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KENDAL SUMLER

Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education | Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL) - 0 views

  • About ACRL Advocacy & Issues Awards & Scholarships Conferences & Continuing Education Consulting Services Get Involved with ACRL Guidelines & Standards Membership News & Press Center Online Learning Professional Tools Publications Working with ACRL Share this page: Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on StumbleUpon Share on Reddit Share on Digg Share on LinkedIn Share on FriendFeed More Options  Send via email  Print  Cite Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education These standards were reviewed by the ACRL Standards Committee and approved by the Board of Directors of the Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL) on January 18, 2000, at the Midwinter Meeting of the American Library Association in San Antonio, Texas. These standards were also endorsed by the American Association for Higher Education (October 1999) and the Council of Independent Colleges (February 2004). A  PDF of this document is available. Print copies may be purchased from the Association of College and Research Libraries for $25.00 for a package of 25, including standard postage. Expedited shipping is available for an additional charge. Orders (along with check or money order made payable to Association of College and Research Libraries) should be sent to:
    • KENDAL SUMLER
       
      A MUST READ ON INFORMATION LITERACY VERY INFORMATIVE
  • Information
    • KENDAL SUMLER
       
      START HERE
  • nformation Literacy and Information Technology
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  • Information
    • KENDAL SUMLER
       
      READ
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    " About ACRL Advocacy & Issues Awards & Scholarships Conferences & Continuing Education Consulting Services Get Involved with ACRL Guidelines & Standards Membership News & Press Center Online Learning Professional Tools Publications Working with ACRL Share this page: Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on StumbleUpon Share on Reddit Share on Digg Share on LinkedIn Share on FriendFeed More Options Send via email Print Cite Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education These standards were reviewed by the ACRL Standards Committee and approved by the Board of Directors of the Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL) on January 18, 2000, at the Midwinter Meeting of the American Library Association in San Antonio, Texas. These standards were also endorsed by the American Association for Higher Education (October 1999) and the Council of Independent Colleges (February 2004). A PDF of this document is available. Print copies may be purchased from the Association of College and Research Libraries for $25.00 for a package of 25, including standard postage. Expedited shipping is available for an additional charge. Orders (along with check or money order made payable to Association of College and Research Libraries) should be sent to: Association of College and Research Libraries Attn: Standards Fulfillment 50 East Huron Street Chicago, IL 60611 To order, call 312-280-2523, or email acrl@ala.org. Introduction Information Literacy Defined Information Literacy and Information Technology Information Literacy and Higher Education Information Literacy and Pedagogy Use of the Standards Information Literacy and Assessment Standards, Performance Indicators, and Outcomes Standards for Proficiencies for Instruction Librarians and Coordinators: A Practical Guide Information Literacy Defined Information literacy is a set of abilities requiring individuals
KENDAL SUMLER

Social Media Training Is Now Mandatory: Five Ways To Make Sure Your Company Does It Right - Forbes - 0 views

    • KENDAL SUMLER
       
      supporting some of my views
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    " Leadership | 10/31/2012 @ 9:59AM |9,812 views Social Media Training Is Now Mandatory: Five Ways To Make Sure Your Company Does It Right 10 comments, 2 called-out Comment Now Follow Comments Sprint Ninjas Sprint Ninjas When I wrote my book, The 2020 Workplace, in 2010, I made a prediction some considered bold: I said that by the year 2020, social media training in the workplace would be as common as ethics and diversity training. Thanks to a turbocharged boom in social over the past two years, developments have outpaced even my own expectations. Eight years early, we are already there. Social media training is quickly becoming mandatory for an ever-growing range of companies, far surpassing the first wave of IT firms that rolled it out two years ago, like Dell, Intel and IBM. While it began as an added 'bonus' in the arsenal of the marketing spokesperson, now companies ranging from Unisys, PepsiCo, Adidas, HP and Sprint are making social not only part of the company's core training curriculum, but also a key element in their recruiting message, stressing the employee benefit of receiving social media literacy training. One obvious motivation for formalizing a company's social media programs and policies is to avoid a social media disaster. If you remember a video entitled "Dirty Dominos Pizza," you know just how dangerous the combination of social media and the workplace can be. The two Dominos Pizza employees who joke in this video while tampering with food -claimed afterward that they were just having fun when they posted this footage to YouTube. The result? Both were fired and sent to jail on charges of food tampering. And three years later, when you conduct a Google search on Domino's Pizza, this awful video is still the fifth result! Companies like Unisys, Sprint and HP are creating social media training programs to avoid these types of social media crises, but also, just as importantly, to show employees how using social media can be a
Xavier Ortiz Serrano

ARTICLE: LIVE PERFORMANCE, COPYRIGHT, AND THE FUTURE OF THE MUSIC BUSINESS - 0 views

  • I. Introduction  A great rock show can change the world, some claim, but can concerts save the popular music business? Since squeezing revenue out of exploiting copyrights in recorded music has become increasingly difficult, many contend that live performance will become the focal point of the music business. The common claim is that the concert business will support not only itself, but also finance the production of studio recordings. This article considers the viability of business models based on linking freely available recordings to other revenue-producing activities, particularly live performance.As it becomes ever more difficult to persuade people to pay for recorded music, some suggest that live performance is the last economic redoubt for musicians - the only unique, excludable, non-duplicable product left in the music business. David Bowie summed up the argument nicely in a New York Times interview several years ago: "I'm fully confident that copyright ... will no longer exist in 10 years, and authorship and intellectual property is in for such a bashing. Music ... is going to become like running water or electricity... . Take advantage of these last few years because none of this is ever going to happen again. You'd better be prepared for doing a lot of touring because that's really the only unique situation that's going to be left." 1
    • Xavier Ortiz Serrano
       
      Article Author Mark f. Sschultz
Rafael Rojas

ASCAP - Welcome to ASCAP. The worldwide leader in performance royalties, service and advocacy for songwriters, composers and music publishers. - 0 views

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    Welcome to ASCAP. The worldwide leader in performance royalties, service and advocacy for songwriters, composers and music publishers.
Aaron McDowell

Pro Tools 10 Hard Drive Requirements - 0 views

  • External Drives ( Avastor HDX/SDX or OWC Mercury Elite-AL Pro™ drives recommended for best performance ) eSATA USB 2.0 (Windows Only) FireWire (Mac Only) with FireWire interface using these chipsets: Oxford 934 - FW 400 Oxford 924 - FW 400 Oxford 924 - FW 800 Oxford 911 - FW 400 Oxford 912 - FW 400 Oxford 912 - FW 800
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    This is a description of the hard drive requirement for an audio drive for Pro Tools. Recording to a separate audio drive is in my opinion is one of the best things you can do for your studio. It allows you internal hard drive to run the software as oppose to streaming and recording audio. Its a good practice and I'm speaking from experience.
Willie Gay

Mac Guide - Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard Optimizations and Troubleshooting - 0 views

  • Pro Tools can be affected by system settings and other software and hardware drives installed on your computer. For best possible performance, it is recommended that you do the following:
  • Optimizations Required Optimizations
  • Optional Optimizations
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  • Optimize Energy Saver
  • Configure System Preferences
  • Troubleshooting
  • Turn off AirPort and Bluetooth
  • Airport
  • Disable FireWire Networking
  • Disable Time Machine
  • Bluetooth
  • Disable FileVault protection
  • can prevent DAE Error -9035 from occurring.
  • Disable Spotlight Indexing
  • Disable Sudden Motion Sensor (For laptops only.)
  • If you're recording in a loud environment, this optimization will prevent the Sudden Motion Sensor from kicking in and throwing a -9073 error in Pro Tools.
  • Disable Spotlight IndexingDisable Sudden Motion Sensor (For laptops on
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    If you are having problems with putting Pro Tools on your Mac, try the following.
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