College and Research Libraries A Military College Initiates A Library Instructional Program BY S I D N E Y E. M A T T H E W S TH E V I R G I N I A M I L I T A R Y I N S T I T U T E i n 1959 radically changed its concept as to the role of the library in a twofold e d u c a t i o n a l p r o g r a m — a c a d e m i c and military. T h i s combination, in the words of its originators, is designed to provide "practical utility, through discipline and formative training," and to produce men of "energy, efficiency and reliability." T h e Virginia Military Institute is or- ganized under the laws of the Common- wealth of Virginia and is governed by a board of visitors appointed by the gov- ernor and subject to confirmation by the state senate. In accordance with provi- sions of the Code of Virginia, the cadets constitute a military corps and officers at the Institute are commissioned by the governor in the Virginia Militia, un- organized. Although V.M.I, requires rigorous military training for its entire student body, the Institute always has placed its first emphasis on its academic program. Colonel J. T . L. Preston, a prime mover in the founding of V.M.I., proposed that "the object is to prepare young men for the varied work of civil life . . . the military feature, though es- sential to its discipline, is not primary in the Institute's scheme of education." T h e Institute has followed this concept since 1839 when it was founded as the first state military college in the nation. V.M.I, offers nine degree-granting cur- ricula—one each in civil engineering, electrical engineering, chemistry, physics, biology, history, and English, and two in mathematics. When it was decided to alter the li- brary's role, three major changes were made: (1) the library was made an aca- Lt. Col. Matthews is Director of Preston Library and Associate Professor of Library Science at Virginia Military Institute. demic department with the librarian reporting directly to the dean of the faculty, (2) the librarian was given aca- demic rank and made a member of the Institute's Academic Board, and (3) for- mal and informal courses in library sci- ence were officially entered in the cur- riculum. T h e formal library science courses as described in the catalog issue of the Institute's bulletin embrace two areas: (1) "Library Science 101—Litera- ture of the Natural Sciences. Reference materials, bibliographical methods, and use of the library in study of the natural sciences. T h i s course is given in the fall semester and required of all biology ma- jors." (2) "Library Science 301—Reference Materials and Bibliographical Methods. Basic bibliographical methods and refer- ence materials used in the various fields of the liberal arts, science, and technol- ogy, with problems and practice. Prob- lems will be adapted to needs of indivi- dual students and may be developed in conjunction with work on a senior thesis. T h i s course is offered both semesters." T h e informal freshman program of the Institute's library program consists of two parts: (1) a tour and (2) three one-hour lectures with problems on use of the library. T h e former is under the supervision of the commandant of cadets and professor of military science and takes place either during the cadre pe- 482 C O L L E G E A N D R E S E A R C H L I B R A R I E S riod or during R . O . T . C . class periods the first week of classes. All academic de- p a r t m e n t s c o o p e r a t e fully w i t h the R . O . T . C . instructors in conducting these tours so as to give the freshmen a thor- ough examination of the academic facili- ties of the various departments. Any more than a cursory tour at this point would be unnecessary as the cadets are confused by various tests and by the ad- justment to a rigid military way of life. T h e informal program of lectures with problems is part of freshman English 101. These lectures are usually given the first week in November, immediately preceding the cadet's term papers, and coincide with that part of the freshman English course in how to prepare a term (research) paper. It is usually at this time that the cadet is searching for book re- views for his history course and begins to realize how necessary it is to know how to locate materials in the library. Instruction in the formal courses is given entirely by the librarian, and the informal course is given by the librarian with the assistance from the two other professional librarians on the Preston library staff. All library instruction is given in the library's auditorium or in its classroom. T h e three one-hour lectures and prob- lems on each in the informal program are designed to: 1) acquaint tbe cadet with the physical arrangement of the seven-story library building (the build- ing is on a slope and the front entrance is located on the fifth floor which is also the first stack level) and location of col- lections, 2) develop the cadet's ability in locating information and to make him as self-sufficient as possible in the use of the card catalog and other reference tools, and 3) to introduce the cadet to various types of sources available to him and not to overwhelm him with too many titles. T h e three lectures emphasize the dic- tionary catalog, reference books, and in- dexes. T h e lectures are illustrated with two filmstrips series. It is planned to produce local slides of Preston library's floor plan and reference items not in- cluded in the films. As supplementary material the cadets use their English textbook and appropriate titles from the library. Problems are passed out at the end of each lecture and the cadets have a two- week period to complete them. T h e problems are designed to direct the cadet along subject lines which are of interest to him and to use his own family name or, if his is not found, to select another beginning with the first three letters. By using this procedure, some of the usual difficulties of freshman library problems, i.e. each cadet using the same part of a book, set, or the card catalog and passing answers, are avoided. These problems are graded by the librarian and the pro- fessional staff and the grades are re- corded by the English department as three units of the cadet's grade in Eng- lish 101 for that grading period. As a follow-up, most of the instructors in the English department include library ques- tions of a general nature covered in these lectures as part of one of their regular English tests. T h e cadet reaction to these lectures and problems has been largely favorable. T h e few unfavorable comments usually center on the amount of time required. Statistics were not recorded the first year, but this past year out of a total of 250 questions, seventy-four cadets missed twenty-five or less, 163 cadets missed thirty-seven or less, and 242 cadets missed fifty or less. No cadet has ever been pro- ficient enough to obtain a perfect score on all three sets of problems. A check of the ten cadets achieving the highest grades on these problems with their grades in other subjects showed that they were proficient in their other freshmen courses. Conversely the cadets receiving an ex- tremely low grade on the library prob- lems were failing one or more freshman courses. No valid inference should be drawn from this, but next year a large N O V E M B E R 1 9 6 2 483 number of library grades will be com- pared with the cadets' grades in other courses. English faculty comments have been extremely favorable and in agreement with the type of problems presented. Re- quests for one or two hours of library lec- tures with problems have also come from other instructors in the liberal arts pro- gram and in engineering. A condensed version of the lectures, with emphasis on the particular subject area involved, has been given in electrical engineering, civil engineering, economics, American gov- ernment, and geopolitics classes. T h e inherent difficulties of the pro- gram include: (1) scheduling nineteen sections of freshman English, usually 350 freshmen, for three different one- hour lectures in one week, (2) lack of any type of local library handbook, (3) large number of papers to grade in which there can be no "key" for the answers since each cadet has worked with sub- jects of interest to him, (4) having to schedule too many cadets at one period, (5) no opportunity to discuss and go over the papers with the cadets after they have been graded, (6) no oppor- tunity for the librarians to give each cadet individual help and attention, and (7) extremely heavy use of the library's reference room and card catalog at this period of the academic year. In spite of these difficulties there is general approval of the program, and for V.M.I.'s program it is highly de- sirable to integrate this instruction with freshman English classes. T h e cadet is introduced to the tools and research methods at the time he is ready to begin serious library use. T h i s introduction is more thorough than the usual library orientation program that is often used in "freshman week" and is much more helpful. Several items indicate a degree of partial success. T h e cadets do not ask as many elementary questions, seem more at ease in the library, and have a clearer understanding of how to go about their work; and perhaps the 30 per cent increase in circulation over the last two years received some impetus from this program. T h i s joint instructional program has proved of value not only to English 101 but in subsequent courses requiring the use of the library. It has done much to make the library meaningful to the cadets of V.M.I. Military Librarians Workshop M i l i t a r y l i b r a r i a n s met on S e p t e m b e r 26-28 at W h i t e Sands Missile R a n g e in New M e x i c o f o r t h e i r sixth a n n u a l workshop. M o r e than o n e h u n d r e d l i b r a r i a n s from sixty installations a n d representatives from C a n a d a and B e l g i u m were in a t t e n d a n c e . P a n e l a n d g r o u p discussions c e n t e r e d a r o u n d the workshop t h e m e — " P e r s o n n e l Practices in M i l i t a r y L i b r a r i e s . " S u b j e c t - c e n t e r e d programs covered t e c h n i c a l a n d research libraries, a c a d e m i c libraries, a n d special services. N e x t year's m e e t i n g , o f which D w i g h t L y m a n , U . S. U n d e r w a t e r S o u n d L a b o r a - tory, F t . T r u m b u l l , C o n n . , is program c h a i r m a n , will be at the U . S. Naval O r d n a n c e L a b o r a t o r y , Silver Spring, M d . T h e workshop is held a l t e r n a t e l y by the U . S. Army, Navy, and A i r Force, with C a n a d a acting as host in odd years. 484 C O L L E G E A N D R E S E A R C H L I B R A R I E S