1 / 11

Portals, Ready Reference, and Libraries

Portals, Ready Reference, and Libraries. Access Evaluation Organization. Access. Search industry and libraries facilitate access to online information. Portals are the search industry’s answer library collections

norris
Download Presentation

Portals, Ready Reference, and Libraries

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Portals, Ready Reference, and Libraries Access Evaluation Organization

  2. Access • Search industry and libraries facilitate access to online information. • Portals are the search industry’s answer library collections • Libraries use, organize, and collect web information too. Portals are usually just called “library home pages.” Or sometimes “ready reference collections.”

  3. Portals • Sites that contain a search function, but also services such as free email, free home pages, maps, phone books, email, directories, news, and company information, etc. ("sticky" features) • They want to be your entry to EVERYTHING on the Web, not just searching

  4. Portals Examples: • Yahoo • Myway.com • msn.com • Aol.com

  5. Library homepages • Provide access to a number of resources, too…more than just the free web!: • Example UC-Berkeley Libraries http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/ • A hybrid: Refdesk.com http://www.refdesk.com/

  6. Ready Reference Collections Collection of online ready reference sources also facilitate access: • City College of San Francisco http://www.ccsf.org/Library/readyref.html • Wilton Library http://www.wiltonlibrary.org/ref.asp • Loyola University http://www.loyno.edu/~hobbs/readyreference.html • University of Oklahoma http://www.ou.edu/webhelp/rr/ • DeskRef http://www.rcls.org/deskref/

  7. Librarians And then, of course, we have the living, breathing, walking, INTELLIGENT guide to all the Web…and more!:

  8. Organizing • Use these pre-made resources (portals, library home pages, ready reference collections) or organize your own • Useful for personal reference • Useful when compiling a collection for patrons/customers

  9. Organizing Finding sites • Bookmark sites you find as you are searching • Search the invisible web • Look for meta sites or other authorities on your topic • Evaluate all sites for yourself

  10. How to Evaluate a Web Page Evaluating content from the user's perspective, not design principles, but authority/accuracy • Who maintains the content? • What is the content provider’s authority? • Is there bias? • Examine the URL (who owns the URL?) • Examine outbound links • Examine who links to it • Is the information current? • Use common sense

More Related