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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
In 18 pages this paper discusses several issues relevant to this topic including library approaches for adopting IT implementation, library automation objectives, individuals involved in library automation planning, implementation steps, factors to consider when selecting automation software, constraints faced in library automation libraries, computer and software packages used, computerized library systems, development of databases, bibliographic standards used, computerized information services, level of network participation, computerized facilities offered to users, and recommendations. Ten sources are listed in the bibliography.
Page Count:
18 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGitunilib.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the rest of the world, global information exchanges are only a mouse click away. For university libraries in the United States and elsewhere, IT is changing the way students
think of books and journals. Once upon a time, print media was the only alternative, but information technology combined with the Internet provide electronic media in such forms as
e-books and e-journals that are easily accessible through library networks (Lam, 2001). Because of constantly changing IT, university libraries have become more complex operations than ever before. They
are expected to offer widespread collection access through intricate networking, digital resources, and effortless access to diverse databases (Lam, 2001). How can campus libraries accomplish these seemingly Herculean tasks
simultaneously? The answer is as simple as it is complex - automation. Simply defined, library automation is the employment of computerized and networking technologies (Lam, 2001). There are
several areas where automation is utilized at the university library level. First, it assists in the access and use of all electronic library and Internet resources both on and
off site (Lam, 2001). It also has revolutionized office tasks through computer-generated word processing documents, spreadsheets, and databases (Lam, 2001). Library automation is also responsible for the creation
and maintenance of digital technologies, which now make it possible to generate information rapidly through digitalization, scanning, and electronic distribution through images, video and audio files, websites, databases, and texts
on an ever-increasing number of topics (Benedetti, Cody, & Hanerfield, 2007). Automation is also responsible for the technology that makes it possible to easily add or edit textual information
through wiki (What I Know Is) web pages, in which a simple markup language makes it easy to modify content. Library Approaches for Adopting IT Implementation When it comes
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