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Stone buildings, cyberspace, and the library user

Jim Agee (Library Acquisitions, at James C. Kirkpatrick Library, Central Missouri State University, Warrensburg, Missouri, USA)
Patricia Antrim (Coordinator for Library Science and Information Services, College of Education and Human Services, at the Central Missouri State University, Warrensburg, Missouri, USA)

New Library World

ISSN: 0307-4803

Article publication date: 1 December 2003

1258

Abstract

Although libraries provide quiet and well‐equipped places for students to seek and use information, the trend librarians are seeing is a decline in the number of people coming to the library. In contrast, they are seeing a dramatic increase in the use of remotely accessed research databases. From these two trends emerges the concept of disintermediation, where library users seek and retrieve information without the assistance of the librarian, and the realization that librarians are no longer present when users need help in developing successful search strategies and evaluating the information they find. Librarians are not present at that teachable moment. To overcome the effects of disintermediation, librarians need to evaluate their services and recreate their instructional strategies in innovative ways so that they are available to the users of information wherever those users are.

Keywords

Citation

Agee, J. and Antrim, P. (2003), "Stone buildings, cyberspace, and the library user", New Library World, Vol. 104 No. 11/12, pp. 474-480. https://doi.org/10.1108/03074800310508759

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 2003, MCB UP Limited

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