Changing partnerships? Government documents departments at the turn of the millennium
By: Duncan M. Aldrich.
Contributor(s): Gary Cornwell | Daniel Barkley.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: New York : Pergamon, 2000Government Information Quarterly 17, 3, p. 273-290Abstract: During the 1990s the Federal Depository Library Program (FDLP) has undergone a transition from collections comprised exclusively of tangible print on paper or fiche publications to a mix of print and electronic materials. This article examines the impact of this transition on depository library operationsboth collections and servicesat the turn of the millennium. The discussion of reference service on depository materials is considered within the context of G. K. Zipfs law, that is, people will tend to seek the path of least effort in gathering information. Given this tendency, the extensive use of the Web to deliver electronic depository materials redirects depository library users away from depository shelves to Web workstations, and leads depository librarians to build Web pages to direct their patrons. The conclusion is that for depository libraries the new collection mix poses a management paradoxthe FDLP receives thousands of tangible documents each year, yet it must maintain new services for patrons turning increasingly to Web-based resourcesDuring the 1990s the Federal Depository Library Program (FDLP) has undergone a transition from collections comprised exclusively of tangible print on paper or fiche publications to a mix of print and electronic materials. This article examines the impact of this transition on depository library operationsboth collections and servicesat the turn of the millennium. The discussion of reference service on depository materials is considered within the context of G. K. Zipfs law, that is, people will tend to seek the path of least effort in gathering information. Given this tendency, the extensive use of the Web to deliver electronic depository materials redirects depository library users away from depository shelves to Web workstations, and leads depository librarians to build Web pages to direct their patrons. The conclusion is that for depository libraries the new collection mix poses a management paradoxthe FDLP receives thousands of tangible documents each year, yet it must maintain new services for patrons turning increasingly to Web-based resources
There are no comments for this item.