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Date: Tue, 26 Mar 2002 18:13:25 -0800 (PST)
From: "Beth Nicholson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: publib <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Take a look at this--I just came across it this morning. It might help.

Beth

http://www.education.tas.gov.au/0278/issue/021/whytl.htm
Vol 8, Issue 1, 2002
"Why do we need a teacher librarian or a school library when we have the
Internet?"
How many times have you heard that, and how many times have you tried to
come up with a short, pithy but hard-hitting reply?

Well this heading caught my eye in an edition of Teacher Librarian (April
2001, 28:4 pp 62-5). It is a collection of replies from librarians after
just this question was posed by Cynthia Kahn, on an electronic discussion
list.

Here are some highlights from it.

Snappy Comebacks

  a.. If we have dictionaries, why do we need English teachers?
  b.. Why do people buy maps? They have all the roads they need.
  c.. Why do people use cookbooks? They have all the ingredients for a good
meal.
  d.. Why do people read the TV guide? They can change channels all they
want.
  e.. If we have email, why do we still need telephones?
  f.. If we have a fax machine, why do we still use the post office?
  g.. If everyone has a calculator on their PC, why do we need an Accounting
Department?
  h.. Anyone can cut down a tree - but few have the experience to manage a
forest.
  i.. Why would we spend 10 minutes looking something up in a book when we
can spend two hours looking for it on the web?
Longer answers

  a.. We still need libraries because "everything" is not on the Internet.
Not even Bill Gates can afford to digitise the sum total of human knowledge.
And we need librarians because, as chaotic as the Internet is, librarians
are trained to find information, and to determine which source - print or
electronic - is the most appropriate to retrieve what is wanted.
  b.. The Internet in very few ways resembles a library. A library provides
a clear, standardised set of easily retrievable resources.
  c.. The Internet is like a library with all the books on the floor. There
are no standards, no librarians. The key isn't a library; it is the
librarian.
  d.. Everything is not on the Internet; authors are still publishing in
books and non-e journals.
  e.. The Internet is so disorganised that it is time consuming to find good
information.
  f.. Information on the Internet is not peer-reviewed - quality and
credibility are variable.
  g.. The Internet just provides access to hundreds of thousands of places
to find data. It does not determine which of these places provides the best,
most authoritative, most correct information, nor does it filter wheat from
chaff. That's what the librarians do.
  h.. The Internet is like a mountain of knowledge. Anyone can start
climbing it. It's so much easier if you have a guide. Librarians are the
mountain guides. They know some of the best routes to the top.
  i.. Library collections are not actually on the Internet. What you will
find is an equivalent to a card catalogue.
  j.. The Internet is just one of many tools in our information-resource
toolbox. Librarians know which tools to respond to a specific request.
  k.. Information on the Internet is free, but you get what you pay for.
  l.. Thousands of citations, abstracts and full-text journal articles are
not accessible to the standard search engines.



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