Virtual Librarians & Indexing Resources
How life has changed since I left library school - How should practice respond and change? Implications for Future? Learners, Educators, Schools Library Profession
Press Release "Ten years after some experts predicted the demise of the nation's system of libraries as a result of the Internet explosion, the most current national data on library use shows that the exact opposite has happened..." Full Report
Going Virtual: Technology & the Future of Academic Libraries PDF 2007
NATIONAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATIONS
VIRTUAL LIBRARIANS
- Virtual Librarian Help
- The Virtual Reference Desk
- Community College Library Consortium
24/7 Virtual Reference: This product provides reference service using the Internet to chat and co-browse and/or push web pages. Through it library reference is available 24 hours per day and 7 days per week. Trained academic reference librarians and library students provide the service. - OPAL, an International Collaborative Initiative by libraries of all types to provide cooperative web-based programming and training for library users and library staff members. These live, online events are held in an online auditorium where participants can interact via voice-over-IP, text chatting, and synchronized browsing. OPAL allows library patrons and library staff members to participate in online library programs from anywhere. Everyone is welcome to participate in OPAL programs, and libraries of all types are encouraged to become OPAL members.
Cybrarians - Librarians - Indexing -
Dr. Jurretta Jordan Heckscher jhec@loc.gov
Research Specialist and Editor, American Memory Digital Reference Team
The Library of Congress
Washington, D.C. 20540-4604
Telephone: 202-707-0271
Library of Congress Virtual Programs & Services
- Journeys & Crossings
- American Memory
- Public Library of Science
- Directory of Accredited LIS Master's Programs
- Current News of Libraries, Internet, and Education
- Resource for online K-12 libraries
- American Library Association
http://www.ala.org Supports over 100,000 school, public, academic and special libraries . - American Association of School Librarians
http://www.ala.org/aasl/index.html A division of the American Library Association, AASL promotes the general improvement and extension of library media services for children and young people. - Video Librarian Online - http://www.videolibrarian.com/index.html - video review guide, for librarians and fans of video, news reviews, searchable databases, current industry news.
- The OCLC member libraries
include all types of libraries: research, university, public, corporate, government, and school libraries.OUR OF PRINT BOOKS - it doesn't seem to matter whether they're technical or not. - The Advanced Book Exchange Home Page
- Alibris - The Ultimate Source for OP and Rare Books
- Bibliofind
JOBS "Internet Librarian" - > sole responsibility was doing reference via the web. > http://www.corestaff.com/ look under library staffing http://www.llsdc.org/committees/placement/jobline.htm (law libraries > only) - Am. Society for Information Science (ASIS)
- Chief Officers of State Library Agencies (COSLA)
- State Libraries of the USA
ALA list of Literature Librarians around the US
Witness to the Decline of Books A Librarian Sees Readers Check Out Jan. 20, 2007, When I started in this profession five years ago I used to teach English I presumed that librarians were mostly united in their attraction to books. But as I moved along in my library science program, I found that books weren't really our focus. Information management, database networking and research tools claimed the largest share of the curriculum. In other words, literacy today is defined less by how English departments or a librarian might teach Wordsworth or Faulkner than by how we find our way through the digital forest of information overload. Typically, many people in my line of work no longer have the title of librarian. They are called media and information specialists, or sometimes librarian technologists. The buzzword in the trade is "information literacy," a misnomer, because what it is really about is mastering computer skills, not promoting a love of reading and books. These days, librarians measure the quality of returns in data-mining stints. We teach students how to maximize a database search, about successful retrieval rates. What usually gets lost in the scramble is a careful reading of the material. <snip> Conventional wisdom has it that teenagers don't read because they're too busy. Only after high school, sometime midway through college, do young adults reconnect with their childhood love of reading and make books their partners for life. I don't think so anymore. The 2004 Reading at Risk report by the National Endowment for the Arts concluded that literary reading was in serious decline on all fronts, especially among the youngest adults, ages 18 to 24, whose rate of decrease was 55 percent greater than that of the total adult population.
SEE GOOGLE SCHOLAR, on the other hand, is an excellent example of the unified field theory. Not to mention what a few bucks in the pocket can do. They are certainly not organizing Committees and Task Forces to present Resolutions. Google is just doing it. You can protest that it's not original, that it's not well-implemented, that we've done better all along. It doesn't matter, because we don't have a cluebird from hell what we're doing, so we are unable to explain to people that the same articles they are buying through Google Scholar are available for "free," as we refer to tax-supported resources, through their library Web pages. And who can blame our users, when we present balkanized and badly-configured pots of content here and there, and then preen that we did not "dumb down" the interface to the point where anyone could actually use it?...]
Indexing Links
Organizations
American Society of Indexers (ASI): This is the place to be if you're an American indexer, and they have a lot of information about indexing. A listing of available indexers is located here as well. More links to relatedprofessional organizations, publications, a bibliography, and other ASI news.
Tennessee Regional Group of ASI: A great site to catch up on news and views about indexing. Terrific online newsletter published bi-monthly.
Indexing Education and Resources
USDA Graduate School: Correspondence courses in Basic and Advanced Indexing as well as other editing courses.
INDEX-L: A discussion list for indexers and related professionals.
FREELANCE: A discussion list concerning issues relating to starting and running a freelance editorial/indexing business. To subscribe, visit this site and follow the directions on the site.
CINDEXUSERS: A discussion list for indexers who use Cindex dedicated indexing software to share tips and enhance skills. To subscribe, visit this site and follow the directions on the site.
Indexing Research: Home of Cindex dedicated indexing software.



