Guides to Library Collection Development

Guides to Library Collection Development

Author: John Thomas Gillespie

Publisher: Libraries Unlimited

Published: 1994-08-15

Total Pages: 464

ISBN-13:

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Intended to enhance collection development in school, public, and college libraries, this volume lists and annotates approximately 1,500 significant bibliographies published from 1985 through 1993, with some earlier but still useful publications. Annotations indicate scope of the work, size (often the number of entries), kinds of material included, purpose, arrangement, nature of entries, indexes, special features, and a recommendation. Author, title, and subject indexes provide easy access to the entries. With its deep and comprehensive coverage, this work will help not only in the process of selecting and acquiring materials for the library but also in the process of identification of items for reference, readers' advisory, interlibrary loan, and collection evaluation.


Axelrod & Cooper's Concise Guide to Writing

Axelrod & Cooper's Concise Guide to Writing

Author: Rise B. Axelrod

Publisher: Macmillan

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 516

ISBN-13: 9780312434397

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Provides six guided writing assignments along with readings and strategies for writing and research -- all in a brief, flexible, easy-to-use format.


Introduction To Library Research In Women's Studies

Introduction To Library Research In Women's Studies

Author: Susan E. Searing

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2019-02-26

Total Pages: 187

ISBN-13: 0429716133

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This annotated bibliography evaluates the traditional reference aids available in most college libraries in terms of their usefulness in women's studies research, highlighting issues and problems of central concern to researchers in women's studies.


Reference Sources on the Internet

Reference Sources on the Internet

Author: Karen R. Diaz

Publisher: CRC Press

Published: 1997-10-21

Total Pages: 290

ISBN-13: 9780789003584

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The most user-friendly book on Internet library research to date, Reference Sources on the Internet: Off the Shelf and Onto the Web gives you a core list of online resources that will save those who visit your library considerable time. Its menu of current reference sites will help you wade through the mire of irrelevant, unreliable material and zero in on the cyberinfo that will more economically and accurately satisfy your users’needs. While online research has by no means replaced in-house paper materials, Resources on the Internet makes it clear that you can?t ignore the timely information that hovers only in cyberspace, outside the traditional library?s four walls. In this book, you?ll learn which search tools are out there, how to determine source reliability, and how to quickly frame a reference need in light of the existing collection of Internet resources. Here?s a quick search list of what you?ll find: a comparative study of existing search engines pinpointing career, government, patent, and geographical information sites covering education, psychology, finance, social science, and private business international trade sites accessing information on gender and cultural issues the performing arts, architecture, world history, languages, and literature sports and entertainment sources life, biological, and earth science sites In an era of library research where surfing the Internet for germane data too often means plowing through the home pages of Vanna White and Pennzoil, Resources on the Internet will teach you the idiosyncracies of the existing search engines while schooling you in how to weed out the propaganda. You?ll save yourself and your researchers time, and you?ll find yourself surfing from the stillwaters of research stagnance to the pipeline of library productivity.