LIS
652-2 Pratt
Institute
Monday:
3:30–5:50 Spring 2007
Catalog
Code LIS 652-2
Information
Services and
Sources
Department/School School of Information and
Library Science
Instructor’s
Name Anne
Kelly – Associate Professor
Course
Locations PMC – 6th floor – Room 608
Number
of credits/CEU’s 3
Prerequisites None
Required
Course Yes
Instructor’s
Phone Numbers PMC 212-647-7682
SILS
212-647-7377 Instructor
Campus
Office Hours and Location: PMC
Rm. 604A
Mon. 2:30-3:30 p.m.
Wed. 5:00-6:30 p.m.
by appointment only
E-mail
– akelly@pratt.edu
Date
of this syllabus – January 2007
SCHOOL OF INFORMATION AND LIBRARY SCIENCE LIS
652-2
Kelly
GOALS:
This course is designed to communicate the basic concepts of reference services. Methods and sources of locating information, analysis of representative works and criteria for collection evaluation with respect to reference and research use are examined.
OBJECTIVES:
Upon completion of the course, students will be able to:
1
PRATT INSTITUTE LIS 652-3
COURSE REQUIREMENTS:
Class Participation 35%
Assignments 35%
Examinations 30%
· 6 Hours of Field Observation Required
COURSE STRUCTURE:
The course consists of lectures, discussion and sample exercises covering the units listed. Students are expected to read widely from Cassell and Balay, 11th ed., assigned readings and self-selected readings from the Pratt Library. Sample exercises will involve the use of a large library collection and beginning use digital/online sources. There will be a mid-term and a final examination. Individual student-teacher conferences will be scheduled early in the semester.
COURSE
DESCRIPTION:
LIS 652 – Information Services
and Sources 3 credits
This course covers concepts of reference service in real and virtual environments. The course introduces the selection and evaluation of resources in all formats, the development of searching techniques, strategies for user-centered service,
matching user needs to resources and the provision of information services in changing technological environments. Six hours of field work are required.
**************************
2
SCHOOL OF INFORMATION AND LIBRARY SCIENCE KELLY
I.
Introduction – Cassell & Hiremath; p. ix-xii, 3-14,
15-29.
II.
Encyclopedias – Cassell & Hiremath; p. 32-50,
69-92.
III.
Ready Reference, Almanacs, etc. – Cassell &
Hiremath; p. 93-110.
IV.
Bibliographies – Cassell & Hiremath; p. 53-68.
V.
Indexes, Abstracts, E-Journals – Cassell &
Hiremath; p. 135-154.
VI.
Biographical Sources – Cassell & Hiremath; p.
199-212.
VII.
Dictionaries – Cassell & Hiremath; p. 111-134.
VIII.
Government Information – Cassell & Hiremath; p.
213-251.
IX.
Geographical Sources – Cassell & Hiremath; p.
183-198.
X.
Reference Interview – Cassell & Hiremath; p. 31-50,
265-285.
REQUIRED TEXT:
Cassell, Kay Ann & Hiremath, Uma. (2006) Reference and Information Services in the
21st Century: An Introduction. New York: Neal Schuman.
(Available Barnes & Noble, 5th Ave. and 18th St. and PMC Library on the 4th floor)
Additional Texts (Selected readings noted below):
Balay, R. (1996). Guide to Reference Books. Chicago: American Library Assn.,
(On Reserve Pratt Manhattan Library, 011.02 G946, PMC, 4th floor)
Bopp. R. E. & Smith, L. C. (2001). Reference and
Information Service: An
Introduction. 3rd ed. Englewood, CO: Libraries Unlimited.
Radford, M. L., Barnes, S. B., & Barr, L. (2006).
Web Research: Selecting, Evaluating
& Citing. Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
3
COURSE
OUTLINE:
Session
1: Introduction
-
course
coverage; introduce requirements (review style manual)
-
history
of reference services
-
service
ethic/user & community centered reference
-
evolution
of bibliographic information retrieval
-
impact
of electronic information retrieval on reference services
-
current
trends in reference services
Session
2: Encyclopedias & Subject
Resources/Databases
-
uses
and importance of encyclopedias
-
types
of encyclopedias (general, subject, one volume, etc.)
-
evaluation
and selection of various formats
-
types
of subject resources and databases (e.g., Biography Resource Center, Literature
Resource Center, Health Research Center)
-
searching
strategies for subject databases
Session
3: Evaluation & Selection
of Print & Electronic Reference Materials
-
reference
librarian’s collection development responsibilities
-
developing
user-centered reference collections (including for diverse environments)
-
decisions
on format (print, electronic, combination, etc.)
-
current
issues in selection/deselection of reference materials
-
evaluation
criteria & selection aids
Session
4: Ready Reference
-
define
ready reference
-
types
of sources (almanacs, dictionaries)
-
ready
reference in different types of libraries and information centers
-
when
to use which resource/which format
-
what
if you cannot find the answer
-
ethical
issues (business, legal, medical queries)
Session
5: Bibliographies &
Bibliographic Networks
-
definition
& use of bibliographies
-
evaluation
of bibliographies
-
types
of bibliographies (national, subject, trade, etc.)
-
union
catalogs & bibliographic networks (OCLC, RLIN, NUC)
Session
6: Searching Techniques for
Bibliographic Databases
-
structure
of electronic reference
-
determining
search strategy
-
use
of keyword vs. subject searching
-
assisting
end-user searchers
-
basic
information retrieval techniques (truncation, proximity operators, limiters,
etc.)
4
Session
7: Mid-term
Session
8: Indexes, Abstracts
-
definition/users
of indexes
-
evolution
of indexes
-
genre
indexes (book review, poetry, short story, play, song, etc.)
-
types
of journal indexes (citation, abstract, full-text)
-
structure/organization
of journal indexes
-
searching
strategies for electronic indexes
Session
9: - major
vendors (Wilson, EBSCO, OCLC, Lexis-Nexis, ProQuest,
DIALOG
-
evaluating/selecting
indexes
Session
10: Digital Reference
Using
the Internet for Reference, Part 1
-
Internet
search strategies for reference queries
-
uses
and types of search engines
-
uses
of subject directories
-
evaluating
Web resources
-
guidelines
for Internet resource selection
Session
11: Government Documents,
Directories, Gazetteers
Using
the Internet for Reference, Part 2
-
Internet
search strategies, continued
-
finding
resources on the “Invisible Web”
-
finding
government documents on the Web
-
search
strategies for government resources
Session
12: The Reference Interview
-
RUSA
Guidelines for behavior of reference librarians
Session
13: Biographical Sources
-
selection
and evaluation criteria for biographical sources
-
authoritative
publishers of biographical sources
-
questioning
strategies for biographical queries
Session
14: Dictionaries &
Directories
-
types
-
current
trends
-
evaluation
Session
15: COURSE REVIEW – FINAL EXAMINATION
5
Attendance & Participation: Attendance at
all class meetings is required. A
student who must be absent from a class meeting still has certain
responsibilities:
o
To inform the instructor
in advance, or if advance notice is not possible, as soon after the absence as
possible (see above for phone numbers/email address).
o
To arrange for delivery
to the instructor of any assignment due at the class meetings.
o
To obtain notes,
handouts, etc. from a classmate (in anticipation of this need, each student is
advised to exchange telephone numbers with one or two other in the class).
Points are deducted for:
unexcused absences, coming late to class, or leaving class early. Active participation includes, but is not
limited to the following:
o
Being involved in class
discussions,
o
Asking relevant
questions, debating, or challenging points raised in class,
o
Suggesting new ways of
looking at things.
Written Work:
o
Students should always
keep second copies of all assignments that are turned in. In the case of a piece of written work
becoming lost, regardless of fault, it is the responsibility of the student to provide a second copy.
o
Assignments are to be
typed, double spaced with wide margins, and free from spelling, grammatical,
and typographical errors.
o
Please put a single
staple in the upper left-hand corner – no plastic covers or folders.
o
Put your name, the date,
class section 652-2, title of assignment, and my name on a front cover title
sheet. No blank page at the end is
required.
o
Papers are due at the
beginning of class on the dates noted.
Late papers will be marked down unless the student has obtained prior
permission of the professor (in the case of illness, etc.).
o
Papers will be prepared
in accordance with the APA (American
Psychological Association) style available at http://www/apastyle.org/elecref.html. Although APA requires an abstract, since all
your papers are short, no abstract of the paper is required. Information with sample citations for citing
Web sources is provided in Ch. 6 of the Radford,
Barnes, & Barr textbook (see scientific styles examples).
o
All material quoted or
paraphrased from another source must
be properly cited.
Student Agreement:
Attendance at this class
signifies that the student has agreed to abide by and adhere to the policies
and regulations specified above. It is
understood that the instructor may adapt or change this syllabus and the assignments
contained within it according to circumstances that may arise during the course
of the class.
6
LIS652-2 Prof. Kelly
Spring 2007
PRATT INSTITUTE SYLLABUS
INFORMATION SERVICES AND SOURCES
LIS652-2
01/22/07 General Introduction to the Course
Course
Schedule and Explanation
Required
Readings:
Cassell & Hiremath; p. ix-xii; 3-14, 15-29.
Examine Balay and read pp. vii-xv.
Janes,
J. (2003). What is reference for? Reference Services
Review, 31(1), 22-25.
Speaker – Professor Jean Hines, Public Services Librarian
Print/Electronic Resources of the
Pratt Library Part 1
01/29/07 Encyclopedias and Subject Databases
Required
Readings:
Cassell & Hiremath; p. 31-50, 69-92.
Bibel, B. & Yusko, S. (Sept. 15, 2006). Encyclopedia Update 2006.
Booklist, 103(2), 78-92.
Berinstein, P. (March 2006). Wikipedia and Britannica…
Searcher,
14(3), 16-26.
Class Discussion – Encyclopedia Comparison
& Subject Database
Examine 2 current general encyclopedias (electronic version recommended).
Choose a topic at least one page in length and evaluate the article according to the
Cassell – Hiremath criteria, p. 70-74.
Examine one subject encyclopedia (e.g. Encyclopedia of Philosophy – print, Encyclopedia of Architecture - print, Grove Dictionary of Art – electronic), and evaluate the subject chosen with the same criteria. Browse. Make notes for discussion.
Examine one electronic subject database (e.g. Biography Resource Center, Literature Resource Center or Health Reference Center), all available with a NYPL card. Browse. Make notes for discussion.
7
02/5/07 Exercise
1 – Hand in – Short Paper Due (3-4 pages)
Encyclopedias
02/12/07 Review
Media – Selection of Print & Electronic Materials – Part 2
Required Readings:
Cassell & Hiremath; p. 253-263, 289-302.
Balay, p.1-15.
Highly Recommended Readings:
Altschiller, D. and Wenzel, S. G. (Spring 2003). Book reviews in print
and online. RUSQ, 42(3), 193-205.
RUSA Guidelines for Information Services. (Winter 2003). RUSQ, 40
(2), 115-117.
Wayman, M. J. (May 2006). It’s the little things: the 2006 list of
outstanding reference sources. American Libraries, 37(5), 40-43.
Witte, S. and Cargill, M. (March 2006). Selected reference works,
2005. College and Research Libraries, 67(2),177-190.
Class Discussion – Review Media – Examine 5 titles (paper or electronic)
discussed by Cassell & Hiremath, p. 291-295 in your readings. Note the
differences in these titles, especially the features you liked or disliked. You do not need to hand in your notes but bring them to class for discussion.
02/19/07 Ready
Reference, Almanacs, Handbooks, etc.
Required Readings:
Cassell & Hiremath; p. 93-110.
Highly Recommended Readings:
RUSA Guidelines for Medical,
Legal and Business Responses at
General Reference Desks. (Winter 2000). RUSQ, 40(2), 118-120.
Yue, J. (Fall 2000). How familiar is it anymore? Bartlett’s Familiar
Quotations goes digital. RUSQ, 42(1), 26-29.
Class Discussion – Ready Reference – Read Cassell & Hiremath, p. 56, 65-66.
Note general sources new to you,
their organization and indexing. Choose
Books
in Print and Encyclopedia of Associations as well. Look for an active political
group of interest to you. Address? Number of members? Newsletter? Mainstream? Find the price of the new 9/11 Task Force report? More than one publisher? And why so cheap? Do the same for the Iraq study group report by Baker and Hamilton. cont’d
8
Bartlett’s Quotations (www.bartleby.com/100)
Information Please Almanac (www.infoplease.com)
Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary & Thesaurus
Merck Manual of Medical Information Home Edition
Roget’s Thesaurus (www.thesaurus.com)
FedStats (www.fedstats.gov) note: compare to print Statistical Abstract of the United States
Facster (www.facster.com) note: compare to print Statistical Abstract of
the United States
Occupational Outlook Handbook (www.bls.gov/oco)
Zip Code Look-Up (www.usps.gov/ncsc)
Utilize any of the ready reference sources listed on the webliography at the end of
this syllabus.
02/26/07 Bibliography – Evaluation
Required Reading:
Cassell & Hiremath; p. 53-68.
Janes, J. (2003). Introduction to Reference Work in a Digital
Age. New York, Neal-Schuman. p.1-36.
RESERVE – LS 025.524 J33 (PMC)
Examine 5 titles of your own choosing, and the National Union Catalog
pre-1956
imprints (at Pratt Library-Brooklyn
3rd floor or Mid-
Manhattan Library 2nd floor).
03/05/07 Journal Indexes Abstracts and
E-Journal Collections – Part 1
Required
Reading:
Cassell & Hiremath; p. 135-154.
Walters, W. H. (October 2004). Criteria for replacing print
journals with online journals, the importance of
sustainable access. Library
Resources and Technical
Services, 48(4), 300-304.
Hand in Topic for Webliography and Short Paper – 02/28/07 Submit a topic which will be used for both projects, with your
name, class name, class section number and date for the Professor’s
approval. The topic should be one in which you are interested, but which
is scholarly in nature, so that you will be able to find information about it
on the web and in journal
indexes. cont’d
9
It should not be too broad or too narrow. Choose a topic that has a
combination of at least 2 concepts, (e.g. “Do the children of gay parents
achieve higher academic goals in elementary school than the children of
other families?” This is a multi-concept question that came into a St.
Louis Public Library branch) or “Women as directors of major penal
institutions in the United States?”
03/12/07 Spring Vacation
03/19/07 Mid-Term Exam
03/26/07 Exercise 2 –Hand in
Journal
Indexes – Annotated List for your Search
Part 1 – For your paper (2 pages) choose 4-5 electronic journal indexes
which are relevant to your topic. Include a 100 word annotation
for each title. Each entry should include the title of the index,
range of dates covered (e.g. ERIC, v.1. 1966 – to date), vendor/
publisher. Include URL (if Web based) and frequency of updates
(e.g. weekly, monthly). Annotation will provide a brief description
of the index, subject areas covered (scope), and specific
relationship to your topic.
Part 2 – Procedure. Use the APA Style Manual for your bibliographic
citation form. Use assigned readings (Cassell &
Hiremath;
p.135-154) and Ulrich’s International Periodical Directory if needed to find indexes relevant to your topic. If you use EBSCO,
WilsonWeb, OCLC FirstSearch, which have several subject
indexes, specify which specific index (e.g. Social Science Index)
covered your topic. Assignment will be graded on the basis of
relevance/appropriateness of indexes to topic and quality of
annotations and presentation.
04/02/07 Biographical Sources and Information
Literacy
Required
Reading:
Cassell & Hiremath; p. 179-212.
Class Discussion – Choose a famous person living or dead. Find
information about him/her in 3 different essay type biographical sources
mentioned in your readings. NOT MONOGRAPHS! Make photocopies
of this information and bring to class (up to 3 pages only). Be prepared to
discuss ease/difficulty in finding information and differences in coverage
of the sources.
10
04/09/07 Dictionaries & Directories –
Discussion
Required
Reading:
Cassell & Hiremath; p. 111-133.
Discussion – Dictionaries & Directories. Examine and become familiar
with at least 4 current dictionaries (including 1 unabridged, 1 desk/college
dictionary, 1 Internet dictionary and 1 specialized dictionary) and at least 3
directories (other than the Encyclopedia of Associations). Check the
“word of the day” in the Oxford English Dictionary (www.oed.com).
Earliest use of the word? Most recent use recorded?
Do not hand in your notes but be prepared to discuss in class.
04/16/07 Digital Reference – Using the
Internet for Reference, Part 1 and
Government
Information Sources
Required
Readings:
Cassell & Hiremath; p. 213-251.
Jatkevicius, J. (March/April 2003). Free lunch legal resources,
from plain to polished. Online, 27(2), 22-26.
West, J. ed. (2004). Digital versus non-digital reference: ask a
librarian online and offline. Reference Librarian, no.85.
(Scan)
Highly
Recommended Reading:
Fallis, J. (Winter 2004). On verifying the accuracy of information.
Library Trends, 3, 463-487.
Herman, E. (2004). A post September 11 balancing act: Public
access to U. S. government information versus the
protection
of sensitive data. Journal of Government
Information, 30(1), 20-41.
04/16/07 Exercise
3 – Webliography – Hand in
(2 pages) Part 1 – Pick out 7-10 best web sites for your research topic.
Use the search engines and web sites on the last pages of the syllabus. To
determine the best web sites use the
criteria provided in class and in your
assigned readings. Be objective about commercial web sites. Give a brief
introduction to your topic. Then in alphabetical order list your web site names, complete URLs and a brief critical annotation (50-100 words).
Exercise
3 – Webliography – Part 2 (1 page – separate sheet of paper)
Discuss the search engines/web indexes you used and any problems you
11
encountered in compiling the webliography and how you solved them.
What worked? What did not work? Exercise 3 will be graded on the
quality of the web sites selected, presentation, quality of the annotations
for each site and quality of description of problems/search strategy as
applied to your topic.
Do
not print out web pages and hand them in.
Exercise
3 due 04/16/07 (3 pages total).
04/23/07 Geographical Sources – Discussion
Required
Readings:
Cassell & Hiremath; p. 183-198.
Mitchell, S. (2003). Where in the world? An online guide to
gazetteers, atlases, and other map resources. Internet
Reference Services Quarterly, 8(1/2), 183-194.
Berenstein, P. (January 2006). Location, location, location:
online maps for the masses. Searcher, 14(1), 16-25.
See also www.mapquest.com for road maps and directions.
04/30/07 Journal Indexes, Abstracts, &
E-Journal Collection – Part 2
Required
Reading:
Cassell & Hiremath; p. 135-154.
Wleklinski, J. M. (May-June 2005). Studying Google Scholar:
wall to wall coverage. Online, 29(3), 22-26.
04/30/07 Exercise
4 – Hand in Journal Articles on Your Search Topic (5-6
pages, plus bibliographies). Look for the 15 best journal articles on your
approved search subject in the appropriate journal indexes. (NO BOOKS,
NO NEWSPAPERS, NO WEBSITES), as if you were doing a 20-30 page
term paper.
The Search Process will have 3 parts:
I. In a well developed essay, describe the process you used to locate the articles. How did you approach the search? Strategy? Did you ask for help? When and why? Was the help a success? Why or why not? What would have been helpful? Would you approach the search the same way were you to do it again?
II. List the 15 best articles you found. (Use the APA style manual – not annotated).
12
III. List the journal indexes you used (APA style) to find the 15 articles.
Hand in Exercise 4 – 4/30/07
05/07/07 Discussion – The Reference
Interaction
Required
Readings:
Cassell & Hiremath; p.31-50, 265-286.
Kluegel, K. et al. (Fall 2003). The reference interview, connecting
in person and in cyberspace. RUSQ, 43(1), 37-51.
Highly Recommended Readings:
Albanese, A.R. (Sept. 15,
2006). Google is not the net, Library Journal 131(15) 32-34.
Dewdney, P. & Mitchell, G. (Summer 1996). Oranges and peaches: understanding communication accidents in the
reference interview. R.Q., 35(4), 520-536.
Straw, J. E. (Summer 2000). A virtual understanding: the
reference interview and question negotiation in the
digital age. RUSQ, 39(4), 376-379.
RUSA
Guidelines for Behavioral Performance of Reference
and Information Services Providers. (Fall 2004). RUSQ.,
44(1), 14-17.
RUSA Task Force on Professional Competencies. (Summer
2003). Professional Competencies for Reference and User Services