Guide to Reference, published in 2008 as the online successor to ''Guide to Reference Books'', was a selective guide to the best print and online reference sources. An editorial team of reference librarians and subject experts selected and annotated some 16,000 entries, which were organized by subject. It was a subscription database, published by the
American Library Association, and was updated on an ongoing basis. It was intended as a resource for libraries when answering reference questions, planning library instruction, identifying items to purchase, and training staff.
The print edition was published regularly since 1902 by the
American Library Association, and had been a staple of academic reference libraries throughout the United States. However, its popularity of use had dropped in recent years with the continued rise of electronic databases.
The online product was closed down on March 31, 2016.
History
The Guide was written in the first decade of the twentieth century by
Alice Bertha Kroeger
Alice Bertha Kroeger (May 2, 1864 – October 31, 1909) was an American librarian and educator. Kroeger was a student of Melvil Dewey. She founded the library science program at Drexel University in 1892 and directed the program until her dea ...
, head of the Library School at
Drexel University
Drexel University is a private research university with its main campus in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Drexel's undergraduate school was founded in 1891 by Anthony J. Drexel, a financier and philanthropist. Founded as Drexel Institute of Art, S ...
in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She developed a 104-page volume meant to educate students and professionals within the library community. Filled with short articles and indexes to other publications for further reading, Kroeger used her book to “codify both the principles of education for reference librarianship and reference librarianship’s province of expertise” (Kieft, 331). It also included a series of indexes describing and evaluating reference publications on a variety of topics and was meant to help the aspiring librarian learn about the most useful and reliable reference sources available on the market. The American Library Association published her book as ''Guide to the Study and Use of Reference Books: A Manual for Librarians, Teachers and Students''. Kroeger produced two editions, one in 1902 and a second in 1907.
After Kroeger's death in 1909 the
American Library Association asked
Isadore Gilbert Mudge
Isadore Gilbert Mudge (March 14, 1875 – May 16, 1957) was ranked by the magazine ''American Libraries'' as one of the top 100 important leaders that libraries have had in the 20th century. Mudge was a defining influence on what a contemporary r ...
, head of the reference department for the library at
Columbia University, to take over the project. Mudge started a trend at Columbia that would last for several decades, pushing their reference staff to essentially “lead four lives-as editors, administrators, collection builders, and front-line reference specialists” (Plotnik, 130). Much of the work for the Guide was accomplished alongside the normal reference work duties of collection development and assisting students and professors with their research requests. During this time the indexes on reference materials expanded and the book went through two title changes: ''New Guide to Reference Books'' in 1923 and ''Guide to Reference Books'' in 1929.
After taking the volume through three decades and four new editions, Mudge retired and passed the responsibility on to her successor at
Columbia University,
Constance Mabel Winchell
Constance Mabel Winchell (November 2, 1896 – May 23, 1983) was an American librarian. Winchell worked at Columbia University for thirty-eight years before retiring in 1962. She is best remembered for producing the seventh and eighth editions of ...
. Winchell reorganized the book, classifying the indexes into different disciplines similar to the academic departments of a university. The indexes were greatly expanded under Winchell; when the eighth edition was published in 1967 it was quite a tome, including entries on some 7500 individual publications.
When
Eugene P. Sheehy took over as head of reference at Columbia in 1967 he took on the Guide. Having worked as Winchell's assistant for several years Sheehy adopted her style, process of selection and organization as his own. He began issuing supplements to the Guide, with versions in 1968, 1970, and 1972. The supplements expanded on the entries of Winchell's eighth edition, adding indexes of material newly published or newly discovered. A new ninth edition, which required Sheehy and his two assistants to update and correct entries from Winchell's edition and add in material from their three supplements, was finally published in 1976. This ninth edition was the first version to include listings of early electronic databases. Sheehy continued editing and publishing supplements until he retired in 1986.
The editorship passed for the 10th edition supplement and the 11th edition to
Robert Balay of the Association of College and Research Libraries' Choice magazine. No longer the vision of a lone individual, the Guide became an increasingly cooperative project as reference literature grew and as contributors were drawn from libraries around the country.
Current developments
Use of the Guide became less and less frequent as research had turned more towards electronic databases such as
EBSCOhost and
JSTOR
JSTOR (; short for ''Journal Storage'') is a digital library founded in 1995 in New York City. Originally containing digitized back issues of academic journals, it now encompasses books and other primary sources as well as current issues of j ...
. The project to develop a 12th edition of the Guide as an online database was announced in 2000 under the editorship of Robert H. Kieft, then librarian at
Haverford College
Haverford College ( ) is a private liberal arts college in Haverford, Pennsylvania. It was founded as a men's college in 1833 by members of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), began accepting non-Quakers in 1849, and became coeducational ...
(now college librarian at Occidental College). This online edition was published in 2009 and continually updated. It was the first to include listings of websites and was the first to be issued in electronic form. The online Guide's last general editor was Denise Beaubien Bennett, engineering librarian at the University of Florida's Marston Science Library.
ALA Publishing, in collaboration with the Guide to Reference Editorial Review Board, announced that, due to the "current business climate", the Guide to Reference online product had ceased taking further subscriptions and would be closed down on March 31, 2016.
References
* Cheatham, Bertha M. “Reviews the Book “Guide to Reference Books” edited by Eugene P. Sheehy.” School Library Journal. 33.7. (March, 1987): 88.
* Galvin, Tom. “Review of The Guide to Reference Books by Eugene P. Sheehy.” Library Journal. (September 15, 1968): 89.
* Harris, Robert R. “Guide to Reference Books (Book Review).” Library Journal. 101.22. (December 15, 1976): 2560.
*
Plotnik, Art. “From Winchell’s 8th to Sheehy’s 9th.” American Libraries. 8.3. (March, 1977): 129-133.
* Kieft, Robert. “When Reference Works Are Not Books: The New Edition of the Guide to Reference Books.” Reference and User Services Quarterly. 41.4. (July, 2002): 330-335.
* Rubin, Richard E. Foundations of Library and Information Science. 2nd ed. New York City: Neal-Schuman Publishers, Inc, 2004.
* Sheehy, Eugene P. “Preface.“ Guide to Reference Books. 10th ed. Ed. Eugene P. Sheehy. Chicago: American Library Association, 1986. ix-xi.
* Washburn, Anne. “Guide to Reference Books (Book Review).” Library Journal. 105.13. (July 1, 1980): 1502.
External links
* {{cite web , url=http://www.guidetoreference.org/HomePage.aspx , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150215014745/http://www.guidetoreference.org/HomePage.aspx , archive-date=February 15, 2015 , title=Guide to Reference Home , url-status=dead
Indexes