A 34% drop since Wisconsin's peak year of 1998, a year before the Wisconsin Public Library Service Data reported the number of public access Internet computers in public libraries.
Wisconsin Public Library Annual Report: What’s New Reporting Library Activities for 2014. (Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction)
To reflect changes in the types of reference requests that libraries receive, the
federal definition of reference transactions has been revised.
Reference Transactions are information consultations in which library staff
recommend, interpret, evaluate, and/or use information resources to help others
to meet particular information needs.
A reference transaction includes information and referral service as well as
unscheduled individual instruction and assistance in using information sources
(including web sites
and computer-assisted instruction). Count Readers Advisory
questions as reference transactions.
Information sources include:
- printed and non-printed material
- machine-readable databases (including computer-assisted instruction)
- the library’s own catalogs and other holdings records
- other libraries and institutions through communication or referral
- persons both inside and outside the library.
When a staff member uses information gained from previous use of
information sources to answer a question, the
transaction is reported as a
reference transaction even if the source is not consulted again.
If a contact includes both reference and directional services, it should be
reported as one reference transaction. Duration should not be an element in
determining whether a transaction is a reference transaction
The article cited here doesn't fully reflect my own view of reference services, but I found this particular quote instructive.
From the concluding section of
Re-conceptualizing the ‘reference transaction': the case for interaction and information relationships at the public library reference desk by Mary Cavanagh
University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
From a management
perspective, the needs are different. Library administrators
are constantly reviewing their
priorities and services to allocate funds in the most effective means possible while
meeting their institutional goals and objectives
. Reference desk work has only typically
been measured through ‘stick counts’ on annual
surveys, aggregated across all branch
libraries into one number.
But such quantification misses capturing some of these
significant dimensions of the reference process – knowledge and knowing are present,
knowledge sharing can be more
mutual and users often come
to their library with prior
experience of relationship, regardless of whether or not that
particular interaction shows
evidence of this relationship
in the moment. And in certain
settings, evidence suggests
that even silence can speak volumes about
information and knowledge connections.
As a library administrator today, I'd be more interested in the amount of time that reference desk staff spend interacting with the public, not the number of actual transactions.
For the sake of example, let's say a full-time Adult Services Librarian is scheduled to work the reference desk 20 hours per week. What percentage of his or her time -- how many of those 1200 minutes -- are spent in "reference transaction" mode? And how much time was spent in duties that just as easily could have been accomplished off-desk?
A low percentage might not necessarily be attributable to a lack of business. It may indicate the need for additional training, perhaps in the areas of verbal and nonverbal communication skills. It would also provide opportunities for
roving.