Strategic Collections Project
The Brandeis Library launched its Strategic Collections Project in summer 2022, to ensure that our physical collections remain current and relevant to Brandeis University’s research and teaching needs. The Library prides itself on the strength of our collections, but over the years, shifting research priorities and changes to the library buildings themselves have created an unsustainable situation, in which the most relevant materials are not always the most accessible to our community.
To remedy this, we have updated our acquisition and assessment processes with regard to all our collections. Within the Library, we have been working, floor by floor, to examine our holdings and make changes to what’s on our shelves. The Library’s Strategic Collections Project involves deselecting materials that meet multiple criteria and are available in alternative formats or through shared collections partnerships with other libraries. The goal is to restructure the Library’s physical collection spaces within the building to allow for easier discovery. We understand that scholars from different disciplines have specific needs and designed our strategy to be flexible; our approach is not a single solution, but instead we use a baseline framework that allows us to remain mindful of what works in each discipline. The goal of a project on this scale will result in a purposeful and sustainable collection growth strategy with an improved library experience for all of Brandeis.
More information on our Strategic Collections Project can be found below, and we will regularly update this website to reflect which phase of the project we are in, as well as share important updates. You can also contact Mark Paris, Associate University Librarian for Scholarly Resources and Discovery.
Jump to a Section
Commitment to Our Collections
Although this project involves deselecting physical materials to promote sustainable growth, the Library is firmly committed to ensuring that no community member loses access to the resources they require for their work.
Through a combination of thoughtful retention, purchasing, digital licensing, consortial partnerships, and our interlibrary loan program, we will ensure continuous access to relevant materials, both during and long after this project’s completion.
The Process
Our deselection process and specific criteria ensure no permanent loss of access. Librarians from across departments, including subject expert librarians, as well as faculty representatives, are included in this process. We value transparency and communicate ongoing details through a dedicated website, regular email communications from subject specialists, meeting attendance, and one-on-one conversations. The Library has not paused our purchasing and acquisitions during this project and is committed to continuing to build a collection that best supports our community.
Expand All
We are identifying books that:
- Haven’t had a single hand touch them in 20+ years and
- Are available in at least 50 other libraries worldwide or are committed to keep by a member library of Eastern Scholars Academic Trust (EAST), meaning that these materials are still accessible to our users even if they aren’t located physically at Brandeis.
- We are also looking at items in the Public Domain and available in HathiTrust, and held by more than ten libraries.
We’ve designed an agile process that allows us to keep any unique material we find in the general collection as we go. We will take into account discipline-specific criteria and items that:
- Are in other distinctive collections such as Judaica or Brandeis Faculty Publications
- Are held by fewer than 50 other libraries worldwide
Before items are discarded, we prioritize availability to our community, asking:
- Do we have perpetual electronic access to this title (this is specifically for journals) making it easy for our patrons to obtain?
- Can the item be sent quickly through interlibrary loan?
- Is the item included in one of our formal collection agreements like EAST, which spans 100 colleges across 15 states?
- Is the item part of a special project, such as Footprints, coordinated by Columbia University?
Project Timeline
Expand All
To manage our collections throughout the three-year life of this project, the Brandeis Library has implemented Greenglass, a powerful tool leveraged by libraries across the country. Filtering and processing our collections through Greenglass allows us to:
- Explore and visualize the collection in the context of the collective collection.
- Quickly model deselection and print management scenarios to ensure the best outcomes.
- Generate custom reports and lists to support collection management and shared print activities.
This first phase of the project was completed in July, 2022.
Periodicals
During Phase 2, we will be conducting a thorough review of the periodicals housed within the main library facility, deselecting volumes that are redundant or available elsewhere, and preparing the remaining materials to be collected in one physical space within the Library, for easier discovery.
The Gerstenzang Science Library space has, in recent years, been used mainly as storage for physical science periodicals, monographs, microfilm, and other materials, many of which are outdated and underutilized. In order to return the space to Brandeis and allow it to be included in the larger Science Building renovation, the Library will spend this phase processing, deselecting, and shifting periodicals and monographs from “G-Zang” back into our main physical collection.
The Library will also review collections on Goldfarb Level 1, ensuring relevance and ease of access.
In this phase of the project, we will move to Goldfarb Level 2 and Level 3, reviewing all physical collections in the space, and ensuring relevance and ease of access.
Goldfarb Mezzanine
Goldfarb Mezzanine
The Brandeis Library’s invaluable collection of physical Judaica materials is currently shelved across multiple locations within the Library, with a core of materials located on the Goldfarb Mezzanine. The Strategic Collections Project will attempt to rectify this by reorganizing materials across the Library sorting A-Z for easy discovery. By starting with the "A" call numbers on the Mezzanine, we can virtually ensure that all of "B" will remain there and thus most of the core texts covering Judaism will remain where they have been while making the rest of the collection more manageable for the rest of the community. Ensuring the collection is easy to navigate is also one small step toward increasing the usage of print materials.
Farber 3 and Farber 4
The Library will also review collections on Levels 3 and 4 of Farber, ensuring relevance and ease of access. Combined with our work noted above to A-Z the collection, this work will also allow us to move our art books away from a space that has had numerous water incursion incidents.
Final Shift
Once all other work is complete, we will finalize our new collection and make it as browsable and discoverable as possible. By the end of the project, the Goldfarb Library will feature dedicated collections spaces and a general collection sorted A-Z throughout the building, to complement our robust digital and consortial access to any materials needed by our community members.
People
The Strategic Collections Project is supported by three main groups of Brandeis Community members: our Steering Group, an Analysis Working Group, and a Process Working Group.
Expand All
This group establishes the long- and short-term strategies that shape this project. They also determine the criteria for all decision making, and manage communication and messaging to the broader community.
- Matthew Sheehy, University Librarian
- Mark Paris, Associate University Librarian for Scholarly Resources & Discovery
- Alexis Scanzani, Manager of Acquisitions & Discovery
- Aimee Slater, Government Information & Social Sciences Librarian
- David Katz, Faculty Representative
- Pu Wang, Faculty Representative
- Laura Hibbler, Associate University Library for Research and Instruction
- Mary Calo, Associate Director of Public Services
This group enacts data analysis best practices during the life of the project, configures and implements the Greenglass software, and establishes our guidelines for deselection of materials.
- Mark Paris, Associate University Librarian for Scholarly Resources & Discovery
- Alexis Scanzani, Manager of Acquisitions & Discovery
- Maric Kramer, Social Sciences Librarian
- Liz Bodian, Metadata Technologies Librarian
This group is responsible for establishing workflows for review, managing the withdrawal and discarding processes, and handling division of labor and resource allocations.
- Alexis Scanzani, Manager of Acquisitions & Discovery
- Mary Calo, Assosciate Director of Public Services
- Lou Hartman, Metadata Coordinator
- Maureen Reynolds, Public Services Coordinator
Frequently Asked Questions
Expand All
The current state of the library’s physical collections is unsustainable. It is our responsibility to make sure that our collections best suit the needs of Brandeis’ research and educational mission, and doing so means that we need a better and more robust approach to determining which physical materials are necessary and relevant at all times. Additionally, we will lose the space that we occupy in the old Gerstenzang Science Library, and building new space is not an option.
In addition to the lack of funding for the space, there are the practical issues of staffing and ongoing maintenance costs. It’s not as simple as simply raising money. While money can be raised fairly easily for one time costs (though we have to ensure alignment with University priorities and that is a different issue altogether), there are implications for ongoing expenses that we cannot cover without a major shift in how we’re spending money.
Though it may sound counterintuitive, removing materials from the Library collection is essential to responsible maintenance of the Library collections, and librarians use the same professional judgment that we apply to build the collection to identify what we can remove. We’re committed to making sure that access to all relevant materials is maintained, whether in physical or digital form, and we will make sure that no truly unique collections are lost in this process.
Our approach in this project is to prioritize the preservation of access in one form or another. We have started with the elimination of secondary copies, meaning no permanent loss of access.
We are leveraging our shared collections partners, namely EAST and HathiTrust. No library can have every title, so we form these partnerships to strategize around collections and build in quick access to materials with partner institutions (basically a distributed library).
Interlibrary loan (ILL) has come a long way from what it was. The technology and people behind the services at Brandeis and our many partner institutions have become really good at turning things around quickly. Digital materials are frequently here within 48 hours and even physical items can be quickly received. The only exceptions here can be rarely held items, but that isn’t a factor here because we will not de-select rarely held materials.
We will not deselect anything that has artifactual value. We’re actively looking for materials that contain special markings, such as the materials we received through Jewish Cultural Reconstruction. We are aware of the artifactual value of materials from certain high-value, historical publishers.
We will not deselect anything that has been used since the year 2000.
As our uninterrupted document delivery services during the pandemic demonstrated, we have the ability and dedication to make materials available to all who need them, even if a physical book is not held in the Library collection. Using Greenglass during this project allows us to run up-to-the-minute analysis of which collections are available in what formats, and through which of our consortial partners. We are confident that we can find just about anything you may need in the course of your research, and that the physical materials we keep will be more discoverable and relevant than ever before. And, as stated above, our shared collection partners and our ILL team will be able to locate any materials you may need in the future that are not housed at the Brandeis Library.
Last page update: February 17, 2026