ABSTRACT

Stay up-to-date with the growing amount of reference resources available online

How important is the World Wide Web to information retrieval and communication? Important enough that information professionals have seen students exit from their libraries en masse when Internet service was lost. Internet providers dominate the indexing and abstracting of periodical articles as major publishers now offer nearly all of their reference titles in digital form. Libraries spend increasing amounts of funding on electronic reference materials, and librarians devote an increasing amount of time to assisting in their use. The Reference Collection: From the Shelf to the Web is an essential guide to collection development for electronic materials in academic and public libraries.

The Reference Collection: From the Shelf to the Web tracks the continuing evolution of electronic reference resources-and how they’re accessed—in a variety of settings. Librarians representing university, elementary school, and public libraries in the United States and Australia examine how reference collections have evolved over time (and may soon be a thing of the past); how public and school libraries have dealt with the changes; why library research assignments have become more difficult for teachers to make and for students to complete; how to organize online reference sources; and why the nature of plagiarism has changed in the electronic era. The book also examines the use of electronic references from a publisher’s perspective and looks at the most important Web-accessible reference tools—both free and subscription—in the areas of humanities, medicine, the social sciences, business, and education.

The Reference Collection: From the Shelf to the Web also examines:

  • issues of authority, accessibility, cost, comfort, and user education in evaluating electronic resources
  • the formation of purchasing consortia to facilitate the transfer of reference materials from print to online formats
  • current literature and research findings on the state of digital versus print reference collections
  • what electronic publishing means to smaller reference books (dictionaries, almanacs, etc.)
  • the need for increased information literacy among students
  • the nature, extent, and causes of cyber plagiarism
  • the use of federated search tools
  • and includes a selected list of the top 100 free Internet reference sites
The Reference Collection: From the Shelf to the Web is an essential resource for all reference and collection development librarians, and an invaluable aid for publishing professionals.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

chapter |16 pages

Out of the Stack and into the Net

International Perspectives on Academic Reference Resources

chapter |16 pages

Digital versus Print

The Current State of Reference Affairs in School Libraries

chapter |20 pages

From the Womb to the Web

Library Assignments and the New Generation

chapter |14 pages

Cyberplagiarism and the Library

Issues and Solutions

chapter |22 pages

Federated Search Tools

The Next Step in the Quest for One-Stop-Shopping

chapter |13 pages

Medical Reference Sources on the Internet

An Evolving Information Forum and Marketplace

chapter |27 pages

Briefcases and Databases

Web-Based Reference Sources for Business Librarians and Their Client Communities

chapter |17 pages

100 Best Free Reference Web Sites

A Selected List