Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Getting different perspectives in the Library

My previous blog treated one of my early morning walks through the library with no one around and with only my observations and my imagination to lead me to a few guesses about what had occurred in the library the evening before.
Other walks I make through the library reveal activities one would expect, but there also are always surprises. Today was one of those days. My reference librarian Katherine came up to me and asked, with a smile on her face, if I had been up to the second floor to see what one of the art classes was doing up there. This had me a bit concerned because normally when an art class visits the oversize books in our art collection seem to escape from their organized shelves and migrate all around the second floor. As I said in my previous blog, it sometimes seems like a hurricane has hit. Katherine assured me this was not the case this time, but that there were art students working all around the second floor. I had to see for myself, and what I indeed found were students with their sketch pads all around the second floor--some sitting on the floor, some in chairs, and even some on the top of our shelving.I learned from their professor, who was accompanying them, that they were observing and sketching various spaces in the library that allowed them to understand and illustrate "perspective." Aisles between ranges of bookshelves, long expanses of floor space, and many other areas on the library's second floor gave them the opportunity to illustrate a variety of perspectives. Once again it was a casual walk for me around the second floor, but just as the art students were observing different perspectives, so was I.

Just beyond one of the artists, I observed four students using the library catalog to identify books or other material probably for a more traditional library research project. I then passed one of the corner study rooms just as a scheduled behavioral science class was finishing up. And finally I returned shortly after noontime to a busy first floor where other learning activities, and even some social ones, were going on.

The learning activities of the art students today contributed in yet another way to help the Proctor Library facilty grow as an active center of learning. I am pleased to have had them working here and that we all have been able to enhance our perspectives on the Library.