Thursday, October 25, 2007

Wed and Thur Oct 24 and 25

Some pictures have been posted in fairly random order at this point. More are coming as time permits. We are currently unable to view the blog ourselves and cannot read comments so we hope you are enjoying it and forgive us if we don’t respond to something on which you have commented. We are also only providing the briefest of summaries here and encourage you to contact any one of us upon our return for details or join us at OLA next Spring.

On Wednesday we spent the day visiting several more departments at the Fuzhou Provincial Library. We visited the Consultation Department which provides support throughout the province for libraries and librarians. This includes providing research and investigation on library service, continuing education and coordination of resource sharing. They write reports using very detailed statistical information and submit these to the Ministry of Culture and the provincial legislature. This office also oversees the maintenance of the MARC record throughout the province.

We then met with the General Secretary of the Society of the Fujian Library Society which would be the equivalent of OLA. He serves as the primary administrator of the society, as the editor of the journal produced by the society- Theory and Practice of Library Science, and as a primary coordinator of interlibrary communication both within the province and outside of it. They put on an annual conference and cooperate with other provinces for additional conferences. There are 3 paid staff in charge of the organization. First the society decides on the location for overseeing the society (right now it is the Provincial Library) then that library suggests a staff member to be General Secretary. If the individual is approved by the membership the hosting library provides the 3 staff and the office with the salaries supported by the hosting library. Our host, Chen Shun, has been General Secretary since 1989.

The Audiovisual department is primarily a production department. They digitize books and cultural events that are then posted on the web. They are building a local database of cultural materials. Some AV materials are available for checkout but users must pay an annual nonrefundable fee of $200 (RMB) and then a deposit of $200 (RMB) and can only borrow up to that value.

We then attended a meeting chaired by the Library Director and attended by his 3 deputy directors. Not very different from meetings many of us attend in the US. They discussed issues they are facing and how they are going to be handled.

At night we attended a banquet for past Horner Fellows and Library Management held at a beautiful restaurant along the Min Jiang River- pictures to come. The weather is beautiful and we didn’t even need the sweaters they made us bring.

On Thursday we visited the temporary quarters for the Children’s Library. A new one is being planned and in anticipation they are currently housed in an old hotel. One way in which they differ from most of us is that they work closely with the schools and support the curriculum. The card for this library is separate from the Main Library but not for access reasons. In fact, since they can only buy from approved publishers and cannot have pirated books there is no censorship of what is read since they cannot buy controversial material to begin with. Representatives from the government do come and check the collection. They are also very strong in the area of providing parenting materials and service to parents. Instead of in-library story times they go out to the nursery schools and do activities there.

The afternoon was spent with Gretta giving a presentation on Grey Literature and Teresa presenting on the “customer focused” “give them what they want” library movement in US public libraries. The presentations were attended by about 150 members of the Fujian Library Society. Rosalind did an incredible job translating for us and spent many hours “learning” about our subjects so she could make the translation even more effective. She is an amazing resource and we would be lost (literally and figuratively) without her.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Tuesday October 23

We have been kept so busy and we have been so tired that adding to the blog and downloading pictures has taken a back seat. We are still working on the pictures and expect to have some up within the next couple of days.

Tuesday we consulted with the Lending Division, Technical Services and the Research Division. Each one is incredibly different than what we are used to. This will be a brief enticement to join us at our program at OLA!

The Lending Division is the circulating collection and includes actually checking out the materials. There are 3 rooms where this occurs and each covers different subject areas. Fiction is classified as deeply as nonfiction. Getting a card involves leaving a deposit and then being allowed to check out materials worth up to half the value of your deposit. The biggest issue they are facing is decreasing circulation. They are strongly driven by circulation statistics set by the Ministry of Culture and standards for libraries which set collection size as the primary standard. Because of this, there is no weeding. They have not yet reached 2 million volumes which is the standard. We discussed various ways to increase circulation.

Technical Services is primarily acquisitions and cataloging with all processing done by one of the two vendors or bookstores they buy from. They also purchase a lot at the annual Book Fair. However, the processing is not “pre-processing” as many of us know it, but the provider comes on site to the library 3 times for each book to complete the processing.

The Research Division is separate from the Reference Division. This group of 7 subject specialists does in depth research for anyone who asks with the provincial government as one of their primary clients. The do the research and present it in a report to the requestor.

In the afternoon we were taken to Gushan Mountain which is a Buddhist Temple built into a mountain. Quite beautiful and moving. We did discover that Teresa seems farther along the road to Enlightenment than either Gretta or Rosalind but that is another story…
We also visited Mawei which is a commercial shipping port. Fuzhou is on the Min Jiang river which is navigable to the ocean so there are many ships. There is also a memorial park which honors the history of the shipping industry in China as well as its naval history. Getting us to understand their cultural background and historical context is very important to our hosts as well as to us and greatly enriches the experience we are having.

Dinner was a mere 8 or 9 courses (can’t remember already) then we were taken to a local department store. I don’t want to give away our purchases as some of you reading this may be getting something from there as a gift!

Monday, October 22, 2007

Day One Fujian Provincial LIbrary

We all arrived safely Saturday night and Sunday. On Sunday night we were treated to a 10+ course meal (not a banquet!) and then attended an unusual celebration. As guests of the Ministry of Culture we had reserved seats at a community celebration to commemorate the end of the 17th People’s Congress. It was spectacular- fireworks, 11 musical and dancing acts- just an amazing pageant. We will post pictures soon.

Gretta and Teresa are dealing with jet lag and hope to catch up on sleep soon. Rosalind has been in China for 2 weeks prior so she is faring somewhat better!

We just completed our first official day of the visit. What a great day we had at the Fujian Provincial Library. Special thanks to one of the deputy directors who treated us morning and afternoon with his own special tea blend and very sophisticated tea making process. We look forward to the next couple of days to enjoy what new blends he has in store for us.

In the morning we met with all the department and deputy directors and got the background on the library. Then the staff held their regular meeting where they discuss monthly evaluations of each of their departments- what is going well, what the problems are and how to address them. Signage, facility issues, misshelved items, materials not getting to the shelves in a timely manner were all addressed. I felt like I’d never left home.

In the afternoon we got an in-depth tour of the Library which generated a lot of questions that we will deal with in more depth as we meet with each division separately. We took lots of pictures but it will be a couple of days before we can get them posted as we are off to a banquet with the Minister of Culture and other important officials tonight then will try to conquer jet lag by getting to bed “early”.