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Anne Weaver

How to See If Your Photos Are Being Used On Another Site | Kevin & Amanda - 17 views

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    Useful for the times that an image has been stored without the location. Helps to find the image source.
book place

Robyn Carr, Best Selling American Author - 0 views

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    Robyn Carr is a best-selling American author of over twenty-five romance novels. Carr has since published dozens of historical and contemporary romance novels. Visit online books store onlinebookplace.com for free ebooks purchase of Robyn Carr
Dennis OConnor

Using Diigo in the Classroom - Student Learning with Diigo - 31 views

  • Diigo is a powerful information capturing, storing, recalling and sharing tool. Here are just a few of the possibilities with Diigo: Save important websites and access them on any computer. Categorize websites by titles, notes, keyword tags, lists and groups. Search through bookmarks to quickly find desired information. Save a screenshot of a website and see how it has changed over time. Annotate websites with highlighting or virtual "sticky notes." View any annotations made by others on any website visited. Share websites with groups or the entire Diigo social network. Comment on the bookmarks of others or solicit comments to your shared bookmarks.
book place

Buy ebooks, Purchase ebooks - 0 views

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    Are you looking to buy or purchase ebooks ? So Get ready for the amazing collection of ebooks at onlinebookplace.com . Buy your favorite ebooks from onlinebookplace.com. It in one of the best ebooks store where you may find collection of more than 2,50,000 ebooks. Visit now.
ADAM CARRON

Salem Library Blog Awards - 0 views

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    Blogs covering topics relevant to school libraries and K-12 education, including reviews of children's and YA literature. Other issues discussed include, but are not limited to, educational technologies, digital learning, early literacy, librarian-teachers, e-reading devices in the classroom, learning strategies, teens and reading, etc. Blogs listed with a include 2010 and 2011 finalists and winners.
Cara Whitehead

SpellingCity for iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch on the iTunes App Store - 9 views

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    VocabularySpellingCity is a fun way to learn spelling and vocabulary words by playing engaging learning games using any word list. The most popular activities are Spelling TestMe, HangMouse, and our vocabulary games, available to Premium Members. The most popular word lists are Sound Alikes, Compound Words, Hunger Games and SAT Words. This is a free app!
Kathleen Porter

A New Annotated Guide to Young People's Literature with Peacemaking and Confl... - 0 views

  • Book by Book: An Annotated Guide to Young People’s Literature with Peacemaking and Conflict Resolution Themes is a valuable resource for librarians, teachers, guidance counselors, and parents to find books to complement the standard language arts curriculum for teaching important peacemaking and social and emotional learning concepts.  Written by a veteran peace educator, Book by Book leads adults to children’s literature that will help students explore themes related to conflict and its resolution, social justice, and appreciation for diversity.
  • About the author Carol Spiegel
  • Click here to download a supplemental index in PDF.
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    See Supplemental Index PDF for a list of titles organized by topic. Distinguishes picture books from chapter books and gives age ranges.
Robin Cicchetti

4 Very Different Futures Are Imagined for Research Libraries - Libraries - The Chronicl... - 0 views

  • "Research Entrepreneurs," lays out a future in which "individual researchers are the stars of the story."
  • Reuse and Recycle," describes a gloomier 2030 world in which "disinvestment in the research enterprise has cut across society." With fewer resources to support pathbreaking new work, research projects depend on reusing existing "knowledge resources" as well as "mass-market technology infrastructure."
  • The "crowd/cloud" approach is widespread, producing information that is "ubiquitous but low value."
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  • "Disciplines in Charge,"
  • "computational approaches to data analysis" rule the research world. Scholars in the humanities as well as the sciences "have been forced to align themselves around data stores and computation capacity that addresses large-scale research questions within their research field."
  • "Global Followers," describes a research climate much like what we know now, except that the Middle East and Asia take the lead in providing money and support for the research enterprise.
  • nstitutions as well as individual scholars will follow the lead of those parts of the world, which will also set the "cultural norms" that govern research. That eastward shift affects "conceptions of intellectual property, research on human subjects, individual privacy, etc.," according to the scenario. "Researchers bend to the prevailing wind rather than imposing Western norms on the cultures that increasingly lead the enterprise."
  • "I plan to use the scenarios to engage staff and key stakeholders in mapping things out,"
  • The cumulative point made by the scenarios is that librarians should think imaginatively about what could happen and not get hamstrung by too-narrow expectations. (The phrase "adapt or die" comes to mind.)
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    Discusses changing information formats and scenarios of response. Good article to reference in 5 year plans.
Janice Stearns

School Libraries Work! - 0 views

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    Research foundation paper that shows how school libraries help students learn -- and improve test scores.
beth gourley

Gutenberg 2.0 | Harvard Magazine May-Jun 2010 - 10 views

  • Her staff offers a complete suite of information services to students and faculty members, spread across four teams. One provides content or access to it in all its manifestations; another manages and curates information relevant to the school’s activities; the third creates Web products that support teaching, research, and publication; and the fourth group is dedicated to student and faculty research and course support. Kennedy sees libraries as belonging to a partnership of shared services that support professors and students. “Faculty don’t come just to libraries [for knowledge services],” she points out. “They consult with experts in academic computing, and they participate in teaching teams to improve pedagogy. We’re all part of the same partnership and we have to figure out how to work better together.”
  • It’s not that we don’t need libraries or librarians,” he continues, “it’s that what we need them for is slightly different. We need them to be guides in this increasingly complex world of information and we need them to convey skills that most kids actually aren’t getting at early ages in their education. I think librarians need to get in front of this mob and call it a parade, to actually help shape it.”
  • Her staff offers a complete suite of information services to students and faculty members, spread across four teams. One provides content or access to it in all its manifestations; another manages and curates information relevant to the school’s activities; the third creates Web products that support teaching, research, and publication; and the fourth group is dedicated to student and faculty research and course support. Kennedy sees libraries as belonging to a partnership of shared services that support professors and students. “Faculty don’t come just to libraries [for knowledge services],” she points out. “They consult with experts in academic computing, and they participate in teaching teams to improve pedagogy. We’re all part of the same partnership and we have to figure out how to work better together.”
    • beth gourley
       
      Good summary of differentiating library services and the need to accommodate staffing. Ultimatley makes for the teaching partnership.
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  • “The digital world of content is going to be overwhelming for librarians for a long time, just because there is so much,” she acknowledges. Therefore, librarians need to teach students not only how to search, but “how to think critically about what they have found…what they are missing… and how to judge their sources.” 
  • But making comparisons between digital and analog libraries on issues of cost or use or preservation is not straightforward. If students want to read a book cover to cover, the printed copy may be deemed superior with respect to “bed, bath and beach,” John Palfrey points out. If they just want to read a few pages for class, or mine the book for scattered references to a single subject, the digital version’s searchability could be more appealing; alternatively, students can request scans of the pages or chapter they want to read as part of a program called “scan and deliver” (in use at the HD and other Harvard libraries) and receive a link to images of the pages via e-mail within four days. 
  • (POD) would allow libraries to change their collection strategies: they could buy and print a physical copy of a book only if a user requested it. When the user was done with the book, it would be shelved. It’s a vision of “doing libraries ‘just in time’ rather than ‘just in case,’” says Palfrey. (At the Harvard Book Store on Massachusetts Avenue, a POD machine dubbed Paige M. Gutenborg is already in use. Find something you like in Google’s database of public-domain books—perhaps one provided by Harvard—and for $8 you can own a copy, printed and bound before your wondering eyes in minutes. Clear Plexiglas allows patrons to watch the process—hot glue, guillotine-like trimming blades, and all—until the book is ejected, like a gumball, from a chute at the bottom.)
  • We’re rethinking the physical spaces to accommodate more of the type of learning that is expected now, the types of assignments that faculty are making, that have two or three students huddled around a computer working together, talking.” 
  • Libraries are also being used as social spaces,
  • In terms of research, students are asking each other for information more now than in the past, when they might have asked a librarian.
  • On the contrary, the whole history of books and communication shows that one medium does not displace another.
  • it’s not just a service organization. I would even go so far as to call it the nervous system of our corporate body.”
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    "This defines a new role for librarians as database experts and teachers, while the library becomes a place for learning about sophisticated search for specialized information." "How do we make information as useful as possible to our community now and over a long period of time?"
Caroline Roche

Philbradley: Home: Zazzle.co.uk Store - 17 views

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    A site where you can buy some great retro style posters on the theme of saving libraries. All proceeds to charity as well
floratorculas

Hatch Your Home Into A Million $$$ Nest Egg - 0 views

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    If someone was to suggest that you could invest in something, using none of your own money, and this investment will double in value on average every 7-10 years, would you be interested? Yes, we think you would. This is very simply what this book is about. By investing in residential property using the equity in your own home to create long term wealth. It is also an easy read for first time home buyers as well. This book explains easily you can to get started.
Jamin Henley

News: 'Too Much to Know' - Inside Higher Ed - 0 views

  • at root managing textual information is about selecting or summarizing items of interest, and storing and sorting them in a way that makes them retrievable at a later date and possibly by other people
  • The potential to gather more information than we can comfortably manage has probably been around since writing first allowed for the accumulation of more material than could be remembered, but overload has not been a universal experience. In many times and places scholars have experienced a dearth of books rather than overload
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    Complaints of information overload are ubiquitous these days -- as are the articles debating what it all means.
Book Store Online

Pediatric Infectious Diseases By CHOUDHURY - 0 views

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    Buy Pediatric Infectious Diseases By CHOUDHURY online at Meripustak.com. The best price for Pediatric Infectious Diseases By CHOUDHURY is only 626.00 INR in India| Shop more Professionals book on meripustak.com-a professional books store.
amby kdp

How to Archive Kindle Books - 0 views

Holding 3500 books at the same time, an Amazon.com Kindle 3 is like your own personal library in your hand. But, just because it is possible to store so many books in you Kindle doesn't mean you sh...

started by amby kdp on 24 Nov 14 no follow-up yet
rachelgomez

Why you should migrate to Exchange Online? - 1 views

Here's a list of the main benefits of migrating from a typical on-premise MS Exchange Server to Exchange Online: Easy access from anywhere. Exchange Online allows anyone to access his/her e-mail m...

Migration information literacy Information fluency necc09 books

started by rachelgomez on 17 Feb 23 no follow-up yet
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