Sentences with phrase «academic library community»

A statement by the NJ academic library community expresses its frustration that many students from NJ high schools coming into their libraries are not prepared for the demands of academic study.

Not exact matches

Relevant code repositories are organized and turned into an open - source blockchain library available to any community member for future developments and academic purposes.
The Call is open to a wide range of people and organisations, including mediators and practitioners of science communication; STEM festival organisers; universities and institutes of technology, science centres, museums and other cultural attractions; artists; educators; industry professionals and academics in science, technology, engineering and maths (STEM); arts agencies; production companies; schools; local authorities (libraries, city / county councils etc.); youth clubs; community groups; and research institutes.
Like bookstores, many public and even academic libraries now offer writing and publishing workshops to their local community of writers and students.
Cork University Press has signed a deal to join the University Press Contents Consortium (UPCC) an academic digital publishing and reading platform for the worldwide library community.
They choose not to embrace professional connections or virtual, digital, and face to face opportunities that promote academic and professional success for the school library leader and school community.
«informed and informative... thoughtful and thought - provoking... inherently fascinating read... deftly crafted... very highly recommended for both community and academic library... collections» [Midwest Book Review, June 2015]
A statement by the academic librarian community expresses its frustration that many students from NJ high schools coming into their libraries are not prepared for the demands of academic study.
In 1983, the Library Network Law was enacted establishing the New Jersey Library Network as a mechanism for academic, institutional, public, school and special libraries to cooperatively provide New Jersey residents with full and equal access to library materials, programs and information that might not otherwise be available in their local communities.
Established in 2003, Polaris Library Systems provides academic, private and public libraries with an integrated library system that boosts productivity, improves patron satisfaction and transforms how libraries connect, communicate and collaborate with their communities in the modern world.
And if they are catering to academic communities keeping up with those rapidly changing disciplines, providing access to patrons at the point of need by leasing rather than owning content makes sense for those libraries.
We will be your presence in the public, academic and K - 12 library communities.
Developed, planned, and conducted classes in information literacy and effective use of library resources for students at all levels of academic achievement at a community college library.
«Exhibiting flawless production values, Edna Andrade is a truly impressive body of work and an essential addition to community and academic library American Art History reference collections and supplemental studies reading lists.»
This annual global event, now entering its sixth year, is organized by the Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition (SPARC) of the Association of Research Libraries (ARL) to promote the goals of Open Access to the public generally but especially within the academic and research communities, to demonstrate its benefits and to inspire wider participation in making Open Access a new norm in scholarly pubAcademic Resources Coalition (SPARC) of the Association of Research Libraries (ARL) to promote the goals of Open Access to the public generally but especially within the academic and research communities, to demonstrate its benefits and to inspire wider participation in making Open Access a new norm in scholarly pubacademic and research communities, to demonstrate its benefits and to inspire wider participation in making Open Access a new norm in scholarly publishing.
In general, and speaking for what I think is the academic law library community in Canada, this idea is probably not an immediate priority.
The only thing I would add is that I believe all libraries, including public and academic, would benefit from thinking about different ways to measure their value to their communities.
First, there are compelling arguments not only for admitting but also for excluding the public; second, academic libraries admit or exclude the public based on their individual circumstances, such as budget, staffing level, and location, that is, whether the sheer number of people in the community using the academic library threatens to overwhelm the primary patrons the library has been created to serve.
Many papers deal with community use of academic libraries.
In fact, one author has argued that academic libraries in small communities are more important to their local populations than academic libraries in large communities, as larger communities can support public libraries that fulfill their needs.»
There is probably always a role for academic libraries to play in the surrounding community, whether large or small, but there are also legitimate reasons for academic libraries to restrict public access.
The case law seems to suggest that, rather than deciding public access policies based solely on considerations of the public or private nature of their universities, the amount of public funding received, or their library's depository status, librarians can consider the individual characteristics of their own universities — the university's mission, their patrons» needs, their financial circumstances, and the place they see for their academic library in the larger community.
As our community of academic law libraries becomes smaller and more anemic, our university libraries may be able to provide us with a transfusion of new skills and influence within a wider information environment with greater collaborative potential, which we could use to further and promote legal information initiatives in our institutions and nationally.
Our SIGs, as we call them, are communities of practice whether that be a workplace type, like the Academic Law Libraries SIG or a broader topic like the Access Services and Resource Sharing SIG.
Designed to be «high level» these Institutes were to attract faculty who were otherwise respected professionals in the law library community, leading scholars, academics, authors, think tank specialists, futurists, philosophers, jurists, lawyers and historians.
Children's librarian with eight years of experience working in community and academic libraries.
Exceptionally well organized and presented, «The Safe Hiring Manual» is unreservedly recommended for professional, corporate, governmental, community, and academic library Business Management and Jobs / Careers instructional reference collections.
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