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An estimated 1 in 110 children in the United States has autism
spectrum disorder (ASD). Although the public awareness of autism
has grown significantly, teens are not as educated about this
subject as they should be. When accurately and positively
presented, literature has been shown to help the classmates of
those with ASD better understand the disorder. Increased
familiarity with the subject will, in turn, help foster acceptance.
In Autism in Young Adult Novels: An Annotated Bibliography, Marilyn
Irwin, Annette Y. Goldsmith, and Rachel Applegate identify and
assess teen fiction with autism content. In the first section, the
authors analyze how characters with ASD are presented. Where do
they live and go to school? Do they have friends? Do they have good
relationships with their family? How are they treated by others?
The authors also consider whether autism is accurately presented.
This discussion is followed by a comprehensive bibliography of
books that feature a character identified as being on the autism
spectrum. The novels reviewed in this volume date as far back as
the late 1960s and include works published in the last few years.
As more and more authors of young adult fiction become sensitive to
ASD, they are featuring such characters in their novels, creating
more realistic works for their readers. This study will help
librarians and others collect, choose, evaluate, and use these
works to educate young adults.
Evaluation is essential to library management: it provides the data
that underlies informed and effective decision-making. This book is
a one-volume, how-to guide to library evaluation techniques,
planning, and reporting. Library professionals-regardless of
whether they operate in a school, public, or academic library
setting-need to have effective evaluation skills in order to be
accountable to stakeholders and to effect informed improvement.
Practical Evaluation Techniques for Librarians provides information
and guidance that is highly useful and accessible for all
librarians looking to intelligently manage the strengths and
weaknesses of their library as well as communicate its value to its
stakeholders. Rather than focusing on data-gathering methods
appropriate for researchers, the book concentrates on data
collection at the local level that enables informed managerial
decision-making. It describes and compares techniques that can be
used with any level or type of resource-staffing, software, and
expertise, for example-in any size library. Author Rachel Applegate
makes it clear that accountability is everywhere and imperative,
and any librarian can learn the simple techniques to benefit from
evaluation. Provides specific directions for writing surveys,
conducting interviews, and performing a wide range of evaluation
techniques, accompanied by examples to follow Covers the evaluation
of library's electronic and physical collections, face-to-face and
virtual service, and facilities Supplies a framework and specific
tools for proving your library's value and improving how it
operates Lays out a clear methodology for quantifying and
demonstrating progress towards an objective: measure, analyze, and
report
This book helps directors of small college libraries to plan,
staff, and organize their facilities and make the right decisions
to effectively contribute to their college's mission. The purpose
of this book is to provide the director of a small college
library—typically defined as a facility managed by one to seven
librarians—with information on every important managerial
function specific to their facilities. This content will be much
more useful for these library specialists than that of management
books covering generic library management or targeted towards large
academic settings. Managing the Small College Library covers the
key responsibilities of the small college library director:
personnel, planning, budgeting, and serving key constituencies. The
author draws upon her in-depth knowledge of bureaucratic,
political, and human resources managerial theory to explain how
librarians can advance the mission of their library. It also
includes an in-depth discussion of tenure and academic status for
librarians, and examines the effects of both public and religious
affiliation.
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R205
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