Abstract
Some of the most enduring, and engaging, questions within academic librarianship are those about students and research skills. The vocabulary employed for discussion has evolved, but essential questions-what skills do students need to be taught, who should teach them, and how?-have persisted from the nineteenth century into the twenty-first. This article examines current and historical aspects of these questions, with special focus on an extended early twentieth- century debate between librarian John Cotton Dana and Vassar College history professor Lucy Maynard Salmon about who should provide library instruction: librarians or professors?. © 2012 by The Johns Hopkins University Press.
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CITATION STYLE
Gunselman, C., & Blakesley, E. (2012). Enduring visions of instruction in academic libraries: A review of a spirited early twentieth-century discussion. Portal, 12(3), 259–281. https://doi.org/10.1353/pla.2012.0027
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