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Wikipedia

Michael Gorman (librarian)

Michael Gorman (born 6 March 1941 in Witney, Oxfordshire)[1] is a British-born librarian, library scholar and editor/writer on library issues noted for his traditional views. During his tenure as president of the American Library Association (ALA), he was vocal in his opinions on a range of subjects, notably technology and education. He currently lives in the Chicago area with his wife, Anne Reuland, an academic administrator at Loyola University.

Michael Gorman
President of the American Library Association
In office
2005–2006
Preceded byCarol A. Brey-Casiano
Succeeded byLeslie Burger
Personal details
Born (1941-03-06) 6 March 1941 (age 81)
Witney, Oxfordshire, England
OccupationLibrarian
Writing career
GenreLibrarianship
Notable works
  • Our Singular Strengths: Meditations for Librarians (1997)
  • Our Enduring Values (2000)
  • The Enduring Library (2003)
  • Anglo-American Cataloging Rules, 2nd ed (2005)

Gorman's principles of librarianship derive from core liberal, democratic and humanist values.[2] A key influence is S.R. Ranganathan, whom he regarded as "the greatest figure of librarianship in the 20th century."[3] He maintains that it is through focusing on core professional values that librarians will facilitate personal growth and enhance the success of their institutions.[4]

Life and career

Gorman grew up in London, England and became interested in libraries in part through his experiences at Hendon library and particularly its Children's Library run by a pioneer in the field Eileen Colwell.[5] He attended Ealing Technical College (now University of West London) in London from 1964 to 1966.

He has also taught at library schools in Britain and in the United States, most recently at the UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies.

Gorman's ideas

Gorman bases his principles of librarianship on core liberal, democratic and humanistic values.[2] Underlying Gorman's fervent defense of his values of librarianship is a strong apprehension regarding the future of the profession.[8]

Eight central values of librarianship

In Our Enduring Values,[9] Gorman identified eight central values of librarianship :

  1. Stewardship : Gorman argues that librarians have a key role to play in preserving the human record for future generations. He maintains that librarians must pass on their best values to future information professionals.
  2. Service : According to Gorman, an ethic of service should permeate all library policies and practices. Gorman stresses the duty of librarians to serve individuals, communities and societies is best fulfilled through a combination of professional skills, empathy and personal dedication.[9]: 85  He argues that librarians need to act idealistically in a materialistic age.[9]: 87 
  3. Intellectual Freedom : Librarians lead the fight for intellectual freedom.[9]: 173  Librarians, Gorman maintains, must zealously fight to protect free expression of thought, even if the ideas concerned contradict the librarian's own personal convictions.[10]
  4. Privacy : The freedom to access whatever materials an individual wishes, without the knowledge or interference of others.[11] Gorman insists that confidentiality is a "bond of trust" between libraries and their patrons.
  5. Rationalism : Gorman argues that libraries are "children of the Enlightenment and of rationalism"[12] and that librarianship is a "supremely rational profession".[9]: 173  This principle should underpin library procedures, and encourage the logical organization and classification of stock.
  6. Commitment to literacy and learning : Reading is of central importance to literacy and lifelong learning. Gorman formulates a broad definition of 'literacy' beyond the mere ability to read, write and surf the net: his concept encompasses comprehensive, 'true' reading which is fulfilling and expands the mind.[13]
  7. Equity of access : Gorman argues that the 'digital divide' is but one manifestation of societal inequality and that all library services, in particular reference services, have a role to play in bridging the gap and providing equity of access.[14]
  8. Democracy : Gorman describes libraries as "supremely democratic institutions".[15] Because democracy, he insists, depends on a "well-informed electorate" the library is integral to promoting education and maintaining democracy. If people are to exercise good judgement in electing representatives, they need to be highly informed and have access to written records: the library plays a central role therefore in maintaining democracy.[15]

These Eight Values have been heavily influenced by the Buddhist Noble Eightfold Path.

Critique of his values

Gorman's selection and defence of his eight central values has attracted some criticism: for example, his championing of 'stewardship' as a central ethical tenet unique to librarianship, which cannot be shared by other information professionals, has been attacked as "too narrow and exclusive".[16] His impassioned defence of intellectual freedom has also been dismissed in some quarters as "empty rhetoric" and "hyperbole".[16] Gorman's views have also been dismissed by some as seemingly contradictory: on the one hand he praises Ranganathan's core values of library science;[17] on the other he claims "information science" is a "bogus discipline".[18] After a careful reading of Gorman's use of the phrase "bogus discipline," one can see that his beliefs are not in contradiction to Ranganathan, however, as he is supplying a critique of library science schools in what he views as a departure from the core values that should be taught.

Five New Laws of Librarianship

Gorman has expanded and added a more contemporary focus to Ranganathan's Five Laws of Library Science.[19] The re-working of the classic five laws is an attempt "to meet the challenges of fast paced social and cultural changes affecting library users and the rapid proliferation of technology in library operations".[19]: 455  The five laws are:

  1. Libraries serve humanity : This law encompasses the assistance of individuals and the lofty ideal of the "furtherance of the higher aspirations of mankind".[19]: 8  This law also implies an altruistic desire to provide quality service and to exceed the expectations of all users.
  2. Respect all forms by which knowledge is communicated : Gorman advocates the use of various forms of "carriers of knowledge and information".[19]: 9  He recommends a utilitarian approach – using whatever is more effective, cost effective, or advantageous.
  3. Use technology intelligently to enhance service : Librarians, Gorman argues, must welcome and integrate new technologies. Yet he is clear that print-on-paper will remain the "pre-eminent medium for the communication of cumulative knowledge"[19]: 10–11  Technology must be used to solve problems and improve services, and achieve cost-effectiveness, rather than adopted for its own sake.[19]: 10 
  4. Protect free access to knowledge : Allowing the records of the past to disappear is, from Gorman's perspective, "a kind of censorship".[19]: 11  It is the librarian's responsibility to ensure intellectual freedom because Gorman asserts, a "society without uncensored libraries is a society open to tyranny".[19]: 11 
  5. Honor the past and create the future : Gorman advocates the need to balance nostalgia for a pre-digital past with the need to embrace new technologies, in a selective way based upon the extent to which they will enhance library service.[19]: 1  He points to a need to respect the accomplishments of predecessors in the field of information science, whilst celebrating new developments in the field of librarianship.

Educating the librarian

As part of his platform when running for ALA President in 2006, Gorman pledged to address what he called the education crisis.[20]

The article "Whither Library Education?"[21] set out his views on the current state of LIS education. He concluded that LIS education had become technocentric, male-dominated and out of touch with the needs of practitioners. This view was critiqued by Dillon and Norris,[22] while both papers were critiqued by Pawley[23] for their treatment of the issue of gender in librarianship.

Library and Information Science academics also responded in the professional press, questioning whether there was a crisis to address.[24]

During his year in office, Gorman introduced an initiative intended to discuss the issue of education. Sessions were held with practitioners and academics. However, Gorman's traditional views may have led to younger librarians turning away from the idea and their views not being represented:

"Whatever the case, after all that effort we still don't know what current students and recent graduates really think about the educations upon which they spend so much money".[25]

Despite the initiative, accreditation and curricula remained unchanged at the end of Gorman's tenure.

Perspectives

Gorman's views on the Internet, digitisation of books, Google, citizen journalism, and information science are widely discussed. Two publications in particular caused heated debate, particularly within the librarian blogging community:

Digitisation

In 2004 Google announced its plan to digitize the collections of five major research libraries. This would allow both Google and the libraries in question, The University of Michigan, Oxford, New York Public, Harvard and Stanford, to have access to digitized copies of millions of texts. Michael Gorman, then ALA president, responded to this announcement with an article in the Los Angeles Times 'Google and God's Mind' where he made clear his disapproval of the digitisation project. This disapproval was based on what he sees as a clear distinction between information and real knowledge. Gorman defines information as facts, data, images and quotations that can be used out of context, while real knowledge denotes literary and scholarly texts. This distinction informs Gorman's observations about online information retrieval which he characterises as being more focused on quick and easy access to facts.[28]

In his later article, Gorman argues that to "Google boosters", speed is of the greatest import: "...just as it is to consumers of fast "food", but, as with fast food, rubbish is rubbish, no matter how speedily it is delivered".[27] However, he suggests that real knowledge is acquired through a traditional scholarly approach to books.[28]

Gorman later gave this opinion on digitising books:

...massive databases of digitized whole books, especially scholarly books, are expensive exercises in futility based on the staggering notion that, for the first time in history, one form of communication (electronic) will supplant and obliterate all previous forms.[27]

Digital Initiatives Technology Librarian Peter Binkley discussed this view on his blog and also noted that a digitisation project does not necessarily involve shredding the books once they are scanned. He even suggests that Gorman himself highlights how digitised databases like Google's make it possible for users to find books and order them by inter-library loan. He also refutes Gorman's "for the first time in history" claim mentioning two previous "transformations" of information delivery over the last couple of millennia: the move from papyrus to vellum codex and the move from manuscript to the printed book. Overall, Binkley felt that, as ALA president-elect, Gorman should accept that digitisation of books is inevitable and that he should "make himself useful by working to ensure that this reformatting goes well".[29]

In 2006, during his term as head of the ALA, Gorman attended the Online Information Conference in London, where he criticised the library profession for being "too interested in technology".[30]

Gorman, however, is not opposed to digitising books per se, but feels that particular types of information, such as inter alia dictionaries, encyclopaedias and gazetteers are suitable candidates for digitisation, while other forms of real knowledge such as whole books (especially scholarly books) and large databases are not suitable for digitisation.[citation needed]

Blogging

Many of the responses to Gorman's article[31] were voiced in the digital domain, with many library and information themed blogs criticising Gorman's opinions, although some bloggers agreed with some of Gorman's stance on digitisation. Gorman credits these responses as making him aware of blogging and leading to him writing Revenge of the Blog People!,[27] in which he criticises the blogging medium and the opinions of his critics. This led to further heated discussion, firstly on blogs then in the professional press. Karen Schneider, an ALA member who writes the Free Range Librarian blog, dubbed the controversy "Gormangate" and shared her concerns about how his words portrayed the library profession, which was subsequently picked up by the professional press.[32]Library Journal, which published Gorman's piece, commented on the decision to publish the piece, noting that the discussion had been beneficial and that:

The power of the blogosphere as a new way to communicate ideas and spread news electronically has been reinforced for all [Library Journal staff].[33]

The journal went on to announce that they would be carrying a technology blog on their website.

One blogger, Michael Stephens, who wrote an open letter to Gorman, which he published on his blog,[34] was so inspired by the subject that he chose to write his doctoral thesis on blogging in librarianship.[35]

Michael Gorman went on to create blog entries of his own for the Encyclopædia Britannica Blog. In the entry “Web 2.0: The Sleep of Reason", he notes how the rise of Web 2.0 has contributed to "an increase in credulity and an associated flight from expertise". In "Siren Song of the Internet", he writes that, although the Internet has shaped our lives in many ways for the better, "we must exercise judgment, use digital resources intelligently, and import into the digital world the values that have pervaded scholarship in Western societies for many centuries". In "Jabberwiki: The Educational Response", he states that discussed how the Web offers texts that are of "doubtful or unestablishable authenticity" how using the Web for research can lead to incomplete research, and the dubious nature of Web-based learning. Finally, in "Challenging the Technophiles", Gorman argues in favor of "sustained reading of complex texts" but notes that Google and the Internet are not helpful in that endeavor.[36]

Personal opinions and spokesmanship

Despite holding such an influential position in the American Library Association, Gorman has made it clear that many of his criticisms are personal and not representative of the ALA. For example, on technology and the Google digitisation, Gorman says:

"The Google project has been enthusiastically embraced and I think that is a mistake. I am not speaking on behalf of the ALA. That has no position on the Google digitisation project. I, on the other hand, do".[30]

While Gorman maintains that he is voicing his own opinion, it was commented that when he is identified as the president of the largest professional library organisation in North America:

...his words have huge legal, political and economic consequences for the entire information science profession.[37]

In regards to Wikipedia, Gorman once stated that "a professor who encourages the use of Wikipedia is the intellectual equivalent of a dietician who recommends a steady diet of Big Macs with everything".[38]

Other commentators have also noted that irrespective of his protestations, the perception on the wider world and the media is that Gorman represents the profession and this can be detrimental to public perception of librarians.[32]

Educating people

Gorman noted with alarm the results of an adult literacy assessment, which showed that reading proficiency of college graduates has declined in the past decade. He said he has been shocked by how few new freshmen understand how to use basic library systems, or enjoy reading for pleasure. "There is a failure in the core values of education," he said. "They're told to go to college in order to get a better job -- and that's okay. But the real task is to produce educated people."[39]

Gorman has spoken extensively on the problems facing library education, particularly in the USA. He proposes the need to restructure library education in the 21st century, focusing on changes in curricula, faculty, and diversity in library education.[40] Gorman believes that students are too focused on learning without goals in mind and that educators are too inclined to change everything just because the internet and all its resources has arrived and that instead, it should be used as an accompaniment to existing educational methods.[41]

The importance of the book

Since his first book (with Walt Crawford), Gorman has stressed the importance of the book in the place of the library and Gorman has suggested that only books can bestow true knowledge on the reader.[42] He emphasises the importance of the book throughout his works. He has expressed concern at the way research has become simply typing a few works in a search engine and says that serious research is impossible to carry out using this method without the additional reading of books.[43]

Spirituality in librarianship

Christianity

Michael Gorman presented ‘'Our Enduring Values'’ to the Association of Christian Libraries (ACL) and further reviews of his book have suggested that the eight proposed values which librarians should follow are more closely related to biblical theism than the humanistic beliefs Gorman believes.[44] Further work by the ACL has developed ideas relating to the formulation of a Christian approach to library values.

Ethical beliefs

In Gorman's publications, he focuses on the importance on the preserving of information and knowledge and the importance of the librarian in helping to achieve this. In Gorman's eight values, he stresses the importance of a librarian having strong values and an ethical stance because these will help the librarian in their job. Failure is bearable because the decisions that caused that failure are based on a person's own beliefs and a person secure in their values is more likely to have higher self-esteem.[45] The importance of librarians reflecting on their own decisions and responsibilities can be seen in Our Singular Strengths and Our Own Selves which feature meditations for librarians, which librarians can use to reaffirm their own profession.[46]

Publications

Gorman has written extensively about librarianship and issues in library science in the professional and academic press, as well as editing and authoring several books, including:

  • Anglo-American Cataloging Rules, 2nd ed (2005) ALA Editions; 2nd edition ISBN 978-0-8389-3555-2 – Gorman was the first editor of the Anglo-American Cataloging Rules second edition in 1978. AACR2 is one of the most popular cataloguing systems in the world; this guidebook accompanies the system, and aims to explain the rules for cataloguing library materials in simplified terms for practitioners and students.
  • The Concise AACR2 (2004) Facet Publishing; 4th revised edition ISBN 1-85604-540-4 – now in its fourth edition, this revision aims to explain the more generally applicable AACR2 rules for cataloguing library materials for practitioners and students who are in less complicated library and bibliographic environments. It is intended for users who do not require extensive detail, but prefer a summary of AACR2 practice.
  • Future Libraries: Dreams, Madness, and Reality (with Walt Crawford) ALA Editions ISBN 0-8389-0647-8 – co-written with Walt Crawford, Gorman argues that libraries can and should welcome advanced technologies while preserving their traditional role as service-oriented repositories of organised information and knowledge. He states that virtual libraries will destroy the impact libraries have on society, and as a result proposes what he calls a "human-oriented" approach to technology. A review in the Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology stated "As the chapters unfold, a wealth of important information and observations about digital technology is presented, particularly the failure of computers to correlate with the often hyperbolic gush of promise for a more economical, streamlined, and utilitarian workplace.",[47] while another reviewer argued that some of the points from the book are ludicrous and suggests that the impact of technological advancements and the longevity of printed works has been exaggerated and instead could lead to a "dangerous complacency"[48] within the profession.
  • Our Singular Strengths: Meditations for Librarians (1997) ALA Editions ISBN 0-8389-0724-5 – this book, precursor to Our Own Selves, is a collection of 144 meditations with a short essay and resolution.

Since 2008, Gorman has written articles on English for the now defunct Vocabula Review and essays on Dickens, paratext, P.G.Wodehouse, and James Joyce for The Caxtonian, the magazine of the Caxton Club.

  • Technical Services Today and Tomorrow (1998) Greenwood Press; 2nd revised edition ISBN 1-56308-590-9 – This book discusses the issues surrounding technology and libraries, centred on the technical services in libraries with views on its future. The four main sections deal with acquisition, bibliographic control, automation and administration. It aims to provide an overview of the way in which technical services are building on the foundations of past work to overcome the new challenges of the present, and aims to remind readers of the technical core of librarians' activities. Like many of Gorman's other books, this text is primarily intended as an academic textbook, and Philip Hider in Library Management wrote that "this book would serve as a primer for library school students".[49]
  • Our Enduring Values: Librarianship in the 21st Century (2000) ALA Editions ISBN 0-8389-0785-7 -in this work, Gorman attempts to define the role of both library and librarians, discussing the core values of the profession. Gorman proposes eight values of librarianship which he believes are the principles which underpin the profession and, in turn, underpin democracy. The books considers the role of the library today, librarianship in the 21st century, what patrons and communities want from their libraries, the effects of new and changing technology on libraries, and ways to maintain the core values of librarianship into the future. Some professionals have criticised the book for some of the personal opinions on which Gorman focuses, and questioned its suitability as an academic textbook for the library and information sector.[2]
  • The Enduring Library: Technology, Tradition, and the Quest for Balance (2003) ALA Editions ISBN 0-8389-0846-2 – This book discusses the issues surrounding traditional library services and the ideas of technology dominance. Gorman's argument is that to comprehend the influence of technology on society and libraries, we need to understand the history and development of technology. He claims that libraries have forever been affected by technology, suggesting we are in a significant point in the development and evolution of libraries. The book surveys the digital world and the internet, library work and the future of libraries, with special focus on reference and cataloguing. It also examines the impact of modern living on information overload and stress[50][51]
  • Our Own Selves: More Meditations for Librarians (2005) ALA Editions ISBN 978-0-8389-0896-9. – 100 essays focusing on the issues central to the library profession. This is a follow up to Gorman's earlier work, Our Singular Strengths (1997).
  • Our Enduring Values Revisited: Librarianship in an Ever-Changing World (2015) ALA Editions ISBN 978-0-8389-1300-0

Awards

  • Margaret Mann Citation (1979)
  • Melvil Dewey Medal (1992)
  • Blackwell's Scholarship Award (1997)
  • California Library Association/Access, Collections, Technical Services Section Award of Achievement (1999)
  • Highsmith Award (2001)
  • Honorary Doctorate, Thames Valley University (2008)
  • Haycock Award[52] (2010)
  • California Library Association/California Library Hall of Fame (2012)[53]

Memberships

  • ALA Council 1991–1995, 2002–2006
  • ALA Executive Board until 2007
  • Fellow of the Library Association 1979
  • Honorary Fellow of CILIP[54] 2005

References

  1. ^ Tammy Lau, Adam Wallace. "Home – Special Collections Research Center – Research Guides at California State University Fresno" (PDF). csufresno.edu.
  2. ^ a b c Line, Maurice B. (2002). "Our Enduring Values: Librarianship in the 21st Century200213Michael Gorman.Our Enduring Values: Librarianship in the 21st Century. Chicago, IL and London: American Library Association 2000. 188+ix pp., ISBN: 0 8389 0785 7 $28.00 ($25.20 to ALA members)". Journal of Documentation. 58: 133–136. doi:10.1108/jd.2002.58.1.133.13.
  3. ^ Gorman, M. (2000). "Our Enduring Values: Librarianship in the 21st Century". p18 ALA Editions. ISBN 0-8389-0785-7
  4. ^ Bridges, K. (2003), Expectations of librarians in the 21st century. p106 London: Greenwood press
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 14 August 2006.
  6. ^ American Library Association, [1], "LITA Presidents", 2014
  7. ^ "Gorman Elected ALA President; Switzer Retains Treasurer's Post". americanlibrariesmagazine.org.
  8. ^ Moran, G. (June 2001). Ethics, strengths and values, Journal of librarianship and information science, vol.33 no.2 p99)
  9. ^ a b c d e Gorman, M. (2000). "Our Enduring Values: Librarianship in the 21st Century". ALA Editions. ISBN 0-8389-0785-7
  10. ^ Gorman, M. (1997), Our singular strengths: meditations for librarians, p23 Washington: ALA, ISBN 0-8389-0724-5
  11. ^ Gorman, M. (1997), Our singular strengths: meditations for librarians, p24 Washington: ALA, ISBN 0-8389-0724-5
  12. ^ Gorman, M. (2000). "Our Enduring Values: Librarianship in the 21st Century". p103 ALA Editions. ISBN 0-8389-0785-7
  13. ^ Gorman, M (2003). "The enduring library: technology, tradition and the quest for balance". p41 Washington: ALA, ISBN 0-8389-0846-2
  14. ^ Gorman, M. (2001). "Values for Human-to-Human Reference". p179
  15. ^ a b Gorman, M. (2001). "Values for Human-to-Human Reference". p181
  16. ^ a b Moran, G. (June 2001). Ethics, strengths and values, Journal of librarianship and information science, vol.33 no.2 p99
  17. ^ Gorman, M. (1997), Our singular strengths: meditations for librarians, p39/55 Washington: ALA, ISBN 0-8389-0724-5
  18. ^ Gorman, M. (2000). "Our Enduring Values: Librarianship in the 21st Century". p69 ALA Editions. ISBN 0-8389-0785-7
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i Crawford, W. and Gorman, M. (1995). "Future Libraries: Dreams, Madness and Reality". ALA Editions. ISBN 0-8389-0647-8
  20. ^ Goodes, P. A. (August 2004)."Gorman Focus: Education, Recruitment". "American Libraries". 35 (7).
  21. ^ Gorman, Michael (2004). "Whither library education?". New Library World. 105 (9/10): 376–380. doi:10.1108/03074800410557330. hdl:10150/105907.
  22. ^ Dillon, A., et al., Crying Wolf: An Examination and Reconsideration of the Perception of Crisis in LIS Education. Journal of Education for Library and Information Science v. 46 no. 4 p280-98
  23. ^ Pawley, C. (2005) Gorman's Gauntlet: Gender and Crying Wolf (In reply to Crying Wolf: An Examination and Reconsideration of the Perception of Crisis in LIS Education by A. Dillon and A. Norris). Journal of Education for Library and Information Science, 46/4, p304-11
  24. ^ "EBSCOhost Login". hwwilsonweb.com.
  25. ^ Berry, J. N. Can ALA Bring Change?. (September 15 2006) Library Journal. 131/15 p10 2 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ Gorman M. (December 17, 2004)"Google and God's Mind: The problem is, information isn't knowledge", Los Angeles Times
  27. ^ a b c d M. Gorman (15 February 2005), , Library Journal, archived from the original on 7 April 2015, retrieved 12 July 2013
  28. ^ a b Gorman M. (17 December 2004) "Google and God's Mind The problem is, information isn't knowledge." Los Angeles Times Archived 5 August 2012 at archive.today
  29. ^ "The Gorman/Google Guff « Quædam cuiusdam". wallandbinkley.com.
  30. ^ a b "Gorman slams digitisation". iwr.co.uk. Archived from the original on 3 February 2015.
  31. ^ Gorman, Michael (17 December 2004). "Google and God's Mind". Los Angeles Times.
  32. ^ a b "Is This "Gormangate"? ALA President-Elect Draws Fire". Library Journal.
  33. ^ Fialkoff, F. (2005). The Power of Blogs. Library Journal, 130(6), 8.
  34. ^ "An Open (yet personal) letter to Michael Gorman". tametheweb.com. 25 February 2005.
  35. ^ Stephens, M. (2007) Modelling the role of blogging in Librarianship PhD THesis, University of Texas
  36. ^ "Michael Gorman – Britannica Blog". britannica.com.
  37. ^ . Archived from the original on 2 February 2015. Retrieved 2 February 2015.
  38. ^ Jemielniak, Dariusz; Aibar, Aibar (2016). "Bridging the Gap Between Wikipedia and Academia". Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology. 67 (7): 1773–1776. doi:10.1002/asi.23691. hdl:10609/92906. S2CID 20057427.
  39. ^ Romano, L. (2005) 'Literacy of College Graduates Is on Decline Survey's Finding of a Drop in Reading Proficiency Is Inexplicable, Experts Say' in The Washington Post 25 December 2005. [2] Last accessed 21 March 2011
  40. ^ Gorman, M. (2003) 'Whither Library Education? at EUCLID/ALISE conference "Coping with continual change—change management in SLIS" in Potsdam, Germany, 31 July 2003 [3] Last accessed 21 March 2011
  41. ^ Carlson, S. (2005) 'The Net Generation Goes to College' in The Chronicle of Higher Education: Information Technology 7 October 2005. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 August 2011. Retrieved 26 April 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Last accessed 21 March 2011
  42. ^ Gorman, M. (2008) 'The Book Is Dead! Long Live The Book!' in YouTube. Video on YouTube Last accessed 29 March 2011.
  43. ^ Gorman, M. (2001) Technostress and Library Values in Library Journal. . Archived from the original on 25 April 2011. Retrieved 26 April 2011. Last accessed 20 March 2011
  44. ^ Smith, G. (2002) 'The Core Virtue of Christian Librarianship' in Faculty Publications and Presentations. Paper 1 [4] Last accessed 20 March 2011
  45. ^ Gorman, M. (2002) 'The value and values of libraries' in A talk given at the Celebration of Libraries in Oxford, England, 20 September 2002. [5]
  46. ^ Westwood, R. 'Library Heroes: On Michael Gorman' originally published in Library and Information Gazette 14 January 2010. . Archived from the original on 20 March 2011. Retrieved 26 April 2011. Last accessed 29 March 2011.
  47. ^ Henry, C. (1995) (1995). "Future Libraries: Dreams, Madness, and Reality". Journal of the American Society for Information Science. 46 (10): 796–797. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1097-4571(199512)46:10<796::AID-ASI16>3.0.CO;2-0.
  48. ^ Odlyzko, Andrew. "Silicon dreams and silicon books: the continuing evolution of libraries" (PDF). AT&T Labs – Research. Retrieved 25 April 2011.
  49. ^ Hider, P. (1999). "Book Reviews: Technical Services Today and Tomorrow (2nd edition)". Library Management. 20 (6): 48. doi:10.1108/lm.1999.20.6.48.3. Retrieved 1 May 2011.
  50. ^ Duckett, B. (2005). "Book Review: The Enduring Library: Technology, Tradition, and the Quest for Balance". Library Review. 54 (2): 134–135. doi:10.1108/00242530510583084. Archived from the original on 3 February 2015.
  51. ^ "The Enduring Library: Technology, Tradition, and the Quest for Balance – Reviews, Discussion". Goodreads. Retrieved 25 April 2011.
  52. ^ "Michael Gorman receives 2010 Haycock Award". ala.org. 9 March 2010.
  53. ^ llarson, "Librarian emeritus Gorman will be inducted into library Hall of Fame" Fresno State News (24 August 2012).
  54. ^ Report from the CILIP Umbrella Conference of 2005 by James Kay 16 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine

External links

  • The American Library Association homepage
  • The Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules homepage
  • The Henry Madden Library homepage
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
Non-profit organization positions
Preceded by President of the American Library Association
2005–2006
Succeeded by

michael, gorman, librarian, other, uses, michael, gorman, disambiguation, michael, gorman, born, march, 1941, witney, oxfordshire, british, born, librarian, library, scholar, editor, writer, library, issues, noted, traditional, views, during, tenure, president. For other uses see Michael Gorman disambiguation Michael Gorman born 6 March 1941 in Witney Oxfordshire 1 is a British born librarian library scholar and editor writer on library issues noted for his traditional views During his tenure as president of the American Library Association ALA he was vocal in his opinions on a range of subjects notably technology and education He currently lives in the Chicago area with his wife Anne Reuland an academic administrator at Loyola University Michael GormanPresident of the American Library AssociationIn office 2005 2006Preceded byCarol A Brey CasianoSucceeded byLeslie BurgerPersonal detailsBorn 1941 03 06 6 March 1941 age 81 Witney Oxfordshire EnglandOccupationLibrarianWriting careerGenreLibrarianshipNotable worksOur Singular Strengths Meditations for Librarians 1997 Our Enduring Values 2000 The Enduring Library 2003 Anglo American Cataloging Rules 2nd ed 2005 Gorman s principles of librarianship derive from core liberal democratic and humanist values 2 A key influence is S R Ranganathan whom he regarded as the greatest figure of librarianship in the 20th century 3 He maintains that it is through focusing on core professional values that librarians will facilitate personal growth and enhance the success of their institutions 4 Contents 1 Life and career 2 Gorman s ideas 2 1 Eight central values of librarianship 2 1 1 Critique of his values 2 2 Five New Laws of Librarianship 3 Educating the librarian 4 Perspectives 4 1 Digitisation 4 2 Blogging 4 3 Personal opinions and spokesmanship 4 4 Educating people 4 5 The importance of the book 4 6 Spirituality in librarianship 4 6 1 Christianity 4 6 2 Ethical beliefs 5 Publications 6 Awards 7 Memberships 8 References 9 External linksLife and career EditGorman grew up in London England and became interested in libraries in part through his experiences at Hendon library and particularly its Children s Library run by a pioneer in the field Eileen Colwell 5 He attended Ealing Technical College now University of West London in London from 1964 to 1966 1966 to 1977 Head of Cataloguing at the British National Bibliography a member of the British Library Planning Secretariat and Head of the Office of Bibliographic Standards in the British Library 1977 to 1988 Director of Technical Services Director of General Services and Acting University Librarian at Library of the University of Illinois 1988 to 2007 Dean of Library Services at the Henry Madden Library California State University Fresno retiring in 2007 1999 to 2000 President of the Library and Information Technology Association 6 2005 to 2006 President of the American Library Association ALA 7 He has also taught at library schools in Britain and in the United States most recently at the UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies Gorman s ideas EditGorman bases his principles of librarianship on core liberal democratic and humanistic values 2 Underlying Gorman s fervent defense of his values of librarianship is a strong apprehension regarding the future of the profession 8 Eight central values of librarianship Edit In Our Enduring Values 9 Gorman identified eight central values of librarianship Stewardship Gorman argues that librarians have a key role to play in preserving the human record for future generations He maintains that librarians must pass on their best values to future information professionals Service According to Gorman an ethic of service should permeate all library policies and practices Gorman stresses the duty of librarians to serve individuals communities and societies is best fulfilled through a combination of professional skills empathy and personal dedication 9 85 He argues that librarians need to act idealistically in a materialistic age 9 87 Intellectual Freedom Librarians lead the fight for intellectual freedom 9 173 Librarians Gorman maintains must zealously fight to protect free expression of thought even if the ideas concerned contradict the librarian s own personal convictions 10 Privacy The freedom to access whatever materials an individual wishes without the knowledge or interference of others 11 Gorman insists that confidentiality is a bond of trust between libraries and their patrons Rationalism Gorman argues that libraries are children of the Enlightenment and of rationalism 12 and that librarianship is a supremely rational profession 9 173 This principle should underpin library procedures and encourage the logical organization and classification of stock Commitment to literacy and learning Reading is of central importance to literacy and lifelong learning Gorman formulates a broad definition of literacy beyond the mere ability to read write and surf the net his concept encompasses comprehensive true reading which is fulfilling and expands the mind 13 Equity of access Gorman argues that the digital divide is but one manifestation of societal inequality and that all library services in particular reference services have a role to play in bridging the gap and providing equity of access 14 Democracy Gorman describes libraries as supremely democratic institutions 15 Because democracy he insists depends on a well informed electorate the library is integral to promoting education and maintaining democracy If people are to exercise good judgement in electing representatives they need to be highly informed and have access to written records the library plays a central role therefore in maintaining democracy 15 These Eight Values have been heavily influenced by the Buddhist Noble Eightfold Path Critique of his values Edit Gorman s selection and defence of his eight central values has attracted some criticism for example his championing of stewardship as a central ethical tenet unique to librarianship which cannot be shared by other information professionals has been attacked as too narrow and exclusive 16 His impassioned defence of intellectual freedom has also been dismissed in some quarters as empty rhetoric and hyperbole 16 Gorman s views have also been dismissed by some as seemingly contradictory on the one hand he praises Ranganathan s core values of library science 17 on the other he claims information science is a bogus discipline 18 After a careful reading of Gorman s use of the phrase bogus discipline one can see that his beliefs are not in contradiction to Ranganathan however as he is supplying a critique of library science schools in what he views as a departure from the core values that should be taught Five New Laws of Librarianship Edit Gorman has expanded and added a more contemporary focus to Ranganathan s Five Laws of Library Science 19 The re working of the classic five laws is an attempt to meet the challenges of fast paced social and cultural changes affecting library users and the rapid proliferation of technology in library operations 19 455 The five laws are Libraries serve humanity This law encompasses the assistance of individuals and the lofty ideal of the furtherance of the higher aspirations of mankind 19 8 This law also implies an altruistic desire to provide quality service and to exceed the expectations of all users Respect all forms by which knowledge is communicated Gorman advocates the use of various forms of carriers of knowledge and information 19 9 He recommends a utilitarian approach using whatever is more effective cost effective or advantageous Use technology intelligently to enhance service Librarians Gorman argues must welcome and integrate new technologies Yet he is clear that print on paper will remain the pre eminent medium for the communication of cumulative knowledge 19 10 11 Technology must be used to solve problems and improve services and achieve cost effectiveness rather than adopted for its own sake 19 10 Protect free access to knowledge Allowing the records of the past to disappear is from Gorman s perspective a kind of censorship 19 11 It is the librarian s responsibility to ensure intellectual freedom because Gorman asserts a society without uncensored libraries is a society open to tyranny 19 11 Honor the past and create the future Gorman advocates the need to balance nostalgia for a pre digital past with the need to embrace new technologies in a selective way based upon the extent to which they will enhance library service 19 1 He points to a need to respect the accomplishments of predecessors in the field of information science whilst celebrating new developments in the field of librarianship Educating the librarian EditAs part of his platform when running for ALA President in 2006 Gorman pledged to address what he called the education crisis 20 The article Whither Library Education 21 set out his views on the current state of LIS education He concluded that LIS education had become technocentric male dominated and out of touch with the needs of practitioners This view was critiqued by Dillon and Norris 22 while both papers were critiqued by Pawley 23 for their treatment of the issue of gender in librarianship Library and Information Science academics also responded in the professional press questioning whether there was a crisis to address 24 During his year in office Gorman introduced an initiative intended to discuss the issue of education Sessions were held with practitioners and academics However Gorman s traditional views may have led to younger librarians turning away from the idea and their views not being represented Whatever the case after all that effort we still don t know what current students and recent graduates really think about the educations upon which they spend so much money 25 Despite the initiative accreditation and curricula remained unchanged at the end of Gorman s tenure Perspectives EditGorman s views on the Internet digitisation of books Google citizen journalism and information science are widely discussed Two publications in particular caused heated debate particularly within the librarian blogging community the 2004 article Google and God s Mind 26 originally printed in the Los Angeles Times the 2005 response article Revenge of the Blog People 27 originally printed in Library Journal Digitisation Edit In 2004 Google announced its plan to digitize the collections of five major research libraries This would allow both Google and the libraries in question The University of Michigan Oxford New York Public Harvard and Stanford to have access to digitized copies of millions of texts Michael Gorman then ALA president responded to this announcement with an article in the Los Angeles Times Google and God s Mind where he made clear his disapproval of the digitisation project This disapproval was based on what he sees as a clear distinction between information and real knowledge Gorman defines information as facts data images and quotations that can be used out of context while real knowledge denotes literary and scholarly texts This distinction informs Gorman s observations about online information retrieval which he characterises as being more focused on quick and easy access to facts 28 In his later article Gorman argues that to Google boosters speed is of the greatest import just as it is to consumers of fast food but as with fast food rubbish is rubbish no matter how speedily it is delivered 27 However he suggests that real knowledge is acquired through a traditional scholarly approach to books 28 Gorman later gave this opinion on digitising books massive databases of digitized whole books especially scholarly books are expensive exercises in futility based on the staggering notion that for the first time in history one form of communication electronic will supplant and obliterate all previous forms 27 Digital Initiatives Technology Librarian Peter Binkley discussed this view on his blog and also noted that a digitisation project does not necessarily involve shredding the books once they are scanned He even suggests that Gorman himself highlights how digitised databases like Google s make it possible for users to find books and order them by inter library loan He also refutes Gorman s for the first time in history claim mentioning two previous transformations of information delivery over the last couple of millennia the move from papyrus to vellum codex and the move from manuscript to the printed book Overall Binkley felt that as ALA president elect Gorman should accept that digitisation of books is inevitable and that he should make himself useful by working to ensure that this reformatting goes well 29 In 2006 during his term as head of the ALA Gorman attended the Online Information Conference in London where he criticised the library profession for being too interested in technology 30 Gorman however is not opposed to digitising books per se but feels that particular types of information such as inter alia dictionaries encyclopaedias and gazetteers are suitable candidates for digitisation while other forms of real knowledge such as whole books especially scholarly books and large databases are not suitable for digitisation citation needed Blogging Edit Many of the responses to Gorman s article 31 were voiced in the digital domain with many library and information themed blogs criticising Gorman s opinions although some bloggers agreed with some of Gorman s stance on digitisation Gorman credits these responses as making him aware of blogging and leading to him writing Revenge of the Blog People 27 in which he criticises the blogging medium and the opinions of his critics This led to further heated discussion firstly on blogs then in the professional press Karen Schneider an ALA member who writes the Free Range Librarian blog dubbed the controversy Gormangate and shared her concerns about how his words portrayed the library profession which was subsequently picked up by the professional press 32 Library Journal which published Gorman s piece commented on the decision to publish the piece noting that the discussion had been beneficial and that The power of the blogosphere as a new way to communicate ideas and spread news electronically has been reinforced for all Library Journal staff 33 The journal went on to announce that they would be carrying a technology blog on their website One blogger Michael Stephens who wrote an open letter to Gorman which he published on his blog 34 was so inspired by the subject that he chose to write his doctoral thesis on blogging in librarianship 35 Michael Gorman went on to create blog entries of his own for the Encyclopaedia Britannica Blog In the entry Web 2 0 The Sleep of Reason he notes how the rise of Web 2 0 has contributed to an increase in credulity and an associated flight from expertise In Siren Song of the Internet he writes that although the Internet has shaped our lives in many ways for the better we must exercise judgment use digital resources intelligently and import into the digital world the values that have pervaded scholarship in Western societies for many centuries In Jabberwiki The Educational Response he states that discussed how the Web offers texts that are of doubtful or unestablishable authenticity how using the Web for research can lead to incomplete research and the dubious nature of Web based learning Finally in Challenging the Technophiles Gorman argues in favor of sustained reading of complex texts but notes that Google and the Internet are not helpful in that endeavor 36 Personal opinions and spokesmanship Edit Despite holding such an influential position in the American Library Association Gorman has made it clear that many of his criticisms are personal and not representative of the ALA For example on technology and the Google digitisation Gorman says The Google project has been enthusiastically embraced and I think that is a mistake I am not speaking on behalf of the ALA That has no position on the Google digitisation project I on the other hand do 30 While Gorman maintains that he is voicing his own opinion it was commented that when he is identified as the president of the largest professional library organisation in North America his words have huge legal political and economic consequences for the entire information science profession 37 In regards to Wikipedia Gorman once stated that a professor who encourages the use of Wikipedia is the intellectual equivalent of a dietician who recommends a steady diet of Big Macs with everything 38 Other commentators have also noted that irrespective of his protestations the perception on the wider world and the media is that Gorman represents the profession and this can be detrimental to public perception of librarians 32 Educating people Edit Gorman noted with alarm the results of an adult literacy assessment which showed that reading proficiency of college graduates has declined in the past decade He said he has been shocked by how few new freshmen understand how to use basic library systems or enjoy reading for pleasure There is a failure in the core values of education he said They re told to go to college in order to get a better job and that s okay But the real task is to produce educated people 39 Gorman has spoken extensively on the problems facing library education particularly in the USA He proposes the need to restructure library education in the 21st century focusing on changes in curricula faculty and diversity in library education 40 Gorman believes that students are too focused on learning without goals in mind and that educators are too inclined to change everything just because the internet and all its resources has arrived and that instead it should be used as an accompaniment to existing educational methods 41 The importance of the book Edit Since his first book with Walt Crawford Gorman has stressed the importance of the book in the place of the library and Gorman has suggested that only books can bestow true knowledge on the reader 42 He emphasises the importance of the book throughout his works He has expressed concern at the way research has become simply typing a few works in a search engine and says that serious research is impossible to carry out using this method without the additional reading of books 43 Spirituality in librarianship Edit Christianity Edit Michael Gorman presented Our Enduring Values to the Association of Christian Libraries ACL and further reviews of his book have suggested that the eight proposed values which librarians should follow are more closely related to biblical theism than the humanistic beliefs Gorman believes 44 Further work by the ACL has developed ideas relating to the formulation of a Christian approach to library values Ethical beliefs Edit In Gorman s publications he focuses on the importance on the preserving of information and knowledge and the importance of the librarian in helping to achieve this In Gorman s eight values he stresses the importance of a librarian having strong values and an ethical stance because these will help the librarian in their job Failure is bearable because the decisions that caused that failure are based on a person s own beliefs and a person secure in their values is more likely to have higher self esteem 45 The importance of librarians reflecting on their own decisions and responsibilities can be seen in Our Singular Strengths and Our Own Selves which feature meditations for librarians which librarians can use to reaffirm their own profession 46 Publications EditGorman has written extensively about librarianship and issues in library science in the professional and academic press as well as editing and authoring several books including Anglo American Cataloging Rules 2nd ed 2005 ALA Editions 2nd edition ISBN 978 0 8389 3555 2 Gorman was the first editor of the Anglo American Cataloging Rules second edition in 1978 AACR2 is one of the most popular cataloguing systems in the world this guidebook accompanies the system and aims to explain the rules for cataloguing library materials in simplified terms for practitioners and students The Concise AACR2 2004 Facet Publishing 4th revised edition ISBN 1 85604 540 4 now in its fourth edition this revision aims to explain the more generally applicable AACR2 rules for cataloguing library materials for practitioners and students who are in less complicated library and bibliographic environments It is intended for users who do not require extensive detail but prefer a summary of AACR2 practice Future Libraries Dreams Madness and Reality with Walt Crawford ALA Editions ISBN 0 8389 0647 8 co written with Walt Crawford Gorman argues that libraries can and should welcome advanced technologies while preserving their traditional role as service oriented repositories of organised information and knowledge He states that virtual libraries will destroy the impact libraries have on society and as a result proposes what he calls a human oriented approach to technology A review in the Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology stated As the chapters unfold a wealth of important information and observations about digital technology is presented particularly the failure of computers to correlate with the often hyperbolic gush of promise for a more economical streamlined and utilitarian workplace 47 while another reviewer argued that some of the points from the book are ludicrous and suggests that the impact of technological advancements and the longevity of printed works has been exaggerated and instead could lead to a dangerous complacency 48 within the profession Our Singular Strengths Meditations for Librarians 1997 ALA Editions ISBN 0 8389 0724 5 this book precursor to Our Own Selves is a collection of 144 meditations with a short essay and resolution Since 2008 Gorman has written articles on English for the now defunct Vocabula Review and essays on Dickens paratext P G Wodehouse and James Joyce for The Caxtonian the magazine of the Caxton Club Technical Services Today and Tomorrow 1998 Greenwood Press 2nd revised edition ISBN 1 56308 590 9 This book discusses the issues surrounding technology and libraries centred on the technical services in libraries with views on its future The four main sections deal with acquisition bibliographic control automation and administration It aims to provide an overview of the way in which technical services are building on the foundations of past work to overcome the new challenges of the present and aims to remind readers of the technical core of librarians activities Like many of Gorman s other books this text is primarily intended as an academic textbook and Philip Hider in Library Management wrote that this book would serve as a primer for library school students 49 Our Enduring Values Librarianship in the 21st Century 2000 ALA Editions ISBN 0 8389 0785 7 in this work Gorman attempts to define the role of both library and librarians discussing the core values of the profession Gorman proposes eight values of librarianship which he believes are the principles which underpin the profession and in turn underpin democracy The books considers the role of the library today librarianship in the 21st century what patrons and communities want from their libraries the effects of new and changing technology on libraries and ways to maintain the core values of librarianship into the future Some professionals have criticised the book for some of the personal opinions on which Gorman focuses and questioned its suitability as an academic textbook for the library and information sector 2 The Enduring Library Technology Tradition and the Quest for Balance 2003 ALA Editions ISBN 0 8389 0846 2 This book discusses the issues surrounding traditional library services and the ideas of technology dominance Gorman s argument is that to comprehend the influence of technology on society and libraries we need to understand the history and development of technology He claims that libraries have forever been affected by technology suggesting we are in a significant point in the development and evolution of libraries The book surveys the digital world and the internet library work and the future of libraries with special focus on reference and cataloguing It also examines the impact of modern living on information overload and stress 50 51 Our Own Selves More Meditations for Librarians 2005 ALA Editions ISBN 978 0 8389 0896 9 100 essays focusing on the issues central to the library profession This is a follow up to Gorman s earlier work Our Singular Strengths 1997 Our Enduring Values Revisited Librarianship in an Ever Changing World 2015 ALA Editions ISBN 978 0 8389 1300 0Awards EditMargaret Mann Citation 1979 Melvil Dewey Medal 1992 Blackwell s Scholarship Award 1997 California Library Association Access Collections Technical Services Section Award of Achievement 1999 Highsmith Award 2001 Honorary Doctorate Thames Valley University 2008 Haycock Award 52 2010 California Library Association California Library Hall of Fame 2012 53 Memberships EditALA Council 1991 1995 2002 2006 ALA Executive Board until 2007 Fellow of the Library Association 1979 Honorary Fellow of CILIP 54 2005References Edit Tammy Lau Adam Wallace Home Special Collections Research Center Research Guides at California State University Fresno PDF csufresno edu a b c Line Maurice B 2002 Our Enduring Values Librarianship in the 21st Century200213Michael Gorman Our Enduring Values Librarianship in the 21st Century Chicago IL and London American Library Association 2000 188 ix pp ISBN 0 8389 0785 7 28 00 25 20 to ALA members Journal of Documentation 58 133 136 doi 10 1108 jd 2002 58 1 133 13 Gorman M 2000 Our Enduring Values Librarianship in the 21st Century p18 ALA Editions ISBN 0 8389 0785 7 Bridges K 2003 Expectations of librarians in the 21st century p106 London Greenwood press InfoSpeak for the World Archived from the original on 14 August 2006 American Library Association 1 LITA Presidents 2014 Gorman Elected ALA President Switzer Retains Treasurer s Post americanlibrariesmagazine org Moran G June 2001 Ethics strengths and values Journal of librarianship and information science vol 33 no 2 p99 a b c d e Gorman M 2000 Our Enduring Values Librarianship in the 21st Century ALA Editions ISBN 0 8389 0785 7 Gorman M 1997 Our singular strengths meditations for librarians p23 Washington ALA ISBN 0 8389 0724 5 Gorman M 1997 Our singular strengths meditations for librarians p24 Washington ALA ISBN 0 8389 0724 5 Gorman M 2000 Our Enduring Values Librarianship in the 21st Century p103 ALA Editions ISBN 0 8389 0785 7 Gorman M 2003 The enduring library technology tradition and the quest for balance p41 Washington ALA ISBN 0 8389 0846 2 Gorman M 2001 Values for Human to Human Reference p179 a b Gorman M 2001 Values for Human to Human Reference p181 a b Moran G June 2001 Ethics strengths and values Journal of librarianship and information science vol 33 no 2 p99 Gorman M 1997 Our singular strengths meditations for librarians p39 55 Washington ALA ISBN 0 8389 0724 5 Gorman M 2000 Our Enduring Values Librarianship in the 21st Century p69 ALA Editions ISBN 0 8389 0785 7 a b c d e f g h i Crawford W and Gorman M 1995 Future Libraries Dreams Madness and Reality ALA Editions ISBN 0 8389 0647 8 Goodes P A August 2004 Gorman Focus Education Recruitment American Libraries 35 7 Gorman Michael 2004 Whither library education New Library World 105 9 10 376 380 doi 10 1108 03074800410557330 hdl 10150 105907 Dillon A et al Crying Wolf An Examination and Reconsideration of the Perception of Crisis in LIS Education Journal of Education for Library and Information Science v 46 no 4 p280 98 Pawley C 2005 Gorman s Gauntlet Gender and Crying Wolf In reply to Crying Wolf An Examination and Reconsideration of the Perception of Crisis in LIS Education by A Dillon and A Norris Journal of Education for Library and Information Science 46 4 p304 11 EBSCOhost Login hwwilsonweb com Berry J N Can ALA Bring Change September 15 2006 Library Journal 131 15 p10 Archived 2 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine Gorman M December 17 2004 Google and God s Mind The problem is information isn t knowledge Los Angeles Times a b c d M Gorman 15 February 2005 Revenge of the Blog People Library Journal archived from the original on 7 April 2015 retrieved 12 July 2013 a b Gorman M 17 December 2004 Google and God s Mind The problem is information isn t knowledge Los Angeles Times Archived 5 August 2012 at archive today The Gorman Google Guff Quaedam cuiusdam wallandbinkley com a b Gorman slams digitisation iwr co uk Archived from the original on 3 February 2015 Gorman Michael 17 December 2004 Google and God s Mind Los Angeles Times a b Is This Gormangate ALA President Elect Draws Fire Library Journal Fialkoff F 2005 The Power of Blogs Library Journal 130 6 8 An Open yet personal letter to Michael Gorman tametheweb com 25 February 2005 Stephens M 2007 Modelling the role of blogging in Librarianship PhD THesis University of Texas Michael Gorman Britannica Blog britannica com Library Organizations Should Support Google Book Search by Dames K Matthew Online Vol 30 Issue 2 March April 2006 Archived from the original on 2 February 2015 Retrieved 2 February 2015 Jemielniak Dariusz Aibar Aibar 2016 Bridging the Gap Between Wikipedia and Academia Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology 67 7 1773 1776 doi 10 1002 asi 23691 hdl 10609 92906 S2CID 20057427 Romano L 2005 Literacy of College Graduates Is on Decline Survey s Finding of a Drop in Reading Proficiency Is Inexplicable Experts Say in The Washington Post 25 December 2005 2 Last accessed 21 March 2011 Gorman M 2003 Whither Library Education at EUCLID ALISE conference Coping with continual change change management in SLIS in Potsdam Germany 31 July 2003 3 Last accessed 21 March 2011 Carlson S 2005 The Net Generation Goes to College in The Chronicle of Higher Education Information Technology 7 October 2005 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 13 August 2011 Retrieved 26 April 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Last accessed 21 March 2011 Gorman M 2008 The Book Is Dead Long Live The Book in YouTube Video on YouTube Last accessed 29 March 2011 Gorman M 2001 Technostress and Library Values in Library Journal Library Journal Archived from the original on 25 April 2011 Retrieved 26 April 2011 Last accessed 20 March 2011 Smith G 2002 The Core Virtue of Christian Librarianship in Faculty Publications and Presentations Paper 1 4 Last accessed 20 March 2011 Gorman M 2002 The value and values of libraries in A talk given at the Celebration of Libraries in Oxford England 20 September 2002 5 Westwood R Library Heroes On Michael Gorman originally published in Library and Information Gazette 14 January 2010 Rob Westwood on Michael Gorman Archived from the original on 20 March 2011 Retrieved 26 April 2011 Last accessed 29 March 2011 Henry C 1995 1995 Future Libraries Dreams Madness and Reality Journal of the American Society for Information Science 46 10 796 797 doi 10 1002 SICI 1097 4571 199512 46 10 lt 796 AID ASI16 gt 3 0 CO 2 0 Odlyzko Andrew Silicon dreams and silicon books the continuing evolution of libraries PDF AT amp T Labs Research Retrieved 25 April 2011 Hider P 1999 Book Reviews Technical Services Today and Tomorrow 2nd edition Library Management 20 6 48 doi 10 1108 lm 1999 20 6 48 3 Retrieved 1 May 2011 Duckett B 2005 Book Review The Enduring Library Technology Tradition and the Quest for Balance Library Review 54 2 134 135 doi 10 1108 00242530510583084 Archived from the original on 3 February 2015 The Enduring Library Technology Tradition and the Quest for Balance Reviews Discussion Goodreads Retrieved 25 April 2011 Michael Gorman receives 2010 Haycock Award ala org 9 March 2010 llarson Librarian emeritus Gorman will be inducted into library Hall of Fame Fresno State News 24 August 2012 Report from the CILIP Umbrella Conference of 2005 by James Kay Archived 16 June 2011 at the Wayback MachineExternal links EditMichael Gorman s web site The American Library Association homepage The Anglo American Cataloguing Rules homepage The Henry Madden Library homepage Appearances on C SPANNon profit organization positionsPreceded byCarol A Brey Casiano President of the American Library Association2005 2006 Succeeded byLeslie Burger Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Michael Gorman librarian amp oldid 1114773735, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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