Press Release from Primary Research Group, Inc.




Primary Research Group has published The Survey of Academic Libraries 2008-09 
Edition, ISBN #1-57440-102-5. The Survey of Academic Libraries, 2008-09 Edition is 
based on data from 75 college libraries in the United States and Canada.  Data is broken 
out by size and type of college, as well as for public and private institutions, to allow for 
easier benchmarking. The report’s more than 300 tables of data present findings about 
trends in staffing and salaries, budgets, grants and endowments, special collections, 
content and materials spending, use of e-books and online services, capital budgets 
library building renovation and facilities management, information literacy, and many 
other issues of interest to academic librarians. 

Some of the report’s findings are:

Only 22.5% of the colleges sampled believed that librarians’ salaries had been going up 
faster than the rate of inflation, while more than 34% believed that their salaries in the 
past year had gone down in real terms.  Librarians in private colleges were more likely 
than their counterparts in public colleges to believe that their salaries had gone down in 
real terms in the past year.

For the libraries in the sample the mean rate of growth in content spending in nominal 
terms was only 1.75% from the 2006-07 to 2007-08 academic year. Spending actually 
declined for the public colleges in the sample and grew only at about the rate of inflation 
for the private colleges. The expected rate of increase in spending for the 2008-09 
academic year is only 1.66%. Private colleges in the sample had a mean expected 
increase of 3.1%, slightly less than the expected rate of inflation, while the public 
colleges essentially foresaw an increase of less than 1/10th of 1 percent, a decline in real 
terms of about 3.5%. 

The libraries in the sample spent a mean of $456,238 for content accessed online in the 
2008-09 academic year; the major research universities in the sample averaged more than 
$3.4 million in such expenditures.  Spending per student for online information for 
colleges with fewer than 1,100 students FTE was $190.15 per student, while for colleges 
with more than 4,401 FTE per student spending averaged $115.04 for online information. 
Generally, students at the larger colleges enjoy access to a greater range of databases at 
much lower cost.

The libraries in the sample accrued a mean of about $119,000 from library endowments 
in the past year, though the mean accrual was zero.  Receipts by private colleges vastly 
overshadowed those by public colleges, by a factor of nearly 30:1. More than a quarter 
(26.47%) of the libraries in the sample had endowments specifically to support the 
purchase of books for the library.  More than half of the libraries in colleges with more 
than 4,401 FTE students had endowments specifically to support book purchases for the 
library.

For more than 47% of the libraries in the sample, the library capital budget has remained 
about the same over the past three years; it has increased somewhat for 23.54% and 
increased significantly for 7.35%. More than 38% of private college libraries have seen 
the capital budget increase either somewhat or significantly, while this is true for only 
about 23% of public college libraries.

The general level of investment in chemistry-related info resources appears to have 
modestly increased. For about half of those sampled, investment in chemistry info has 
remained stable; for roughly a quarter it increased, but decreased for only 13.64% of 
participants. Investment in psychology-related information has increased for more than 
half of the libraries in the sample and has not decreased for any.  Moreover, all types of 
libraries, public and private, community colleges and research universities, increased 
investment in psychology-related information resources in the past three years. Similarly, 
investment in sociology and political science-related resources has also increased 
significantly in the past three years. Although more than 55% held investment in these 
subjects stable, more than 34% increased it and only about 4.5% decreased it. Public 
colleges in particular increased investment in these subjects, as did colleges offering the 
most advanced degrees. 

We asked survey participants to list their top five academic MLS programs in North 
America, on the basis of scholarly output and effectiveness in preparing professional 
librarians for practice.  Library science programs received 5 points for a first place 
selection, four for second place, three for third and so on. The leader by far was the 
University of Illinois at Campaign Urbana, with 77 total points; two universities tied for 
the second spot, each with 38 total points, the University of Michigan, and the University 
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

The price of the report is $89.50; it is available directly from Primary Research Group or 
from major book distributors such as Midwest Library Services, Baker & Taylor, 
Blackwell and others. For a full table of contents and further information view our 
website at www.PrimaryResearch.com. 

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