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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hoffert, Barbara
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ786498
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author Hoffert, Barbara
author_facet Hoffert, Barbara
Hoffert, Barbara
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Circ's Up, Budgets Leap Hoffert, Barbara Public Libraries Internet Library Services Electronic Libraries Library Materials Library Administration Budgets Library Automation Multimedia Materials Vendors Reading Material Selection From the ascendance of the reference database and web sites offering endless opportunities for cyber-promotion to the crowds swarming through the doors to avail themselves of new computers, the Internet has transformed the way public libraries do business. That is not news. What is exciting, though, is how the Internet continues to change public libraries, even if, at times, it can be a double-edged sword. Take circulation, the success story of "Library Journal's" annual book-buying survey, which began in 1998. According to the survey, a snapshot of a select group of public libraries (the "Library Journal" 100) distributed evenly throughout the country by size and type, circulation has been flowing upward since a slight dip in the late 1990s. This article reports that just over half of this year's respondents report an increase in circulation--almost as good as last year's 55 percent and appreciably better than 1999's 32 percent--and circulation rose on average by over four percent, the survey's biggest leap yet. (Contains 3 tables.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ786498
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2007
record_format eric
spellingShingle Circ's Up, Budgets Leap
Hoffert, Barbara
Public Libraries
Internet
Library Services
Electronic Libraries
Library Materials
Library Administration
Budgets
Library Automation
Multimedia Materials
Vendors
Reading Material Selection
Circ's Up, Budgets Leap Hoffert, Barbara Public Libraries Internet Library Services Electronic Libraries Library Materials Library Administration Budgets Library Automation Multimedia Materials Vendors Reading Material Selection From the ascendance of the reference database and web sites offering endless opportunities for cyber-promotion to the crowds swarming through the doors to avail themselves of new computers, the Internet has transformed the way public libraries do business. That is not news. What is exciting, though, is how the Internet continues to change public libraries, even if, at times, it can be a double-edged sword. Take circulation, the success story of "Library Journal's" annual book-buying survey, which began in 1998. According to the survey, a snapshot of a select group of public libraries (the "Library Journal" 100) distributed evenly throughout the country by size and type, circulation has been flowing upward since a slight dip in the late 1990s. This article reports that just over half of this year's respondents report an increase in circulation--almost as good as last year's 55 percent and appreciably better than 1999's 32 percent--and circulation rose on average by over four percent, the survey's biggest leap yet. (Contains 3 tables.)
title Circ's Up, Budgets Leap
topic Public Libraries
Internet
Library Services
Electronic Libraries
Library Materials
Library Administration
Budgets
Library Automation
Multimedia Materials
Vendors
Reading Material Selection
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ786498