Reference librarians are no longer expected to know much about the information they find; they are merely expected to find it. Technological competency rather than knowledge has become the order of the day. In many respects, reference service has become a matter of typing search terms into a library’s online catalog or a web search engine and providing the patron with the results of the search. Calling for a re-intellectualization of reference librarianship, this book suggests another approach to providing quality reference service–reading. The authors surveyed both academic reference librarians and public library reference personnel in the United States and Canada about their reading habits. From the 950 responses, the authors present findings about the extent to which librarians read newspapers, periodicals, fiction and nonfiction, and recount and analyze stories about how reading has made them better librarians. The authors also report that North American professors in the humanities and social sciences believe that the best reference librarians are those who have wide-ranging, subject-based knowledge as opposed to the type of process-based, functional knowledge that is increasingly dominating the curricula of many Library and Information Science programs.
Dilevko Juris Dilevko & Gottlieb Lisa Gottlieb
Reading and the Reference Librarian [PDF ebook]
The Importance to Library Service of Staff Reading Habits
Reading and the Reference Librarian [PDF ebook]
The Importance to Library Service of Staff Reading Habits
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Idioma Inglés ● Formato PDF ● Páginas 269 ● ISBN 9780786480456 ● Editorial McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers ● Publicado 2014 ● Descargable 3 veces ● Divisa EUR ● ID 5671976 ● Protección de copia Adobe DRM
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