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The Library World Volume 37 Issue 8

New Library World

ISSN: 0307-4803

Article publication date: 1 March 1935

51

Abstract

OUR readers need no apology from us for the attention given to Library Training in these pages. The amount of dissatisfaction with the present state of affairs, if it may be judged from the gossip and letters that reach us, is of some proportions. It is not to be supposed that complaints are necessarily justified. They may be made in the natural chagrin of disappointment by candidates who have failed. Alternatively, there may be reasons which have a disinterested origin. The record of passes and failures shows that in December there was a dêbacle in candidates in the subject of cataloguing, which at least merits thought. In earlier issues it has been suggested by our writers that examinations twice yearly encourage experiments in sitting. There has also been the suggestion that librarians place too much stress on qualifications for their juniors and urge them to struggle with subjects for which they cannot be ready. To pass in cataloguing a student must be able to catalogue anything from a novel to an academic thesis in Anglo‐Norman French on Phlogiston, supposing that to be possible!

Citation

(1935), "The Library World Volume 37 Issue 8", New Library World, Vol. 37 No. 8, pp. 201-224. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb009175

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1935, MCB UP Limited

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