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- Comments: Gated by NETNEWS@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU
- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!auvm!UOFT01.BITNET!FAC2813
- Approved-By: Diane Kovacs <DKOVACS@KENTVM.BITNET>
- Message-ID: <LIBREF-L%92081417323872@KENTVM.BITNET>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.libref-l
- Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1992 14:21:53 EDT
- Sender: 'Discussion of Library Reference Issues' <LIBREF-L@KENTVM.BITNET>
- From: "Gary Klein (bear at heart)" <FAC2813@UOFT01.BITNET>
- Subject: RE: E-mail Reference Requests
- Lines: 106
-
- ----------------------------Original message----------------------------
- Some things came to my mind when reading the call for assistance on this.
-
- BIT OF BACKGROUND FIRST: (yeah this is lenghty!)
-
- I am an active participant in a number of e-mail discussion groups which
- have virtually nothing to do with libraries, YET because I have always put
- my job title into my signature (sort of like a business card), I have received
- e-mail requests for help from around the world. Usually about 2 requests per
- month. Most of the requests come from students, who have above average amounts
- of LIBRARY ANXIETY, or simply find it more comfortable to chat over e-mail
- with a "known librarian" then having to find a knowledgable one in the caverns
- of their local library.
-
- Secondly, being visible on the Gay & Lesbian discussion groups, people
- have turned to me, instead of displaying their anxiety over a face-to-face
- situation of asking for assistance on SEXUALITY research, and fearing rejection
- because of the specific of the topic, BUT NOT FEARFUL of talking face-to-face
- with a librarian on other non-sexual research topics.
-
- Third, is the presumption that THEIR library would never carry the types
- of sexuality research materials that they really need, when in fact many times
- their library has a comparable array of materials as I have here in Toledo
- (INTERNET access to their own OPACs comes off as being magical to them).
-
- Fourth, is the type of request for help, where they simply never even
- thought of their own library. "IF IT IS COMPUTERIZED, it has to be better.
- Asking for help VIA COMPUTER is better than asking for help in person." The
- requester does not have to worry about messages being lost. Not to worry about
- when the library is open, the message will be sitting in SOMEONE's in-basket.
- No need to play telephone tag. If a response is not received quickly enough,
- simply re-direct a copy of the original message to someone else. As a by-
- product of using e-mail, the questioner can polish up the question before
- transmitting it. Stark contrast with the numerous phone calls at the
- Ref Desk where the person hems & haws for and then states several times,
- "I am not sure if this is the right department, but do you..."
-
- Fifth, is the fact that there is typically no out-of-pocket costs for a
- patron using e-mail at an academic institution to use e-mail. Some states
- like Michigan have local phone numbers all across the state, ALL OF WHICH
- plug into the same statewide network of academic computers. Whether you
- are temporarily in Ann Arbor or Grand Traverse, you are always a local phone
- call away from YOUR campus e-mail system. This will be attractive to commuter
- students/faculty.
-
- CYNICAL COMMENT #1 (policy, policy, who has a policy on...)
- Do librarians really need a separate policy or procedure for every type
- of query that one might get?
-
- Libraries often have separate policies for patrons on roller blade,
- patrons with bicycles, patrons who do not wear shoes. What about a policy
- for the shoeless patron who rides a unicycle? Remember, a bicycle is not
- the same thing! It may not hold up in a court of law!
-
-
- CYNICAL COMMENT #2 (the medium is the message/massage)
- YES I recognize that e-mail is not quite the same thing as taking a
- message off an answering machine. But how different is it really from when
- you come back to your desk and find one of those "WHILE YOU WERE OUT" slips
- addressed to you, which is unintelligible?
-
- At least, at most academic institutions, there is no out-of-pocket
- expense involved when you have to ask the patron, "Can you clarify your
- request for the Doo-Hickey Ratio?" But phoning across the state to ask that
- same question will probably cost bucks during daytime hours, and often put
- you into that favorite game of TELEPHONE TAG.
-
- Do you also need to write a policy or procedure for responding to queries
- which are FAXED? How much of a difference is there between responding to
- phone message, a fax message or an e-mail message?
-
- To me, the big problem is not the method of communicating, but the need
- for some Reference Negotiations.
-
-
- CYNICAL COMMENT #3 (Lydia Pinkham's Tonic to cure all sorts of maladies)
- If you can formulate some sort of template or other method of guaranteeing
- reciept of complete & relevant information by the requester, OR securing feed-
- back when a response is given to the requester, THEN YOU OUGHT TO PATENT IT.
- Librarians all over the world are struggling with both sides of this problem.
- Why should it be any different when the format of communication changes?
-
- Aside from suggesting that the person asking for help will have to come
- into the library to get the underlying sources, what difference does it make
- if the person is on-campus or off-campus? If they are 1 mile away or 1,000
- miles away?
-
- Whether the person is in front of you, on the phone, or on e-mail, how
- does the patron get the book/journal article when someone has stolen the
- volume from your library?
-
- CYNICAL COMMENT #4 (the twelve step program, for twelve step addictions)
- How do you provide support to the librarians who (like myself) gradually
- develop an addiction to e-mail?
-
- Maybe Daniel Lester can help us out on this! When I chatted about this
- with Martin Raish, he agreed that we could probably set up an e-mail list
- dedicated to providing support & suggestions for e-mailaholics. Let's
- call it 12STEP-L.
-
- "Librarian, leather bound"
- * * * * Gary Klein, Business Librarian, Univ of Toledo
- * * P.O.Box 12650 / Toledo OH 43606
- * * WORK: 419-537-2629 HOME: 419-243-2740
- * BITNET: fac2813@uoft01 FAX: 419-537-2726
- B4 t+ w- g s+ k INTERNET: fac2813@uoft01.utoledo.edu
-