (ALA). This division strives to be the premier authority within librarianship in the areas of technical services (acquisitions, cataloging and classification, and continuing resources), collection management and development, and preservation and reformatting. The membership of ALCTS represents over forty countries, and it comprises nearly 5,000 librarians, library support staff, students of library and information science, and commercial vendors whose professional interests lie within these areas of practice. Membership in ALCTS requires membership in the ALA. ALCTS meets the needs of its members through educational programming, publications, professional development opportunities and information exchange. ALCTS also promotes and has significant input into the development of standards and best practices within its focus areas, e.g., NISO standards, cataloging rules.

The current executive director of ALCTS is Charles Wilt.

History and organizational structure

ALCTS was one of several ALA divisions created in 1957, upon the merger of several ALA units related to technical services. The division was originally known as the Resources and Technical Services Division (RTSD). The original four sections of the division were Acquisitions, Cataloging and Classification, Copying Methods, and Serials. The current name of the division is the result of a 1989 division membership vote.

ALCTS consists of five sections: Acquisitions; Cataloging and Classification; Collection Management and Development; Preservation and Reformatting, and Continuing Resources.

The current Acquisitions (AS) and Collection Management and Development (CMDS) Sections emerged over time from the original AS. The Cataloging and Classification Section (CCS) has the longest history, having begun as a section of ALA in 1900. The Preservation and Reformatting Section (PARS) is a result of a 1994 merger of the Reproduction of Library Materials Section (which started as the Copying Methods Section) and the Preservation of Library Materials Section (which was created in 1980). The Continuing Resources Section (CRS) started as a round table of ALA in 1929, and was renamed in 2007.

The work of these sections, as well as the entire division, is supported through regular committee meetings. ALCTS also makes available to its sections online options for communication and collaboration, including discussion lists, online communities, and wikis.

These sections are joined by the Council of Regional Groups (CRG). The role of CRG is to maintain contact with groups similar to ALCTS that serve specific geographic regions. In addition to maintaining relationships with these groups, CRG also maintains a list of speakers who have made themselves available to CRG affiliates.

Publications

ALCTS has created and maintains a wide variety of publications that provide guidelines and policies for the work of its constituents; serve as educational resources, and keep the membership informed of current developments and trends with the division and the profession. The guidelines and policy documents are often used in an advisory role for technical services, collection development, and preservation decisions. These resources are generally available on the ALCTS website. The division also publishes a series of books (ALCTS Papers on Technical Services and Collections). ALCTS publishes two serials – ALCTS Newsletter Online (ANO), which reports on the happenings of the division and the people within it; and Library Resources and Technical Services (LRTS), a quarterly, peer-reviewed journal.

Programming

At the ALA Annual Conference, ALCTS sponsors programming both at the division level and through its sections. At the ALA Midwinter Meeting, ALCTS hosts a forum on a major topic of interest to its constituency. At both annual events, ALCTS sponsors symposia and preconference workshops that get in depth on specific concepts. Both events also feature interest groups (many of which were formerly discussion groups). The IGs are not official programs, but they allow people working or interested in specific roles to gather for discussion and/or plan future programming. Outside of conferences, ALCTS also offers online educational opportunities and a series of online discussions via discussion groups.

In 2007, to celebrate its 50th anniversary, ALCTS held a special conference just prior to the ALA Annual Conference.

Awards

Each year, ALCTS honors people in librarianship working in acquisitions, continuing resources, cataloging, collection development, and preservation through more than a dozen awards. Juries consisting mostly of ALCTS member volunteers (who are generally peers of potential recipients) select recipients of these awards:

Writing/Publishing: Best of LRTS Award; Blackwell's Scholarship Award

Innovation: Outstanding Collaboration Citation; Coutts Award for Innovation in Electronic Resources Management

Personal Achievement: Ross Atkinson
Ross Atkinson
Ross W. Atkinson was an American librarian and scholar.Atkinson worked at Northwestern University from 1977 until 1983 when he left to become an assistant university librarian for collection development at the University of Iowa...

 Lifetime Achievement Award; Hugh C. Atkinson Memorial Award; Paul Banks and Carolyn Harris Preservation Award; LBI George Cunha and Susan Swartzburg Award; Esther J. Piercy Award; Margaret Mann Citation

Leadership in Library Acquisitions Award (acquisitions); Ulrich’s Serials Librarianship Award (continuing resources); Presidential Citation (special service to ALCTS)

Achievement for Newer Professionals: First Step Award

For Professionals in Developing Countries: Online Course Grant

See also

American Library Association
American Library Association
The American Library Association is a non-profit organization based in the United States that promotes libraries and library education internationally. It is the oldest and largest library association in the world, with more than 62,000 members....



Library acquisitions
Library acquisitions
Library acquisitions is the department of a library responsible for the selection and purchase of materials or resources for the library. Acquisitions may select vendors, negotiate consortium pricing, arrange for standing orders, and/or select individual titles or resources .-Functions:*Ordering,...



Library cataloging

Library collection development
Library collection development
Library collection development is the process of meeting the information needs of the people in a timely and economical manner using information resources locally held, as well as from other organizations....



Library technical services
Library technical services
Library technical services is a term used to describe, in general, the processing and maintenance of a library's physical collection.According to the textbook Introduction to Technical Services , by Evans, Intner, and Weihs, the traditional technical services are:*Identification: locating...



Periodicals librarian
Periodicals librarian
A periodicals or serials librarian is a librarian who works in the specialized area of serials librarianship. A periodicals librarian can have a variety of duties, but generally work specifically with the acquisition, collection development, organization, preservation, and sometimes cataloging of...



Preservation (library and archival science)
Preservation (library and archival science)
Preservation is a branch of library and information science concerned with maintaining or restoring access to artifacts, documents and records through the study, diagnosis, treatment and prevention of decay and damage....


External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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