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Our sources of information, and the practices we use to find it,
are in a period of rapid flux. Libraries must respond by selecting,
acquiring, and making accessible a host of new information
resources, developing innovative services, and building different
types of spaces to support changing user behaviors and patterns of
learning. A Field Guide to the Information Commons describes an
emerging library service model that embodies all three spheres of
response: new information resources, collaborative service
programs, and redesigned staff and user spaces. Technology has
enabled new forms of information-seeking behavior and scholarship,
causing a renovation of libraries that revisits the idea of the
"commons" a public place that is free to be used by everyone. A
Field Guide to the Information Commons describes the emergence,
growth, and adoption of the concept of the information commons in
libraries. This book includes a variety of contributed articles,
and descriptive, structured entries for various information commons
in libraries across the country and around the world.
In the closing decades of the twentieth century, academic libraries
responded to rapid changes in their environment by acquiring and
making accessible a host of new information resources, developing
innovative new services and collaborative partnerships, and
building new kinds of technology-equipped spaces to support
changing user behaviors and emerging patterns of learning. The
"Information Commons" or "InfoCommons" blossomed in a relatively
short amount of time in libraries across North America, and around
the world, particularly in Europe and the British Commonwealth.
This book is more than a second edition of the 2009 book A Field
Guide to the Information Commons which documented the emergence of
a range of facilities and service programs that called themselves
"Information Commons." This new book updates this review of current
practice in the Information Commons and other new kinds of
facilities inspired by the same needs and intents, but goes beyond
that by describing the continued evolution. This new book is an
attempt to answer the question: "What might be the next emerging
concept for a technology-enabled, user-responsive, mission-driven
form of the academic library?" Like its predecessor, Beyond the
Information Commons is structured in two parts. First, a brief
series of essays explore the Information Commons from historical,
organizational, technological, and architectural perspectives. The
second part is a field guide composed of more than two dozen
representative entries describing various Information Commons using
a consistent format that provides both perspective on issues and
useful details about actual implementations. Each of these includes
photos and other graphics.
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