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It is no secret that the world of libraries has rapidly evolved
into an environment which will soon be largely digitized. However,
this digital shift has brought with it a unique set of challenges
and issues for scholars and librarians to handle. Recent
Developments in the Design, Construction, and Evaluation of Digital
Libraries not only addresses the challenges with digital libraries,
but it also describes the recent developments in the design,
construction, and evaluation of these libraries in various
environments. This cutting-edge resource compiles research from a
wide array of specialists into a unified and comprehensive manner.
Librarians, researchers, scholars, and professionals in this field
will find the reference source beneficial in order to deepen their
understanding of this continually growing field.
This resource is as much a tribute to its editors and contributors,
a cadre of champions who have made the study of this
underrepresented group their lifework, as it is a testament to
their unwavering respect for the young inquiring mind. Continuing
the work of their earlier volume published in 2004, Mary K. Chelton
and Colleen Cool offer a snapshot of the current research agenda,
and provide a useful starting place for exploring the information
seeking behavior of young adults. This excellent resource, which
supports information behavior and youth services courses, compiles,
in one convenient volume, the work of many of the discipline's
important researchers and their research projects. Five chapters
focus on everyday life information seeking (ELIS), including: the
everyday information behaviors of children nine to thirteen years
of age; a similar study of urban teenagers fourteen to seventeen;
the need for sexual health information; information seeking during
"queer" youth coming-out experiences; and teen reading, book
purchasing, and library-use patterns. The authors also include four
chapters that address the information seeking of youth in their
role as students. These studies are a must-read for researchers in
the field and for those with an interest in the information seeking
behaviors of youth.
This resource is as much a tribute to its editors and contributors,
a cadre of champions who have made the study of this
underrepresented group their lifework, as it is a testament to
their unwavering respect for the young inquiring mind. It begins
with a historical overview of the literature on children's use and
understanding of electronic information systems, when these
retrieval mechanisms were in their infancy. Subsequent essays by
leading figures in the field, all peer-reviewed, highlight the
theoretical and empirical progress that has occurred since then.
Including classic papers originally published elsewhere, the result
is a powerful synthesis of thought, practice, and belief. For
practitioners and academics, and all those who seek to better
understand the complex dynamics of information seeking among
children and young adults. Deserves a place on every professional
bookshelf for many years to come.
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