This is AcaDemon.com

Home Sellers Area Buy Term paper FAQs Custom Term Papers Contact Us Facebook Application Go to AcaDemon UK Go to AcaDemon AU Go to AcaDemon Canada Go to AcaDemon France

Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —>

Search results on "SCHOOL LIBRARY MEDIA CENTER":

Term Paper # 101231 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
School Library Media Center, 2008.
This paper studies the functions of the school library media center.
940 words (approx. 3.8 pages), 4 sources, MLA, $ 33.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
In this article, the writer notes that school libraries and media centers within the library are becoming more important to the overall operations and provision of services for patrons. The writer points out that in an effort to modernize programs at school libraries, a great deal of technological investment and automation is necessary. The writer maintains that a fully integrated library will serve to provide optimal space and atmosphere for patrons, in addition to modern equipment and facilities to promote functionality and the retrieval of information. The writer argues that the primary goal for school libraries should be to make the transition from book archive to a one-stop learning center for all student needs.

Outline:
The Function of the Library
Services Provided by the Library
The Role of the Library Media Specialist

From the Paper
"The difficult task for many school libraries is outlining what services will support the ultimate function for the community and the student body. It is important to note that whichever plan of action is used in facilitating learning, the primary goal is to have readily accessible information for patrons. Historically, school libraries have become obsolete in its provisions of fresh resources. Although automated services such as the Dewey Decimal System create a user friendly and automated system for library books, it is important to note that automation is key for media services, and that the integration with the book system and computer databases is a paramount priority.

"According to the Literacy Partners, providing user friendly access for students and staff that is appropriate for student development and features diversity in perspective, format and interest. In other words, accountability for flexible learning is becoming more prevalent for library and media services institutions and staff."
Term Paper # 69674 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Middle School Library Support, 2005.
Examines how a middle school library can support learning activities within the school.
1,610 words (approx. 6.4 pages), 6 sources, APA, $ 55.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper examines how a middle school library can support, motivate and initiate service learning opportunities with the students and staff. The paper outlines the service learning activities and the need to create social learning activities.
Term Paper # 20331 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Online Computer Library Center, 1993.
A look at the features of automated library cataloging including its origins, functions, use of and accessibility, searching, advantages and disadvantages.
2,475 words (approx. 9.9 pages), 26 sources, $ 87.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

From the Paper
"The purpose of this research is to examine automated library cataloging, commonly referred to as the system of the Online Computer Library Center (sometimes wrongly referred to as Ohio Computer Library Center), or OCLC, which originated in the 1960s with research done at the University of Connecticut, and which seeks to standardize automated cataloging services for libraries (Zeidner, 1976; Calabrese & Acker, 1987). The plan of the research will be to set forth the principal features of OCLC, including the origins and need for the system, the use of and accessibility to automated catalogues, and current trends in automated cataloging. As appropriate, there will also be discussion of advantages and disadvantages of OCLC, methods and ranges of OCLC searching, and differences between that system and commercial bibliographic databases."
Term Paper # 4482 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The World Trade Center: Media, War and Ethics, 2001.
An in-depth examination of the role of the media in portraying the news. Particular emphasis is given to ethics and levels of accountability.
4,150 words (approx. 16.6 pages), 17 sources, $ 111.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
In this 15 page paper the author takes a look at the attacks on the World Trade Center. He begins the examination by looking at how the media dealt with the event and the effect that this has had on people - was it really necessary to show so much detail? Was the media coverage sensationalizing? The author moves on to examine the ethics of reporting and looks at the various debates that are currently going on concerning this issue. The author concludes with a specific look at the way the media works during times of war and makes reference to the Gulf War, The Israeli/Palestinian Conflict and Afghanistan and talks of the media acting as a visual conduit.

From the paper:

"Who can forget the graceful turn of the massive jet as it turned to slam into the second tower, and the massive fireball that plumed outward? There are some pictures that change the world, like the photograph of Kim Phuc at My Lai-a little girl in flames and running. The image of Americans leaping to their death from the upper floors of the towers is like that, and the chilling choreography of their free fall was captured on film as they plummeted to their death rather than endure the agony of burning up."
Term Paper # 12609 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Cost Centers & Profit Centers, 1997.
Defines two approaches to organizational control, benefits & risks of changing from cost to profit, effects on management & accounting and implementation.
1,350 words (approx. 5.4 pages), 5 sources, $ 47.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

From the Paper
"Introduction

Organizations with decentralized operations typically divide those operations into cost and profit centers. This delineation, which is a management and strategic decision, has long-term ramifications for the success of the organization, and helps define (and is defined by) the culture which exists in the company at the time the decision is made. Companies which have operated with cost centers in the past may determine that changing some or all of those cost centers to profit centers may be more beneficial to the organization in the long-run. This research examines the considerations which must be taken into account when making this determination, and evaluates the effect that such a change might have on the organization as a whole.

Cost Centers
A cost center is a.."
Term Paper # 91163 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Libraries, 2006.
An examination of the importance of current and up to date media in middle school student libraries.
1,340 words (approx. 5.4 pages), 7 sources, MLA, $ 45.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
The paper analyzes the relevance of providing middle school students with current, contemporary and up to date media in the middle school library. The paper discusses how, historically, many schools, under funded and on tight budgets, have allocated little attention to providing contemporary library collections to students. The paper further discusses how such dismissal of contemporary materials may contribute to illiteracy and negative perceptions of reading on the part of these students. The paper provides an exploratory analysis of the impact providing contemporary and up to date media has on middle school students using the school library.

Outline:
Abstract
Background/Introduction
Methodology
Data Results
Summary

From the Paper
"For decades researchers have acknowledged the necessity of providing current materials to student libraries regardless of the age of students utilizing library services (American Association of School Librarians, 1960). Most libraries today are managed under general systems theory which suggests that collection development should involve identifying current and up to date texts and other sources of media to provide for student interests and educational purposes (Lukenbill, 2002; Stueart & Moran, 1998). Collection development in the student library has evolved around multiple concepts. Administrators must work to identify the role collection development will play in student outcomes and the roles that librarians, educators and teachers together will play in developing collections that are current and viable (Lukenbill, 2002)."
Term Paper # 59230 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Public Library Social Norms, 2005.
An examination of social norms in a public library.
1,574 words (approx. 6.3 pages), 5 sources, MLA, $ 51.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper examines a number of the social norms exemplified in a particular public location. The writer was chosen to observe social interaction in a common public library. Over the course of the approximate hour that the writer spent studying the library's patrons and personnel, several behavioral patterns emerged. It became apparent that certain types of behavior were acceptable, while others appeared to produce annoyance or other forms of sanction. All of the interactions, however, were highly specific to the public library setting; put elsewhere, certain actions that produced sanctions would be perfectly acceptable, while others simply would not fit. It is important to note that the patterns observed remain reasonably unofficial codes of conduct and that adherence to them is relatively implicit. Therefore, violations of these social norms were more likely to be overlooked, depending upon the individual's familiarity with them; age, for example, tended to be one of the most influential variables. Overall, the brief examination of the public library as a social setting revealed a number of facts that often tend to be overlooked or taken for granted.

From the Paper
"A social norm is, essentially, a guideline dictating appropriate behavior dependent upon the social context. Generally, "Social norms theory states that behavior is often influenced by how individuals perceive that other members of a social group behave." So, these norms are created and perpetuated by individuals' interpretations of how others act, in combination with their desires to adhere to common practices. Collectively, these perceptions come together to formulate specified methods of procedure for certain social situations. Often times, sociologists define the most iron-clad form of customary behavior to be "mores"; these constitute "must behaviors, the basic patterns of ideas and acts of a people." These mores are often backed up by more formal rules or laws within a particular society. More unofficial than both norms and mores are folkways. These tend to be, "Behaviors which are construed as somewhat less compulsive than mores of the same society, and do not call for a strong reaction from the society if violated." In other words, folkways are behaviors that are generally looked upon with favor when held to, but are not obligatory in their nature."
Term Paper # 75423 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
An Enduring Digital Library, 2005.
This paper discusses current trends and issues relating to the building and maintaining of an enduring digital library.
17,350 words (approx. 69.4 pages), 45 sources, MLA, $ 249.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper provides broader insight into topics such as technology use, copy right laws, user needs, costs and the integration of digital and physical materials. The author points out that the advantages of digital libraries include immediate access to a heterogeneous presentation of materials and the ability to find new and innovative uses for these materials; however, the disadvantages of digital libraries include the costs associated with maintaining them. The paper indicates the need for considering the needs of users when selecting the types of materials that will be present in a digital library. The paper includes chart, several quotations and additional annotation of the bibliography.



Table of Contents
Introduction
Digital Libraries
Advantages of Digital Libraries
Disadvantages
Overcoming the Disadvantages Associated with Digital Libraries
Technology Issues
Advantages of Digital Imaging
Disadvantages of Digital Imaging
Search and Retrieval Tools
Search Engines
Digital Collection
Cataloging Digitized Images
Virtual Unity and Coherence
Distributed Searching
Distributed Indexing
Intellectual Property and Copyright Issues
Integration of Digital and Physical Materials
Presentation of Heterogeneous Materials
Appealing to Various Users with Varied Purposes
User Transformation of Digital Content
Costs and Funding
Conclusion

From the Paper
"Storage virtualization is able to accomplish this by making physically separate and heterogeneous storage arrays seem to be a single logical pool of storage resources, controllable from a central console. The purpose of the program is for data to freely flow between the different tiers and types of storage, depending on business needs, without disturbing the operating environment. The author also asserts that "The single most important attribute of any storage virtualization solution is the ability to mask complexity and thereby make manageable that which is increasingly unmanageable.""
Term Paper # 88845 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Green's Ideology and the Modern Library, 2006.
A review of Green's ideology in relation to the modern library.
4,050 words (approx. 16.2 pages), 20 sources, $ 160.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper reviews Green's discussion on how the personalization of the library experience can be accomplished between librarian and reader. The paper continues by saying that Green contended that each individual from every walk of life was capable of using the library system. As individuals sought knowledge through literature it was, according to Green, the librarian's responsibility to ensure that the information that was needed was easily retrieved. The paper further reports that this process was accomplished in an atmosphere of courteous service to every library patron.
Term Paper # 83965 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Library Management, 2005.
This paper discusses a theoretical problem in library management.
675 words (approx. 2.7 pages), 3 sources, $ 26.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper explores the theoretical case of a special library, which exists to serve the research and information needs of a select group of scientific research based corporations. The author divides the paper into five sections: Background, problem, analysis, alternatives and recommendation. The paper is written from the perspective of a library manager who must convince the superiors at his or her institution that the library has extreme merit and is an overall benefit to the organization.

From the Paper
"Our special library exists to serve the research and information needs of a select group of scientific research based corporations. Our materials include contracts, correspondence, accounts, public relations materials, and advertisements, but primarily consist of business and scientific publications. One corporation, T. Corp, provides our sole source of funding and designates other parties who may also have access to the library's resources. Recent acquisitions and management changes inside T. Corp have led to a decline in use of the library, as well as lack of communication concerning the research and information needs of the employees and other users."
Term Paper # 89109 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Electronic Library, 2006.
A look at the viability of modeling the social function of a library in electronic form.
2,250 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 4 sources, $ 89.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
The public library has together with the public museum and art gallery performed a critical role in modern democracy as a palace of enlightenment that theoretically provides all citizens with the information necessary to develop informed opinions and play the politically necessary role as an educated voter on the important issues of the day. In this context, this paper attempts to shed some light on the social and economic preconditions that determine the viability of any electronic library. The paper first defines the social function of a library and then extrapolates whether that form is capable of being replicated in electronic form.
Term Paper # 98273 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Ptolemy II Philadelphus and the Library of Alexandria, 2007.
This paper explains the role of the second post-Alexandrian pharaoh, Ptolemy II Philadelphus ,in developing the Library of Alexandria into a monument of Egypt.
1,200 words (approx. 4.8 pages), 5 sources, MLA, $ 41.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper explains that Ptolemy II Philadelphus, who had an insatiable desire for the luxury of books, transformed the Library of Alexandria, which was started by his father Ptolemy I Soter, into the world's biggest and best organized collection of knowledge. The author points out that Zenodotus, who he appointed as "bibliophylax" ("custodian of the books)", instituted a modern shelving system, invented alphabetization and sorted the rolls according to the nature of their contents. The paper concludes that, while the Library ushered in an era of intellectualism and produced and preserved texts, which laid the groundwork for more than two millennia of scholarship, the Library was not regarded as a public institution of education but rather as a way to please the king's intellectual inclinations and to act as a monument to the greatness of Egypt.

From the Paper
"Philadelphus was "fair-haired and delicate in health" with a "peculiar thick neck." Besides books, his other great indulgence was women and his lust for both can be expressed in similar terms. He was "a noble patron of science, literature, and art, as well as a man of pleasure" and he "alternated the company of his mistress with that of his philosophers, poets, and men of science." He was a "lover of all that is beautiful and of literature." While subsequent kings of Egypt would broaden the Library's mission to include the sciences, Philadelphus kept his collection inline with his passion and ..."
Term Paper # 101294 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Public Library in a Community, 2008.
A discussion of the role and benefits of a public library to a community's economic development.
906 words (approx. 3.6 pages), 8 sources, MLA, $ 32.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper discusses the economic development of communities. It specifically looks at the role and value of public libraries in a community and discusses how they have long been recognized as engendering development and fostering educational initiatives. It then discusses the benefits of specific services that a public library can offer to a community. The paper contains an annotated reading list and a model graphic plan for the library development project.

Table of Contents:
Model Plan Graphic
Primary Issues
Specific Aspects

From the Paper
"While small rural communities can't commit the type of resources to such programs as cities such as San Diego in the U.S. which regularly commit millions of dollars ("San", 2005, p.19), they can build the funding for such services into cooperative funding programs with other initiatives such as establishing chambers of commerce and community action groups. In fact, often the funds exist for such programs but require more effective finance, budgeting strategies and management to make better use of the funds that do exist. McKay (2003, p.15) states that the first objective that community development planners should make is defining what the public library initiative should encompass in regards to fostering economic activity."
Term Paper # 72158 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Library Education, 2005.
A historical analysis of library education in the United States.
1,350 words (approx. 5.4 pages), 5 sources, APA, $ 47.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper discusses the history of library education in the United States. The paper examines the five periods in the development of library education and looks at the contention that active learning rather than lectures are more effective in educating librarians.

From the Paper
"Michael Lorenzen asserted that from the very beginning of academic library instruction in the United States, it was noted that lecturing was not necessarily the most effective way of educating students about the library. Many key actors in developing library education argued in favor of active learning rather than lectures as the primary and best approach to providing future librarians with an in-depth understanding of the profession and its demands. Building upon concepts advanced by Jean Jacques Rousseau and John..."
Term Paper # 39888 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Technology and the Library, 2002.
Examines the effect that technology has on the present library institution.
3,650 words (approx. 14.6 pages), 16 sources, $ 133.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper explores the impact of technology on the library and the probable future of the library as an institution.
Shopping Cart
Cart total : $ 0.00

Find Term paper
Search Guide

Search :


Category :
Paper No. :

Options
Show papers between
and pages
Display results per page
Currency :

Enter Coupon Code :
Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —>