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Home » Subject Collections » Arts & Humanities » Libraries » On the Job » Tips & Tools

Tips & Tools

SEE ALSO MagazinesAssociations on the Net

Resources in this category:

Comics Recommended for Libraries
http://ublib.buffalo.edu/libraries/asl/guides/comics.html#Re...
Guide for librarians when choosing to add comics to their collection, including links to other sources as well as reviews.
DIALOG Bluesheets
http://library.dialog.com/bluesheets/
A subject guide to the to the hundreds of databases on the DIALOG system. Each database has a hypertext link to a blue sheet which contains the details of the database structure.
Evaluating Information Found on the Internet
http://www.library.jhu.edu/researchhelp/general/evaluating/i...
Guide for researchers examines issues of evaluating authorship, publishing body, point of view or bias, eeferral to other sources, verifiability, and currency. Discusses "the criteria by which scholars in most fields evaluate print information, and shows how the same criteria can be used to assess information found on the Internet."
Lexis-Nexis Knowledge Base
http://support.lexis-nexis.com/default.asp
Provides instructions, sample searches and FAQs for Lexis-Nexis products
The Librarian's Guide to Anime and Manga
http://www.koyagi.com/Libguide.html
A tool for librarians who might want to add manga or anime materials to their collection, including an explanation of the two media and offering examples of them as well.
Native American Libraries and Resources
http://faculty-staff.ou.edu/P/Lotsee.F.Patterson-1/nalib.htm
This is a site that has information on resources for Native American librarians or researchers.
The Researching Librarian
http://www.researchinglibrarian.com/
"This site was created for librarians--new or experienced--who find themselves needing to perform research. Intended as a supplement to the print and electronic resources available in library collections, this site gathers links to selected web resources useful for research: freely searchable citation and full-text databases, funding information, relevant journals, statistics and statistical methods, useful research tools, current awareness sources, and conference papers and proceedings."
Search for Public Libraries
http://nces.ed.gov/surveys/libraries/librarysearch/
"The Public Library Locator is a tool to help you locate information about a public library or a public library service outlet when you know some, but not all of the information about it. The information in this locator has been drawn from the NCES Public Libraries Survey." Libraries can be searched by name, address, phone number, etc., but also by legal service population, number of full time or professional staff, operating expenditures, operating income, collection size, services offered, types of transactions recorded - and many more. This allows users to compile lists of similar libraries across or within regions, states or counties. A powerful and flexible tool.
SOL: Spanish in Our Libraries
http://www.quicktopic.com/22/H/BhC64pQyGQy
SOL (Spanish in Our Libraries) strives to be a forum and resource bank for librarians who want to improve their services to Spanish speakers. It does so through a 150-member discussion list, an archived digest of mailings, and its ongoing consolidation of the Public Libraries Using Spanish website.
Virtual Acquisition Shelf and News Desk
http://resourceshelf.blogspot.com/
Resources and news for information professionals and researchers compiled by a professionl university librarian. The site provides abstracts and links to articles describing new Internet sources of information and what's new on or about the Internet. Other sections are Fast Facts (resources of factual information), Direct Search (a compilation of links to "Invisible Web" resources not easily found by general search engines), News Center ("one-click access to many news resources"), Price's List of Lists with "information in the form of rankings of different people, organizations, companies, etc.", texts of speeches and transcripts, audio and video access to current events, and a clearinghouse to many Congressional Research reports.
VOYA Online: Voice of Youth Advocates: The library magazine serving those who serve young adults
http://www.voya.com/
VOYA is "a bimonthly journal addressing librarians, educators, and other professionals who work with young adults," and the "only magazine devoted exclusively to the informational needs of teenagers." Its website offers highlights of articles from its current issue and web-only features like the Teen Pop Culture Quiz and other resources to help librarians keep up with teen culture.
 
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