Abstract
Universities in the UK at the start of the 21st century are in transition. Different trends are emerging in the subjects they teach and the way they are organized and student numbers are increasing. New and more powertul computer networks are being established. In this environment economies have to be made and administrative reorganisation can be seen to assist this. Libraries and computing services are increasingly overlapping in their coverage and are formally merging. Librarians are taking more part in training and the electronic library is changing much. Electronic journals, books and secondary services are changing the ways in which libraries work. The concept of the hybrid library has emerged and the virtual learning environment means that the traditional boundaries between classroom and library are blurring. A recent SCONUL report made some predictions about library economics, technological developments and student numbers.
Keywords: Universities - computing services, University libraries, Electronic library, Virtual learning environment - students, SCONUL, United Kingdom
References
- The Times Higher Education Supplement has information on the developments covered in this paper.
- Athens Access Administration System. Bath: Athens Service, 2001. http://www.athens.ac.uk
- "The cafetiere theory of government: Whitehall's cultural revolution: In opposition, Tony Blair remade the Labour Party. In office, he is reinventing Britain's system of government." Economist (21 Aug 1999), s.2486.
- Corrall, S. (2001). The SCONUL Vision: the academic library in the year 2005. London: SCONUL: (Online). URL: http://www.sconul.ac.uk/vision2005.htm.
- Joint Funding Councils' Libraries Review Group. report I Higher Education Funding Council for England, Scottish Higher Education Funding Council, Higher Education Funding Council tor Wales, Department of Education for Northern Ireland; [chair Sir Brian Follett]. Bristol: HEFCE, 1993. 83 s.
- UKOLN UK Office for Library and Information Networking. UKOLN [Website Home Page]. Bath: UKOLN, 2001. http://www.ukoln.ac.uk. Useful source of information on their and other related activities.
License
Copyright (c) 2001 The author(s). This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.

