“When you hear the word library, it may conjure this traditional image of rows of books in a building so quiet you are hesitant to clear your throat. While this nostalgic image of the library may not be what the library of today is, the quietude and a collection of print books still have their place in the future of libraries. However, along with these traditional purposes of the academic library, the library of the future will have more interactive learning spaces and leisure spaces for students to enjoy.”
“Libraries have been transforming the last 20 years to have many spaces,” said Natalie Kulick, resources and services specialist at Worthington Scranton’s library; “a space for the traditional ‘quiet’ atmosphere, a space for leisure interactive, and a place to do computer work.”
If leisure space and interactive media are the future of libraries, then nobody knows better than Mary Ann Joyce, the information resources and services support specialist at the Worthington Scranton library.
Joyce orders, catalogues, and manages the campus library’s extensive selection of popular DVDs and bestselling books available to students, faculty, and staff who may be looking for a more laid-back experience at the library.
She too believes that libraries aren’t going anywhere in the future, they’re only transforming with the shifting needs of the community. On the future of libraries, she says:
“Yes, they will play an active role in communities and universities going forward. But, I think they are changing in many ways. I think patrons, whether they are students or community members, expect today's libraries to have technology available for use like computers, iPads, printers, scanners, WiFi availability, etc. But also, they want to be able to study in groups, have comfortable seating, private rooms to collaborate, and hold meetings.”
With the digitization movement taking huge collections of print textbooks and research tools out of the library and putting them online, the libraries of tomorrow may have much more space for community gatherings and recreational interactions.