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Autore principale: Templeton, Thomas Clay
Natura: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: 2008
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ875984
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author Templeton, Thomas Clay
author_facet Templeton, Thomas Clay
Templeton, Thomas Clay
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Placing the Library: An Argument for the Phenomenological and Constructivist Approach to the Human Geography of the Library Templeton, Thomas Clay Constructivism (Learning) Human Geography Familiarity Phenomenology Library Services Library Research User Needs (Information) Users (Information) User Satisfaction (Information) Library Development Social Change Place reminds us to tailor our professional work to the shifting concerns, and indeed the shifting criteria, of our shifting constituencies, rather than to a placeless professional vision of what librarianship, society, and literacy should be. Every place maker must make do, make sense, and make place in an environment that is technologically heterogeneous and in which the potential for novelty as well as recurrence is a persistent feature. The siege flag of place has been raised, not only in librarianship but in many sectors, in defense of the human and the parochial, of tradition and local turf. Taking a phenomenological cue, here we attempt to prune and redirect this problematic term. We arrive at what we consider reasonable criteria of success for ourselves: to what extent is our "library," in whatever professional sense we assign that word, vitally connected to the discursive practices of the places from which it draws its mandate? We contend that vitalizing a library in this respect requires us to step outside the sphere of our habitual familiarity and to explore other places. How we go about doing this is a matter of methodology. If a prior conception of place interferes with the absorption of ethnomethods, it should be held in suspension, bracketed at least until the practitioner can grasp the place that already exists.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ875984
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2008
record_format eric
spellingShingle Placing the Library: An Argument for the Phenomenological and Constructivist Approach to the Human Geography of the Library
Templeton, Thomas Clay
Constructivism (Learning)
Human Geography
Familiarity
Phenomenology
Library Services
Library Research
User Needs (Information)
Users (Information)
User Satisfaction (Information)
Library Development
Social Change
Placing the Library: An Argument for the Phenomenological and Constructivist Approach to the Human Geography of the Library Templeton, Thomas Clay Constructivism (Learning) Human Geography Familiarity Phenomenology Library Services Library Research User Needs (Information) Users (Information) User Satisfaction (Information) Library Development Social Change Place reminds us to tailor our professional work to the shifting concerns, and indeed the shifting criteria, of our shifting constituencies, rather than to a placeless professional vision of what librarianship, society, and literacy should be. Every place maker must make do, make sense, and make place in an environment that is technologically heterogeneous and in which the potential for novelty as well as recurrence is a persistent feature. The siege flag of place has been raised, not only in librarianship but in many sectors, in defense of the human and the parochial, of tradition and local turf. Taking a phenomenological cue, here we attempt to prune and redirect this problematic term. We arrive at what we consider reasonable criteria of success for ourselves: to what extent is our "library," in whatever professional sense we assign that word, vitally connected to the discursive practices of the places from which it draws its mandate? We contend that vitalizing a library in this respect requires us to step outside the sphere of our habitual familiarity and to explore other places. How we go about doing this is a matter of methodology. If a prior conception of place interferes with the absorption of ethnomethods, it should be held in suspension, bracketed at least until the practitioner can grasp the place that already exists.
title Placing the Library: An Argument for the Phenomenological and Constructivist Approach to the Human Geography of the Library
topic Constructivism (Learning)
Human Geography
Familiarity
Phenomenology
Library Services
Library Research
User Needs (Information)
Users (Information)
User Satisfaction (Information)
Library Development
Social Change
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ875984