31 July - 4 August 1995
Strategies for the efficient identification and interpretation of the
bibliographies that are most useful for work with rare and early printed books;
aimed at reference librarians, booksellers, catalogers, and others who
routinely research rare books. Sources primarily in English and in the major
other Roman-alphabet languages; but some attention paid to non-Western sources
as well.
1. How useful were the pre-course readings?
1: Useful, but not necessary -- nice, because I didn't get to them all. 2:
I appreciated the June 29th phone confirmation: the mailing was delayed and
didn't reach me until July 26th. Otherwise, these would have been helpful.
4: Pre-course readings comprised for the most part descriptions of
specific national bibliographies; may have been helpful for us to have examined
a few of the standard bibliographies at our own institutions. 7: Not
required. 8: I did not have time to search for and gather the pre-course
readings prior to RBS, but I don't feel that this detracted in any way from
what I was able to get out of the course. 9: They were useful, most
especially DK's article to give a flavor of what the course would be.
11: Very useful.
2. Did your instructor prepare sufficiently to teach THIS course? Were the
course syllabus and other materials distributed in class useful?
1: 1) Yes. 2) Very much so. 2: Yes, most definitely! 3:
Syllabus was most useful. 4: Yes. Yes. 5: Yes. 6:
Yes -- materials should be quite useful. 7: Yes. 8: Yes. The
syllabus will continue to be an ongoing source of useful information on
bibliographies. 9: DK is a gold mine of information! There were a few
problems with the locations of various sources. Also, electronic access is
changing this area dramatically. 10: The syllabus would have been easier
to use if search questions had been separate from the bibliographic
lists -- paging back and forth, I shredded my syllabus. 11: Yes to both.
3. Was the intellectual level of the course content appropriate?
1: Yes, even though the problem sets we had were a bit humbling. 3-8:
Yes. 9: Certainly appropriate. Also insightful, humorous, stimulating,
and challenging. 10: No -- I was lost for much of the course because of my
lack of foreign languages. 11: Yes.
4. Did the actual course content correspond to its RBS brochure description
and Expanded Course Description? Did the course in general meet your
expectations?
1: Yes. Yes. 3: Yes. 4: a) Yes. b) Yes. 5-8: Yes.
9: Yes, it did corresponded to the description. 11: Yes.
5. What did you like best about the course?
1: 1) DK -- his kindness, knowledge of the subject, wisdom, and good humor. I envy
his library school students. 2) Class camaraderie. 2: DK: a torrent of
information (not merely a fountain!) and a delightful instructor. 3:
Being able to use many fine sources that I don't usually use in my professional
duties. 4: The expertise that the instructor brought to the course (the
man knows his stuff) and the variety of problems assigned. 5: DK could
not have been more knowledgeable.6: The instructor -- both his expertise in
the area and his graciousness in dealing with students. 7: Gaining
familiarity with a wide variety of literature and experience in using much of
it. 8: The exposure to a vast array of bibliographies, though
intimidating, was most helpful, as were the instructor's comments on the
various sources. 9: The relaxed atmosphere and camaraderie of the
students and instructor. I also liked the broad scope of the course, but was
frustrated that so much was presented so quickly. 11: Instructor.
6. How could the course have been improved?
1: Having the books centrally located, although having them in three locations
was good exercise. More time in the day for problem sets -- although I wouldn't
want to cut back on class time at all. 2: I would hate to see the scope
narrowed (say, to American): the scope was what attracted me, and will
no doubt prove to be most useful. 3: Could there be access to OCLC or
RLIN? Many course members search these utilities and one was often frustrated
at the Windows interface of the public machines (and also the wait for the one
terminal to be free). 4: The reference bibliographies which were needed
to be consulted for the problem sets would be much handier in one location
rather than three (Special Collections, Reference, the stacks); the savings of
travel time would be worthwhile. 5: Perhaps more access to the rare book
room for reference materials. 6: Perhaps by having the first day devoted
to examining the bibliographies themselves (even, perhaps, two days) before the
searching assignments begin. Maybe starring essential searches and then having
alternate ones if the others are finished. 7: Clearly, there are
logistical problems with the locations of the books. I would prefer fewer
problems and so more time to spend looking at sources. Perhaps this is
unrealistic. I think online searching could be viewed as a legitimate tool, but
it has a tendency to become the lowest common denominator and isn't the purpose
of the course to learn the literature rather than simply solving the problems?
8: Fewer search queries that repeated the same sources might have left
more time for discussing the pros and cons of individual sources. 9: It
would help to have all sources in one physical location. We spent a lot of time
on the stairs or in the elevators! 10: Tried to cover too much
ground -- perhaps in the future special courses might be devoted to specific
national bibliographies. 11: Perhaps more emphasis on selective fields
of bibliographic research.
7. Any final thoughts?
1: More substance at breakfast, please! (What was there was delicious, though.)
2: Be prepared to become humble, and quickly! I feel very
comfortable in performing my day-to-day job as a reference librarian, but felt
I was particularly inept at bibliographic detective work (perhaps because 99%
of the examples were outside my area of subject expertise?). In any case, you
WILL LEARN A GREAT DEAL about approaches to bibliographic verification
techniques! 4: Daily problem sets covering the course lectures were
assigned -- time was well spent, indeed. 7: I would highly recommend this
for just about anyone working with books as a library professional in any
capacity. 11: I would recommend this course to anyone interested in the
subject.
Number of respondents: 11
Percentages
Leave | Tuition | Housing | Travel |
Institution gave me leave | Institution paid tuition | Institution paid housing | Institution paid travel |
82% | 73% | 59% | 62% |
I took vacation time | I paid tuition myself | I paid for my own housing | I paid my own travel |
18% | 18% | 41% | 38% |
N/A: Self-employed, retired, &c. | N/A: Self-employed or retired | N/A: Stayed with friends or at home | N/A: Lived nearby |
0% | 9% | 0% | 0% |