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Autor principal: Allen, Gillian
Formato: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: 1996
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED411809
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author Allen, Gillian
author_facet Allen, Gillian
Allen, Gillian
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Disintermediation: A Disaster or a Discipline? Allen, Gillian Foreign Countries Information Dissemination Information Retrieval Information Seeking Information Skills Internet Librarians Online Searching Reference Services Role Search Intermediaries Search Strategies Technological Advancement User Needs (Information) Users (Information) The term "disintermediation" has developed to describe the finding of information by an end-user without the need for a third party. New developments in techniques for retrieval and dissemination have led to a situation where an end-user can acquire the basic skills necessary for searching the myriad databases available. The information professional needs to become more proactive and add value to the end product in order to meet the challenge of new technology. This paper includes a basic discussion of the pros and cons of disintermediation, training, subject awareness and end-user confidence, and disintermediation as the discipline of the future. The paper concludes with a case study of working practices of enquiry in the library at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (London, United Kingdom). Librarians and information workers have always been able to adapt their working practices to fit the requirements of their community. Librarians have to accept that others will begin to impinge on what they have always seen as their "territory," but if they develop their jobs in line with the demands of the technology, they should find that disintermediation acts as a discipline and does not become a disaster. Individuals will find that their jobs become far more highly profiled and their contributions to the data handling within their organizations will be marked. (Author/SWC)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED411809
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1996
record_format eric
spellingShingle Disintermediation: A Disaster or a Discipline?
Allen, Gillian
Foreign Countries
Information Dissemination
Information Retrieval
Information Seeking
Information Skills
Internet
Librarians
Online Searching
Reference Services
Role
Search Intermediaries
Search Strategies
Technological Advancement
User Needs (Information)
Users (Information)
Disintermediation: A Disaster or a Discipline? Allen, Gillian Foreign Countries Information Dissemination Information Retrieval Information Seeking Information Skills Internet Librarians Online Searching Reference Services Role Search Intermediaries Search Strategies Technological Advancement User Needs (Information) Users (Information) The term "disintermediation" has developed to describe the finding of information by an end-user without the need for a third party. New developments in techniques for retrieval and dissemination have led to a situation where an end-user can acquire the basic skills necessary for searching the myriad databases available. The information professional needs to become more proactive and add value to the end product in order to meet the challenge of new technology. This paper includes a basic discussion of the pros and cons of disintermediation, training, subject awareness and end-user confidence, and disintermediation as the discipline of the future. The paper concludes with a case study of working practices of enquiry in the library at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (London, United Kingdom). Librarians and information workers have always been able to adapt their working practices to fit the requirements of their community. Librarians have to accept that others will begin to impinge on what they have always seen as their "territory," but if they develop their jobs in line with the demands of the technology, they should find that disintermediation acts as a discipline and does not become a disaster. Individuals will find that their jobs become far more highly profiled and their contributions to the data handling within their organizations will be marked. (Author/SWC)
title Disintermediation: A Disaster or a Discipline?
topic Foreign Countries
Information Dissemination
Information Retrieval
Information Seeking
Information Skills
Internet
Librarians
Online Searching
Reference Services
Role
Search Intermediaries
Search Strategies
Technological Advancement
User Needs (Information)
Users (Information)
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED411809