Planning Shifts of Collections:

Measuring Collections


Measure the collection as close to the time of the shift as possible.

An easy way to measure: Cut string 40-ish inches long. Tie a nut (metal, not organic) on one end. At exactly the 35" mark, tie a knot.

Even cotton string stretches, so at the end of each day re-measure your strings and tie the knots at the correct places, or replace them.

You can measure either the empty space or the books on the shelves. Once you decide which to measure, of course, you should stick with that decision. If you're shifting a pretty full collection, it's easier to measure the space, not the books.

Use a two-person team: the measurer and the recorder.

Measurer: start at the first shelf. Hold the string up to the amount of space left on shelf. Go to the next shelf. Measure empty space. When you've used up the string (35"), say out loud "Hatch" or "One" or whatever. When you have a totally full shelf (such as a bound journal run) there's nothing to measure.

Recorder: every time you hear the measurer say "One", make a hatch mark on your sheet.

Part of the measuring is recording the numbers of sections and shelves. The Recorder can be counting these while the measurer measures.

If you're having folks new to measuring doing this job, you should randomly check their work. Go to a range and re-measure it yourself, and see if you get close to the same number of hatch marks, and the exact number of sections and shelves/section.

These measurements are what you base your spreadsheets on: they need to be pretty accurate.

Here's a sample sheet:


Floor:______
Range # Growth space Beg. call # End. call # # sections # shelves
1 A AP2.N7G43 11 148
2 AP2.N7G45 AP2.P4 v.11 11 150
3 AP2.P4 v.12 AP2.S3T99 12 165
           
           
           
           
           
           



Next:
Count the number of new shelves being added to the collection, and
decide how growth space will be distributed









Back to Shift Planning main page


Page created by sstevens@darkwing.uoregon.edu
Last substantive update: 970506