Librarians entering the profession often shun the prospect of becoming catalogers because they perceive public service responsibilities as more rewarding than those of technical services. This is causing a shortage in the area of technical services in general and cataloging librarians in particular. A group of concerned professionals decided to investigate solutions to the problems, thus, the Simmons College Symposium on Recruiting, Educating, and Training Cataloging Librarians evolved. The editors have compiled papers presented at the symposium that propose solutions to the cataloger shortages. . . . Discussions included topics such as the evolving public/technical services relationship, the networking of professional librarians to aid in recruitment, flexible and creative education programs, and the cross training of library professionals to handle cataloging. The symposium participants, which included well-known professionals, administrators, and educators, encourage increased cataloging knowledge and involvement to support the automation and technological challenges facing libraries of today. The papers are well written and easy to read. Recommended. Library Journal
Developed from a recent symposium, this informative book offers research-based analyses; it also offers realistic approaches to the concerns of catalogers and the library educators and administrators responsible for their recruitment, education, and training. It was written by more than 25 specialists who have developed solutions to particular problems within these three areas.
Solutions are offered for a wide range of issues, including increased financial pressure on libraries, recruiting methods, the changing economic and professional expectations of librarians, the impact of technology, challenges for the library science curriculum, and training strategies for large and small institutions. This book will encourage library administrators to break new ground in applying creative solutions to the real-life problems of their institutions. It will help professional educators in designing or improving library and information science programs, and give students a greater understanding of critical issues in contemporary librarianship.
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Maße
Höhe: 240 mm
Breite: 161 mm
Dicke: 28 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-313-26693-5 (9780313266935)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
SHEILA S. INTNER is Associate Professor at the Graduate School of Library and Information Science of Simmons College. Her earlier works include Access to Media: A Guide to Integrating and Computerizing Catalogs, and she has contributed numerous articles and reviews to American Libraries, Library Journal, RQ, and Information Technology and Libraries, among others.
JANET SWAN HILL was head of cataloging at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois.
Preface Introduction Keynote Address The More Things Change ... Session on Recruiting Cataloging Librarians Session Keynote Address Recruitment: The Way Ahead Recruiting, What Next? Recruitment, a Positive Process Are We Teaching Dinosaurs to Forage: Recruiting Catalogers to the Profession A Network of Professionals Recruiting (In Lieu of a Staff of Professional Recruiters) Recruiting Catalogers: Three Sets of Strategies The Evolving Public/Technical Services Relationship: New Opportunities for Staffing the Cataloging Function Beneath the Stereotyping: Matching Recruitment to Reality Recruiting Catalogers at the Louisiana State University Libraries Session on Educating Cataloging Librarians Session Keynote Address Educating Cataloging Librarians: Its Art and Craft Making Cataloging Interesting Preaching to the Unconverted: The Cataloging Educator's Challenge The Crisis in Cataloging: A Feminist Hypothesis Responding to Change: New Goals and Strategies for Core Cataloging Courses Alternatives for Educating Catalogers: A Small Library School Perspective Using Computers to Enhance Cataloging Productivity Cataloging Education in the Library and Information Science Curriculum Session on Training Cataloging Librarians Session Keynote Address Developing Catalogers for the Nation: Problems and Issues in Training Cataloging Librarians for the Future The Role of Training in the Changing Cataloging Environment Training and Continuing Education for Catalogers: The Electronic Environment of the 1990s Training the Cataloger: A Harvard Experience Standards, Volume, and Trust in the Shared Cataloging Environment: Training Approaches for the Smaller Library Dollars and Sense: Training Catalogers Using Management Tools for Cataloging Discussions Selected Bibliography Index