This involves library work, buying supplies, organizing travel, gathering feedback from colleagues about the types of sampling to do, and — of course — planning the experiments themselves.
Not exact matches
«Our employees get
involved in everything from summer reading programs at the local
library to blood drives to
working at the local food pantry,» Davis says.
These maker spaces are frequently led by librarians and located within school
libraries, which have been reconfigured and redesigned to include workstations where students
work on projects
involving coding and robots, inquiry - based building, and even 3 - D printing.
Peter Brantley will be leading a stellar panel exploring how
libraries and publishers can
work together to make digital reading and lending a win for all parties
involved (including authors), and we'll be taking a look at the importance of copyright with the brilliant William Patry.
But until all parties
involved work together for the much - needed
library patrons, the revolution we were promised just might stall.
She is a non-technologist who has long been
involved in technology (writing CMS documentation; developing and conducting training on her organization's ILS, Internet filters, and digital privacy; giving online research workshops for activists; doing everyday public
library reference and computer support) at
work and elsewhere.
(Note: author - publishers have a bit more freedom if their plans for the
work do not
involve library, bookstore, or similar sales.
Now she keeps
involved in collection development and readers» advisory (her two loves) by reviewing for Reference Books Bulletin, writing reviews and articles on mysteries for NoveList,
working as a consultant for publishers on marketing to
libraries, and
working on the Executive Board of the Adult Reading Round Table.
Right now, I think if you look at the major publishers who are
involved in the publication of what the industry refers to as trade book, bestselling fiction and non-fiction
works, they have very different positions with respect to e-book borrowing from
libraries.
As librarians» roles expand beyond curating collections and
involve more
work with faculty and more outreach, as budgets and staff continue to shrink, and as more and more books inundate the already - saturated academic book market, librarians will rely on eCollections to alleviate the burden of keeping up and ensuring their institutions can fall back on the breadth of their
library's content, and this content extends far beyond the frontlist.
The
work was unveiled on February 25 at an opening reception attended by Pratt Institute President Thomas F. Schutte, Provost Kirk E. Pillow, Fine Arts Chair Deborah Bright, Director of
Libraries Russell Abell, Sol LeWitt Catalogue Raisonné Director of Research Lindsay Aveilhe, Conant and her students, and others who were
involved in the project.
Henry Moore used this «
library of natural forms» to inform and inspire his transformative
working process which
involved many stages, often not following a linear pattern.
The Borrowing is the result of a partnership between the Cootehill
Library & Arts Centre and IMMA, which
involved members and friends of the
library and arts centre curating an exhibition of
work from the Museum's Collection.
I don't have access to an academic
library, and even if the local
library did support academic access, my
work process
involves downloading files to my computer.
Libraries that agree to
work with Google do so on Google's terms, which
involve access to the material only through the Google search engine, as well as restrictions on how much of it can be downloaded.
The real thrust of the project is to act as a catalyst for integrating the School's history,
library collections and archival resources into the life and
work of the Osgoode community by
involving the students in developing and curating exhibitions, both physical and virtual, that illustrate the dramatic changes in legal education and the profession over the course of the past century and document Osgoode's role in them.
Some of our notable entertainment and media attorneys are: John Quinn, General Counsel of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, who has also represented entertainment and media clients in a number of high profile cases; Kathleen Sullivan, the former Dean of Stanford Law School, First Amendment scholar, and nationally renowned appellate advocate, who heads the firm's appellate practice group; Bob Raskopf, an expert in the sports, entertainment and media bars in New York, who is perhaps best known for his
work on behalf of professional sports leagues and teams, newspapers and publishers; Claude Stern, who has represented a broad array of leading software developers, videogame manufacturers, online publishers and other media clients in all forms of intellectual property litigation, including copyright, patent, trade secret, trademark, and licensing disputes; Bruce Van Dalsem, who has tried and resolved disputes for studios, producers and performing artists in the film, television, music and finance businesses, securing a top five verdict in California based on the misappropriation of a film
library; Gary Gans, an expert litigator in motion picture financing, production and distribution disputes, as well as copyright and idea theft cases, who has been named in 2012 by The Hollywood Reporter as one of America's «Top Entertainment Attorneys;» Jeff McFarland, who has litigated entertainment related cases for more than 20 years, including cases
involving motion picture and television series profits, video game licenses, idea theft and the «seven year rule;» and Michael Williams, who represents a satellite exhibitor and other media clients in trademark, copyright, patent, antitrust and other commercial litigation.
Increasingly, we are seeing law firm librarians and
library staff becoming more
involved in KM at their firms (e.g., helping the firm organize and maintain the firm's research memo and
work product databases or helping design and maintain the firm's intranet, to name but two examples) but we don't necessarily see the opposite: it remains unusual for KM lawyers and KM staff to be
involved with or integrated into
library or research services.
I have been getting
involved in ChangeCamp, the movement to engage citizenship in the
work of government, as have a few other
library - related folk.
And since there is technology
involved — ever changing and non-relenting technical aspects of
library work — the
work is most fascinating.
Worked with interns to foster development of new skills for projects
involving the RasterMaster imaging
library.
A typical school day will
involve a variety of activities such as reading and writing tasks, learning about numbers, shapes and patterns, lessons in science and how things
work, physical education activities, art and music activities, visiting the
library and using information technologies.