Hm. It's hard to compare because there's a mass exodus when our computers are down. I do think the patrons who are more comfortable Googling probably got a little scared off by my conspicuous frazzled state. ;) We have a lot of people who need the F2F service because they're not computer literate, or they have accessibility issues with computers, or they can't really navigate all the steps of figuring out the right search term to put into the catalog, figuring out if a relevant book is at the branch, and figuring out where the item actually is based on the call number.
I have a very ingrained preference for looking up things myself instead of asking people for help, and it didn't occur to me until I was already in library school that the same wasn't true of everybody. I wonder how many people have those really strong preferences one way or the other.
Yes, that IS the curse word I use when I'm the one who has to run off GED applications and tax forms because I'm the one who knows how to find them on the web!
That is...not okay. Wow. I mean, by the standards of, say, Sedge, I would not be a competent Googler (not that she'd ever say it, because she is delightful, but she also has Mad Gugl Skillz), but criminy, I can find tax forms.
Holy moly! That really surprises me. I assumed you've had electronic catalogs for a decade or so; wouldn't learning how to Google just follow on from a) surrounded by terminals and b) interested in stuff with culture on them?
It's certainly the case that going from "Nice book I saw on TV" to "Book in hand" is a much different journey today than it was 30 or more years ago. When our system opened up a dial-in hold service (not on the net, yet; basically the main branch was hosting a 10-line BBS to put books on hold) circulation skyrocketed. Who knew there was so much pent-up demand?
Huh, I share that "do it myself" preference, mostly because there's so much interesting stuff I stumble over on the way to my answer. (Yes, I do miss card catalogs, kinda.)
Are there people who want to interact F2F, that is, argue about what information they're looking for?
I think there are the people who value the human contact for its own sake, and there are people who can't quite formulate what they're looking for except by negotiating it with somebody else, and there are the people who don't feel confident in their own information seeking except by getting it validated by somebody else -- I've had reference questions where essentially all I had to say was "yup" as the patron pursued their train of thought to the end. Which I'm not going to argue with, since it's more successful than feeling TOO confident in one's own information seeking.
Sorry to keep butting in on y'all's conversation...but yeah, there's a school of thought that a significant part of librarianship is social work, whether face to face (reference interviews) or behind the scenes (collection development, website accessibility, etc.).
This might be why I adored librarians — not only were they guiding me to the wonders of independent reading and research, they often seemed to listen to me with a carefully tuned ear.
One of my top ten regrets is not having done librarianship.
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4/8/11 00:45 (UTC)I have a very ingrained preference for looking up things myself instead of asking people for help, and it didn't occur to me until I was already in library school that the same wasn't true of everybody. I wonder how many people have those really strong preferences one way or the other.
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4/8/11 02:06 (UTC)(no subject)
4/8/11 01:20 (UTC)Huh, I share that "do it myself" preference, mostly because there's so much interesting stuff I stumble over on the way to my answer. (Yes, I do miss card catalogs, kinda.)
Are there people who want to interact F2F, that is, argue about what information they're looking for?
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4/8/11 01:31 (UTC)(no subject)
4/8/11 01:35 (UTC)(no subject)
4/8/11 01:44 (UTC)Sorry, I just <3 librarianship. :D
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4/8/11 01:50 (UTC)One of my top ten regrets is not having done librarianship.