Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kessler, Julia Boone
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1981
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED221184
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867181253515542528
author Kessler, Julia Boone
author_facet Kessler, Julia Boone
Kessler, Julia Boone
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Bibliographic Access to Audiovisual Materials: A Comparison Between Professional Recommendations and Regional Practice. Kessler, Julia Boone Audiovisual Aids Cataloging Classification Comparative Analysis Indexing Learning Resources Centers Library Collections Library Materials Literature Reviews Nonprint Media Public Libraries School Libraries Using decision points from Esther Piercy's "Commonsense Cataloging" as a framework for analysis, this paper compares the opinions of experts on cataloging, classification, and shelf arrangement of audiovisual materials in school libraries, public libraries, and media centers with actual practices in four school and community libraries in upstate New York. A review of the literature on bibliographic access to audiovisual materials is presented, with individual discussions devoted to each of the major questions involved in cataloging, classification, and shelf arrangement identified in Piercy's work. An overview of bibliographic control practices in four upstate New York libraries--a public elementary school library, a public library, a school district enrichment and resource center, and a 2-county media/resource center--follows, with analysis of each of the major questions in cataloging, classification, and shelf arrangement for which expert opinion was summarized. A discussion of the level of agreement between experts on bibliographic access to nonprint materials, a review of the differences in practices among the libraries examined, and recommendations for a number of ways in which expert opinion might be developed and applied to solve the problems encountered by practicing librarians conclude the report. Three tables and a 29-item reference list accompany the text. (JL)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED221184
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1981
record_format eric
spellingShingle Bibliographic Access to Audiovisual Materials: A Comparison Between Professional Recommendations and Regional Practice.
Kessler, Julia Boone
Audiovisual Aids
Cataloging
Classification
Comparative Analysis
Indexing
Learning Resources Centers
Library Collections
Library Materials
Literature Reviews
Nonprint Media
Public Libraries
School Libraries
Bibliographic Access to Audiovisual Materials: A Comparison Between Professional Recommendations and Regional Practice. Kessler, Julia Boone Audiovisual Aids Cataloging Classification Comparative Analysis Indexing Learning Resources Centers Library Collections Library Materials Literature Reviews Nonprint Media Public Libraries School Libraries Using decision points from Esther Piercy's "Commonsense Cataloging" as a framework for analysis, this paper compares the opinions of experts on cataloging, classification, and shelf arrangement of audiovisual materials in school libraries, public libraries, and media centers with actual practices in four school and community libraries in upstate New York. A review of the literature on bibliographic access to audiovisual materials is presented, with individual discussions devoted to each of the major questions involved in cataloging, classification, and shelf arrangement identified in Piercy's work. An overview of bibliographic control practices in four upstate New York libraries--a public elementary school library, a public library, a school district enrichment and resource center, and a 2-county media/resource center--follows, with analysis of each of the major questions in cataloging, classification, and shelf arrangement for which expert opinion was summarized. A discussion of the level of agreement between experts on bibliographic access to nonprint materials, a review of the differences in practices among the libraries examined, and recommendations for a number of ways in which expert opinion might be developed and applied to solve the problems encountered by practicing librarians conclude the report. Three tables and a 29-item reference list accompany the text. (JL)
title Bibliographic Access to Audiovisual Materials: A Comparison Between Professional Recommendations and Regional Practice.
topic Audiovisual Aids
Cataloging
Classification
Comparative Analysis
Indexing
Learning Resources Centers
Library Collections
Library Materials
Literature Reviews
Nonprint Media
Public Libraries
School Libraries
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED221184