Course Information
Session |
---|
Credits | 1.5 CEUs or 15 PDHs |
---|---|
Registration dates | We accept registrations through the first week of classes, unless enrollment is full, and unless the class was canceled before it started due to low enrollment. |
$250.00
Credits: 1.5 CEUs or 15 PDHs
Every library, at some level, faces pressure to justify and skillfully manage budgets while costs for simply keeping the same level of resources and services steadily rise. The issues and challenges facing libraries are complex and are sometimes misunderstood by librarians themselves as well as administrators and faculty. Simplistic solutions such as moving to fully digital collections or reducing staff are not the answer. Developing effective library budgets involves not only “crunching the budget numbers,” but understanding how the money is spent, where the money comes from, and projecting the impact of future trends in the industry. Successful library budget management involves a balance between careful planning, data gathering, and documentation as well as creativity, informed risk taking, and solid analysis.
This introductory course provides background information on the vocabulary of budgets, identifies sources of data to create a strong proposal for ongoing and new expenses, and reviews some techniques for documenting budget activities for operational and planning purposes. Librarians and others taking the course will become familiar with standard elements of an operational budget and learn ways to expand critical data into planning tools.
Desired outcomes: Students will be able to describe the basic steps in a standard budget cycle, know the standard components in a budget, and create a simple budget and rationale for a library program or project.
Overarching goals, big ideas: Understanding how the library budget fits together within the department and within the larger institutional financial structure is essential. Learning how to assemble data and details for a simple budget will be emphasized.
Overarching questions: How are budgets created and used in an academic library? How does the library budget fit into the bigger financial picture in a college or university. How are budgets used day to day in an academic library?
Weekly Lesson Plans:
Session |
---|
Credits | 1.5 CEUs or 15 PDHs |
---|---|
Registration dates | We accept registrations through the first week of classes, unless enrollment is full, and unless the class was canceled before it started due to low enrollment. |
Every library, at some level, faces pressure to justify and skillfully manage budgets while costs for simply keeping the same level of resources and services steadily rise. The issues and challenges facing libraries are complex and are sometimes misunderstood by librarians themselves as well as administrators and faculty. Simplistic solutions such as moving to fully digital collections or reducing staff are not the answer. Developing effective library budgets involves not only “crunching the budget numbers,” but understanding how the money is spent, where the money comes from, and projecting the impact of future trends in the industry. Successful library budget management involves a balance between careful planning, data gathering, and documentation as well as creativity, informed risk taking, and solid analysis.
This introductory course provides background information on the vocabulary of budgets, identifies sources of data to create a strong proposal for ongoing and new expenses, and reviews some techniques for documenting budget activities for operational and planning purposes. Librarians and others taking the course will become familiar with standard elements of an operational budget and learn ways to expand critical data into planning tools.
Desired outcomes: Students will be able to describe the basic steps in a standard budget cycle, know the standard components in a budget, and create a simple budget and rationale for a library program or project.
Overarching goals, big ideas: Understanding how the library budget fits together within the department and within the larger institutional financial structure is essential. Learning how to assemble data and details for a simple budget will be emphasized.
Overarching questions: How are budgets created and used in an academic library? How does the library budget fit into the bigger financial picture in a college or university. How are budgets used day to day in an academic library?
Weekly Lesson Plans:
Lauren Slingluff (she/her) is the University Librarian at University of New Haven, Connecticut and has previously served in leadership roles at UConn Library and at Wheaton College. A third generation library worker, she is passionate about access and service and has presented and published on topics of social justice, open education resources, assessment, and leadership practices within academic librarianship. In addition to teaching about library budgeting, Slingluff regularly provides workshops on strategic planning and thinking.
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