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Visualcv - 0 views

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    A way to host an electronic portfolio
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A Berkeley Compendium of Suggestions for Teaching with Excellence - 0 views

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    A 1983 compendium of teaching suggestions
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PRINCIPLES OF ADULT LEARNING - 0 views

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    Pioneered by Knowles.
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One Laptop per Child (OLPC): Vision - 0 views

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    Worldwide laptop project, especially aimed at developing countries, but applicable in developing areas everywhere
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Connectivism and the modern learner « E-Learning in the Corporate Sector - 0 views

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    Writer makes the point that all three learning theories can be used where relevant. One does not supercede the other, though they were conceived in this order: instructivism, constructivism, connectivism.
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Information behavior theories - LISWiki - 0 views

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    Good rundown on all the most prominent researchers on information seeking models
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Resource Description and Access: Background / Overview Webcast (Library of Congress) - 0 views

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    TITLE: Resource Description and Access: Background / Overview SPEAKER: Barbara Tillett EVENT DATE: 05/14/2008 RUNNING TIME: 67 minutes TRANSCRIPT: View Transcript (link will open in a new window) DESCRIPTION: RDA (Resource Description and Access), the next generation cataloging code designed for the digital environment, is under development. This presentation provides background on its development and a general overview of the conceptual models, international principles, and structure of this new code. Speaker Biography: Dr. Barbara Tillett is chief of the Cataloging Policy and Support Office at the Library of Congress.
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Philosophical foundations and research relevance: issues for information research - 0 views

  • Information behaviour research is another area where there is some degree of cohesion around models and methods that have won some support (e.g., Wilson, 1981, 1999; Dervin, 1992; Kuhlthau, 1994) and, in that field, there is, perhaps, a developing consensus on an appropriate framework for investigation.
    • Emily O
       
      It will be necessary to mention at least these names in the Comp J essay.
  • The information retrieval specialist, on the other hand, conceives of information in terms of strings of symbols, matching query strings against indexed strings. The librarian sees information in terms of the macro containers; books, reports, journals and, now, electronic documents of various kinds, and, indeed of a higher level of organization, the library itself. In other words, information itself is not a unitary concept, but has different levels of organization, around which different theories are built and practices evolved. Consequently, there cannot be a unitary information science, but only different approaches to information from the perspective of the integrative level involved.
    • Emily O
       
      Good idea to compare IR and the librarian approach (information seeking)
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    Good background article by seminal thinker/researcher in area of information-seeking behavior (T.D. Wilson)
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Presentation Zen: Brain rules for PowerPoint & Keynote presenters - 0 views

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    Recommends a good book for rethinking presentation design; slide show worth viewing
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Taylor - 0 views

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    Summary of Question-Negotiation and Information Seeking in Libraries by Robert S. Taylor
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Archive (Taxonomy Strategies) - 0 views

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    All kinds of presentations on taxonomy and metadata design for business. That's Dublin, Ohio...not Ireland.
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Critical Thinking in an Online World - 0 views

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    We do not expect our learner to travel down our same path as librarian or researcher but to become independent knowledge seekers. There is no right or wrong process of research, although there are many heuristics we can pass on. Applicable use of information requires that we see knowledge acquisition as amorphous and changing. As librarians, so we are too. Let us teach those who come to us our strengths, not our past.
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Mooers' Law: In and Out of Context - 0 views

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    Mooers actually suggested that it was too much trouble to have information because then you'd have to do something about it, and it wasn't about building better databases; his law was adapted to the LIS field to mean the same as the Law of Least Effort. It's an intellectual climate that is the problem. He was pointing to certain specific environments where this is true (such as some companies or laboratories).
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Towards collaboration between information seeking and information retrieval - 0 views

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    A 2005 article by Kuhlthau, attempting to find a conceptual framework that incorporates allied areas (not just LIS)
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