Public use of the Internet at Chester library, UK.

Substantial investment is accelerating the provision of public access to the Internet in UK public libraries. Monitoring and evaluation will be essential to inform policies, developments and justify the new services. This paper reports on quantitative and qualitative research into the use being made...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Katherine Turner, Margaret Kendall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Borås 2000-01-01
Series:Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
Subjects:
UK
Online Access:http://informationr.net/ir/5-3/paper75.html
id doaj-ae4af883358e4422a69c37aeeba8db39
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ae4af883358e4422a69c37aeeba8db392020-11-24T21:25:15ZengUniversity of BoråsInformation Research: An International Electronic Journal1368-16132000-01-015375Public use of the Internet at Chester library, UK.Katherine TurnerMargaret KendallSubstantial investment is accelerating the provision of public access to the Internet in UK public libraries. Monitoring and evaluation will be essential to inform policies, developments and justify the new services. This paper reports on quantitative and qualitative research into the use being made of the Internet facilities at Chester Library between August 1998 and May 1999. A questionnaire survey of 178 users revealed substantial use by non-library members, mostly aged between 16 and 35, with only slightly higher use by men than by women. Most of the sample had received no formal training in Internet use and the most popular application was e-mail. Follow-up interviews with 9 users provide examples of the value of the service to users and recommendations for increased training and support from librarians. Analysis of the results includes recommendations for Chester libraries and contributes to the wider debate on the changing roles of public libraries. Further research on the monitoring and evaluation of IT-based services in public libraries is now underway at Manchester Metropolitan University, with Cheshire libraries being one of three library authority project partners in VITAL, an 18 month study funded by the Library and Information Commission.http://informationr.net/ir/5-3/paper75.htmlInternetpublic accesspublic librariesUKChestertrainingresearchLibrary and Information Commission
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katherine Turner
Margaret Kendall
spellingShingle Katherine Turner
Margaret Kendall
Public use of the Internet at Chester library, UK.
Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
Internet
public access
public libraries
UK
Chester
training
research
Library and Information Commission
author_facet Katherine Turner
Margaret Kendall
author_sort Katherine Turner
title Public use of the Internet at Chester library, UK.
title_short Public use of the Internet at Chester library, UK.
title_full Public use of the Internet at Chester library, UK.
title_fullStr Public use of the Internet at Chester library, UK.
title_full_unstemmed Public use of the Internet at Chester library, UK.
title_sort public use of the internet at chester library, uk.
publisher University of Borås
series Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
issn 1368-1613
publishDate 2000-01-01
description Substantial investment is accelerating the provision of public access to the Internet in UK public libraries. Monitoring and evaluation will be essential to inform policies, developments and justify the new services. This paper reports on quantitative and qualitative research into the use being made of the Internet facilities at Chester Library between August 1998 and May 1999. A questionnaire survey of 178 users revealed substantial use by non-library members, mostly aged between 16 and 35, with only slightly higher use by men than by women. Most of the sample had received no formal training in Internet use and the most popular application was e-mail. Follow-up interviews with 9 users provide examples of the value of the service to users and recommendations for increased training and support from librarians. Analysis of the results includes recommendations for Chester libraries and contributes to the wider debate on the changing roles of public libraries. Further research on the monitoring and evaluation of IT-based services in public libraries is now underway at Manchester Metropolitan University, with Cheshire libraries being one of three library authority project partners in VITAL, an 18 month study funded by the Library and Information Commission.
topic Internet
public access
public libraries
UK
Chester
training
research
Library and Information Commission
url http://informationr.net/ir/5-3/paper75.html
work_keys_str_mv AT katherineturner publicuseoftheinternetatchesterlibraryuk
AT margaretkendall publicuseoftheinternetatchesterlibraryuk
_version_ 1725983918605205504