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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dougherty, Richard M., Blomquist, Laura L.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1974
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED090981
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author Dougherty, Richard M.
Blomquist, Laura L.
author_facet Dougherty, Richard M.
Blomquist, Laura L.
Dougherty, Richard M.
Blomquist, Laura L.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Improving Access to Library Resources: The Influence of Organization of Library Collections, and of User Attitudes Toward Innovative Services. Dougherty, Richard M. Blomquist, Laura L. Attitudes Branch Libraries College Faculty College Libraries Decentralization Distance Information Dissemination Information Seeking Interviews Library Circulation Library Collections Library Networks Questionnaires Tables (Data) Use Studies User Satisfaction (Information) An investigation was conducted to probe faculty attitudes toward library effectiveness, to measure the effect on these attitudes of the dispersion of relevant resources in a system of departmental libraries around the campus, and to determine if a document delivery system produced changes in user attitudes toward the library. Studies were conducted at Syracuse University (SU) and Ohio State University (OSU), the latter having a new document delivery service. At SU, interviews were conducted with a random sample of faculty members; other techniques, such as subject interest profiling, shelf list location counts and distance measurements, were used to gauge user and library effectiveness. At OSU, known users of the document delivery service were interviewed. The investigators found that, while a department library structure may well have impeded an individual's access to all relevant materials, attitudes of users of branch libraries were generally more positive toward the library as a source of information than attitudes of central library users. The small sample of faculty studied at OSU precluded a generalizable evaluation of the document delivery service, but it was felt that such a service increased user access to and satisfaction with the library. (Author/SL)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED090981
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1974
record_format eric
spellingShingle Improving Access to Library Resources: The Influence of Organization of Library Collections, and of User Attitudes Toward Innovative Services.
Dougherty, Richard M.
Blomquist, Laura L.
Attitudes
Branch Libraries
College Faculty
College Libraries
Decentralization
Distance
Information Dissemination
Information Seeking
Interviews
Library Circulation
Library Collections
Library Networks
Questionnaires
Tables (Data)
Use Studies
User Satisfaction (Information)
Improving Access to Library Resources: The Influence of Organization of Library Collections, and of User Attitudes Toward Innovative Services. Dougherty, Richard M. Blomquist, Laura L. Attitudes Branch Libraries College Faculty College Libraries Decentralization Distance Information Dissemination Information Seeking Interviews Library Circulation Library Collections Library Networks Questionnaires Tables (Data) Use Studies User Satisfaction (Information) An investigation was conducted to probe faculty attitudes toward library effectiveness, to measure the effect on these attitudes of the dispersion of relevant resources in a system of departmental libraries around the campus, and to determine if a document delivery system produced changes in user attitudes toward the library. Studies were conducted at Syracuse University (SU) and Ohio State University (OSU), the latter having a new document delivery service. At SU, interviews were conducted with a random sample of faculty members; other techniques, such as subject interest profiling, shelf list location counts and distance measurements, were used to gauge user and library effectiveness. At OSU, known users of the document delivery service were interviewed. The investigators found that, while a department library structure may well have impeded an individual's access to all relevant materials, attitudes of users of branch libraries were generally more positive toward the library as a source of information than attitudes of central library users. The small sample of faculty studied at OSU precluded a generalizable evaluation of the document delivery service, but it was felt that such a service increased user access to and satisfaction with the library. (Author/SL)
title Improving Access to Library Resources: The Influence of Organization of Library Collections, and of User Attitudes Toward Innovative Services.
topic Attitudes
Branch Libraries
College Faculty
College Libraries
Decentralization
Distance
Information Dissemination
Information Seeking
Interviews
Library Circulation
Library Collections
Library Networks
Questionnaires
Tables (Data)
Use Studies
User Satisfaction (Information)
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED090981