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Collection Development: Weeding
Need help with weeding? Ask us!
General Tips
- Weeding should be included in your library’s collection development policy and be considered as part of the library’s collection goals
- Make weeding a part of your collection management routine
- Determine who among library staff will be responsible for weeding the collection
- Create a weeding plan (see the CREW’s manual’s 10-step process)
- Use Decision Center to send you scheduled/automated weeding reports
- Feeling overwhelmed or short on time/staffing? Start here:
- Circulation: Low use or duplicate copies – use Decision Center weeding reports to identify items fitting these criteria
- Condition: Browse the stacks to check the condition of materials, and/or use Decision Center weeding reports (high circ or age of collection reports)
- Next steps: Evaluate materials based on the following (see the CREW manual’s Guidelines for Weeding your Collection):
- Content: Is the information outdated, inaccurate, misleading, or biased?
- Relevance: Is the material relevant to current needs and interests of the community?
Tools & Resources
- CREW: A Weeding Manual for Modern Libraries
- Awful Library Books (Weeding Resources)
- Decision Center Reports (see Maintenance > Weeding)
- See webinar recording: Using Decision Center for Weeding Reports
- Weeding Reports: Low Circ, High Circ, Age of Collection, Supply and Demand
Articles & Webinars
- Article: “Ditch That Book: The Importance of Weeding in Libraries” (Book Riot)
- Webinar: Weed ‘Em and Reap: Getting Your Collection from Awful to Awesome (Web Junction, 60 minutes)