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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Hbcu (Historically Black Colleges And Universities) News Jul 2005

Hbcu (Historically Black Colleges And Universities) News

The Southeastern Librarian

Library news from historically Black colleges and universities.


Solinet Offers Iacet - Certified Continuing Education Units Jul 2005

Solinet Offers Iacet - Certified Continuing Education Units

The Southeastern Librarian

Classes offered by SOLINET’s Educational Services now offer Continuing Education Units (CEUs), a major benefit to library staff needing to enhance or maintain their professional credentials.


State News Jul 2005

State News

The Southeastern Librarian

Recent developments from SELA member institutions.


The Southeastern Librarian V. 53, No. 2 (Summer 2005) Complete Issue Jul 2005

The Southeastern Librarian V. 53, No. 2 (Summer 2005) Complete Issue

The Southeastern Librarian

Complete issue of The Southeastern Librarian, volume 53, no. 2 (Summer 2005).


Message From The President, Judith Gibbons Jul 2005

Message From The President, Judith Gibbons

The Southeastern Librarian

Column by SELA President, Judith Gibbons.


Outstanding Southeastern Library Program Award Call For Nomination Jul 2005

Outstanding Southeastern Library Program Award Call For Nomination

The Southeastern Librarian

Calls for nominations for the Outstanding Southeastern Library Program Award of 2005.


People News Jul 2005

People News

The Southeastern Librarian

Recent professional developments from SELA members.


Eku Libraries And The Nova Program: Collaborating To Bring Information Literacy To First Year Students, Brad Marcum Apr 2005

Eku Libraries And The Nova Program: Collaborating To Bring Information Literacy To First Year Students, Brad Marcum

The Southeastern Librarian

During the fall semester of 2003, Eastern Kentucky University libraries and the NOVA program for first year students initiated a collaborative effort aimed at achieving two goals: 1) better prepare the one hundred students selected to participate in the NOVA program for their career at EKU, and 2) provide those students with information literacy skills needed to function as discriminating consumers of information throughout their lives.

This article will discuss the creation and outcomes of our first year of collaboration. It will touch on our positive experiences and on some of the challenges EKU librarians encountered as we worked with …


The Southeastern Librarian V. 53, No. 1 (Spring 2005) Complete Issue Apr 2005

The Southeastern Librarian V. 53, No. 1 (Spring 2005) Complete Issue

The Southeastern Librarian

Complete issue of The Southeastern Librarian, volume 53, no. 1 (Spring 2005).


From The Editor, Perry Bratcher Apr 2005

From The Editor, Perry Bratcher

The Southeastern Librarian

Column by Perry Bratcher, editor of The Southeastern Librarian.


President's Column, Judith Gibbons Apr 2005

President's Column, Judith Gibbons

The Southeastern Librarian

Column by SELA President, Judith Gibbons.


Chatting About Questionpoint And Docutek, Dana Mervar, Matthew Loving Apr 2005

Chatting About Questionpoint And Docutek, Dana Mervar, Matthew Loving

The Southeastern Librarian

The following article describes our experience using two popular interactive chat services: OCLC QuestionPoint and Docutek VRLplus. A search of the library literature revealed that no similar comparisons had been done. Regardless of the future of chat technology, the current buzz surrounding its use is prompting libraries across the country to seek out ways of acquiring a chat service. OCLC has strong name recognition due to its traditional role in providing library technology solutions. This factor plays an important role in marketing its QuestionPoint chat product. Docutek also offers library technology solutions with the idea of making technology simple and …


Creating A Reading Culture In An Academic Library, Kathy A. Campbell, Debbie O'Brien, Jean Flanigan Apr 2005

Creating A Reading Culture In An Academic Library, Kathy A. Campbell, Debbie O'Brien, Jean Flanigan

The Southeastern Librarian

Aliteracy is becoming a growing concern on college campuses, including East Tennessee State University (ETSU). Several years ago, a colleague emailed the librarians at Sherrod Library an article from the online edition of the Washington Post (Weeks 2001) about a graduate student at Park University in Kansas City who was making it through school by skimming texts, drawing information and themes from dust jackets, watching television, and listening to audio books. Jeremy Spreitzer, the focus of the Washington Post story, represented the growing number of students in the United States who are aliterate. After discussing this article at our faculty …


Live Virtual Reference And The Database Dilemma, Jennifer Mcclure Apr 2005

Live Virtual Reference And The Database Dilemma, Jennifer Mcclure

The Southeastern Librarian

Live virtual reference programs in the university setting have blossomed in recent years as librarians have aspired to become as “virtual” as the resources they offer. While some libraries have chosen to limit their service to affiliated members, many have preferred to open their programs to the wider community. The motivation to do so is perhaps particularly strong among public university librarians, who often feel a dual responsibility to their own affiliates and to the citizens of their state. However, the decision to offer a chat reference service to the public raises a number of legal, ethical, and practical questions …


Striving For Success: Practical Advice For Reference Graduate Assistants (And Other New Reference Providers), D. Brett Spencer, Amia Baker, Richard A. Stoddart, Sheri Helt, Adrienne R. Lee, Bryan Paul Tronstad Apr 2005

Striving For Success: Practical Advice For Reference Graduate Assistants (And Other New Reference Providers), D. Brett Spencer, Amia Baker, Richard A. Stoddart, Sheri Helt, Adrienne R. Lee, Bryan Paul Tronstad

The Southeastern Librarian

With a little reflection, most librarians can recall the excitement, anticipation, and fear that filled their early days at the reference desk:

“What will people ask me?”

“What if I don’t know how to help someone?”

“What do I need to do to be successful?”

Many librarians first experienced this emotional turbulence while working as graduate assistants (GAs) in academic library reference departments. Although demanding, working as a reference graduate assistant yields many benefits. An assistantship introduces participants to basics of reference librarianship like customer service, search techniques, and teamwork. Assistantships also help students get their foot in the door …


Assessing Library Services With Libqual+: A Case Study, William J. Hubbard, Donald E. Walter Apr 2005

Assessing Library Services With Libqual+: A Case Study, William J. Hubbard, Donald E. Walter

The Southeastern Librarian

There is a growing body of literature on the development of the Association of Research Libraries (ARL) assessment tool, LibQUAL+ (Cook, Heath, Thompson). Because LibQUAL+ is a fairly recent innovation, there has been little published on its use in individual libraries. The 2001 LibQUAL+ survey at Texas Tech (Kemp) and the 2002 survey at the University of Washington (Hiller) are two exceptions. Both were conducted at ARL libraries, which is appropriate as LibQUAL+ is an ARL program. ARL has announced a forthcoming title, From Data to Action: Libraries Report on Their Use of LibQUAL+™ Survey Findings, but this has yet …


Battlefields, Tools, And Targets: Archives And Armed Conflict, Patricia A. Nugent Jan 2005

Battlefields, Tools, And Targets: Archives And Armed Conflict, Patricia A. Nugent

Provenance, Journal of the Society of Georgia Archivists

Kenneth Foote notes in his seminal book on memorials Shadowed Ground that, "Every society in every period has borne witness to war, disaster, violence and tragedy." The universal nature of conflict is, of course, well known, so it is perhaps not surprising that, as with many other institutions of society, archives have been impacted by human violence and destruction. Indeed, the birth of the archival profession is often closely associated with one of the most important wars in history-the French Revolution of 1789. In the aftermath of the revolution, the new French government sought to make the records of the …


Front Matter, Reagan L. Grimsley Jan 2005

Front Matter, Reagan L. Grimsley

Provenance, Journal of the Society of Georgia Archivists

No abstract provided.


Reviews, Lauren Kata, Peter J. Wosh, Ellen Garrison, Tina Mason, Anke Voss, Patricia Willingham Jan 2005

Reviews, Lauren Kata, Peter J. Wosh, Ellen Garrison, Tina Mason, Anke Voss, Patricia Willingham

Provenance, Journal of the Society of Georgia Archivists

No abstract provided.


Back Matter, Reagan L. Grimsley Jan 2005

Back Matter, Reagan L. Grimsley

Provenance, Journal of the Society of Georgia Archivists

No abstract provided.


Building On The Past: Construction Of The New Georgia Archives, David W. Carmicheal Jan 2005

Building On The Past: Construction Of The New Georgia Archives, David W. Carmicheal

Provenance, Journal of the Society of Georgia Archivists

On September 10, 2005, the Georgia Archives celebrated its eighty-eighth birthday in a new home, its fourth since 1918. Georgia Secretary of State Cathy Cox formed a unique partnership with state and federal government officials, one county, two cities, a university, and a foundation to accomplish construction of the 171, ooo square-foot building. The construction took just nineteen months from groundbreaking to opening day, but the events that led to the new archives dated back many years, even decades. In fact, though no one knew it at the time, they began with the construction of an interstate highway.


What Archives Reveal: The Hidden Poems Of Amelia Earhart, Sammie L. Morris Jan 2005

What Archives Reveal: The Hidden Poems Of Amelia Earhart, Sammie L. Morris

Provenance, Journal of the Society of Georgia Archivists

The importance of primary source materials to scholarship is undeniable. Primary source materials can verify or contradict information accepted as true in history books and other secondary sources. They can tell the whole, or at least more complete, story of events. Unlike secondary sources, primary source materials offer first-hand accounts from the past, bringing history closer and making it feel more real. It can even be argued that primary source materials are less susceptible than published texts to the loss or misinterpretation of information over time in subsequent edition revisions. In particular among primary source materials, manuscripts such as diaries …


Archival Priorities: Ten Critical Issues For The Profession, Randall C. Jimerson Jan 2005

Archival Priorities: Ten Critical Issues For The Profession, Randall C. Jimerson

Provenance, Journal of the Society of Georgia Archivists

The most striking feature of the American archival profession in recent years is its ongoing search for identity and for public acceptance as a socially significant profession. Many of the important developments in the field since the early 1980s have either derived from or eventually contributed to this quest for professional identity and recognition. At times this has stirred passionate debates over the nature of American archives, the role of archivists in society, the relationship between archives and other professions, and the education necessary for archivists, among other topics.


Provenance Xxiii, Naomi Nelson Jan 2005

Provenance Xxiii, Naomi Nelson

Provenance, Journal of the Society of Georgia Archivists

No abstract provided.