Online searching has affected the librarian's traditional role of assisting users in their pursuit of information. With the recent introduction of user-friendly systems designed to promote end-user online searching, a new look at the librarian's role as a search intermediary is needed. Through a review of the literature, the author discusses several key aspects ofthe librarian's changing role in the online search process. These include the reference interview, online search evaluation, user training, and information service management
The Internet enables global dissemination and\ud retrieval of information at any time, as a result, ...
Librarians often ask if there\u27s a simple way to keep online systems straight in order to help use...
The Searchers project examines the strategic challenges for major public libraries presented by the ...
The ubiquity of library user familiarity with online searching allows librarians to focus on the soc...
THE FAVORED SEARCHING TEXT in LIS programs for over a decade has been Online Retrieval: A Dialogue o...
This study investigated the impact of online bibliographic retrieval on the librarian's profess...
To succeed searchers, all librarians require both a basic idea of how databases are put together and...
The present research project focuses on the user/system interface of on-line bibliographic search se...
Value premises underlying the "information versus instruction " debate in ref-erence libra...
The broad subject of this article is how online searching (as a special form of information retriev...
As use of the Internet grows as a research tool, patrons have become increasingly less dependent on ...
This paper examines the relevance of the reference librarian in the face of ubiquitous IT tools whic...
In this article, the author discusses teaching library and information science (LIS) students about ...
While BRS/After Dark and Dialog's Knowledge Index were developed for the end-user market, their...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine which factors influence librarians selection of electr...
The Internet enables global dissemination and\ud retrieval of information at any time, as a result, ...
Librarians often ask if there\u27s a simple way to keep online systems straight in order to help use...
The Searchers project examines the strategic challenges for major public libraries presented by the ...
The ubiquity of library user familiarity with online searching allows librarians to focus on the soc...
THE FAVORED SEARCHING TEXT in LIS programs for over a decade has been Online Retrieval: A Dialogue o...
This study investigated the impact of online bibliographic retrieval on the librarian's profess...
To succeed searchers, all librarians require both a basic idea of how databases are put together and...
The present research project focuses on the user/system interface of on-line bibliographic search se...
Value premises underlying the "information versus instruction " debate in ref-erence libra...
The broad subject of this article is how online searching (as a special form of information retriev...
As use of the Internet grows as a research tool, patrons have become increasingly less dependent on ...
This paper examines the relevance of the reference librarian in the face of ubiquitous IT tools whic...
In this article, the author discusses teaching library and information science (LIS) students about ...
While BRS/After Dark and Dialog's Knowledge Index were developed for the end-user market, their...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine which factors influence librarians selection of electr...
The Internet enables global dissemination and\ud retrieval of information at any time, as a result, ...
Librarians often ask if there\u27s a simple way to keep online systems straight in order to help use...
The Searchers project examines the strategic challenges for major public libraries presented by the ...