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Autore principale: Wyatt, Neal
Natura: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: 2010
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ925983
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author Wyatt, Neal
author_facet Wyatt, Neal
Wyatt, Neal
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Kissing Cousins Wyatt, Neal Public Libraries Library Services Reference Services Librarians Internet Role Access to Information In the library world, there seems to be a fundamental conflict between reference and readers' advisory (RA). But in fact, the two are similar in approach, an insight that goes back to James Wyer's 1930 "Reference Work: A Textbook for Students of Library Work and Librarians." It defined the reference librarian as a mediator of information, answering questions that involve three factors: (1) an inquirer (or reader); (2) a librarian; and (3) a source of materials. That's exactly how RA works as well, at the intersection of reader, librarian, and the collection. With the growth of the Internet, as patrons look to librarians to answer different kinds of questions, public libraries nationwide are reconsidering the role of public service librarians. Often the result is a change of duties and responsibilities that places staff in unfamiliar and unsettling territory. This is a fundamental shift not from reference to RA, but an integration of the two that strengthens both.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ925983
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2010
record_format eric
spellingShingle Kissing Cousins
Wyatt, Neal
Public Libraries
Library Services
Reference Services
Librarians
Internet
Role
Access to Information
Kissing Cousins Wyatt, Neal Public Libraries Library Services Reference Services Librarians Internet Role Access to Information In the library world, there seems to be a fundamental conflict between reference and readers' advisory (RA). But in fact, the two are similar in approach, an insight that goes back to James Wyer's 1930 "Reference Work: A Textbook for Students of Library Work and Librarians." It defined the reference librarian as a mediator of information, answering questions that involve three factors: (1) an inquirer (or reader); (2) a librarian; and (3) a source of materials. That's exactly how RA works as well, at the intersection of reader, librarian, and the collection. With the growth of the Internet, as patrons look to librarians to answer different kinds of questions, public libraries nationwide are reconsidering the role of public service librarians. Often the result is a change of duties and responsibilities that places staff in unfamiliar and unsettling territory. This is a fundamental shift not from reference to RA, but an integration of the two that strengthens both.
title Kissing Cousins
topic Public Libraries
Library Services
Reference Services
Librarians
Internet
Role
Access to Information
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ925983