Written as a textbook for LIS students taking reference courses, this fully updated and revised seventh edition of Reference and Information An Introduction also serves as a helpful handbook for practitioners to refamiliarize themselves with particular types and formats of sources and to refresh their knowledge on specific service topics.
The first section grounds the rest of the textbook with an overview of the foundations of reference and an introduction to the theories, values, and standards that guide reference service. The second section provides an overview of reference services and techniques for service provision, establishing a foundation of knowledge on reference service and extending ethical and social justice perspectives. The third part offers an overview of the information life cycle and dissemination of information, followed by an in-depth examination of information sources by type as well as by broad subject areas. Finally, the concluding section guides the reader through the process of developing and maintaining their own vision of reference practice.
This textbook is essential reading for all preservice and working librarians, particularly those concerned with ethical and social justice perspectives on reference work.
This book is used for those interested in doing Reference and Instruction as a profession. The book provides you with the latest insights and knowledge on what one encounters when doing the work of a Reference Librarian. What I like most about the book are the numerous amounts of resources and databases that's talked about that will be of value to anyone who takes part in doing reference interviews. A must have for my own personal and professional use.
This is a book for librarians in training and current librarians. It's not the most exciting thing to read, but it is really helpful with issues related to librarianship.
It's a text book. It's a door stop. It's bigger than the phone book (for those of you who remember phone books). It has EVERY handy resource and tool for working a reference desk, as of 2019 anyway. There was a new edition out in September 2024, however my class started in August and it wasn't an option. I'd hope the new text addresses AI since that wasn't much of a public-facing thing when this was published but still this was such an essential read. Was glad to read and discuss every step of the way as part of my Ref/Resources course in the MSLIS program (Univ of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign). So many cool elements of research librarianship in one spot. An interesting history of how the field progressed and innovated throughout the last century, and how there is a place for unique human touch (empathy, inclusion) despite the ready-reference availability of today.
I made a joke in my other "text book review" because I had beef with my other class, but this was a legitimately great textbook. Informative, up-to-date, and well organized.
LIS 407, Introduction to Reference Services, Fall 2020