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E-raamat: Reference Services for the Adult Learner: Challenging Issues for the Traditional and Technological Era

  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Feb-2026
  • Kirjastus: Haworth Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040896488
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
  • Hind: 64,99 €*
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Feb-2026
  • Kirjastus: Haworth Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040896488

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Help adults returning to school learn to find and use the information they need!Reference Services for the Adult Learner: Challenging Issues for the Traditional and Technological Era offers proven, effective approaches for teaching adult patrons how and where to find information. Unlike younger students, who in many cases grew up with computers at school and in the home, many older patrons are uncomfortable with current technologies. They may not remember how to use a card catalogue, but at least the drawers and index cards look familiar. A phrase like database search may bring on confusion and anxiety for them. Including the views of faculty, adult students, and administrators as well as librarians, Reference Services for the Adult Learner provides you with theories of educational psychology that explain how adults learn, as well as suggestions from adult learners to help you understand what these clients need to know about using new technologies and finding information. Reference Services for the Adult Learner provides original empirical research on such vital issues as:technophobia, technostress, and information literacy the unique needs of the adult learner, including evening and weekend access to information and instruction adult-learning theories and appropriate teaching strategies to take advantage of adult students’strengths distance learning and the adult student issues of information literacy and approaches to seeking, analyzing, and evaluating information adult learners in special populations, including international and disabled studentsContaining research from librarians and adult learners from the United States, Canada, and Australia, Reference Services for the Adult Learner offers you teaching strategies that will enable adult patrons to easily locate and properly use all of the materials in your library.
Introduction 1(4) Kwasi Sarkodie-Mensah SECTION 1: INFORMATION EXPLOSION, TECHNOPHOBIA, AND TECHNOSTRESS The Information Explosion: Continuing Implications for Reference Services to Adult Learners in Academia 5(14) Anita Ezzo Julia Perez The Information Explosion and the Adult Learner: Implications for Reference Librarians 19(12) Gayle R. Christian Caroline Blumenthal Marjorie Patterson Stress Relief: Help for the Technophobic Patron from the Reference Desk 31(18) Lucy Harrison Overcoming Technostress in Reference Services to Adult Learners 49(14) Brian Quinn Technological Mediation: Reference and the Non-Traditional Student 63(6) Deborah S. Grealy Challenges Faced by Reference Librarians in Familiarizing Adult Students with the Computerized Library of Today: The Cuesta College Experience 69(10) Kevin F. Bontenbal SECTION 2: UNDERSTANDING THE CHARACTERISTICS, NEEDS AND EXPECTATIONS OF ADULT LEARNERS TO BETTER SERVE THEM Envisioning the Mature Re-Entry Student: Constructing New Identities in the Traditional University Setting 79(16) Lisa Given A Close Encounter Model for Reference Services to Adult Learners: The Value of Flexibility and Variance 95(8) Sara Baron Alexia Strout-Dapaz Helping Adult Undergraduates Make the Best Use of Emerging Technologies 103(10) Charlotte Diana Moslander Understanding the Characteristics, Concerns, and Priorities of Adult Learners to Enhance Library Services to Them 113(6) Robin E. Veal The After-Five Syndrome: Library Hours and Services for the Adult Learner 119(10) Anne Fox SECTION 3: THEORIES OF ADULT LEARNING: IMPLICATIONS FOR REFERENCE AND INSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES FOR THE ADULT LEARNER How Do We Learn? Contributions of Learning Theory to Reference Service and Library Instruction 129(12) Loriene Roy Eric Novotny The Andragogical Librarian 141(10) Dorothy S. Ingram Adult Learning Theory and Reference Services: Consonances and Potentials 151(10) James Ghaphery SECTION 4: FROM A DISTANCE: PROVIDING REFERENCE AND INSTRUCTIONAL SERVICES FOR THE ADULT LEARNER The Librarian as Bricoleur: Meeting the Needs of Distance Learners 161(10) Elaine Anderson Jayne Interactive Reference at a Distance: A Corporate Model for Academic Libraries 171(10) Susan A. Ware Patricia S. Howe Rosemary G. Scalese Reference Provision in Adult Basic and Community Education: An Unusual Model 181(12) Melva Renshaw The University Librarys Role in Planning a Successful Distance Learning Program 193(12) Jon R. Hufford Library Services to External Students from Australian Universities: The Influence of Flexible Delivery upon Traditional Service Provision 205(14) Michael Middleton Judith Peacock Facilitating Adult Learning: The Role of the Academic Librarian 219(14) C. Lyn Currie Going the Distance (and Back Again): A Distance Education Course Comes Home 233(14) Craig Gibson Jane Scales SECTION 5: REFERENCE, INSTRUCTION AND INFORMATION LITERACY Reference Services to Police Officer Students at the School of Police Staff and Command, Traffic Institute, Northwestern University 247(12) Hema Ramachandran Library Instruction and Information Literacy for the Adult Learner: A Course and Its Lessons for Reference Work 259(12) Patti Schifter Caravello Adult Students: Wandering the Web with a Purpose 271(16) Marcia A. King-Blandford Breaking the Mold: Using Educational Pedagogy in Designing Library Instruction of Adult Learners 287(12) Naomi Harrison Delphi Method in Web Site Selection: Using the Experts 299(14) Julian W. Green SECTION 6: SERVING DIVERSE POPULATIONS: DISABLED PATRONS AND INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS Reference Services for All: How to Support Reference Service to Clients with Disabilities 313(14) Katherine J. Miller-Gatenby Michele Chittenden Strategies for Providing Effective Reference Services for International Adult Learners 327(10) Suhasini L. Kumar Raghini S. Suresh Reference Services to the International Adult Learner: Understanding the Barriers 337(12) Christopher C. Brown Reference Services: Meeting the Needs of International Adult Learners 349(14) Calmer D. Chattoo Reference Services and the International Adult Learner 363(18) Daniel Liestman SECTION 7: FROM THE HORSES MOUTH: VIEWS FROM FACULTY, ADMINISTRATORS, LIBRARIANS, AND STUDENTS Faculty Expectations and the Adult Learner: Some Implications for Reference 381(14) Barbara Mullins Betsy Park Providing Quality Library Service to the Adult Learner: Views of Students, Faculty, and Administrators 395(12) Patience L. Simmonds Towards an Integrative Literature Search: Reflections of a `Wild Adult Learner 407(12) Robert M. Fisher Index 419
Sarkodie-Mensah Kwasi