68 REFERENCE SERVICES
developed sources as well as access to the Internet, provides a solid basis for
answering telephone reference questions. These resources should be organized
in such a way that individual sources can be located quickly and easily. A
bank of telephones, or even a single telephone, each one next to a computer
with Internet access, surrounded by, or adjacent to, a print collection, is a
fairly typical model of a telephone reference service. Wireless headsets and
tablet PCs could also allow librarians to go into the stacks in order to answer
12 Telephone Reference Service..................................................................
Just as at the in-person reference desk, there will be some downtime. The
time between calls can be spent reading news magazines and other publica-
tions, checking news feeds or newspaper websites, or exploring the library’s
own website and electronic reference sources. And just as at the in-person
reference desk, it is very important not to get too engrossed in the page or
screen in front of you. A ringing telephone, though, is usually enough to get
your attention.
note
- Emily Garnett, “Reference Service by Telephone,” Library Journal 61, no. 21
(December 1, 1936): 911.
http://www.ebook3000.com