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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
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Articles 1 - 7 of 7
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Online Reference Question Protocol, Nora Hillyer
Online Reference Question Protocol, Nora Hillyer
Criss Library Faculty Proceedings & Presentations
This presentation first provides a snapshot of internet habits of college-age patrons. Then, following topics are discussed: concerns with online reference; ideas to use online reference to its fullest potential; the human element online; personal space; and language of communication for the online environment; handling rude/impatient users; more issues to consider; and words of advice from veterans
Cast A Net: Meshing Libraries With Service Learning, Joyce Neujahr, Nora Hillyer
Cast A Net: Meshing Libraries With Service Learning, Joyce Neujahr, Nora Hillyer
Criss Library Faculty Proceedings & Presentations
Common Missions and Goals; Tying UNO Faculty, Students, and Community Partners Together; Service Learning Defined; Where is the Library in Service Learning; Service Learning Projects at the Criss Library; Mesh Your Library with Service Learning; What can the Library Offer SL Projects?
What The Text Is Happening? : Texting, Mobile Communications And The Academic Library, Audrey Defrank, Linda Parker
What The Text Is Happening? : Texting, Mobile Communications And The Academic Library, Audrey Defrank, Linda Parker
Criss Library Faculty Proceedings & Presentations
Academic libraries are looking for ways to stay relevant to the Millennial/Internetgeneration. At the University of Nebraska at Omaha (UNO) Criss Library, we are conducting a pilot study on mobile computing to provide people to people (p2p) reference services. We will use smart phones and iPhones to interact with students who need information assistance. The study's objectives are the following: 1. Collect data to inform decisions about budgeting, reference services and staffing to re-tool for mobile computing; 2. Identify the audience for mobile computing; 3. Identify the skill sets needed by staff; 4. Create an action plan for redefining the …
Wikifying Your Workplace, Audrey Defrank, Karen K. Hein
Wikifying Your Workplace, Audrey Defrank, Karen K. Hein
Criss Library Faculty Proceedings & Presentations
A presentation on adding an organizational wiki to your workplace drawing upon gardening analogies. What's a Wiki?; Wiki your Work; Sowing the Seeds; Why Wiki?; Your Monitor?; Your Inbox?; Your Shared Drive?; Your Intranet?; Your People?; Choosing a Wiki; Planting; Growing; Weeding; Future Harvests; Criss Library Wiki; Criss Library Wiki Stats; New Crops and Cultivation for Criss Library; Keep Tilling!
Myths Of Quality On The World Wide Web, Melissa Cast-Brede
Myths Of Quality On The World Wide Web, Melissa Cast-Brede
Criss Library Faculty Proceedings & Presentations
A presentation on the myths of quality on the world wide web and tips on how to discover and verify reliable sources.
How To Be A Depository Library Without Being A Depository Library: Adding Records For Electronic Government Documents To The Library Catalog, James T. Shaw
Criss Library Faculty Proceedings & Presentations
Judith Russell, the Superintendent of Documents of the U.S. Government Printing Office, remarked at the ACRL National Conference in March 2005:
"With 95% of the new titles added to the Federal Depository Library Program available online, every library now has the ability to access a wide array of government information for its patrons at no charge. Understanding what is already available--and what is coming soon--can help each library plan for the integration of electronic government information into its reference and public services" (Assuring Access).
Electronic distribution of government documents has opened more avenues for access to government information, but libraries …
Promoting Government Information: Outreach To Non-Depository Libraries, James T. Shaw
Promoting Government Information: Outreach To Non-Depository Libraries, James T. Shaw
Criss Library Faculty Proceedings & Presentations
Some of you may recall that at last year's Fall FDLP Conference, Professor Charles Seavey (University of Missouri, School of Information Science and Learning Technologies) participated in a panel presentation about the future of depository libraries, and he remarked that "any library can be a depository." In the August 2005 issue of American Libraries, Professor Seavey elaborated on his idea in an article entitled, "Documents to the People: Musings on the Past and Future of Government Information." At some risk of oversimplification, his primary point is that the era of electronic access presents a new opportunity for any library …