Last fall, first-year student Helen Rudnicki received an email at her brand new utoronto address. Signed by librarian Jacqueline Whyte Appleby, the message welcomed Rudnicki to U of T and offered her something special – personalized help coming to grips with St. George Campus’s 42 libraries.
“I thought that was pretty cool,” says Rudnicki, an archeology major who attends New College. “A lot of my friends didn’t go to the library at all, but I always had books. There’s a lot of material you can’t get online.”
That’s exactly why U of T started the Personal Librarian Program, says Rita Vine, faculty liaison and information literacy co-ordinator for University of Toronto Libraries and administrative lead for the project. First-year students just didn’t seem to be using the library. “I came up with the idea after doing research on similar programs at Yale and Drexel University,” she says. In addition, the John M. Kelly Library at St. Michael’s College, which has run a similar project for several years, shared data.
During last year’s pilot project, Vine and Appleby matched 1,000 incoming students with 10 librarians who work across St. George Campus – from Trinity to Robarts Reference Department to OISE. About 200 students took up the offer of help, says Vine. “That ranks among the highest levels of take-up [among similar programs] that we’re aware of.”
The librarians explained everything from how to read a call number and write a citation to how to find non-academic services on campus. All contact was through email. “A lot of the time I didn’t know where to start at all,” says Rudnicki. “I was able to give the librarian a topic and she would help me narrow it down, give me places to look and [teach me] how to search.”
“Students may not even know that they can ask for help,” says Vine. “By creating an intentional connection to a librarian, we’re helping them meet one more person in the university who cares about their academic success.”
Vine wants to grow the program, but “we don’t have enough librarians on St. George Campus to reach out to all 7,000 first-year students in Arts and Science,” she says. “We’ll require more administrative and librarian resources.” In the meantime, 2,000 frosh were emailed this fall, and approximately 24 librarians are participating.
For students who haven’t been assigned a personal librarian, Vine offers an insider secret. “One of my favourite ‘hidden’ resources is a set of bibliographies on many subjects,” she says. “Prepared by experts, each item has an abstract that can help you figure out if the article is suitable for your assignment – a big time-saver for busy students. The trick is to look under ‘Oxford Bibliographies Online’ in the library catalogue.” Bonus: many paywall-protected articles are free when accessed through the library website.
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2 Responses to “ At Your Service ”
The photo in this article features Personal Librarian Jacqueline Whyte Appleby and 2012-13 student participant Tony Ding.
What a great idea, wish they had this at other universities - would have been very helpful when I was in first year!