Sentences with phrase «written by librarians»

It's written by a librarian at the University of Washington School of Law.
Interesting, at least one DHCP / BOOTP server was written by a librarian, and it and several other standard ISP programs implement the librarian's standard for the prompt destruction of personally identifying information.

Not exact matches

When your family is going through hard times, such as the death of a family member, help your child deal with the situation by asking the librarian at your public library for titles of books written for children.
We must hope and fight for that, by writing, editing, publishing, talking and defending the trade, libraries, librarians, and what Emile Zola called the «republic of letters».»
The exhibit was researched and written by Grosvenor Room Librarians Meg Cheman, Amy Pickard and Charles Alaimo.
A number of personal letters written by the late Andrew Hollis were handed over to the Librarian (Tony Kinder) and a collection of documents relating to the formation of the section was received from Richard McKim.
Brashear is hampered by a number of impediments in addition to Sunday's personal abuses, including his seventh grade education (so that he has trouble with written exams and must seek the help of a young librarian, Jo [Aunjanue Ellis], who eventually becomes his wife), and the training school's commanding officer, Mr. Pappy (Hal Holbrooke), who makes it his personal divine mission to keep Brashear from passing his Master Diver exams.
Geostorm is both written and directed by Dean Devlin, a veteran producer and writer making his feature directorial debut with this movie, after directing a few episodes of «Leverage» and «The Librarians» previously.
After reading Silver's article, the librarians analyze, reflect on, question, and add to it by walking around the room and writing their thoughts and opinions on giant pieces of paper.
To start the day, librarian educators explore Jay Silver's article «Invention Literacy» by using a write - around text - on - text activity I discovered on Buffy Hamilton's blog.
«CAVERNS: Kentucky Middle School Poetry is celebrating April as National Poetry Month by asking grade 6 - 8 teachers and school librarians to encourage their students to write original poetry for consideration for publication in the 2019 edition.
Completed reviews run on the BlueInk website, which has special features designed to help publishers and literary agents find promising new material and to help librarians and booksellers discover titles their patrons will be interested in, such as those written by local authors or set in their regions.
Graphic Novel — a term used by librarians, educators and booksellers to indicate a publishing format... books written and illustrated in the style of a comic book.
Each chapter is written by either a library - school faculty member or a practicing academic librarian.
«It has become an invaluable research tool that permits students, teachers, librarians, and others to more efficiently identify and locate books,» Judge Chin wrote, referencing an amicus brief submitted by the Library Copyright Alliance.
Visitors can also search by region --- a tool useful to librarians looking for books written by local authors or set in their region.
It's an intelligent, thoughtful, well - written blog maintained by Jan, a retired librarian and Kindle owner.
One of the few books written jointly by an academic librarian and a classroom faculty member, Implementing the Information Literacy Framework packs dozens of how - to ideas and strategies into ten chapters specifically intended for librarians and classroom instructors.»
Young Adult Book Reviews is a Book review site written by a high school librarian.
These terms are written by information - service providers and agreed upon (or at least clicked through) by users — and by librarians — with little or no ability to negotiate terms.
The Slippery Art of Book Reviewing by Mayra Calvani and Anne K. Edwards This book was written not only with the aspiring reviewer in mind, but also for the established reviewer who needs a bit of refreshing and also for anybody — be they author, publisher, reader, bookseller, librarian or publicist — who wants to become more informed about the value, purpose and effectiveness of reviews.
This NSR original three - part series on ebooks in K - 12 or school libraries (written and researched by Peyton Stafford, an expert on school library - oriented publishing) is intended for school librarians who want a basic understanding of how ebook business models work in their world and how to make them work as much as possible to the librarian's advantage.
I'm a school librarian by training, and though I'm freelance writing now and not currently in a school library, that school - librarian part of my brain gets excited when I see books like this.
But I've listened to many a book written in the first person POV of a 20 yr - old librarian assistant / school teacher / first mate / warrior princess narrated by a 50 - yr - old, ex-smoker who happens to have a contract to narrate a certain number of books a year with the audiobook publisher producing the book... especially, I'm sad to say, in the Inspirational Fiction Market, where I do most of my work.
The Video Game Librarian: The Halo Graphic Novel Written by Byron Tsang on 08/23/06 Peer inside the pages of this comic take on Bungie's epic trilogy with Byron as he looks at The Halo Graphic Novel.
The Video Game Librarian: A Librarian's Look at the Xbox 360 Launch Written by John Scalzo on 11/16/05 As if the Xbox 360 launch hasn't been analyzed in enough ways already, here comes the librarian's perLibrarian: A Librarian's Look at the Xbox 360 Launch Written by John Scalzo on 11/16/05 As if the Xbox 360 launch hasn't been analyzed in enough ways already, here comes the librarian's perLibrarian's Look at the Xbox 360 Launch Written by John Scalzo on 11/16/05 As if the Xbox 360 launch hasn't been analyzed in enough ways already, here comes the librarian's perlibrarian's perspective.
There is also an extended Conceptual piece by the Los Angeles artist Sarah Seager, which consists of numerous letters written in the 1930's by or to George Watson Cole, the first librarian of the Huntington Library in Pasadena, Calif..
I don't intend to discuss these cases in this column, here I will write about the development of the deep research skills needed by professional researchers such as lawyers and law librarians to provide the enhanced expertise needed to be paid professionally for this work.
Take advantage of every training opportunity offered by legal writing instructors, law librarians (who are all JDs, fyi), and Lexis and Westlaw reps. Ignore this practice at your peril.
Since 2005, Slaw.ca has been Canada's online legal magazine, written by and for the Canadian law community: lawyers, librarians, technologists, marketers, students, educators and everyone in between.
The research guide is written by Chenglin Liu, the foreign and international librarian at the O'Quinn Law Library at the University of Houston Law Center.
The posts and columns have been written by nearly 200 people over the years: lawyers, librarians, judges, consultants, scholars, and politicians.
Joe Hodnicki Way back in 2004, I wrote here about the launch of the Law Professor Blogs network by Paul Caron, editor of TaxProf Blog, and Joseph A. Hodnicki, co-editor of Law Librarian Blog.
Would legal writing and legal research be taught by law librarians (who, at Canadian universities, are themselves faculty with little or no experience of legal practice), or would the responsibility be given to adjunct faculty from the practising bar, with hands - on experience of research in practice?
Way back in 2004, I wrote here about the launch of the Law Professor Blogs network by Paul Caron, editor of TaxProf Blog, and Joseph A. Hodnicki, co-editor of Law Librarian Blog.
She includes on the list only professional blogs targeted toward the legal community — blogs affiliated with a law library, blogs written by individual law librarians and blogs of law librarian associations.
I wrote in October about the launch of Law Professor Blogs, a network of blogs written by law professors, and I noted more recently the network's launch of Law Librarian Blog.
It is written collaboratively by five librarians at the Zimmerman Law Library of the University of Dayton School of Law.
First, if you don't have a copy of the latest edition of «The Cybersleuth's Guide to the Internet,» written by Carole Levitt, a lawyer and law librarian, and Mark E. Rosch, long time legal technology author and speaker, I highly recommend you pick one up.
Alan Kilpatrick, a law librarian with the Law Society of Saskatchewan (LSS), wrote earlier this month on the Legal Sourcery blog about a new Primer to Legislative Research Across the Provinces and Territories published by the Vancouver Association of Law Libraries (the linked version is a reprint by the LSS).
Sharp writes that he was inspired by the librarians at the Indiana University Libraries in Bloomington, Indiana who developed the customized search tool for intergovernmental organizations I described on November 16, 2006.
The subsequent nine weeks will be taught by Sara, four legal writing instructors (doctoral students — Gail Henderson, Hélène Maynard, Mike Nesbitt and Mike Pal) and three librarians (myself, Susan Barker and John Bolan), thereby exposing our students to experts in writing and analysis as well as in the process and tools of legal research.
It is written by Annette Demers, Acting Law Librarian, University of Windsor, Melanie Hodges Neufeld, Director of Legal Resources, Law Society of Saskatchewan, and... [more]
Though there's a great write - up about it in the American Law Librarian Blog, notice of it by the profession has been minimal, most disappointingly here in Canada.
Source: Read Write Web — Awesome Augmented Reality App Could Save Librarians Hours by Audrey Watters (March 27, 2011).
There are a growing number of blogs written by lawyers and law librarians.
As has worked in the past, when the neutral citation system for Canadian courts was created and adopted, and equally a uniform naming convention for Canadian judgments, I would suggest the work be entrusted to a core working group supported by an advisory board representative of all the affected communities: the Courts (and the Canadian Judicial Council), the law publishers both print and digital (especially CanLII and Lexum), legal writing and research faculty, law librarians and practising lawyers from both our French and English legal communities.
It is written by Annette Demers, Acting Law Librarian, University of Windsor, Melanie Hodges Neufeld, Director of Legal Resources, Law Society of Saskatchewan, and Dale Barrie, Information, Research and Training Services (IRTS) Manager, Alberta Law Libraries.
Written and compiled by an experienced law librarian, with chapters contributed by other seasoned legal information professionals, this book tells you what it's like to work in a particular work environment - ranging from the court house library to a law firm library, the law society to a legislative library.
When writing a librarian resume you can start by adding your contact information (full name, address and a telephone number where you can be permanently reached by the employer), a short introduction and the objective statement.
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