Economic trends:
- Slow economic recovery increase number of community patron whom utilize library services and resources
- Subscription price for electronic materials (i.e. serials and databases) continues to increase
- Economic recovery will increase funding for the campus and funding for library resources
Demographic trends:
- Increase number of traditional students, who grow up in the digital environment
- Digital divide between junior and senior faculty; junior faculty is more tech savvy and prefer electronic resources, while senior faculty prefer print materials.
Technological trends:
- Digital born is comfortable with information being available on the Internet, they tend to bypass the library when they look for information to fulfill their information need.
- Increase number of students process the latest technologies like smartphone, e-readers etc.
Ecological trends:
- Concerns about books that being weeded or withdraw from the collection, will they be dumped or recycled?
Social-cultural trends:
- Addition of student housing increase the need of leisure/recreational reading materials.
- Increased diversity in students and faculty body requires acquisition of materials in different languages.
- Research preference of students and faculty gears toward electronic resources
Political-legal trends:
- Copyright law have direct impact on faculty and students use of electronic resources subscribed by the Library
- Complexity of licensing for journals and databases increase due to merger of vendors
- Change in state education requirement impact degree programs which the Library support
Competitive trends:
- Online search engines continue to improve search capability and enhance user interface
- The new Education and Arts building provide the latest technologies and an attractive environment for students and faculty to study
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