Library as Knowledge Commons for the University

Abstract

Journal ArticleFor much of the 20th century libraries were known and valued for their collections, and the defining role for a library was to be "a repository of knowledge." Although libraries continue to build and deliver a large collection of resources, we are now defined by the services we offer and our ability to make the work of our users more productive in all areas of teaching, learning and research. To meet this ambition our libraries have become agents of transformation, innovation, development, growth, and opportunity; we are centers for innovation, anchors for projects, and instigators as well as incubators for collaborations that produce integrated, scalable, extensible, lasting, powerful and demonstrable results. We supply access to high quality knowledge, coupled with high tech, high touch services that strive to remove the mystery from research and learning. We teach our students to be "smart for life," with a solid grounding in critical thinking that will serve them for their entire life experience of finding, utilizing, evaluating, and creating knowledge in their chosen careers and personal lives. More than ever we are integral to the process of knowledge generation, and as intensively interdisciplinary centers, we serve as knowledge commons for the university

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