The Subject Liaison s Survival Guide to Technical Services - Softcover

Schmidt, Krista; Carstens, Tim

 
9780838915028: The Subject Liaison s Survival Guide to Technical Services

Inhaltsangabe

Subject liaisons are a communications bridge connecting academic departments to the library and its services Liaisons provide instruction sessions, research support, and collection development for their departments. The better the subject liaison understands the technical services functions the better the service she can offer.This model ask that liaisons have vision or collection building philosophy as well as a working knowledge of how technical services staff get things done. Oftentimes, liaisons only knowledge of technical services comes LIS coursework, sufficient for understanding principles, perhaps. Far short on the operational details of ordering, processing, cataloging, and weeding. With a better command of technical services operations, subject liaisons will shape will manage expecations and assure that your library delivers on promised services. From the author proposal:Chapters will address six main areas of interest including policy, budget and funds, submitting orders, acquisitions ordering, processing, cataloging, deselection/weeding. All chapters will include appropriate background information and further explanations will be devised to enhance liaison understanding of each area. A list of prompts related to each area will follow explanations; these Questions You Should Be Asking will be created to help liaisons understand the breadth and depth of each area as they train and begin to more thoroughly understand collections and acquisitions concepts.Positioning the work against comparable books, they write:Most of these resources- particularly the monographs- are aimed at technical services audiences and include in-depth information and jargon of interest to those already in the technical services field or pursuing librarianship in that niche. Liaisons are forced to dig through a morass of not pertinent information to find the useful parts of these resources. One exception, Moniz and Eschleman s Fundamentals for the Academic Liaison, is similar to ours in that its audience is liaisons and it uses the idea of checklists (similar to our Questions You Should be Asking ). However, while that book does address ideas such as budgeting and acquisitions, it is but a snapshot of what we plan to include in an entire book.

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