ACRL News Issue (B) of College & Research Libraries O ctober 1988 / 605 Teaching as a collection development tool By Carol Cronquist H ead o f T echnical Services Ashland C ollege Collection development in the small academic library frequently suffers because of insufficient li­ brary personnel and faculty members who main­ tain taxing course loads. Frequently long periods of time pass when literally no one assesses just what is in the collection in any given area. C h oice order cards are processed as the years pass by, and the collection frequently becomes misshapen because C h oice is relied on as the sole tool for collection de­ velopment. The academic librarian with an additional sub­ ject master’s degree who is also utilized as an in­ structor in an academic department on the small college campus ultimately can do much to fill this collection development gap. As head of library technical services at Ashland College, a small liberal arts institution in Ohio with an enrollment of 3,956 students, I have had the opportunity to teach as an adjunct instructor in the English Department for the past five years. I have been teaching a required freshman English course which includes segments on the short story, the play, and poetry, and I have used a text favored by the majority of the department: X .J. Kennedy’s L itera tu re: An In trodu ction to F iction , P oetry , an d D ram a, 4th edition. As with numerous other anthologies of this sort, a recent edition change re­ flected an effort on the part of the editor to include more contemporary literature by ethnic minori­ ties, especially blacks, Hispanics and women. The library collection, which is undoubtedly typical of most small college libraries, could in no way sup­ port this change. Literally nothing was on our shelves by or about such authors as Kate Chopin, T. Coraghessan Boyle, Alice Walker, Alice Munro, W alter Van Tilburg Clark, Nagai Tatsuo, Toni Cade Bam bara, or Gabriel Garcia Marquez. And given buying practices by a tradition-oriented fac­ ulty in English, it was likely that nothing would be added to the library collection to support either teaching or research in these areas. In spare moments and with spare funds from the general book budget, I have been doing some sorely needed course-related collection development. I have located out-of-print books, imprints by for­ eign publishers, and other relevant titles that our vendor had not been able to supply. In addition to this course-related form of collec­ tion development, I have developed a “casebook” of sorts that contains critical materials on the short stories in the Kennedy text. Ready access to the O C LC interlibrary loan system has made it possi­ ble for me to expeditiously collect materials for both my own use and other members of the English Department who are using the Kennedy text. Though hired as a librarian with only adjunct status as an English instructor, my dual role in this institution has, I believe, had unanticipated bene­ fits for both the English Department and the li­ brary. It’s Computer Learning Month! October 1988 is Computer Learning Month, a public awareness campaign supported by 120 sponsors— including the computer and soft­ ware industries, more than 40 United States and Canadian departments of education, the National Education Association, the American Federation of Teachers, and the National Par­ ent Teachers Association. A report published last spring by the Na­ tion al Assessment of E d u ca tio n a l Progress stated th at “most students have used com ­ puters, like them, and have some familiarity with them, but their computer competence is generally low .” A Nation at Risk, the 1983 re­ port by the U.S. Department of Education, also recognized th at “computers and com puter- controlled equipment are penetrating every as­ pect of our lives.” Computer Learning Month was created to help all segments of the popula­ tion become comfortable with this new tech­ nology. T h e o b je c tiv e s of this y e a r’s C om p u ter Learning Month are: to increase the public awareness of how computers are used as tools at home, work, and school; to provide programs for schools, universities, community groups, user groups, and organizations to experience the benefits of technology; to stimulate the in­ novative use of computers; and to promote equal access to computer learning for everyone. Computer Learning Month is a non-profit educational foundation and a subsidiary of the Software Publishers Association. For more in­ fo rm a tio n , c o n ta c t: C om p u ter L e a rn in g Month, P.O . Box 60007, Palo Alto, CA 94306- 0007.