Teaching Cataloguing and Classification at the University of Pretoria: Thinking Preferences of Second Year Students
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The information profession has changed drastically in the last few years. The core requirements for information workers have also changed because the workplace needs specific qualities and skills. The necessity of continuing to teach cataloguing and classification is questioned, and many library schools have discontinued teaching these subjects. Many experts, however, believe that cataloguing and classification are still among the basics of information work. The subject still forms part of the curriculum at the University of Pretoria. At the beginning of 2000, funds were obtained to use the Herrmann Brain Dominance Instrument to establish the preferences of the second year Library Science students taking cataloguing. The result showed that their preferences do not really correspond to those of cataloguers. They specifically do not like the analysing and mastering the technical details required in cataloguing. As these skills are required for cataloguing, teaching methods will have to be adapted to equip students for the workplace.
© 2001 by K. G. Saur Verlag GmbH, Federal Republic of Germany
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Articles in the same Issue
- Information Retrieval from Full-Text Arabic Databases: Can Search Engines Designed for English Do the Job?
- Bibliographic Displays of Web-based OPACs: Multivariate Analysis Applied to Latin-American Catalogues
- Metadata as a Catalyst: Experiments with Metadata and Search Engines in the Internet Journal, First Monday
- Determinants of Health Kiosk Use and Usefulness: Case Study of a Kiosk Which Serves a Multi-Cultural Population
- Teaching Cataloguing and Classification at the University of Pretoria: Thinking Preferences of Second Year Students
- Author Productivity and Collaboration: An Investigation of the Relationship Using the Literature of Technology