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Marta
Deyrup
Assistant Professor and Librarian, Seton Hall University, Glen
Rock, NJ Field: Library Science Host
Institution: Centre National de Coordination et de Planification
de la Recherche Scientifique et Technique, Morocco Dates of
Grant: February 1 -21, 2003
My fifteen-year-old son and I arrived in Rabat on February 2,
2003 to find instead of the snow and ice of northern New Jersey,
spring-like weather and temperatures in the 50s. That week, I began
work at the Insitut Marocain de l'information scientifique et
technique (IMIST) at its temporary location in the capital. IMIST
was created in 2000 and will break ground in July as a full-fledged
part of the Moroccan university system.
Although there are 14 universities in Morocco, there is no
centralized university library system. Instead, libraries function
autonomously, as divisions of individual departments or institutes.
There are few electronic resources for researchers, no unified
catalog for books or serials, and little exchange of materials among
academic institutions. This will all change in the next few years.
The Moroccan government has committed itself to expanding and
modernizing its university and public library system as part of
educational reform in the country.
Mohammed Essadaoui (IMIST's project leader) and I visited the
institute's future site in central Rabat. The building plan calls
for a modern library that will house an extensive collection of
scientific and technical periodicals, study rooms, computing
facilities for patrons, archives, and a circulating collection of
books organized according to the American Dewey Decimal System.
During my three-week stay in Rabat I conducted a series of
lectures and workshops on topics related to American librarianship.
Most of the topics were technical in scope, covering such areas as
traditional and virtual models of interlibrary loan, integrated
library database management systems, electronic reserve systems, the
creation of online theses and dissertations, and bibliographic
records and metadata standards. But we also looked at library
management issues, such as workflow procedures, using surveys and
user statistics for decision-making purposes, U.S. copyright law as
applied to libraries, and the general trend toward the open access
of scholarly communication.
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What was particularly valuable for the IMIST team was to gain a
basis of comparison between the American university library system
and that of the Francophone world with which they are very familiar.
IMIST will serve as the hub for the exchange of scientific and
technical information among researchers in Morocco and eventually
provide competitive intelligence for the country's business
community. It was absolutely thrilling to participate in this
national project, which will transform the Moroccan university
library system and bring many of its activities on par with other
countries. The project leader and I plan to continue the
collaboration begun between IMIST and Seton Hall University and are
planning further ways in which we can work together.
My son and I did a bit of traveling in our free time, visiting
Marrakesh to the south and the nearby city of Casablanca. We grew to
really love the beauty of the country, which is geographically very
diverse and spent time with our hosts in their homes.  |