The number of these facilities in Chaoyang has since been
growing quickly. Thus far, the district has launched 119 ATM libraries across
43 communities. "The machines, a major breakthrough in terms of time and
space limitations, turned out to be more efficient and convenient [compared to
the traditional libraries]," said Song Wei, deputy director of Chaoyang
Library. By July 2013, the ATM libraries in the district have received more
than 10,800 visits for registration. The district plans to increase their
number to a total of 150 in the future. These ATM libraries are not merely
book-lending facilities, they can also help librarians collect and categorize
reader information. "From these roadside ATM libraries, we have found that
literary and sociological books are the mostpopular among our readers,"
said Wang Qi, an official with the publicity department of the Capital Library
of China. Wang's conclusion was echoed by a reader who happened to apply for a
registration card to borrow the books from the ATM library for the first time.
"I have an immense interest in sociological books. I am fascinated by the
books as long as they are understandable." the borrower Li Liying said.
The automation of libraries composes only one step in the long-term program for
the libraries to cultivate reading habits among readers. According to a report
drafted by China Youth Daily, a Chinese newspaper, the average Chinese read
only 4.39 paper books in 2012, a number ranking far below that of South Korea and Japan. Several reasons lie at the
core of these low reading rates. In addition to the overall demise of the print
media, the general format of the books also contributes to people not reading
as much. "In Japan,
people can find many portable books, say pocket books [to be read on the go],
however in China
those books are rare," Wang explained. According to her, people in Beijing are spending an
increasing amount of time commuting between work and home; this time period
would be a suitable occasion for them to get in some reading. However, this
habit cannot be shaped in one day. "It will take a long time for any
investments in culture to yield their fruits. The cultivation [of people's
reading habits] is a process that may take two, five or even 10 years to be
completed," Song said.
http://www.china.org.cn/arts/2013-08/27/content_29835174.htm