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Study Guide

📖 Core Concepts Library – A collection of books, media, and digital resources that users can access physically, digitally, or both. Collection Components – Borrowable items (circulating) + on‑site reference materials (non‑circulating). Classification System – Organized scheme (e.g., Dewey Decimal) that places items on shelves and in catalogues for quick retrieval. Integrated Library System (ILS) – Enterprise software that tracks acquisitions, cataloguing, circulation, payments, and patron activity across a library system. Information Literacy – Basic skills taught by libraries to locate, evaluate, and use information effectively. Makerspace – Design‑and‑build area equipped with tools such as 3D printers, scanners, and electronics kits for hands‑on learning. 📌 Must Remember Physical vs. Digital Access – Libraries provide hard‑copy items and soft‑copy (e‑books, databases, streaming media). Reference‑Only vs. Lending – Reference libraries/sections do not circulate items; they stay on‑site. Dewey Decimal Classification (DDC) – Most common classification standard; numbers indicate subject hierarchy. WorldCat – Global union catalogue that lets anyone search millions of library records worldwide. Legal Deposit – National libraries must receive a copy of every publication produced in their country. Public Advocacy Focus – Modern campaigns stress the library’s economic/community value (e‑access, makerspaces, digital literacy) rather than just book lending. 🔄 Key Processes Acquisition → Cataloguing → Classification → Shelving Plan purchases → enter metadata into the ILS → assign DDC number → place in physical or digital collection. Patron Borrowing Cycle Card issuance → search catalogue → request item → checkout via ILS → return → item re‑shelved or sent to repair. Reference Request (Closed Stacks) Patron asks staff → staff retrieves item from storage → item used on‑site only. Makerspace Use Sign‑in → safety briefing → reserve equipment → create/project → check‑out finished work or digital file. 🔍 Key Comparisons Academic vs. Public Lending Libraries Academic: Serve students/faculty, emphasize scholarly resources, provide course reserves & citation workshops. Public: Serve general population, focus on community programs, broader borrowing privileges. Reference Library vs. Lending Library Reference: Materials cannot leave the building; support in‑depth research. Lending: Items can be checked out; includes both circulating and reference sections. Physical Library vs. Digital Library Physical: Brick‑and‑mortar building, tangible media, quiet study spaces. Digital: Online repository of texts, images, audio; accessed via web or institutional portals. ⚠️ Common Misunderstandings “All libraries lend books.” – Reference and national libraries often do not lend items; they provide on‑site access only. “Digital resources replace physical ones.” – Many libraries maintain hybrid collections; print remains essential for rare/archival material. “Makerspaces are just computer labs.” – Makerspaces include fabrication tools (3D printers, scanners) and support STEM/STEAM learning, not just computers. 🧠 Mental Models / Intuition “Library as a Hub, not a Shelf.” – Think of the library as a central node that connects users to information (books, databases, staff expertise, makerspace tools). “Classification = GPS for Books.” – Dewey numbers work like coordinates; the more you understand the hierarchy, the faster you locate anything. 🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases National Libraries – Rarely lend; may require special permission for research use. Closed‑Stack Reference Items – Must be requested; cannot be self‑checked. Legal Deposit Copies – May be restricted to on‑site use only, even in national libraries. 📍 When to Use Which Need a scholarly article? → Use academic library databases (journal subscriptions, institutional repositories). Looking for community programming or free Wi‑Fi? → Visit a public library. Require a rare primary source that cannot leave the building? → Go to a reference or national library. Hands‑on project requiring 3D printing? → Reserve time in the library makerspace. Searching multiple libraries at once? → Use WorldCat or the library system’s OPAC. 👀 Patterns to Recognize “Library + ” often signals a service: Library website → online catalogue; Library makerspace → fabrication tools. “Reference only” label → on‑site use, no checkout. Dewey number starts with 0‑9 → subject area (e.g., 500s = Science). “OPAC” vs. “Webcat” – Both refer to electronic catalogue interfaces. 🗂️ Exam Traps Trap: “All libraries provide free internet access.” Why tempting: Many public libraries do, but some academic or special libraries may restrict access or require authentication. Trap: “WorldCat is a library’s internal system.” Why tempting: It sounds like an internal catalogue, but WorldCat is a global union catalogue. Trap: “Makerspaces only exist in public libraries.” Why tempting: Public libraries are most visible, yet many academic and special libraries host makerspaces too. Trap: “Dewey Decimal is the only classification system.” Why tempting: Dewey is common, but other systems (LC, UDC) exist, especially in research or special libraries. --- Use this guide to quickly review core ideas, differentiate library types, and avoid common pitfalls before your exam.
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