TRUST SYSTEM
The FLIP books are not included in the Brown library’s catalog or officially checked out. Instead, the books are simply set up on shelves in five categories marked by signs: STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics), Social Sciences, Humanities, Language, and Arts. Books are marked with paper slips and FLIP labels. All of the books are listed on an online spreadsheet and color coded. Students sign out books using a binder placed on top of the collection shelves, with the borrower’s name and email address entered beside the book being borrowed. Jaramillo described this as “a trust system” and noted that, two semesters into the project, “books are not being stolen.” The project is student-run, with students taking the lead on collecting donations, recording and distributing the contents of the collection, and otherwise maintaining the FLIP Library shelves. As Gresh told LJ, the students have “done all the heavy lifting” for the project, including developing the concept, organizing it, and advocating for its implementation. His role, as a representative from Brown’s Office of Campus Life, has been to assist the students in working through logistical challenges, such as book storage and donation of out-of-date texts that are no longer useful for the FLIP Library. One ongoing concern, Gresh said, is “how to make the project sustainable” for the foreseeable future. Student organizers are seeking additional ways to communicate with their fellow students about the availability of the FLIP Library. Information about the Library is currently posted on a Facebook page, but students are working on a website, to launch later in 2016, with a list of titles and instructions about checking out and returning textbooks. It is hoped that the information on the new site will simplify the lending process and raise awareness.ROOM TO GROW
According to Haley De La Rosa, a Brown junior who works as Special Projects Coordinator for the First Generation Initiative at Brown, the FLIP Library “is growing,” and this will be helped along by the opening this summer of Brown’s First-Generation College Student Center. The Center will provide a space to store the Library’s steadily growing collection of books, which presented an ongoing challenge as the the volume of FLIP Library holdings steadily increased over the past year. The FLIP Library organizers are also exploring partnerships with other organizations to donate books that are no longer needed for Brown coursework. The FLIP Library team is also considering advocacy initiatives related to the project, such as increasing student understanding about methods of purchasing textbooks at a discount and working with the university’s administration to ensure that the the costs of courses are transparent, with faculty being “conscientious about the economic diversity of the student population,” said Gresh. Students from other colleges and universities have reached out to Jaramillo expressing interest in setting up comparable initiatives on their own campuses, and he emphasized that the FLIP Library concept is one that can be adapted to work at any school. At Columbia, for example, books are not offered through an open library setup; instead, books are requested and distributed through a form on a first come, first serve basis. The implementation of this project at Columbia and Brown is “proof that [this type of] library can happen anywhere” and “can spread to different schools,” Jaramillo said.We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing
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Eric
Despite their claim that this type of program "can be adapted at any school," this would never work at the community college where I work. Having students who take "the lead on collecting donations, recording and distributing the contents of the collection, and otherwise maintaining the FLIP Library shelves" might be feasible at an Ivy League institution like Brown, it is impossible for a population who work, care for families, and face many other daily challenges in completing their education. They simply don't have the time, resources, or support to start anything like this. I wonder why these students aren't devoting their time and energy to promoting OER (Open Education Resources) on their campus. This would solve or alleviate the problem of expensive textbooks without enabling publishers of high cost educational materials to continue overcharging. It could also serve the greater good by helping other first-generation college students at all levels of higher-ed.Posted : Apr 21, 2016 04:30
Vickie
We have been doing a similar program for 4 years now. We noticed that students were sharing books or trying to get through classes without purchasing the books. Now we place one copy of each textbook and required reading on reserve for 2 hour check out, in-library use only. We are a small college with a limited number of courses, so it is not a monumental endeavor. The students really appreciate the service and it seems a reasonable way to help students with the high cost of their education and it has also driven higher numbers of in-library use.Posted : Apr 15, 2016 01:43