[Koha] Separate hold queues?

Coehoorn, Joel jcoehoorn at york.edu
Wed Jun 14 05:08:44 NZST 2017


Most libraries I'm familiar with use different shelving locations for these
books. It could even be in the same area in the stacks, just one section of
a shelf that's labeled differently.

This helps you, because you can set borrowing rules for this to more easily
accomplish your goal. More importantly it helps your patrons, because now
they know right away what they can do with the book; they won't be suddenly
surprised that the book can't be checked out when they reach the
circulation desk.



Joel Coehoorn
Director of Information Technology
402.363.5603
*jcoehoorn at york.edu <jcoehoorn at york.edu>*

*Please contact helpdesk at york.edu <helpdesk at york.edu> for technical
assistance.*


The mission of York College is to transform lives through
Christ-centered education and to equip students for lifelong service to
God, family, and society

On Tue, Jun 13, 2017 at 11:42 AM, BOUIS Sonia <sonia.bouis at univ-lyon3.fr>
wrote:

> Hello,
> I'm rising from the dead this email because we have a similar problem.
> We would like to use Koha for asking books in stacks not freely available
> for public and we have thought that we could use holds for this.
> For one biblio, we have items directly borrowable and items that are in
> specific stacks non directly reachable.
> For items directly borrowable, patrons can put a hold only if the item is
> on loan but it's  not the same for the item in stacks that could be asked
> for even if they are available. We could manage that with different item
> types.
> If someone asks for an item in stacks but if there's already an hold on
> the other item, when we will return the stack's item, it will be the patron
> who asked for the item on loan that will be served (as he's on priority 1)
> So, if we could manage different hold queues, regarding the item type, it
> would be better.
>
> Do you have the same problem in your libraries ?
> Andreas, did manage to solve your problem ?
>
> Cheers
>
> Sonia
>
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Wed, 22 Mar 2017 21:11:28 +0000
> From: Andreas Hedström Mace  <Andreas.Hedstrom.Mace at sub.su.se>
> To: "koha at lists.katipo.co.nz" <koha at lists.katipo.co.nz>
> Subject: [Koha] Separate hold queues?
> Message-ID: <AC7E35B5-1CAA-4303-A5D2-4AC6F23AA779 at sub.su.se>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
>
> Hi all!
>
> We are at Stockholm University Library experiencing some difficulties with
> how Koha is currently handling hold queues, and are considering development
> in this area. Are there any other libraries who are experiencing similar
> issues (see below), and would be interested in the development of separate
> hold queues? Or have an opinion on whether this would be a good/bad idea?
>
> In Koha today it is possible to limit the fulfilment of holds per branch
> (same pick-up location as home/holding library) and item type. For us, it
> makes most sense to view this as several hold queues for one bibliographic
> record. For example: a person queuing for a book from the textbook
> collection (item type = ”TC”) isn’t actually queuing for books for the
> general collection (item type = ”GC”). But Koha handles this as one big
> queue. This isn’t a problem for the holds per se, as Koha only fetches the
> book that has the right criteria to fill the hold (i.e. the correct item
> type or home/holding library) but it has proven to be an issue for our
> patrons.
>
> As Koha displays it as one big queue, it might seem that the queue is much
> bigger that it actually is. This has confused a number of patrons, and have
> discouraged others from placing holds. Continuing our example: a book has
> three patrons on hold for item type GC, when a new patron adds a hold for
> TC. This makes this person number four in the queue in Koha today, making
> the patrons believe that they will have to wait weeks or months for the
> book (in our library TC is 7 days, GC 28 days) when in reality it is only
> one week.
>
> For us, this would better be described as two queues:
> One with 3 patrons on hold (General collection) One with 1 patron of hold
> (Textbook collection)
>
> The same is true for hold fulfilment that require pick-up location to be
> the same as home/holding library (i.e. hold fulfilment per branch). Say a
> public library also have a school library in it’s organization, that is a
> special case where books from the other libraries should not be sent to the
> fulfil holds, or vice versa. As in our example above it would be better to
> display queues separately so 5 holds at the main library won’t discourage a
> student from placing a hold on that same book at the school library.
>
> So my question is basically, is there are other libraries out there who
> are using any of these hold fulfilment features (or would like to), and
> would want to see a new feature to separate/split hold queues? Or who could
> see the benefit of such a feature.
>
> Please note that separate hold queues would of course only come in effect
> if any system preference that limits hold fulfilment is set to allow. Also,
> this would not effect holds to pull.
>
> I look forwards to hearing people’s opinion about this!
>
> Best regards,
> Andreas
>
> ________________________________
> Andreas Hedström Mace
> Librarian
> Stockholm University Library
> Stockholm University
> 106 91 Stockholm
> Tel: +46 (0) 8 16 49 17
> su.se/english/library<http://su.se/english/library>
> ________________________________
>
>
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