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        <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
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        <p>North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />Spring 2001<lb />N Research and Librarianship<lb /><lb />... research should be<lb />regarded not as<lb /><lb />something separate from<lb /><lb />our normal public or<lb />technical service tasks, but rather as an integral part of those duties.<lb /><lb />" Stefanie DuBose and David Durant<lb />page 4.<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Get mainframe power at PC prices with<lb />the Mandarin M3�"� Library Automation System.<lb /><lb />Power searching made easy.<lb /><lb />Mandarin M3 lets libraries manage their collections almost<lb />effortlessly. M3 includes:<lb /><lb />* Full Windows functionality<lb /><lb />* A search engine specifically designed to search MARC records<lb />¢ A quick and simple OPAC<lb /><lb />¢ Advanced cataloging and circulation features<lb /><lb />A Union Catalog that meets librariesT needs.<lb /><lb />Share real-time information with other libraries using<lb />M3Ts Classic Merged Union Catalog. Set up a Union<lb />Catalog on the Internet with M3 Web Gateways for Adults<lb />and Children or M3Ts Z39.50 server. Or choose SIRS<lb />MandarinTs convenient Union Catalog Hosting Service.<lb /><lb />Superior service at an affordable price.<lb /><lb />Unlimited site licensing. Multilingual interface modules.<lb />Customizable reports. Retrospective conversion. On-site<lb />training. Superior technical support " 24 hours a day,<lb /><lb />7 days a week. With features and services like these,<lb /><lb />it is no wonder hundreds of libraries are turning to<lb />Mandarin M3!<lb /><lb />@<lb />SIRS Mandarin, Inc.<lb />LS | rs PO. Box 272348<lb /><lb />Boca Raton, FL 33427-2348<lb />MANDARIN... 561-994-0079 + Fax: 561-994-4704 For more information, visit us at www.sirs.com<lb />Iuminating Our World with Information and Automation� or call SIRS Mandarin toll-free at 1-800-232-7477,<lb /></p>
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          <lb />Volume 99, Number 1<lb />ISSN 0029-2540<lb /><lb />Spring 2001<lb />mums «= RESEARCH &amp; LIBRARIANSHIP<lb /><lb />Margaret Foote, Guest Editor<lb /><lb />4 Research and Practice in Academic Libraries: A Case Study, Stefanie DuBose and<lb />David Durant<lb /><lb />10. The Current State of Public Library Research in Select Peer-Reviewed Journals:<lb />1996-2000, Julie Hersberger and Christopher Demas<lb /><lb />15 From Research to Action in School Library Media Programs, Gail K. Dickinson<lb /><lb />20 Collaborative Authorship in North Carolina Libraries: Past, Present, and Future,<lb />Margaret Foote<lb /><lb />25 Publications and Sinners: Research from the Church Library Perspective<lb /><lb />pmmmememcecrman [901 0 CCS RARE RE ET<lb /><lb />2 From the President<lb />26 NCLA Candidates 2001-2003<lb />29 Wired to the World: Bluetooth, Ralph Lee Scott<lb />29 About the Authors<lb /><lb />30 _Lagniappe: North CarolinaTs Department of Public InstructionTs Jolly Good Fellows,<lb />Angela Leeper<lb /><lb />32 North Carolina Books<lb /><lb />|<lb />4O_ In View Of... Shelley Mueller Pew Learning Center - Martha Ellison Library, and<lb />Fairview Branch Library of the Asheville-Buncombe Library System |<lb /><lb />43 NCLA Minutes<lb /><lb />Advertisers: Broadfoot's, 45 * Serials librarians please note: North Carolina Libraries is moving to a 3 issue/year<lb />pan a cycle in 2001: Spring 2001, Summer 2001, Fall 2001.<lb />Cumeantheitons, 17 There were 2 issues in 2000: Spring/Summer 2000, Fall 2000.<lb />Davidson Titles, 31<lb />Ebsco, 35<lb /><lb />Mumford Books, 19<lb />Parkway Publishers, 24<lb />Quality Books, 36<lb />SIRS, front cover<lb />Brodart, back cover<lb /><lb />Cover: Clock Tower, Joyner Library, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC. Photo copyrighted<lb />and owned by East Carolina University.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries is the official publication of the North Carolina Library Association.<lb />Art direction and design by Pat Weathersbee of TeamMedia, Greenville, NC.<lb /><lb />AAR LR RO NT<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Milestones in<lb /><lb />ews of what's happening in North CarolinaTs libraries is impressive! Read on<lb />to find out what your colleagues are doing to bring library services to the<lb />citizens of North Carolina!<lb />Griffin Motor Company of Monroe and the Public Library of Charlotte &amp;<lb />Mecklenburg County have forged a unique partnership to help benefit the<lb />NOVELLO Jr. program and other PLCMC programming for youth. Griffin Motor Com-<lb />pany has donated a 2001 Pontiac Sunfire as the prize in a raffle. Raffle tickets went on<lb />sale Tuesday, September 12th at the Main Library and the twenty-two branch libraries<lb />throughout Mecklenburg County. The winning ticket was drawn at the Main Library at<lb />2:00 p.m. on Friday, December 15th! Sharing the belief of his grandfather and Griffin<lb />Motor Company founder, oPop� Griffin, General Manager Macon Griffin<lb />said, oWe are proud to support the efforts of the public library in promoting<lb />the importance of books and reading among children.�<lb />To celebrate the first decade of the NOVELLO Festival of Reading, one of<lb />the premiere literary festivals in the country, the Public Library of Charlotte<lb />&amp; Mecklenburg County announced the publication of NOVELLO: Ten Years<lb /><lb />N O rth G aro / i na of Great American Writing. This literary anthology will sell at library branches<lb /><lb />and area bookstores for $16.95. All proceeds will benefit the PLCMC.<lb />Ann Viles, Coordinator of Reference Instruction at Appalachian State<lb /><lb />Li br ar. i ans hi P / / / University, is the new editor of oFast Facts,� a one-page factsheet feature<lb /><lb />that appears on the last page of each issue of College &amp; Research Libraries<lb />News. Academic librarians, get your cool facts and figures to Ann and you,<lb /><lb />2. " Spring 2001<lb /><lb />too, might find your name in print!<lb /><lb />In fall 2000, North Carolina State UniversityTs main library began<lb />supporting the concept of onomadic computing,� in cooperation with the<lb />universityTs Information Technology Division. Individuals may now bring<lb />their own laptop computers into the library and gain access to the Internet<lb /><lb />and campus network. The NCSU LibrariesT popular Laptop Lending service, launched in<lb />fall 1999, now offers three laptop configurations. Wireless network access is available in<lb />the main and branch libraries. All of these services are offered as a complement to the<lb />universityTs open-source strategy.<lb /><lb />The Carnegie Library of Livingstone College held an open house on September 16,<lb />2001, to introduce its new automated system from Endeavor. The Hickory Public Library<lb />and the Lenoir-Rhyne College Visiting Writers Series presented author Pat Conroy on<lb />September 21, 2000. Dr. James Billington, Librarian of Congress, will be the Reynolds<lb />Lecturer at Davidson College on April 19, 2001.<lb /><lb />Union County plans to spend more than $4 million on new libraries and renovations<lb />to old ones over the next several years. For more expansion news, visit the Union County<lb />Public Library Web site at http://www.union.lib.nc.us.<lb /><lb />Poet Ruth Moose, a lecturer in the Creative Writing Department at the University of<lb />North Carolina at Chapel Hill, donated 488 volumes of poetry, poetry criticism, antholo-<lb />gies, and biographies of poets to the Corriher-Linn-Black Library at Catawba College. The<lb />Catawba College Library is the depository for the works of the members of the North<lb />Carolina Poetry Council as well as the minutes of the organization. On Saturday, October<lb />21, 2000, the library reading room of the Catawba College Library was dedicated in<lb />honor of Frances Decker Wentz on the occasion of her 95th birthday and in memory of<lb />her husband, Dr. Bruce Wentz, library retiree and current volunteer, a Catawba professor<lb />until his death in 1969.<lb /><lb />The State Library of North Carolina has awarded over $800,000 in School Library<lb />Collection Development Grants to 153 North Carolina schools. Since these grants require<lb />matching funds from the local school, this means that these 153 school libraries will buy<lb />more than $1.6 million worth of new books for their students. The State Library also<lb />received the Citizen Involvement award from the Raleigh MayorTs Committee for Persons<lb />with Disabilities for its support of a project resulting in public access PCs with adaptive<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />technology that improve access to NC LIVE for North Carolina citizens with disabilities.<lb /><lb />On a more somber note, it is my solemn duty to record for posterity the deaths on<lb />October 11, 2000, of Vernelle G. Palmer of Salisbury, NCLA President (1957-59) and<lb />school librarian in Rowan County, and Mildred S$. Councill of Mount Olive, NCLA<lb />President (1967-69), Librarian Emerita of Mount Olive College, and 1985 Life Member of<lb />NCLA. Gifts to the NCLA Endowment in their, honor are welcomed. Your gifts will be<lb />acknowledged and the families of Mrs. Palmer and Mrs. Councill will be informed.<lb /><lb />The North Carolina State University Libraries FOCUS newsletter has been in print<lb />since 1964. On October 13th a Web-based version of FOCUS was launched. Check it out<lb />at http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/administration/publications/focusonline/index.html.<lb /><lb />Two North Carolina universities have received gifts to strengthen their libraries.<lb />Duke University has received a $171,000 grant from the National Endowment for the<lb />Humanities to preserve and provide wider access to the archives of the John W. Hartman<lb />Center for Sales, Advertising, and Marketing History. The archives is the repository for<lb />the documents of many advertising agencies, including the official records of the<lb />Outdoor Advertising Association of America, dating from the nineteenth century, and<lb />several related collections of slide, photographs, original artwork for billboards, and<lb />correspondence. The School of Information and Library Science at the University of<lb />North Carolina at Chapel Hill received a $120,000 gift from Cisco Systems Inc. and the<lb />Cisco Systems Foundation to honor the universityTs late chancellor. The newly estab-<lb />lished Michael Hooker Graduate Fellowship in Applied Networking will help pay tuition<lb />and expenses for a graduate student who is studying development and management of<lb />networked information systems.<lb /><lb />Sandra Cooper and Frannie Ashburn of the State Library of North Carolina are both<lb />contributors to The Functions and Roles of State Library Agencies, a new publication from<lb />the American Library Association. Ron Jones, a State Library recent retiree, was a featured<lb />participant in the Wake County Storytelling Festival held in Raleigh on September 29-30,<lb />2000; Ron was profiled in an article in the Raleigh News and Observer on September 29,<lb />2000.<lb /><lb />The Public Library of Charlotte &amp; Mecklenburg County has been ranked as one of<lb />the top ten American public libraries serving a population of over 500,000 in the most<lb />recent HennenTs American Public Library Rating (HAPLR) Index. The HAPLR rating is<lb />based on factors such as circulation, staffing, materials, periodicals, reference service,<lb />and funding levels. PLCMC was the only North Carolina library ranked in the top ten in<lb />any population category.<lb /><lb />The Asheville-Buncombe Library SystemTs West Asheville Branch Library is one of<lb />ten more public libraries selected to receive a grant of $1,000 to host the new LetTs Talk<lb />About It: The Next Generation of Reading and Discussion Programs for Libraries series<lb />awarded by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the American Library<lb />AssociationTs Public Programs Office.<lb /><lb />The New Hanover County Public Library in Wilmington is one of fourteen addi-<lb />tional libraries selected nationwide to participate in the Prime Time Family Reading Time<lb />reading, discussion, and storytelling series offered by the Louisiana Endowment for the<lb />Humanities in partnership with the American Library AssociationTs Public Programs<lb />Office. The project is funded by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humani-<lb />ties. Prime Time, based on illustrated childrenTs books, is designed specifically to help<lb />underserved families with children bond around the act of reading and learning to-<lb />gether. The series teaches parents and children to read and discuss humanities topics,<lb />and aids them in selecting books and becoming active public library users.<lb /><lb />In a joint press conference held on December 14, 2000, the ChildrenTs Theatre of<lb />Charlotte and the Public Library of Charlotte &amp; Mecklenburg County announced that<lb />land has been secured for a new ChildrenTs Learning Center, which will be named in<lb />honor of Joseph B. Martin III, a longtime Charlotte civic leader. The announcement took<lb />place at the future site of the facility in the heart of CharlotteTs uptown Cultural District.<lb />Groundbreaking will take place in fall 2001, with the Center scheduled to open in late<lb />2003. The ChildrenTs Learning Center will be a 113,000-square foot interactive learning<lb />environment, combining library resources, performance spaces, and the latest in educa-<lb />tional technology.<lb /><lb />Keep up the good work you all are doing to put the national spotlight on North<lb />Carolina libraries and the creative services they are providing to North Carolina citizens!<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 "<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Research and Practice in Academic Libraries:<lb /><lb />n recent decades, as academic li-<lb />brarians have achieved tenure-<lb />track or even special faculty sta-<lb />tus, a growing professional con-<lb />sensus has emerged that they<lb />should uphold this status by ac-<lb />tively engaging in research and pub-<lb />lication. Beginning in 1971, with the en-<lb />actment of ACRLTs faculty status stan-<lb />dards for research librarians, scholarship<lb />has been officially recognized as an im-<lb />portant duty for academic librarians.<lb />The 1992 revised version of the stan-<lb />dards confirmed this view by stating<lb />that olibrarians add to the sum of knowl-<lb />edge through their research into the in-<lb />formation process and other areas of<lb />study.�' ACRL continues to emphasize<lb />the importance of this issue to the<lb />present day. In its most recent Statement<lb />on Professional Development, approved<lb />on July 8, 2000, ACRL expresses the<lb />opinion that:<lb /><lb />Academic and research librarians<lb />have a responsibility to share<lb />what they have learned through<lb />writing, speaking, mentoring<lb />and modeling, in order to<lb />facilitate the learning of their<lb />colleagues and the advancement<lb />of the profession.�<lb /><lb />In addition to the official position<lb />of organizations such as ACRL, a grow-<lb />ing body of literature discusses the direct<lb />and indirect benefit to librarians of re-<lb />search and writing. In an article in the<lb />September 1986 issue of College &amp; Re-<lb /><lb />4 " Spring 2001<lb /><lb />A Case Study<lb /><lb />by Stefanie DuBose and David Durant<lb /><lb />search Libraries, Dale S. Montanelli and<lb />Patricia F. Stenstrom refer to three ben-<lb />efits that librarians derive from engaging<lb />in scholarship. The first of these is that<lb />research promotes advancement. As they<lb />put it, ostudy after study indicates that<lb />successful librarians, as measured by pro-<lb />fessional advancement, publish more<lb />than their less successful counterparts.�<lb />The second benefit cited by Montanelli<lb />and Stenstrom is that research oprovides<lb />recognition when advancement is not<lb />possible.� Research provides both an al-<lb />ternative means of gaining recognition,<lb />and a way for librarians to exercise au-<lb />tonomy and creativity, pursue challenge,<lb />and engage in professional learning. Fi-<lb />nally, research enables librarians to de-<lb />velop the skills and analytical abilities<lb />necessary to cope in an environment of<lb />constant change.<lb /><lb />Yet, in spite of these potential ben-<lb />efits, many academic librarians continue<lb />to regard research as a necessary evil at<lb />best. For a large number of librarians, the<lb />prospect of engaging in re-<lb />search is daunting. It requires<lb />a major commitment of time,<lb />effort, and thought, one that<lb />many librarians are reluctant<lb />to make. Possibly the biggest<lb />obstacle to persuading aca-<lb />demic librarians of the impor-<lb />tance of pursuing research is<lb />the way in which they per-<lb />ceive research relative to their<lb />other duties. It is regarded as a<lb />burden of time and effort, a<lb /><lb />distraction from their normal duty of<lb />serving their users, a distasteful necessity<lb />imposed by the demands of tenure. Yet<lb />research can be much more than a way<lb />to satisfy tenure requirements or an eso-<lb />teric pursuit apart from professional<lb />practice. It can also be an excellent way<lb />to gain understanding of issues and<lb />problems that confront us on a daily<lb />basis and to further our growth and de-<lb />velopment as librarians.<lb /><lb />For academic librarians, research<lb />should be regarded not as something<lb />separate from our normal public or tech-<lb />nical service tasks, but rather as an inte-<lb />gral part of those duties. In the words of<lb />William K. Black and Joan M. Leysen,<lb />othere should be a real continuity be-<lb />tween professional practice, research,<lb />and service, and we need to appreciate<lb />the benefits inherent in this relation-<lb />ship.�* Through engaging in the re-<lb />search process and accompanying litera-<lb />ture search, academic librarians can gain<lb />a deeper understanding of an issue or<lb /><lb />... research enables librarians<lb /><lb />to develop the skills and<lb /><lb />analytical abilities necessary<lb />to cope in an environment of<lb /><lb />constant change.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />problem related to their work routines.<lb />As Black and Leysen put it, oscholarly<lb />projects should come ... from the daily<lb />work of the librarian who is involved in<lb />planning and developing services and<lb />programs and in making decisions re-<lb />lated to them.� For example, a reference<lb />librarian doing a research study on the<lb />reference interview can use that research<lb />as a means to improve his or her ability<lb />to work with patrons at the reference<lb />desk. By having this research published<lb />as a journal article or in some other for-<lb />mat, he or she then allows other librar-<lb />ians to benefit from it. As Rebecca<lb />Watson-Boone describes it, this is the<lb />model of the academic librarian as oprac-<lb />titioner-researcher,� who is able not only<lb />to use research as a means of improving<lb />professional practice, but also to incor-<lb />porate research methods into their daily<lb />work habits and problem-solving skills.°<lb /><lb />Currently, the authors, who work at<lb />Joyner Library, East Carolina University,<lb />are engaged in a research project analyz-<lb />ing free scholarly electronic journals. We<lb />feel that this project provides a case<lb />study as to how academic librarians can<lb />integrate research into their overall pro-<lb />fessional duties, and in particular use<lb />research as a tool for gaining insights<lb />into issues of major importance for the<lb />library profession. This study arose di-<lb />rectly from a project to create a search-<lb />able database of all e-journals available<lb />to Joyner LibraryTs user community. As<lb />part of this project, we compiled a list of<lb />free e-journals and e-zines. During this<lb />fairly straightforward collection evalua-<lb />tion and development task, a number of<lb />interesting issues regarding these e-jour-<lb />nals became apparent, issues of direct<lb />relevance to academic libraries. This re-<lb />alization proved the starting point for<lb />our research. By collecting a much larger<lb />sample of free scholarly e-journals and<lb />doing a detailed analysis of them, ad-<lb />dressing questions such as who pub-<lb />lishes these journals, what subject areas<lb />are most represented, and how many are<lb />still being actively updated, we hope to<lb />gain some understanding of the viabil-<lb />ity and duration of these journals. In<lb />particular, we wish to see if free e-jour-<lb />nals are indeed emerging as a legitimate,<lb />alternative form of scholarly communi-<lb />cation. Once our research is completed,<lb />therefore, we will both have collected<lb />additional free e-journals that we can<lb />make accessible to our users, and have a<lb />more thorough understanding of the<lb />above issues. Having arisen from our<lb />professional practice, this research<lb />project will hopefully enable us to im-<lb />prove that practice. In this way, research<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />hr<lb /><lb />and professional practice are not oppo-<lb />sites, but rather mutually reinforcing el-<lb />ements of a single process.<lb /><lb />Origins of the Project<lb /><lb />Like most academic libraries, Joyner Li-<lb />brary has been deeply impacted by the<lb />exponential growth of electronic jour-<lb />nals. Currently, Joyner Library provides<lb />full text, electronic access to well over<lb />8,000 magazines, journals, and newspa-<lb />pers. Providing access to these titles has<lb />been a problem, as until now there has<lb />been no single place where a user can<lb />search to see if we have full text, elec-<lb />tronic access to a particular journal, and<lb />if so, where it can be found. Therefore,<lb />in June 2000, the authors were among a<lb />project team that began work on an E-<lb />Journal Locator http://www.lib.ecu.edu/<lb />locator/, which would provide users<lb />with oone stop shopping� in terms of<lb />finding e-journals available through<lb />Joyner Library.<lb /><lb />For this project, it was decided to<lb />include those publications that provide<lb />free, full-text access to most or all of<lb />their content, going back at least one<lb />year. For example, a user looking for<lb />Time in the E-Journal Locator would find<lb />links both to full text aggregators such as<lb />ProQuest that include Time, and to<lb />time.com, which has complete full text<lb />coverage of the magazine from January<lb />1994 to the present, except for the cur-<lb />rent issue. We decided to include free<lb />electronic journals in this project for sev-<lb />eral reasons. For publications such as<lb />Time, available both for free and through<lb />subscription databases, linking to the<lb />free Web site gives users an alternate<lb />means of access. This is especially impor-<lb />tant for those users having problems<lb />with remote authentication through our<lb />proxy server. This is the only way to<lb />make our users aware of free electronic<lb />journals, unavailable through any other<lb />means, and provide them with access.<lb /><lb />In June, one of the authors began<lb />compiling a list of electronic magazines<lb />and journals meeting these criteria. He<lb />collected seventy-six titles, which were<lb />then added to our overall e-journal da-<lb />tabase. Of these seventy-six electronic<lb />publications, fifty could be classified as<lb />scholarly e-journals. We defined free<lb />scholarly e-journals as oEnglish language<lb />scholarly journals that make most or all<lb />of their content freely available via the<lb />World Wide Web, without requiring reg-<lb />istration or imposing other barriers to<lb />access.� These items varied greatly in<lb />terms of currency, publication schedule,<lb />formatting of articles (HTML or PDF),<lb />frequency of publication, and other fac-<lb /><lb />tors. Thus, even a seemingly routine,<lb />mundane, task was able to spark some<lb />interesting research questions.<lb /><lb />Background Issues<lb /><lb />Simply analyzing a relatively small<lb />sample of scholarly e-journals raised a<lb />number of interesting issues, and the<lb />authors felt that attempting a more thor-<lb />ough study of these publications prom-<lb />ised to yield some useful insights.<lb />Among the issues raised were the nature<lb />of publishing in the Web environment,<lb />the stability of that environment, the<lb />economic viability of free e-journals, the<lb />publisher, the potential for using links<lb />and multimedia content, and finally, the<lb />question of whether free e-journals can<lb />provide an alternative to the current<lb />commercially-driven scholarly publish-<lb />ing system.<lb /><lb />Most of the e-journals we found,<lb />even newer electronic-only ones, con-<lb />form to the traditional model of the<lb />scholarly journal. That is to say, collec-<lb />tions of articles were published periodi-<lb />cally as separate issues and/or volumes.<lb />There were several, however, that pub-<lb />lished articles as they came in, and did<lb />not organize their articles into issues or<lb />volumes. Even among those journals<lb />that did use the traditional model, many<lb />published new issues on an infrequent<lb />basis. This raised the question of<lb />whether, in an electronic environment,<lb />the traditional model of journal publish-<lb />ing is still necessary.<lb /><lb />Closely related to this issue is that of<lb />new versus preexisting journals. Many of<lb />the e-journals we found are new, Web-<lb />only publications, such as the Journal of<lb />Mundane Behavior.T Others, however, like<lb />the British Medical Journal, are both pub-<lb />lished in print and made available for<lb />free via the Web.® Finally, a third cat-<lb />egory of journals, those that have mi-<lb />grated from print to free electronic-only<lb />access, was also discovered. Essays in His-<lb />tory, from the University of VirginiaTs<lb />History Department, is an example of<lb />such a omigratory� journal.?<lb /><lb />Another issue that arose while gath-<lb />ering free e-journals for the locator data-<lb />base is the question of the differences<lb />between Web-based and print content.<lb />As we all know, one of the great advan-<lb />tages of Web pages is that they are active<lb />documents that can be easily altered<lb />when necessary. Unfortunately, this can<lb />also be a disadvantage in terms of the<lb />consistency and reliability of the infor-<lb />mation offered. Some of the e-journals<lb />we found attempted to address this<lb />problem by presenting articles in Por-<lb />table Document Format (PDF). In addi-<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 " vy)<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>tion, Web-based publishing allows the<lb />use of a variety of audio, visual, and<lb />other interactive and multimedia con-<lb />tent not available to print journals. Most<lb />of the journals we found included only<lb />text articles. Some, however, did offer<lb />links to related resources,<lb />and several even featured<lb />multimedia content. This<lb />raised the issue of how<lb />widespread the use of<lb />non-text content is<lb />among free e-journals.<lb /><lb />The issue of arch-<lb />iving Web-only publica-<lb />tions is also a concern.<lb />What if the e-journal<lb />should cease publication<lb />and stop maintaining its<lb />Web site? History Reviews<lb />Online is an example of a<lb />free e-journal that liter-<lb />ally disappeared from the<lb />Web overnight. A related<lb />issue is whether free e-<lb />journals can be economi-<lb />cally viable. As will be discussed below,<lb />these are questions we sought to pursue<lb />in our literature search on this topic.<lb /><lb />Another interesting question that<lb />arose is who is producing free scholarly<lb />e-journals. Not surprisingly, scholarly so-<lb />cieties or academic institutions created<lb />almost all of the ones we found. Only<lb />two or three were maintained by com-<lb />mercial publishers or other for-profit or-<lb />ganizations.<lb /><lb />The issue of the authorship of free e-<lb />journals led us to arguably the most im-<lb />portant issue that arose during this pro-<lb />cess: the current crisis in scholarly com-<lb />munication and the possible role of free<lb />e-journals in helping provide a solution.<lb />Scholarly communication refers to the<lb />process by which researchers and schol-<lb />ars share ideas and research findings<lb />with each other. The traditional schol-<lb />arly journal has been the primary ve-<lb />hicle for communicating such informa-<lb />tion in many academic fields, and is<lb />therefore an integral part of academic<lb />and research library collections. In the<lb />last several decades, however, two major<lb />developments have brought this system<lb />into crisis.<lb /><lb />The first of these developments is<lb />the rapid growth in the number of schol-<lb />arly journals. Since the mid-1980s, the<lb />number of journals published worldwide<lb />has approximately doubled. A major<lb />part of this proliferation of academic<lb />journals has been the entry of commer-<lb />cial publishers such as Elsevier into the<lb />realm of scholarly publishing, often cre-<lb />ating oniche� and orapid communica-<lb /><lb />6 " Spring 2001<lb /><lb />Unfortunately, the<lb />hope of many<lb />that electronic<lb />journals would<lb />provide a solution<lb />to the scholarly<lb />communication<lb />crisis has proven<lb />to be forlorn....<lb /><lb />tions� journals, especially in the sci-<lb />ences, with high impact factors and, not<lb />surprisingly, high prices. Ironically<lb />enough, the goal of the rapid communi-<lb />cations titles is to make research findings<lb />more readily available to researchers<lb />worldwide. The fi-<lb />nancial burden of<lb />maintaining these<lb />subscriptions, how-<lb />ever, weighs heavily<lb />on academic librar-<lb />ies, as these publish-<lb />ers have found<lb />scholarly communi-<lb />cation to be ex-<lb />tremely profitable,<lb />earning profit mar-<lb />gins of up to 40%.1°<lb /><lb />This situation<lb />has led to the sec-<lb />ond major element<lb />of the scholarly<lb /><lb />communication cri-<lb />sis: the dramatic in-<lb />crease in serials sub-<lb />scription costs. Dur-<lb />ing the period 1986-<lb />1999, serial costs in-<lb />creased by an an-<lb />nual average of 9%,<lb />well beyond the rate<lb />of inflation. This<lb />has resulted in a<lb />situation where ARL libraries are spend-<lb />ing 2.7 times more on serials than in<lb />1985-86, while actually subscribing to<lb />6% fewer titles. Thus the cruel paradox<lb />at the heart of the serials crisis: while<lb />more journals are available than ever be-<lb />fore, libraries are subscribing to fewer<lb />and fewer.!!<lb /><lb />Unfortunately, the hope of many<lb />that electronic journals would provide a<lb />solution to the scholarly communica-<lb />tion crisis has proven to be forlorn. Aca-<lb />demic libraries are spending just as<lb />much money, if not more, maintaining<lb />subscriptions to both print and elec-<lb />tronic journals. In most cases, electronic<lb />access to a fee-based title is contingent<lb />upon maintaining the print subscrip-<lb />tion; predominantly among the sci-<lb />ences, obtaining electronic-only access<lb />is, in fact, more expensive than main-<lb />taining the print subscription alone. Fi-<lb />nally, acquiring access to full text article<lb />aggregators such as ProQuest or<lb />EBSCOhost has merely added to the<lb />budgetary burden. In short, the crisis in<lb />scholarly communication has stretched<lb />academic library acquisition budgets to<lb /><lb />... fand] has<lb />stretched academic<lb />library acquisition<lb />budgets to the<lb />breaking point.<lb /><lb />the breaking point.<lb /><lb />This has definitely been the case at<lb />Joyner Library. New print journal sub-<lb />scriptions have been frozen for several<lb />years now, with departments forced to<lb />exchange current titles for new ones on<lb />a one-to-one dollar basis. As with many<lb />other libraries, Joyner is beginning to<lb />examine critically its serials and elec-<lb />tronic resources budget while simulta-<lb />neously engaging in serious evaluation<lb />of print journal holdings and electronic<lb />databases using various quantitative<lb />methodologies. At Joyner, as at most<lb />academic libraries, the fiscal effects of<lb />the scholarly communication crisis are<lb />felt on an almost daily basis.<lb /><lb />As we gathered free e-journals for<lb />our locator project, the issue of such<lb />journals providing an alternate form of<lb />scholarly communication, free from the<lb />control of commercial giants such as<lb />Elsevier, arose almost immediately. Sev-<lb />eral free scholarly e-jour-<lb />nals, such as the Elec-<lb />tronic Journal of Sociology,<lb />have as their explicit ob-<lb />jective taking back con-<lb />trol of the scholarly<lb />communication process<lb />from the commercial<lb />publishing houses. !2<lb />By analyzing a larger<lb />sample of free e-journals<lb />to see how many have<lb />been actively main-<lb />tained, and how many<lb />new ones have been started, we can<lb />hope to determine whether these publi-<lb />cations are indeed emerging as a possible<lb />alternative means of disseminating<lb />scholarly research, or if they are merely<lb />a brief experiment destined for failure.<lb /><lb />In light of the issues discussed<lb />above, free e-journals were clearly a re-<lb />search topic worthy of further explora-<lb />tion. We decided, therefore, not only to<lb />continue collecting additional journals,<lb />but to expand the process from a prac-<lb />tical, collection development project to<lb />one also incorporating a research com-<lb />ponent. Thus, we were able to success-<lb />fully integrate research with practice.<lb />The next step was to decide on our re-<lb />search methodology and begin the ac-<lb />tual research process.<lb /><lb />Methodology<lb /><lb />Our first task was to define the phrase<lb />ofree e-journal.� At the University of<lb />HoustonTs Web site, we found a very de-<lb />tailed set of selection criteria that de-<lb />scribed our phrase.!4 We further refined<lb />our definition after examining the<lb />Sociocite/ICAAP Journals Database and<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>Distribution Centre criteria.!4 Our final<lb />definition encompassed the following<lb />criteria: Most of the title in question<lb />must be offered on the Web; the journal<lb />must be peer-reviewed; the majority of<lb />the articles must be in English; the title<lb />must be published regularly rather than<lb />existing as a solitary publishing exploit;<lb />and finally, no fees or registration are re-<lb />quired to access the articles published<lb />within. This formed the basis of our defi-<lb />nition; however, we were to find that<lb />some of these criteria lent themselves to<lb />further investigation. We also discover-<lb />ed other criteria to include for further<lb />research, as discussed below.<lb /><lb />Previously, one of the article authors<lb />had compiled a list of free e-journals fall-<lb />ing into various subject categories for<lb />the ECU E-Journal Locator project. In<lb />order to gather a more substantial<lb />amount of data for this project, we in-<lb />vestigated various Web sites that proved<lb />invaluable for extending our initial set of<lb />titles. Among these sites are the Univer-<lb />sity of HoustonTs Scholarly Journals Dis-<lb />tributed Via the WWW,,'5 the Interna-<lb />tional Consortium for Alternative Aca-<lb />demic Publication (ICAAP),!° the Direc-<lb />tory of Electronic Health Sciences Journals<lb />at Monash University of Australia,'�<lb />AcqWebTs Directory of Journals, Newslet-<lb />ters and Electronic Discussion Archives,}®<lb />Internet Free-Press Journals,'° and finally,<lb />titles discovered through other resources<lb />or via serendipitous Web browsing. Of<lb />these titles, we eliminated all that were<lb />described as offering free full-text access<lb />for a limited time, the logical conclusion<lb />being that the titles would then transi-<lb />tion to a fee-based format.<lb /><lb />Another issue of some concern was<lb />_ that of registration. Many medical titles<lb />are currently offered via Medscape, an<lb />online medical community that requires<lb />user registration for access to the free<lb />content within. While this does pose a<lb />barrier to access, the material within re-<lb />mains peer-reviewed as well as timely. It<lb />was felt that for undergraduates this<lb />would indeed become an obstacle, but<lb />the targeted community would simply<lb />take the registration in stride. This belief<lb />was confirmed through anecdotal evi-<lb />dence in our discussion of the topic with<lb />some residents and physicians affiliated<lb />with the nearby teaching hospital.<lb />While these titles will most likely be<lb />added to the locator database, it remains<lb />undecidéd whether to include these<lb />titles in our formal study.<lb /><lb />Due to the increasing number of<lb />titles to investigate, it was necessary to<lb />divide the research process between the<lb />authors. The logical division was by<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />broad subject categories since our titles<lb />fell within the social sciences and sci-<lb />ences. The subject librarian with respon-<lb />sibilities in the social sciences evaluated<lb />the social science and humanities titles,<lb />while the librarian with science respon-<lb />sibilities assessed those titles.<lb /><lb />At this time, we engaged in a litera-<lb />ture review to investigate various facets<lb />of our topic, including the evolving na-<lb />ture of scholarly communication in an<lb />increasingly digital academic society and<lb />the eventual economic impact of free e-<lb />journals upon the publishing industry.<lb />Another issue we investigated was the<lb />stability of Web-based serial publica-<lb />tions, one related to the concern of ar-<lb />chival access. This issue is of utmost con-<lb />cern to the academic community at<lb />large, for if a title offers unique and valu-<lb />able information, yet provides no archi-<lb />val assurance and ultimately disappears,<lb />so, obviously, does the content. This is-<lb />sue underscores the oftentimes ephem-<lb />eral nature of Web publishing, a subject<lb />that causes information professionals to<lb />proceed with caution as we move toward<lb />formally selecting free materials for our<lb />user communities.<lb /><lb />We also searched for articles discuss-<lb />ing the research process itself and the<lb />necessity of publishing as a form of<lb />scholarly communication among aca-<lb />demic librarians. Our search comprised<lb />database searching (Library Literature and<lb />EBSCOhostTs MasterFILE Premier), as well<lb />as browsing various Internet sites. Using<lb />the latter approach, we found a great<lb />deal of information at the Harrassowitz<lb />Web site, Electronic Journals: A Selected<lb />Resource Guide. This site included valu-<lb />able information regarding locating elec-<lb />tronic journals, lists and directories, elec-<lb />tronic journal providers, definitions and<lb />a history of electronic journals, usage<lb />studies of electronic journals, standards,<lb />legal and academic issues, archiving, ref-<lb />erence linking and pre-print servers, and<lb />current awareness information on the<lb />issues surrounding electronic journals.<lb /><lb />Another key source was the Journal<lb />of Electronic Publishing,�! itself a Web-<lb />based publication, and the University of<lb />HoustonTs Scholarly Electronic Publishing<lb />Bibliography,� as well as various discus-<lb />sion threads on the Serialst listserv. The<lb />discussions from the listserv mostly fo-<lb />cused on the economic impact of e-jour-<lb />nals on the publishing industry, al-<lb />though a few were directed at the use of<lb />multimedia within the e-journals. All of<lb />these sources inspired a number of<lb />thought-provoking brainstorming ses-<lb />sions that gave our project impetus for<lb />future directions.<lb /><lb />For the purposes of the initial<lb />project, however we decided to focus on<lb />basic quantifiable data, and thus gath-<lb />ered the following: number of journals<lb />by discipline; number and percentage of<lb />Web-only journals versus electronic ver-<lb />sions of print publications; number and<lb />percentage of journals offering multime-<lb />dia content (streaming audio and video);<lb />number and percentage of journals offer-<lb />ing interactive access (allowing readers<lb />to comment on articles either as a sepa-<lb />rate component or via an interactive<lb />message board); statistical breakdown by<lb />type of publisher (university, profes-<lb />sional society or for-profit); and a statis-<lb />tical breakdown by frequency and regu-<lb />larity of publication.<lb /><lb />With respect to our actual research<lb />processes, the description by Rebecca<lb />Watson-Boone of opractitioner-research-<lb />ers� is especially apt as othey approach<lb />projects and problems in ways that yield<lb />(1) solutions, (2) an enlarged under-<lb />standing of their actual field of work "<lb />their practice " and (3) improvements<lb />in that practice.�* The research in<lb />which we are currently engaged is action<lb />research; as Watson-Boone points out,<lb />this type of research opresupposes that<lb />something will be changed as a result of<lb />applying this method to a problem and<lb />that those affected by the problem must<lb />be involved in the research effort.��* Our<lb />project is dynamic when viewed in these<lb />terms insofar that we are examining an<lb />issue increasingly integral to our daily<lb />professional activities as a reference li-<lb />brarian and a serials collection develop-<lb />ment librarian. This research will modify<lb />our understanding of free e-journals and<lb />the concomitant issues of selection, ac-<lb />cess, and impact on our fee-based serials<lb />collection. Accompanying these changes<lb />will be an enhanced knowledge of the<lb />free e-journal phenomenon and im-<lb />proved access to these titles.<lb /><lb />Interestingly enough, each author<lb />had a different approach in collecting<lb />the data, based upon his or her daily ex-<lb />periences in public and technical ser-<lb />vices. One made general notes includ-<lb />ing the title, URL, ISSN, publisher, fre-<lb />quency, archive dates, whether the title<lb />was electronic only or had a pre-exist-<lb />ing print version, extra software require-<lb />ments, and any special utilization of its<lb />Web format (links, searching, etc.). As a<lb />reference librarian with a humanities/<lb />social science background, his primary<lb />concern was with end-user access. His<lb />approach to the research and evaluation<lb />process was more intuitive and less<lb />quantitative than that of his colleague.<lb /><lb />The other librarian noted the same<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 " %<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027372_0010" />
        <p>information and developed an Excel file<lb />in order to track the above data and ma-<lb />nipulate extra data. Because the second<lb />author was (1) responsible for examining<lb />the science and medical titles and (2) a<lb />technical services librarian, different is-<lb />sues came to the forefront of her re-<lb />search. These included the presence of a<lb />distinct ISSN for the electronic title;<lb />whether the title was indexed and<lb />where; the availability of TOC notifica-<lb />tion; the need for registration; the<lb />amount and type of advertisement (i.e.,<lb />Java or Shockwave banners) within the<lb />journal; the availability of continuing<lb />medical education credits; and the avail-<lb />ability of MARC records for the titles for<lb />future inclusion in the online catalog.<lb />Our differing methodologies are a<lb />reflection of our vantage points (public<lb />services and technical services) within<lb />the library profession. This project is an<lb />excellent example of the value of col-<lb />laboration between librarians in two<lb />very distinct areas of the field. The tech-<lb />nical services librarian focused on issues<lb />particular to providing access to the<lb />materials and their resulting impact on<lb />the rest of the collection. For example, if<lb />it were decided to include these titles in<lb />the online catalog, the catalogers would<lb />profit greatly from the availability of<lb />MARC records. If MARC records were<lb />not available, then a decision would<lb />need to be made regarding original cata-<lb />loging. This would, in turn, be based on<lb />the amount of time the original catalog-<lb />ers would have available to dedicate to<lb />this project, the cost of uploading the<lb />records to OCLC, and the potential im-<lb />pact such OCLC inclusion would have<lb />on the interlibrary loan workload.<lb />Another example is analyzing the<lb />effect of free titles on the remainder of<lb />the serials collection. Again, if it were<lb />determined that stable, free e-journal<lb />titles should be considered valid mate-<lb />rials and formally added to the collec-<lb />tion, we must incorporate these new<lb />tools into our methodologies for collec-<lb />tion evaluation. This brings up the<lb />question of the impact of free scholarly<lb />e-journals on the use of our fee-based<lb />serials collection, especially if these<lb />journals begin to have an impact on<lb />scholarly communication and hence,<lb />an economic impact on the publishing<lb />industry. A number of methods, in com-<lb />bination, could give librarians an idea<lb />of this impact, including tracking hits<lb />through the local OPAC and via any<lb />Web-based mode of access; examining<lb />the impact of the titles on scholarly<lb />publication through citation analysis;<lb />and evaluating the relevance of the<lb /><lb />&amp; " Spring 2001<lb /><lb />titles to the institutionTs educational<lb />goals by assigning LC subject headings.<lb /><lb />The public services librarian, on the<lb />other hand, approached this project<lb />from the perspective of the end-user,<lb />a view shaped by working directly<lb />with students and faculty at the refer-<lb />ence desk, in library instruction ses-<lb />sions, and as a subject specialist. He<lb />emphasized, for example, the issue of<lb />whether articles were provided in<lb />HTML or PDF and the impact this<lb />would have on end-users in terms of<lb />required hardware and software. Also,<lb />the question of barriers to user access<lb />was one he approached from a different<lb />perspective than his colleague. Re-<lb />quired registration, for example, is<lb />much more likely to deter under-<lb />graduates or general users from a Web<lb />site than the medical specialists with<lb />whom his colleague is more familiar.<lb /><lb />This divergence of background and<lb />outlook between the two authors has<lb />not been a problem or obstacle to<lb />progress. On the contrary, it has proven<lb />to be a tremendous advantage in terms<lb />of broadening the scope and under-<lb />standing of the issues associated with<lb />this project. Both librarians have been<lb />exposed to a much wider understanding<lb />of the free e-journal question and its im-<lb />plications than had they pursued this<lb />research on their own or with a col-<lb />league of similar background.<lb /><lb />In spite of their different service per-<lb />spectives, both librarians share an over-<lb />riding concern with access. Michael<lb />Fosmire and ElizabethYoungTs essay in<lb />the most recent issue of College &amp; Re-<lb />search Libraries? analyzed the amount of<lb />access ARL libraries provide to free schol-<lb />arly e-journals and brings to the fore-<lb />front of our professional discourse the<lb />overriding issue of access. Each library<lb />must struggle with the question of how<lb />best to support the needs of its user com-<lb />munity by providing them the means of<lb />finding information. Many libraries use<lb />multiple methods to provide this infor-<lb />mation by using both the local online<lb />catalog and the libraryTs Web site. This<lb />raises the issue of selection and selection<lb />guidelines, however, as well as inventory<lb />control, as the URLs must be checked at<lb />all points of access on a regular basis to<lb />ensure stability of access.<lb /><lb />The final stage of the research pro-<lb />cess will involve interpreting the data we<lb />have gathered and publishing our con-<lb />clusions in an article. As we move to-<lb />ward the final process of analyzing our<lb />results, several trends are becoming ap-<lb />parent. We expect to find that the sci-<lb />ences are more inclined to use the Web<lb /><lb />as a method for scholarly communica-<lb />tion. It appears that the medical sciences<lb />are particularly engaged in using the<lb />Web for communication. While medical<lb />journals are not the most expensive,<lb />with the average 2000 cost at $663.21<lb />(in comparison with chemistry and<lb />physics titles at $1,302.79),2° it will be<lb />interesting to see what their impact will<lb />be on serial costs and, hence, library ac-<lb />quisition budgets.<lb /><lb />Many medical journals, such as the<lb />British Medical Journal, American Family<lb />Physician, Canadian Journal of Rural Medi-<lb />cine, and Annals of Medicine, offer free<lb />access to their electronic content while<lb />maintaining the alternative of a fee-<lb />based print subscription. Furthermore,<lb />99% of the titles checked are indexed in<lb />Medline or EMBASE, thus increasing the<lb />potential for free scholarly and profes-<lb />sional communication. In conjunction<lb />with the recent NLM venture into free<lb />scholarly communication via PubMed,<lb />we begin to see a change looming on the<lb />publishing horizon. With the advent of<lb />the Cross-Ref endeavor, fairly diverse<lb />types of journals will become more inte-<lb />grated with one another.<lb /><lb />The evolving picture reveals the po-<lb />tential for both fee-based and free e-jour-<lb />nals being indexed in major A+I re-<lb />sources, and linking to one another as<lb />well, taking greater advantage of the<lb />WebTs unique nature and thus improv-<lb />ing the possibility for ovirtual� scholarly<lb />communication. Among the primary<lb />influences on this potential scenario will<lb />be the researchers themselves as they<lb />choose where to publish their academic<lb />contributions. If such a model of aca-<lb />demic communication prevails, the fu-<lb />ture ramifications will be in the scientific<lb />rapid communications journals and will<lb />subsequently have a financial impact<lb />upon commercial publishers. Unfortu-<lb />nately, according to Fosmire and YoungTs<lb />recent findings, libraries are not provid-<lb />ing access to free e-journals commensu-<lb />rate with the notification provided by<lb />indexing services.� In order to effect any<lb />change in the prevailing scheme of aca-<lb />demic communication, libraries will<lb />need to reexamine their selection crite-<lb />ria to include these free titles.<lb /><lb />Conclusion<lb /><lb />Research can become a natural exten-<lb />sion of daily professional activities;<lb />seemingly mundane subjects can lead to<lb />informative research topics through the<lb />research process itself. Librarians espe-<lb />cially can take advantage of being prac-<lb />titioners as the burgeoning nature of<lb />information technology affects both<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />public and technical services. Whether<lb />teaching clients to locate and evaluate<lb />information from numerous diverse re-<lb />sources successfully, realigning budget<lb />expenditures, or selecting and provid-<lb />ing controlled, standardized access to<lb />discrete bits of information in the cata-<lb />log or at the Web site, all librarians must<lb />work at an almost frantic pace to main-<lb />tain a working knowledge of resources,<lb />modes of access, publishing trends, and<lb />evaluation methods. It is possible, how-<lb />ever, to realign our professional<lb />workflow to engage in scholarly commu-<lb />nication through the research process.<lb /><lb />The current project, which origi-<lb />nated from selecting free e-journals for<lb />JoynerTs E-Journal Locator database, con-<lb />tained a number of these diverse issues<lb />of interest to the library community: the<lb />economic impact of free e-journals on li-<lb />brary budgets, the mechanisms provid-<lb />ing access to information, the constantly<lb />evolving nature of scholarly communi-<lb />cation, and collection evaluation meth-<lb />odologies. Ultimately, as Watson-Boone<lb />notes, ocontinuous learning is seen as a<lb />particularly attractive part of being<lb />members of a chosen profession.��8 Li-<lb />brarians constantly engage in continu-<lb />ing education by virtue of the inherently<lb />mutable nature of information structure<lb />and access. Such a profession lends itself<lb />effortlessly to the integration of research<lb />and practice.<lb /><lb />As a result of this experience, here<lb />are some lessons learned that may be ap-<lb />plicable to other librarians wishing to<lb />engage in research, and to integrate re-<lb />search into their overall professional<lb />practice:<lb /><lb />¢ Pick a topic arising from daily profes-<lb />sional practice. For example, if you<lb />are having difficulty finding a suitable<lb />research topic, you can possibly find<lb />a topic in a practical project or study<lb />currently underway or already com-<lb />pleted. The most effective and inter-<lb />esting research is often that which is<lb />tied directly to daily practice.<lb /><lb />° Collaborate with colleagues possess-<lb />ing a different background and/or<lb />service perspective. This will yield<lb />both a broader perspective on the<lb />topic at hand, and give insight<lb />regarding how librarians in other<lb />fields approach their work.<lb /><lb />¢ Find ways to integrate research into<lb />your daily workflow. For example,<lb />by pursuing projects offering both<lb />research and practical benefits, you<lb />can successfully integrate both<lb />elements into a single workflow<lb />process.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />e Remember that research is a<lb />dynamic process. During the course<lb />of the research project, some issues<lb />will fade in importance while newer<lb />ones will become apparent.<lb /><lb />Above all, as noted at the beginning<lb />of this article, the best way to integrate<lb />research into oneTs overall duties is con-<lb />ceptually. Academic librarians must<lb />think of research and publishing as an<lb />integral part of their duties. Research<lb />and practice are best seen as two essen-<lb />tial, synergistic elements of an overall<lb />work process, and not as polar opposites.<lb />By adopting such a view, librarians will<lb />find that their professional practice ben-<lb />efits, not suffers.<lb /><lb />References<lb /><lb />1 Association of College and Research<lb />Libraries, oStandards for Faculty Status<lb />for College and University Librarians,�<lb />January 1992. http://www.ala.org/acrl/<lb />guides/guifacst.html (November 29,<lb />2000).<lb /><lb />2 Association of College and Research<lb />Libraries, oACRL Statement on Profes-<lb />sional Development,� July 8, 2000.<lb />http://www.ala.org/acrl/profdevlp.<lb />html (November 29, 2000).<lb /><lb />3 Dale S. Montanelli and Patricia F.<lb />Stenstrom, oThe Benefits of Research for<lb />Academic Librarians and the Institu-<lb />tions They Serve,� College &amp; Research Li-<lb />braries 47 (September 1986): 282-85.<lb /><lb />4 William K. Black and Joan M.<lb />Leysen, oScholarship and the Academic<lb />Librarian,� College &amp; Research Libraries<lb />55 (May 1994): 232.<lb /><lb />SIDI Gs, Doubs<lb /><lb />6 Rebecca Watson-Boone, oAcademic<lb />Librarians as Practitioner-Researchers,�<lb />Journal of Academic Librarianship 26<lb />(March 2000): 85-93. MasterFILE Pre-<lb />mier. EBSCOhost. File #3048506 (De-<lb />cember 2, 2000).<lb /><lb />7 Journal of Mundane Behavior. http:/<lb />/www.mundanebehavior.org/ (Decem-<lb />ber 3, 2000).<lb /><lb />8 British Medical Journal. http://<lb />www.bmj.com/ (December 3, 2000).<lb /><lb />9 Essays in History. http://etext.lib.<lb />virginia.edu/journals/EH/ (December<lb />3, 2000).<lb /><lb />10 oScholars Under Siege.� http://<lb />www.createchange.org/librarians/is-<lb />sues/silent.html (September 18, 2000).<lb /><lb />11 oJournal Costs: Current Trends &amp;<lb />Future Scenarios for 2020,� ARL: A Bi-<lb />monthly Report on Research Library Issues<lb />and Actions from ARL, CNI, and SPARC<lb />210 (June 2000): 10.<lb /><lb />12 Sosteric, Mike. oElectronic Journals:<lb />The Grand Information Future?� Elec-<lb /><lb />tronic Journal of Sociology 2 (November<lb />1996). http://www.sociology.org/con-<lb />tent/vol002.002/sosteric.html (De-<lb />cember 3, 2000).<lb /><lb />13 oDetailed Journal Selection Crite-<lb />ria,� in Scholarly Journals Distributed Via<lb />the WWW: Detailed Journal Selection<lb />Criteria. http://info.lib.uh.edu/wj/<lb />selection.html (September 12, 2000).<lb /><lb />14 International Consortium for Alter-<lb />native Academic Publication, oThe<lb />Sociocite/ICAAP Journals Database<lb />and Distribution Centre.� http://<lb />www.icaap.org/database/journals.html<lb />(September 19, 2000).<lb /><lb />1S oScholarly Journals Distributed Via<lb />the WWW.� http://info.lib.uh.edu/wj/<lb />selection.html (September 12, 2000).<lb /><lb />16 International Consortium for Alter-<lb />native Academic Publication, oThe<lb />Sociocite/ICAAP Journals Database and<lb />Distribution Centre.� http://www.<lb />icaap.org/database/journals.htm1 (Sep-<lb />tember 19, 2000).<lb /><lb />17 oNirectory of Electronic Health Sci-<lb />ences Journals.� http://wwwmed.med.<lb />monash.edu.au/dehsj/ (December 2,<lb />2000).<lb /><lb />18 oAcqWebTs Directory of Journals,<lb />Newsletters and Electronic Discus-<lb />sion Archives.� http://acqWeb.library.<lb />vanderbilt.edu/acqWeb.journals.html<lb />#journals (December 2, 2000).<lb /><lb />19 Internet Free-Press, oJournals.�<lb />http://www.free-press.com/journals/<lb />(December 2, 2000).<lb /><lb />20 Harrassowitz, Booksellers and Sub-<lb />scription Agents, oElectronic Journals: A<lb />Selected Resource Guide,� May 4, 2000.<lb />http://www.harrassowitz.de/<lb />top_resources/ejresguide.html (De-<lb />cember 2, 2000).<lb /><lb />21 oJEP, The Journal of Electronic Pub-<lb />lishing.� http://www.press.umich.edu/<lb />jep/ (December 2, 2000).<lb /><lb />22 Bailey, Charles W., Jr., oScholarly<lb />Electronic Publishing Directory.� Ver-<lb />sion 34 (12/1/2000). http://info.lib.<lb />uh.edu/epb/sepb.html (December 2,<lb />2000).<lb /><lb />23 Watson-Boone, 85.<lb /><lb />24 Tbid., 87.<lb /><lb />25 Michael Fosmire and Elizabeth<lb />Young, oFree Scholarly Electronic Jour-<lb />nals: What Access do College and Uni-<lb />versity Libraries Provide?� College and<lb />Research Libraries 61 (November 2000):<lb />500-508.<lb /><lb />26 Barbara Albee and Brenda Dingley,<lb />oU.S. Periodical Prices"2000.� American<lb />Libraries 31, 5 (May 2000): 78.<lb /><lb />27 Fosmire and Young, 507.<lb /><lb />28 Watson-Boone, 86.<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 " 9<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027372_0012" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />The Current State of Public Library Research<lb /><lb />in Select Peer-Reviewed Journals:<lb /><lb />he purpose of this article is to<lb /><lb />examine the current state of re-<lb /><lb />search regarding public libraries<lb /><lb />in the library and information<lb /><lb />studies (LIS) literature over the past<lb /><lb />five years of publication. Four char-<lb /><lb />acteristics were examined: (1) fre-<lb /><lb />quency of publication; (2) author pro-<lb />files; (3) subject; and (4) methodology.<lb /><lb />Previous researchers have studied<lb />various aspects of public library issues.<lb />Several articles comment on the lack of<lb />motivation for public library practitio-<lb />ners to publish. Chapman and Pike!<lb />note three such barriers to practitioners<lb />publishing: (1) publications are not con-<lb />sidered as part of the librarianTs perfor-<lb />mance evaluation, (2) publishing can be<lb />considered as an inappropriate use of<lb />professional time, and (3) practitioners<lb />do not have the same access to research<lb />materials that LIS faculty do (although<lb />this has changed somewhat since this<lb />article was published due to access to<lb />electronic databases such as NC LIVE).<lb />Woodrum acknowledges that oFew<lb />public librarians receive any monetary<lb />gain from writing, and there is no re-<lb />quirement forcing us to publish to<lb />keep our jobs or further our careers.�<lb />Still she urges practitioners to conduct<lb />and publish research as a professional<lb />obligation.�<lb /><lb />Other authors note a gap between<lb />the research conducted by LIS educators<lb />and what is useful to library practitio-<lb />ners. Van Fleet and Durrance surveyed<lb />23 public library leaders and found that<lb />these practitioners viewed research as<lb /><lb />10 " Spring 2001<lb /><lb />1996-2000<lb /><lb />needed, but that existing research was<lb />onot relevant� and that olibrary schools<lb />donTt understand what we need.� Prac-<lb />titioners need more of the practical, ap-<lb />plied or action type of research, i.e. the<lb />ohow we done it good� type of article<lb />which presents a problem and how the<lb />local library solved it. Library educators,<lb />on the other hand, are not rewarded for<lb />doing this type of research in the ten-<lb />ure process. Perspectives and standards<lb />of researchers often result in the percep-<lb />tion that such localized, single shot case<lb />studies are lesser in quality due to less<lb />rigorous research standards. Greiner<lb />notes that while basic, theoretical re-<lb />search has its place in the public library<lb />area, oapplied research as a problem-<lb />solving tool in public libraries is often<lb />overlooked.�* The question then be-<lb />comes how to bridge this gap. Van Fleet<lb />and Durrance* recommend the re-pack-<lb />aging of basic research articles for the<lb />professional literature, in such publica-<lb />tions as American Libraries and Library<lb />Journal.<lb /><lb />Other researchers of public library<lb />research focused on either LIS faculty<lb />or practitioners and their characteristics<lb />and publishing habits. Tjoumas® stud-<lb />ied the productivity of LIS professors<lb />who appeared to specialize in public li-<lb />brary research and found that they pub-<lb />lished in journals they considered pres-<lb />tigious, but that they produced less than<lb />one article per year.<lb /><lb />Chapman and PikeT produced an<lb />excellent literature review of research<lb />on author characteristics (position, in-<lb /><lb />by Julie Hersberger and Christopher Demas<lb /><lb />stitution type, gender, geographic loca-<lb />tion, collaboration, and level of activ-<lb />ity), and the reader is directed to this<lb />article for further information.<lb /><lb />Another Van Fleet article asserts<lb />that there is evidence that LIS educa-<lb />tors and public library practitioners<lb />share an informal communication sys-<lb />tem utilizing research and that they<lb />share elements of a ocommunicative<lb />and intellectual culture.�8 The bottom<lb />line would appear to be that although a<lb />gap between the needs and motivations<lb />of LIS educators and public librarians<lb />who publish exists, there are ways to<lb />improve the situation.<lb /><lb />Methodology<lb /><lb />Our approach to the study can best be<lb />described as quasi-scientific. The criteria<lb />for considering that which constitutes a<lb />research article was generously applied,<lb />rather than rigidly considered. The pur-<lb />pose of the article is to illustrate the cur-<lb />rent status of public library research to a<lb />mainly practitioner readership, so the<lb />strategy was to be more inclusive than<lb />exclusive in order to get a sense of the<lb />big picture.<lb /><lb />The researchers used a purposeful<lb />sampling approach. We first limited the<lb />study to articles on public librarianship<lb />in the LIS literature. Although it would<lb />be very interesting to examine public li-<lb />brary research outside the main field of<lb />library literature, time constraints did<lb />not allow for this. The strategy devel-<lb />oped was to begin with the Library Lit-<lb />erature databaseTs peer-reviewed journals<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027372_0013" />
        <p>list. Journals with a United States em-<lb />phasis, as well as some national journals<lb />with articles by Canadians of interest to<lb />North Carolinians were selected. The<lb />five-year period of 1996-2000 is some-<lb />what arbitrary as it was predicted that<lb />this strategy would yield a useful pool of<lb />data for analysis and was manageable<lb />given the time restraints of the project;<lb />however, some of the December 2000<lb />issues may not have been included in<lb />this sample if they were not processed<lb />at the time of the data collection. An-<lb />other sampling constraint is that the<lb />authors were limited to the journal<lb />holdings of Jackson Library at the Uni-<lb />versity of North Carolina Greensboro.<lb />Library Trends is not part of the sample<lb />because even though articles are peer<lb />reviewed, they are more likely to be re-<lb />ports of research in a synthesized form<lb />rather than the research report itself.<lb /><lb />Once a list had been made of the<lb />national research journals in LIS (see<lb />Appendix A) a quick review of the table<lb />of contents from 1996-2000 identified<lb />journals in which public library research<lb />was published (see also Appendix A).<lb />This strategy identified 11 journals con-<lb />taining some form of public library ar-<lb />ticles and two specialized public library<lb />journals (Public Libraries and Public Li-<lb />brary Quarterly). The next phase con-<lb />sisted of examining the public library<lb />articles in each journal run from 1996-<lb />2000 to select those that were research-<lb />based. Articles that were simply opin-<lb />ion pieces were deselected, but articles<lb />addressing the philosophical and theo-<lb />retical underpinnings of public librar-<lb />ies were included if they contained<lb />some sort of a research question that<lb />was answered. The line between re-<lb />search and essay may be rather murky<lb />in some of the selections, but again, the<lb />aim was to be inclusive rather than rig-<lb />idly exclusive.<lb /><lb />The review process yielded a total<lb />pool of 121 research articles from the<lb />13 identified journals for the five-year<lb />period. The simple frequency of public<lb />library research publication was first ex-<lb />amined. Then, articles were content<lb />analyzed in several categories using ana-<lb />lytical frameworks that were both de-<lb />ductive and iterative in nature. Another<lb />category addressed is authorship"<lb />whether the authors were LIS educators,<lb />practitioners, or other"and the num-<lb />ber of authors per article. Next, the sub-<lb />ject of the article was analyzed using an<lb />emergent analytical framework. Re-<lb />search methods were examined utiliz-<lb />ing an analytical framework developed<lb />by Powell,? which identified relevant LIS<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />ee<lb /><lb />research methods. The study does not<lb />attempt to evaluate the quality of the<lb />research nor does the analysis differen-<lb />tiate between public library-based re-<lb />search or research which was simply<lb />applied to public libraries.<lb /><lb />Both authors analyzed each article,<lb />which would imply some measure of<lb />inter-coder reliability. A rigorous process<lb />was not applied, with several iterations<lb />of analysis being developed, nor were<lb />outside coders used to enhance the<lb />trustworthiness of results; thus the<lb />oquasi-scientific� label has been applied<lb />to this project.<lb /><lb />Data analysis produced some ex-<lb />pected research findings as to frequency,<lb />authorship, subjects, and methods. In-<lb />teresting issues and trends emerged<lb />from the data which should be of inter-<lb />est to public librarians and perhaps oth-<lb />ers as well.<lb /><lb />Findings<lb /><lb />The original research design proposed<lb />examining the articles to determine<lb />where they fell on the basic " ap-<lb />plied " action continuum. This strategy<lb />was abandoned due to the difficulties<lb />in operationalizing the terms. Still, the<lb />impression left to the researchers is that<lb />the vast majority of the articles either<lb />applied theories to a large pool of pub-<lb />lic libraries, using national surveys or<lb />statewide surveys, or looked at a couple<lb />of cases or even single-shot case stud-<lb />ies. This would seem to support the call<lb />for research that is more readable and<lb />useful to public library practitioners. We<lb />note, however, that public librarians<lb />also read research on topics not solely<lb />focused on public librarianship. Other<lb />studies in the general research literature,<lb />for example, generic studies of refer-<lb />ence, collection management, technol-<lb />ogy use, etc. may not be as practitioner-<lb />friendly. Additionally, research con-<lb />ducted on reference work in academic<lb />libraries could have applicability in the<lb />public library setting, so it would be<lb />short-sighted to limit the range of top-<lb />ics read by public library practitioners<lb />to such a narrow, single focus.<lb /><lb />Frequency<lb /><lb />Readers will probably not be surprised<lb />to learn that public library research con-<lb />stitutes a small percentage of the total<lb />number of research articles published in<lb />all thirteen journals over the past five<lb />years. Out of an estimated 1,707 articles<lb />total, 121 or 7%, are public library ori-<lb />ented. Also not surprisingly, the two<lb />public library based journals, Public Li-<lb />braries and Public Library Quarterly, pub-<lb /><lb />lished public library research with the<lb />most frequency. When these two jour-<lb />nal totals are removed from the 13 jour-<lb />nal sample, the percentage of public li-<lb />brary to all research articles published in<lb />the remaining 11 journals (1,547 total<lb />articles to 57 public library articles) is<lb />4%, Although we did not gather data to<lb />analyze the distribution of research ar-<lb />ticles by type of library subject, the<lb />overall impression is that academic li-<lb />brarians wrote the vast majority of ar-<lb />ticles about academic libraries. Many<lb />others are simply non-specific in na-<lb />ture. The difference in numbers may be<lb />generated by the requirement for aca-<lb />demic librarians in tenure track posi-<lb />tions to publish on a regular basis. Spe-<lb />cific frequencies can be seen in Table 1.<lb /><lb />Table 1. Publication Frequency<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />JELIS<lb />RL 200<lb />RQ, RUSQ 78<lb />JLA 191<lb />NCLibs 23<lb />ITL<lb /><lb />eee<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />a) WI RIL OO) OO<lb /><lb />Total** 1547 57 4%<lb />* See Appendix A for abbreviations.<lb />** Total minus PL and PLQ totals.<lb /><lb />Conclusions as to whether public<lb />library research is sufficiently meeting<lb />the needs of consumers cannot be dis-<lb />cerned from the frequency chart. Li-<lb />brary educators, public library practitio-<lb />ners and other interested parties should<lb />conduct more research as information<lb />needs arise.<lb /><lb />Conclusions as to whether public<lb />library research is sufficiently meeting<lb />the needs of consumers cannot be dis-<lb />cerned from the frequency chart. Li-<lb />brary educators, public library practitio-<lb />ners and other interested parties should<lb />conduct more research as information<lb />needs arise.<lb /><lb />Authorship<lb /><lb />Article authorship was analyzed in re-<lb />gard to the number of collaborative ef-<lb />fort and as to the gender of the authors.<lb />LIS educators appear to collaborate more<lb />often than did public library practitio-<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 " ie<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027372_0014" />
        <p>ners. Some of the articles seem to have<lb />evolved from class projects or research<lb />conducted by faculty with multiple stu-<lb />dents or graduate assistants. Other ar-<lb />ticles appear to be the written reports<lb />of masterTs thesis work. There were sev-<lb />eral interesting collaborative efforts be-<lb />tween LIS educators and practitioners,<lb />and between practitioners and vendors<lb />or consultants. Such innovative collabo-<lb />rations would seem to heed the recom-<lb />mendation of Van Fleet and Durrance!®<lb />for more cooperative efforts between all<lb />stakeholders in the interest of public li-<lb />braries. Table 2. displays the distribution<lb /><lb />of collaborative efforts:<lb /><lb />Table 2: Collaborative Efforts<lb /><lb />77 335) 6 3<lb /><lb />Due to the cross-collaboration between<lb />LIS educators, public library practitio-<lb />ners, and other interested parties, we<lb />decided not to try to document the<lb />number of occurrences since the results<lb />were more confusing than edifying.<lb /><lb />Authorship was further analyzed by<lb />gender and career position with the re-<lb />sults shown in Table 3.<lb /><lb />Table 3: Authorship by Gender and<lb />Career Position<lb /><lb />LIS Educators 106 Total<lb /><lb />60 female<lb /><lb />area that could benefit from more<lb />encouragement either as single au-<lb />thors or in collaboration with LIS<lb />educators and/or public librarians.<lb /><lb />Some authors published several<lb />articles in the five-year period exam-<lb />ined, but most contributed only one.<lb /><lb />Subject<lb /><lb />While there exists some evidence of<lb />patterns of subject preference by cer-<lb />tain authors, a closer examination of<lb />the research topics of the 121 articles<lb />revealed some interesting trends and<lb />issues.<lb /><lb />Subject categories emerged from<lb />the data in an iterative process. For<lb />some articles the journals provided<lb />keyword terms which were used for<lb />the analysis. For the rest of the ar-<lb />ticles, subjects were derived from ab-<lb />stracts, where provided, or from a scan<lb />of the entire article. The range of sub-<lb />jects addressed in the research articles<lb />is displayed in Table 4.<lb /><lb />The fact that management studies<lb />constitute the majority of research stud-<lb />ied is not surprising. Much of the ac-<lb />tion research represented was aimed at<lb />gathering data to resolve specific prob-<lb />lems or to make better man-<lb />agement decisions. Also not<lb />surprising is the fact that<lb />technology studies comprise<lb /><lb />LIS Practitioners | 52 Total<lb /><lb />28 female<lb /><lb />the second most frequent<lb /><lb />Other 20 Total<lb /><lb />8 female<lb /><lb />subject researched. The in-<lb />flux of new technologies into<lb /><lb />Total 178 Total<lb /><lb />Results show that there are more<lb />female than male authors both in the<lb />educator and practitioner categories, but<lb />marginally more males than females in<lb />the oother� category. Some names were<lb />difficult to distinguish as to gender, such<lb />as Pat, Lee, Alex, Leslie, etc., so where<lb />clues were not available, a obest guess�<lb />was made. Comparisons to the distri-<lb />bution of gender, for example the ratio<lb />of male to female LIS educators nation-<lb />ally, and the public library practitioner<lb />population would be interesting to<lb />make if this information is readily avail-<lb />able in a usable form. We were not able<lb />to quickly locate such information for<lb />this article.<lb /><lb />Twenty of 178 total authors (11%)<lb />were not currently employed in LIS<lb />educational programs or as public li-<lb />brarians. This oother� category con-<lb />sisted of an interesting mix of library<lb />consultants, vendors, library users,<lb />and even the Librarian of Congress.<lb />The issue of oothers� conducting pub-<lb />lic library research is an interesting<lb /><lb />12 " Spring 2001<lb /><lb />96 female<lb /><lb />public libraries should lead to<lb />studies evaluating the infor-<lb />mation technology needs of library us-<lb />ers, how they are using these technolo-<lb />gies and the information gathered, and<lb />how satisfied users are with this infor-<lb />mation technology. We predict many<lb />more research projects concerning in-<lb />formation technology in the next five<lb />years.<lb /><lb />Management studies, reference<lb />studies, and collection management<lb />studies comprise three of the four core<lb />class areas we typically require of all stu-<lb />dents in an LIS curriculum. Interest-<lb />ingly, there is a dearth of technical ser-<lb />vices, or cataloging, research repre-<lb />sented in the sample. A quick review of<lb />technical services-specific journals re-<lb />vealed that most of these studies are ei-<lb />ther generic in terms of type of library<lb />or aimed at academic libraries.<lb /><lb />We could conflate the two catego-<lb />ries of children and YA services with the<lb />more generic user studies, which would<lb />then represent 23 of 133 total subjects<lb />studied, or 17%. From this result, it is<lb />difficult to report whether this repre-<lb /><lb />Table 4. Subject Areas<lb /><lb />Management Studies<lb /><lb />Technology Studies<lb /><lb />Reference Studies<lb /><lb />Collection Management Studies<lb /><lb />Children and Young Adult Studies<lb /><lb />User Studies<lb /><lb />Intellectual Freedom<lb /><lb />Theory, Philosophical<lb /><lb />Gay Oriented Materials Studies<lb /><lb />Community Studies<lb /><lb />Risk Management<lb /><lb />Library/Librarian Image Studies<lb /><lb />Geospatial/Geosystems Studies<lb /><lb />Reader's Advisory Studies<lb /><lb />Other<lb /><lb />*Articles had multiple subject headings as-<lb />signed to them.<lb /><lb />sents a significant percentage, and thus<lb />we cannot tell, without comparison fig-<lb />ures, if there is a trend towards more<lb />user-centered research or not.<lb /><lb />The five studies included in the<lb />oother� category include one article on<lb />a 1951 reading conference, one article<lb />on McCarthyism and film, one article<lb />on library development, one examining<lb />library standards, and one gauging pub-<lb />lic opinion.<lb /><lb />More studies need to be conducted<lb />in all of these categories, and more, in-<lb />novative topics, will most likely appear<lb />in future work.<lb /><lb />Methods<lb /><lb />Methods used in the research articles<lb />were analyzed utilizing the framework<lb />Powell developed in his research.!! The<lb />distribution of methods used is shown<lb />in Figure 1.<lb /><lb />Results show the three main re-<lb />search methods used were case studies,<lb />content analyses, and surveys, which<lb />fits with the subjects being studied as<lb />noted previously. Management studies<lb />were generally case studies, often used<lb />in combination with other methods<lb />such as interviews and surveys. Content<lb />analysis studies were used to examine<lb />library collections, library policies, and<lb />library documents.<lb /><lb />It is interesting to note the 11 his-<lb />torical studies. Understanding public li-<lb />brary history is an important part of<lb />understanding the present and predict-<lb />ing the future, so we hope more such<lb />studies will be conducted in the future.<lb /><lb />The term ooperations research� was<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />a LS en TM ll<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027372_0015" />
        <p>Figure 1. Methods<lb /><lb />0 5 10<lb /><lb />Number<lb />6) 20 25 30<lb /><lb />Case Study<lb />Content Analysis<lb />Survey :<lb />Historical<lb />Qualitative<lb /><lb />Operations Research<lb /><lb />Method<lb /><lb />Single Shot Case Study<lb />Statistical Analysis<lb />Other<lb /><lb />Theoretical |<lb /><lb />Exploratory<lb /><lb />Experimental<lb /><lb />co-opted and adapted somewhat from<lb />PowellTs definition to include the more<lb />general library system analysis and not<lb />just pertaining to technology systems.<lb />Single-shot case studies were separated<lb />from the general case study category<lb />where multiple cases were the object of<lb />study. Some of these studies came close<lb />to edging away from research towards<lb />more journalistic efforts. Care needs to<lb />be taken to make case studies research<lb />as rigorously scientific as possible. Li-<lb />brary Journal, American Libraries, and<lb />Public Libraries are good venues for these<lb />more informal reports. Statistical stud-<lb />ies were those which analyzed data such<lb />as circulation statistics, national public<lb />library statistics, etc. Other methods<lb />used included geographic analyses,<lb />checklist use, nominal record linkage,<lb />and the development of a standard al-<lb />gorithm.<lb /><lb />The more common research meth-<lb />ods will continue to be represented in<lb />LIS research conducted by both library<lb />educators and practitioners. In addition,<lb />researchers in LIS are continually import-<lb />ing new methods from other fields and<lb />developing exciting new and innovative<lb />methods. Public library research will<lb />hopefully reflect these new trends, too.<lb /><lb />Conclusion<lb /><lb />It is clear from this review of the public<lb />library research conducted in the past<lb />five years that there is a solid, growing<lb />body of knowledge being produced by<lb />library educators, public library practi-<lb />tioners, and interested other parties.<lb />Public library research comprised 7% of<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />i<lb /><lb />the total research published in the 13<lb />journals sampled. Single authors wrote<lb />the majority of these articles, but inter-<lb />esting collaborative efforts were noted<lb />between educators, practitioners and<lb />other interested parties. Women authors<lb />dominated in the educator and practi-<lb />tioner categories, but more men than<lb />women were represented in the oother�<lb />category (60% men and 40% women).<lb />None of the disparities were great. The<lb />main subjects studied in these articles<lb />were the core areas of librarianship com-<lb />prising management, reference, and col-<lb />lection management. Case studies, con-<lb />tent analyses, and survey research meth-<lb />ods were the most commonly used ap-<lb />proaches in the majority of the studies.<lb /><lb />We conclude by analyzing the re-<lb />sults of our study in the context of the<lb />five recommendations for improving<lb />the utility of public library research of-<lb />fered by Van Fleet and Durrance:!?<lb /><lb />1. Make the research literature more<lb />available to librarians.<lb /><lb />Publishing in popular journals, pub-<lb />lishing review articles on specific top-<lb />ics and developing a oresearch digest�<lb />are specific recommendations made<lb />by Van Fleet and Durrance. Re-<lb />packaging basic research for publica-<lb />tion in professional journals may<lb />need to be encouraged more. Just as<lb />Woodrum!T urges practitioners to<lb />publish as a professional obligation,<lb />library educators may need to realize<lb />that publishing for practitioners may<lb />be their professional obligation, even<lb />if academic administrators do not re-<lb /><lb />ward them for such publications. Li-<lb />brary Trends seems to be publishing<lb />review articles, though not specifi-<lb />cally for public library research. A<lb />public library research digest could<lb />be published as a service by a particu-<lb />lar library school or might be ex-<lb />tracted from a database and docu-<lb />ment delivery service such as CARL<lb />UnCover.<lb /><lb />. Enhance public librarian/<lb /><lb />researcher opportunities for inter-<lb />action in library settings.<lb /><lb />Specific recommendations made by<lb />Van Fleet and Durrance�"� mention in-<lb />volving more public libraries in the<lb />research process, developing funding<lb />for innovative collaborative efforts,<lb />and encouraging practitioners to de-<lb />velop research positions or agendas.<lb />We would advocate further efforts as<lb />simple as encouraging LIS educators<lb />to frequent their local public library,<lb />use local practitioners as guest speak-<lb />ers in classes, and to serve, when re-<lb />quested by public library directors, as<lb />consultants. This general interaction<lb />could lead to cooperative efforts and<lb />research collaborations. Funding for<lb />research is always an issue, but it<lb />would seem intuitive that the wider<lb />the range of researchers on a project,<lb />the wider the funding pools.<lb />WoodrumTs article! is a good ex-<lb />ample of library administration en-<lb />couraging staff development of re-<lb />search positions and supporting these<lb />research projects.<lb /><lb />. Develop a framework for interac-<lb /><lb />tion through association activities.<lb /><lb />More specific recommendations from<lb />Van Fleet and Durrance!* involve en-<lb />couraging more activities between<lb />the research sections of library pro-<lb />fessional organizations, encouraging<lb />research as part of the PLA action<lb />agenda, including both educators<lb />and librarians on committees, devot-<lb />ing more attention to collaborative<lb />continuing education efforts, and to<lb />include library administrators in the<lb />Association of Library and Informa-<lb />tion Science Education (ALISE) re-<lb />search activities.<lb /><lb />We would like to see more inter-<lb />action between educators and prac-<lb />titioners at the state level as well, per-<lb />haps at the North Carolina Library<lb />Association (NCLA) biennial meet-<lb />ings. According to their Web site,'�<lb />NCLA does not have a research sec-<lb />tion, and this may be an area of in-<lb />terest to pursue in the future where<lb />public, academic, and special librar-<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 " 1<lb /></p>
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        <p>ians share their research efforts. Pub-<lb />lic Library Association (PLA) confer-<lb />ence programming is another area<lb />where improvements could be made<lb />to include more public library re-<lb />search sessions. Based on the confer-<lb />ence program, few sessions at the<lb />2000 Public Library Association meet-<lb />ing held in Charlotte!® were research-<lb />based, most being single-shot case<lb />studies.<lb /><lb />4. Emphasize state library and other<lb />cooperative research ventures.<lb /><lb />Recommendations include the sup-<lb />port of cooperative research efforts<lb />by the state library and the support<lb />of state library research efforts<lb />through consultation. Van Fleet and<lb />DurranceTT go on to note that many<lb />M.L.I.S. students and librarians are<lb />unaware of the role that state librar-<lb />ies play in the research process. The<lb />State Library of North Carolina�?<lb />takes a supportive role in the dissemi-<lb />nation of some research. Several<lb />studies conducted by the N.C. State<lb />Library Commission, such as one on<lb />oChildren, Teens, and Libraries� and<lb />another on the impact of school me-<lb />dia centers, is available on their Web<lb />site. Better communication between<lb />the State Library, library schools in<lb />the state, and the public library prac-<lb />titioners, is desirable. From the Web<lb />site it appears that while funding for<lb />public library research is not readily<lb />available from the State Library, it<lb />can facilitate research efforts through<lb />the excellent statistics accessible via<lb />their Web site.<lb /><lb />5. Develop a research perspective at<lb />the M.L.LS. level.<lb /><lb />Van Fleet and DurranceTs?! recom-<lb />mendations include integrating re-<lb />search literature and methodology<lb />into appropriate courses in the<lb />M.L.I.S. curriculum, encouraging in-<lb />dependent study and research for<lb />credit, involving students at the<lb />M.L.LS. level in faculty research, and<lb />establishing extracurricular activities<lb />such as forums and presentations<lb />with a research emphasis. All of these<lb />are very important recommenda-<lb />tions, and some have already been in-<lb />tegrated into the University of North<lb />Carolina at Greensboro (UNCG)<lb />M.L.I.S. curriculum. We would fur-<lb />ther like to note that this article is<lb />the collaboration of an LIS faculty<lb />member and a graduate student.<lb />Throughout the process of conduct-<lb />ing the research, time and effort was<lb />spent in the educational process of<lb /><lb />14 " Spring 2001<lb /><lb />learning how to do a solid piece of<lb />research.<lb /><lb />In conclusion, the current state of<lb />public library research would appear to<lb />be fairly healthy. But as the focus of<lb />many library schools evolves from em-<lb />phasizing the study of types of libraries<lb />toward a more general orientation, or<lb />towards the even more general informa-<lb />tion science track, it is possible that pub-<lb />lic library research will appear with even<lb />less frequency in the future. Practitio-<lb />ners will need to publish more, heed-<lb />ing WoodrumTs call to this professional<lb />obligation, and the public library com-<lb />munity will need to actively lobby LIS<lb />educators to conduct more public li-<lb />brary research. As has been noted by<lb />almost all the researchers who have ad-<lb />dressed the ogap� between what re-<lb />search is published and what practitio-<lb />ners need to know, more and better<lb />communication is the resolution to the<lb />problem. The five recommendations<lb />made by Van Fleet and Durrance need<lb />to be revisited and actively advanced by<lb />both LIS educators and public librarians.<lb />The public library world is an exciting<lb />one of excellent services and programs.<lb />This excellence needs to be documented<lb />and disseminated through more, not<lb />less research.<lb /><lb />Appendix A<lb /><lb />Peer reviewed journals that did not<lb />contain public library research, 1996-<lb />2000<lb />Behavioral and Social Sciences Librarian<lb />Cataloging and Classification Quarterly<lb />Catholic Library World<lb />Collection Building<lb />Collection Management<lb />Current Studies in Librarianship<lb />Government Information Quarterly<lb />Information Processing and Management<lb />Journal of Education for Librarianship<lb />Library Acquisitions<lb />Library Hi-Tech<lb />Library Resources and Technical Services<lb />Online and CD Rom Review<lb />References Services Review<lb />Serials Librarian<lb />Serials Review<lb />Technical Services Quarterly<lb /><lb />Peer Reviewed Journals Containing<lb />Public Library Research, 1996-2000<lb />and Abbreviations Used<lb /><lb />Information Technology and Libraries<lb />(ITL)<lb /><lb />Journal of the Association of Information<lb />Science (JASIS)<lb /><lb />Journal of Education in Library and In-<lb />formation Science (JELIS)<lb /><lb />Journal of Library Administration (JLA)<lb /><lb />Journal of Youth Services in Libraries<lb />(YSL)<lb /><lb />Libraries and Culture (L&amp;C)<lb /><lb />Library Quarterly (LQ)<lb /><lb />Library and Information Science Research<lb />(LISR)<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries (NCLibs)<lb /><lb />Public Libraries (PL)<lb /><lb />Public Library Quarterly (PLQ)<lb /><lb />Reference Librarian (RF)<lb /><lb />RQ or Reference and User Services Quar-<lb /><lb />terly (RQ)<lb /><lb />References<lb /><lb />1 Karen Chapman and Lee E. Pike,<lb />oPublic Librarians as Authors in the Li-<lb />brary Science Periodical Literature: An<lb />Examination and Profile,� Public Library<lb />Quarterly 13(1993): 47-61.<lb /><lb />2 Pat Woodrum, oPublish or Perish!<lb />But not in the Public Library,� Public Li-<lb />braries, 28(January/February, 1989): 28.<lb /><lb />3 Connie Van Fleet and Joan C.<lb />Durrance, oPublic Library Leaders and<lb />Research: Mechanisms, Perceptions, and<lb />Strategies,� Journal of Education for Li-<lb />brary and Information Science 34 (Spring<lb />1993): 137-152.<lb /><lb />4 Joy Greiner (ed), Research Issues in<lb />Public Librarianship: Trends for the Future.<lb />(Westport CT: Greenwood Press, 1994).<lb /><lb />5 Van Fleet and Durrance , 146-148.<lb /><lb />® Renee Tjoumas, oResearch Produc-<lb />tivity and Perceived Prestige of Profes-<lb />sional Journals: An Examination of<lb />Faculty Specializing in Public Lib-<lb />rarianship,� The Serials Librarian 25<lb />(1994): 65-81.<lb /><lb />7 Chapman and Pike, 47-49.<lb /><lb />8 Connie Van Fleet, oEvidence of<lb />Communicating among Public Librar-<lb />ians and Library and Information Sci-<lb />ence Educators in Public Library Journal<lb />Literature,� Library and Information Sci-<lb />ence Research 15 (1993): 257-274.<lb /><lb />° Ronald H. Powell, oRecent Trends<lb />in Research: A Methodological Essay,�<lb />Library and Information Science Research<lb />21 (1999): 91-119.<lb /><lb />10 Van Fleet and Durrance, 148.<lb /><lb />'l Powell, 92-93.<lb /><lb />2 Van Fleet and Durrance, 147-148.<lb /><lb />13 Woodrum, 28.<lb /><lb />'4 Van Fleet and Durrance, 148.<lb /><lb />15 Woodrum, 29.<lb /><lb />16 Van Fleet and Durrance, 148-149.<lb /><lb />7 http://nclaonline.org<lb /><lb />'8 http://www.pla.org<lb /><lb />!9 Van Fleet and Durrance,149.<lb /><lb />0 http://statelibrary.dcr.state.nc.us<lb /><lb />21 Van Fleet and Durrance, 149.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />From Research to Action<lb /><lb />in School Library Media Programs<lb /><lb />he research on the school li-<lb /><lb />brary media center program has<lb /><lb />been developed over a period of<lb /><lb />decades. School library media re-<lb /><lb />searchers over the years have used<lb /><lb />different strategies to achieve the<lb /><lb />goal of creating excellence in school<lb /><lb />library media programs. The degree<lb /><lb />to which that research has changed the<lb /><lb />building-level program, however, is<lb /><lb />questionable, and the amount of time<lb /><lb />that passes between proven strategies<lb /><lb />and implementation of those strategies<lb />is frustrating.<lb /><lb />Current research in the school li-<lb />brary media area is combined with na-<lb />tional guidelines built on improving aca-<lb />demic achievement. This research on the<lb />impact of school library media programs<lb />on academic achievement does much to<lb />outline the school library media pro-<lb />gram needed for todayTs students, yet<lb />the field is still struggling with issues<lb />such as scheduling, limited resources,<lb />and limited staffing " issues that have<lb />been studied for decades.<lb /><lb />The gap between the fully staffed<lb />school library media center with a<lb />wealth of technology and a neighboring<lb />school library with no technology, no<lb />budget, and minimal staffing makes one<lb />wonder what we have learned from uni-<lb />versity research. Journal articles and con-<lb />ference programs are filled with evi-<lb />dence of the value of the school library<lb />media program to the education of our<lb />children, but the research does not seem<lb />to affect a significant level of change in<lb />the way school libraries are structured,<lb />Staffed, and administered.<lb /><lb />This frustration is not unique to the<lb />library field. John Tillotson, in a recent<lb />article encouraging action research in<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />ts<lb /><lb />by Gail K. Dickinson<lb /><lb />the science classroom, noted that the<lb />problems in science education stem from<lb />an inability to take what is known about<lb />science education and implement it in<lb />the field.! Action research is a strategy<lb />that could turn this frustration into en-<lb />ergetic application, and merge the gap<lb />between university-level research and<lb />building-level practice.<lb /><lb />History of School Library Media<lb />Research<lb /><lb />Over the decades, three basic types of<lb />research into school library media pro-<lb />grams have emerged. Model programs<lb />research illustrates the implementation<lb />of library media center roles and tasks in<lb />real-life school settings. Research into<lb />input measures study what inputs, usu-<lb />ally budget, materials, and staffing, are<lb />typical in a school library media center.<lb />Most recently, research into output mea-<lb />sures focuses on the impact that school<lb />library media programs have on the edu-<lb />cational process. Each of these three<lb />types of school library media research<lb />has had opportunities to come to the<lb />forefront. Each has lent credibility to<lb />school library media center program de-<lb />sign; and each provides opportunities for<lb />furthering that research at the building<lb />level through action research.<lb /><lb />Before the action research potential<lb />for each of these areas, can be discussed,<lb />the possibilities and problems of action<lb />research is necessary.<lb /><lb />Action Research<lb /><lb />oYes, but,� oThat would never work<lb />here,� oNot on our budget,� are discour-<lb />aging phrases that can easily squelch<lb />planned changes in schools and libraries,<lb />even promising changes in terms of<lb /><lb />achieving the mission of the school li-<lb />brary media program. For instance, the<lb />type and amount of student reading has<lb />been positively linked to academic<lb />achievement. Stephen KrashenTs book<lb />The Power of Reading? is still a powerful<lb />motivational tool for instigating change<lb />in school library media programming to<lb />encourage more reading in schools. Fur-<lb />thermore, school library media research<lb />is now being linked directly to school<lb />library media programs, through the<lb />work of Keith Curry Lance,? focusing on<lb />the links between school library media<lb />programs and academic achievement.<lb /><lb />The question that school library<lb />media specialists may have is why this<lb />increasingly recognized research is not<lb />making a difference in their daily work<lb />with students and teachers. Flexible<lb />scheduling is another example of an is-<lb />sue that has been studied for years, yet<lb />school library media specialists still<lb />struggle to convince principals and<lb />teachers of the benefits to student learn-<lb />ing that the change would bring.<lb /><lb />The answer lies in the research lit-<lb />erature of change, especially school<lb />change. Robert Evans, in his book The<lb />Human Side of School Change, notes not<lb />only the difficulties of change, but also<lb />the benefits of resistance to change. Re-<lb />sistance to change ensures that there is<lb />stability in the organization, and that<lb />whims and fads will pass before imple-<lb />mentation occurs. Accepting resistance<lb />to change as a positive factor in the<lb />school setting does not mean that<lb />change cannot occur, only that there<lb />must first be a reason to change. He<lb />notes, oPeople must be sufficiently dis-<lb />satisfied with the present state of af-<lb />fairs " and their role in maintaining<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 " 19<lb /></p>
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        <p>it " or they have no reason to endure<lb />the losses and challenges of change.�*<lb /><lb />The question for school library me-<lb />dia specialists is not that others canTt see<lb />why a proposed change would benefit<lb />the school, or even that others do not<lb />agree with the change. The question is<lb />how to increase the dissatisfaction of<lb />their teaching peers and school admin-<lb />istration with the current state of affairs<lb />in their own school. Flexible scheduling<lb />is again a good example of this. It may<lb />be fairly easy to convince classroom<lb />teachers, principals, and parents of the<lb />advantages of flexible scheduling; how-<lb />ever, awareness, and even agreement<lb />with the issues may not be enough.<lb />Many times the school librarian is the<lb />only person dissatisfied with the sched-<lb />ule, while teachers, principals, students,<lb />and parents are very satisfied. The plan<lb />must not only be to make these stake-<lb />holders intellectually aware of the ben-<lb />efits of a reform such as flexible schedul-<lb />ing, but must also go further to encour-<lb />age the stakeholdersT personal dissatis-<lb />faction with the current system, so that<lb />they are willing to go through the<lb />change process.<lb /><lb />Action research is a strategy that can<lb />achieve this goal. Action research can<lb />turn the tide of negativity to a promising<lb />opportunity for positive change by cre-<lb />ating a research environment in which<lb />talk of improving academic achievement<lb />is brought to a localized reality in terms<lb />of oour� students, oour� test scores, and<lb />oour� teachers.<lb /><lb />Definition of Action Research<lb /><lb />Action research, sometimes also called<lb />teacher-as-researcher, has been de-<lb />scribed more often than defined. Glanz<lb />described it as oapplying traditional re-<lb />search approaches ... to real problems<lb />or issues facing the practitioner.� Gay®<lb />defines the purpose of action research as<lb />solving practical problems through the<lb />application of the scientific method.<lb />CalhounTs more formal definition of<lb />odisciplined inquiry (research) in the<lb />context of focused efforts to improve<lb />the quality of an organization and its<lb />performance (action)�� can be com-<lb />bined with the others, to achieve a defi-<lb />nition that action research is simply<lb />practitioners using research methods to<lb />solve problems and answer questions<lb />that they see in their everyday work in<lb />their local setting.<lb /><lb />Action research in the school library<lb />media center is a method for systematic<lb />evaluation of specific areas of the school<lb />library media program. Action research,<lb />when combined with nationally re-<lb /><lb />16 " Spring 2001<lb /><lb />ported research, can provide local con-<lb />text for the data. Most researchers agree,<lb />however, that action research cannot be<lb />generalized beyond the local level, and<lb />cannot substitute for systematic study by<lb />trained researchers. The school-library-<lb />media-specialist-as-researcher, however,<lb />can add to that national body of re-<lb />search by providing local context and<lb />local tests of implementation strategies.<lb /><lb />Steps in Action Research<lb /><lb />School library media specialists conduct<lb />research all the time. We have circula-<lb />tion data, we keep schedules and lists,<lb />and we talk to students, teachers, and<lb />parents. This data, however, is rarely sys-<lb />tematically collected and analyzed, and<lb />even more rarely applied to a specific<lb />problem. An action research agenda at<lb />the school or district level can use data<lb />already available to create change. The<lb />four basic steps in conducting action re-<lb />search are: selection of the research ques-<lb />tion, data collection, data analysis, and<lb />reporting of results.<lb /><lb />Selection of the Problem<lb /><lb />We may think we are surrounded by<lb />problems in the school library, but<lb />choosing an area for action research may<lb />prove difficult. Commonly heard con-<lb />cerns of school library media specialists<lb />may be the following:<lb /><lb />¢ I wish I had flexible scheduling.<lb /><lb />e My budget is too low (or nonex-<lb />istent).<lb /><lb />e The teachers donTt have time to<lb />collaborate.<lb /><lb />A successful action research problem (or<lb />question) is aligns with school goals,<lb />increases student learning, or positively<lb />impacts teaching strategies. A less suc-<lb />cessful action research problem is one<lb />that will only improve the efficiency of<lb />program administration within the li-<lb />brary media center. Choose an area of<lb />greatest concern; then conduct a litera-<lb />ture search to see what previously has<lb />been studied in that area.<lb /><lb />Data Collection<lb />As with scientific research, two types of<lb /><lb />action research data exist: quantitative<lb />data (numbers and statistics), and quali-<lb />tative (what is read, heard, or said). Li-<lb />braries have always collected quantita-<lb />tive data. Circulation statistics, budget<lb />reports, and attendance totals have<lb />been collected and reported for years.<lb />Ironically, with the use of automated<lb />catalogs, the availability of such data<lb />may have decreased, since circulation<lb />records may be deleted at the end of<lb />each school year.<lb /><lb />Test data may be available for the ac-<lb /><lb />tion researcher. It may be possible to<lb />compare aggragated reading test scores<lb />with aggragated circulation records to<lb />discover the effectiveness of a reading<lb />initiative such as a book talking program<lb />for 4th graders, or to remove checkout<lb />limits for certain classes.<lb /><lb />Qualitative data are also useful. In<lb />scientific research, qualitative data are<lb />comprised of interviews or observations.<lb />The same concepts are true in action re-<lb />search, except that gathering methods<lb />may be more informal. To test the value<lb />of a library orientation program for new<lb />students, a high school library media<lb />specialist may develop a student opinion<lb />survey; however, the library media spe-<lb />cialist may also observe classes doing re-<lb />search in the library and make notes as<lb />to research behaviors that the students<lb />may have learned during orientation.<lb />Overheard comments and informal dis-<lb />cussions with students may be noted in<lb />a journal. Library staff and classroom<lb />teachers can be invaluable partners in<lb />the gathering of qualitative data; the<lb />data, however, must be systematically<lb />gathered and written down for future<lb />reference.<lb /><lb />Data Analysis<lb />Data analysis is not always statistical,<lb />although in some cases this may be help-<lb />ful. Remember that action research usu-<lb />ally cannot be generalized, which means<lb />that it cannot be applied beyond the lo-<lb />cal school setting. Rather than being a<lb />limitation, the lack of generalizability<lb />can be a strength, and give even more<lb />meaning to the results at the local level,<lb />since statistics most meaningful to the<lb />local school setting, such as to special<lb />program area teachers or within class-<lb />room special projects, can be used.<lb />Data can be analyzed using a simple<lb />spreadsheet chart, showing the differ-<lb />ence in scores, numbers of items<lb />checked out, or other numeric data.<lb />Qualitative data can be analyzed using<lb />numbers as well, by dividing the com-<lb />ments or pieces of observations into cat-<lb />egories, and then counting the times<lb />each category is mentioned. Use of anec-<lb />dotal comments based on the qualitative<lb />data is helpful to draw a visual picture of<lb />the use of the library media center.<lb /><lb />Reporting of Results<lb /><lb />Usually the results of action research are<lb />used in a report directed to administra-<lb />tion, or in a staff development program.<lb />Publication of the results in a newsletter<lb />or journal devoted to practical tips<lb />should be encouraged. By using these<lb />journals, practitioners are encouraged to<lb />try action research themselves. A com-<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />
          <lb />posite picture of a typical class using the<lb />library media center, for example, could<lb />draw from observations, student sur-<lb />veys, and teacher interviews to illustrate<lb />the value of the school library program<lb />in the teaching and learning processes of<lb />the school.<lb /><lb />These four basic steps " identifica-<lb />tion of the research question, collection<lb />of data, analysis of data, and reporting of<lb />results " are repeated in a variety of ac-<lb />tion research projects. The results are ap-<lb />plicable only to the specific school; how-<lb />ever, if enough action research is per-<lb />formed at the local school setting and<lb />reported regionally and nationally<lb />through journal articles and conference<lb />presentations, the resulting change will<lb />have a resounding impact on the school<lb />library media program development.<lb /><lb />Collaborative action research, con-<lb />ducted with several other partners<lb />within the school, also strengthens the<lb />meaning of the data. Since several per-<lb />spectives are used at each step of the pro-<lb />cess, the results are more easily seen as<lb />fact rather than opinion. Collaborative<lb />action research also can include several<lb />schools gathering the same types of data.<lb />Although still not generalizable beyond<lb />these schools, the data tends to be seen<lb />as having more legitmacy. Collaborative<lb />action research programs also can be<lb />conducted under the auspices of a uni-<lb />versity research program. This type of<lb />research can add controls to the program<lb />to generate more general results.<lb /><lb />Applying Action Research<lb />Strategies to National Research<lb /><lb />Initiatives<lb /><lb />As described earlier, three types of school<lb />library research that have been con-<lb />ducted over the years involve the use of<lb />model program, input measures, and<lb />output measures. Action research can be<lb />applied to each of these national re-<lb />search trends.<lb /><lb />Model Programs<lb /><lb />The Knapp School Library Project,® in<lb />the mid-1960s is seen as the first wide-<lb />spread model program for school library<lb />media centers. Model elementary and<lb />secondary school libraries were devel-<lb />oped at specific sites across the country,<lb />and grants were used to encourage visi-<lb />tation to these sites. Knapp funds also<lb />were used in the training of school li-<lb />brary media specialists, and with the Li-<lb />brary Manpower Project, to delineate<lb />the tasks and activities in the school li-<lb />brary media center. Findings from the<lb />Knapp Project were used to determine<lb />appropriate staffing levels, collection<lb />sizes, and activities for school library<lb />programs. The Knapp project helped to<lb />change the perception of a library as a<lb />book collection to one that included a<lb />variety of formats, was staffed profes-<lb />sionally, and could function as the heart<lb />of the school.<lb /><lb />Library Power, from the Dewitt<lb />Wallace ReaderTs Digest fund, is fre-<lb />quently hailed as the modern version of<lb />the Knapp School Library Project. Li-<lb />brary Power funded programs of excel-<lb />lence dependent on flexible scheduling,<lb />staff development to encourage collabo-<lb />rative teaching and learning, and money<lb />for facilities and collections. Tastad and<lb />Tallman? studied the impact of Library<lb />Power on two schools over a period of<lb />three years. They identified three goals<lb />of Library Power: developing a stronger<lb />curricular role for the school library<lb />media specialist, developing learner-cen-<lb />tered libraries, and developing a school<lb />culture to sustain reform. Library Power<lb />was most successful in school settings<lb />where the school library media special-<lb />ist became a partner with administrators<lb />and teachers to achieve whole-school re-<lb />form. A major investment in time and<lb />money was placed in staff development<lb />activities. Authentic assessment meth-<lb />ods were strengthened, with the library<lb /><lb />media center as a learning laboratory for<lb />authentic, student-centered learning.<lb />Teachers were encouraged to move from<lb />traditional desk-bound instruction to<lb />using a variety of instructional resources<lb />and strategies.<lb /><lb />These two examples of model pro-<lb />gram research show how this research<lb />places the school library media center<lb />into whole school reform. The Knapp<lb />School Library Project encouraged the<lb />development of school libraries, and Li-<lb />brary Power turned the participating<lb />school library media programs into<lb />learning laboratories for whole school<lb />reform.<lb /><lb />Model program research takes the<lb />ideal of what a school library media pro-<lb />gram can achieve and places it into a<lb />real-life setting in an attempt to encour-<lb />age replication of the structure and ac-<lb />tivities. Visitation to the sites and publi-<lb />cation of the findings of these activities<lb />does much to encourage replication. Un-<lb />fortunately, there is little in the literature<lb />to show that visitors to these sites at-<lb />tempt action research to duplicate re-<lb />forms in their own schools. This would<lb />add to our knowledge of the importance<lb />of model programs, and strengthen the<lb />knowledge of whether money, staff de-<lb />velopment, or policy changes does most<lb />to create the model programs.<lb /><lb />Model programs action research re-<lb />quires gathering a variety of data. Action<lb />researchers should first select an area of<lb />the model program for study, such as<lb />collaboration with teachers. A baseline<lb />should be established by describing the<lb />present degree and amount of collabora-<lb />tion. A survey to ascertain teacher atti-<lb />tudes toward collaboration is helpful. A<lb />review of research literature on collabo-<lb />ration may suggest possible strategies,<lb />including direct approach to teachers<lb />through one-on-one discussion, staff<lb />development presentations to grade lev-<lb />els and department chairs, and whole<lb /><lb />CURRENT EDITIONS, INC.<lb /><lb />858 Manor Street<lb />Lancaster, PA 17603<lb /><lb />WHOLESALERS<lb /><lb />TO LIBRARIES<lb /><lb />1-800-959-1672<lb />1-800-487-2278 (FAX)<lb /><lb />oSupport North Carolina Libraries�<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 " 17<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>school approaches, including program<lb />advocacy techniques such as newsletters<lb />and whole school staff development.<lb /><lb />As the collaborative effort unfolds,<lb />careful recording of observations, per-<lb />sonal reflections, and records of conver-<lb />sations with teachers, parents, students,<lb />and administrators are helpful. Do not<lb />rely on your memory. A specific time<lb />period, perhaps a semester or a complete<lb />school year, must be established at the<lb />beginning of the action research project,<lb />so that the data collection period has a<lb />definite beginning and end.<lb /><lb />Each strategy implemented needs to<lb />be documented and its success evalu-<lb />ated. At the end of each time period,<lb />data must be collated and categorized.<lb />The reporting of this type of action re-<lb />search is very appropriate for a journal<lb />article. Action research personalizes<lb />theoretical research, and the personal<lb />reflections and issues, carefully docu-<lb />mented and observed, are helpful in rep-<lb />licating and implementing university<lb />research, especially in the implementa-<lb />tion of person-to-person reforms such as<lb />collaborative instructional efforts.<lb /><lb />Input Measures<lb /><lb />In the 1970s, the publication of Media<lb />Programs, District and School'® reflected<lb />the high point of the use of input mea-<lb />sures for school library media programs.<lb />This publication offered qualitative goals<lb />for the school library media program<lb />and quantitative statements for the<lb />number of items in school library media<lb />collections. A specific number of books<lb />and equipment per student was used as<lb />an ideal, and although few schools<lb />reached the numeric totals outlined in<lb />Media Programs, the standards given<lb />were helpful to school library media spe-<lb />cialists building an integrated collection<lb />of print and nonprint materials.<lb /><lb />Another type of input measure is<lb />Marilyn MillerTs research in conjunction<lb />with other researchers on school library<lb />budgets. The Miller studies, published<lb />in School Library Journal beginning in<lb />the early 1980s and continuing bienni-<lb />ally,!1 give an overview of the budget<lb />money school library media programs<lb />were receiving, and the types and num-<lb />bers of materials purchased with these<lb />funds. These studies give the budding<lb />action researcher valuable tools for as-<lb />sessing their local school budgets.<lb /><lb />A more recent input measures is the<lb />National Center for Education Statistics<lb />publication on School Library Media Cen-<lb />ters, 1993-94.!2 The National School<lb />and Staffing Survey (SASS) regularly<lb />gathers data on public and private<lb /><lb />18 " Spring 2001<lb /><lb />schools. For the first time, the survey<lb />gathered information on school library<lb />media centers as well. This survey, avail-<lb />able online and in print, gives informa-<lb />tion on budget, collections, and library<lb />media center activities.<lb /><lb />The reliance on input measures is<lb />still evident in guidelines such as South-<lb />ern Association of Schools and Colleges<lb />(SACS), and in state level guidelines as<lb />well. Action research can give the<lb />school library media specialist valuable<lb />information for assessing local budget,<lb />collections, and support for typical li-<lb />brary media center activities such as<lb />serving on planning teams and working<lb />collaboratively with teachers.<lb /><lb />Action research can easily be ap-<lb />plied to input measures to bring na-<lb />tional data to the school level. Using<lb />the SASS data, or the latest Miller-<lb />Shontz survey, school library media spe-<lb />cialists can compare data such as bud-<lb />get, or numbers of books purchased.<lb />For comparison purposes, the same<lb />types of data about your school and<lb />your school library media center should<lb />be gathered. Typical data comparison<lb />points are the following:<lb /><lb />e Enrollment " Use the official<lb />enrollment figure reported to the<lb />state education agency. The princi-<lb />pal office staff should know or be<lb />able to find this figure easily.<lb /><lb />e Budget figures " How much was<lb />spent during the previous school<lb />year, and for what? Divide the total<lb />amount spent on books by the<lb />official enrollment figure to ascer-<lb />tain the amount spent per pupil for<lb />each category of spending.<lb /><lb />¢ Materials purchased " The number<lb />of materials purchased in each<lb />category (books, periodical subscrip-<lb />tions, software, etc.) should be<lb />totaled. Dividing the number of<lb />materials purchased in each cat-<lb />egory produces the average price per<lb />item, an important key to justifying<lb />the numbers of items needed.<lb /><lb />Once these figures are obtained, the<lb />national data is reviewed to find schools<lb />of similar size, similar diversity levels,<lb />and similar levels. The data is compared,<lb />and the results reported in chart or<lb />graph form. Numbers alone are just<lb />numbers, so the stories behind the<lb />data " what it means to have an ad-<lb />equate collection, budget, or staff "<lb />should also be reported.<lb /><lb />Output Measures<lb /><lb />The more recent research into school li-<lb />brary media programming parallels to<lb /><lb />the changing role of the school library<lb />media specialist, and general direction<lb />of education. Accountability, more than<lb />a buzzword, has become the aim unto<lb />itself, with a strong reliance on stan-<lb />dardized testing. The impact of school<lb />library media center programs on aca-<lb />demic achievement is the focus of more<lb />recent school library media center re-<lb />search.<lb /><lb />This type of measure is the most<lb />valuable to research at the local school<lb />level. If school library media centers<lb />were widely accepted as crucial to stu-<lb />dent success, perhaps input measures<lb />and model programs research would in-<lb />crease as well.<lb /><lb />Keith Curry Lance is by far the<lb />strongest advocate of this type of re-<lb />search. Lance began this research with<lb />a Colorado study testing links between<lb />elements of school library media pro-<lb />grams and academic achievement, spe-<lb />cifically student performance on a Colo-<lb />rado achievement test. Lance discov-<lb />ered that school library media center<lb />funding and instructional activities of<lb />the school library media specialist did<lb />have a positive impact on student<lb />achievement.!* Lance has tested this<lb />research in different states, all with<lb />strong positive results.!4<lb /><lb />Action research applied to his stud-<lb />ies can take the statewide results and<lb />compare them with the local results.<lb /><lb />This type of action research is more<lb />difficult to do in the school, mainly be-<lb />cause it involves people other than the<lb />school library media specialist. Obtain-<lb />ing student records, test scores, and<lb />analysis of test question items may be<lb />difficult for the school library media<lb />specialist or, in some cases, be pre-<lb />vented by school policy.<lb /><lb />Still, cooperation of classroom<lb />teachers will be extremely helpful, espe-<lb />cially in the use of in-class assessments.<lb />With output measures research, the<lb />choice of a research question is critical.<lb />What is the library media center pro-<lb />gram trying to impact? Student achieve-<lb />ment as a broad topic must be narrowed<lb />to a specific subject area, specific grade<lb />levels, or even a specific classroom. For<lb />instance, when testing a reading en-<lb />coutagement program and the effect on<lb />reading scores, the library media spe-<lb />cialist must know the average increase<lb />of reading test scores from one test pe-<lb />riod (end of year) to the next test period<lb />for the same group of students. If stu-<lb />dents in 4th grade generally improve<lb />one grade level in reading to the end of<lb />5th grade, the library media specialist<lb />can then assess whether the implemen-<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>tation of a reading improvement pro-<lb />gram can improve this.<lb /><lb />Issues in Action Research<lb /><lb />Despite the growing popularity of action<lb />research in teacher education and train-<lb />ing, many researchers dispute the effec-<lb />tiveness and the wisdom of conducting<lb />such research. Researchers claim that<lb />action research, instead of assisting in<lb />the implementation of research-based<lb />change, may slow that implementation<lb />by watering down the results with un-<lb />controlled quasi-research efforts. Cer-<lb />tainly there are issues with action re-<lb />search that the beginning library media<lb />specialist as researcher must consider.<lb /><lb />Confidentiality<lb /><lb />The legal ramifications of a breach of<lb />confidentiality of student records must<lb />be paramount in the action researcherTs<lb />research design. Protecting the privacy<lb />of individual students and of individual<lb />teachers is an obvious need. Teacher<lb />comments must be confidential. Student<lb />comments, records, and other data<lb />should be treated with extreme care and<lb />within school district policy. Action re-<lb />search involving students and teachers<lb />should be approved by school district<lb />authorities or in conjunction with a uni-<lb />versity human subjects review board.<lb /><lb />Before beginning any type of action<lb />research, the researcher should develop<lb />a proposal indicating research goals,<lb />questions to be considered, data to be<lb />collected, probability analysis, and how<lb />results will be shared.<lb /><lb />Generalizing Results<lb /><lb />The validity of research depends on the<lb />ability of the researcher to control the<lb />environment. Control of variables that<lb />may affect the research outcome, use of<lb />sampling techniques to identify partici-<lb />pants, and strict adherence to qualitative<lb />research methods techniques are crucial<lb />elements in research. These same ele-<lb />ments will probably not be used in ac-<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />* 19 Years of Service<lb /><lb />e oHands On� Selection<lb /><lb />* Pre-School Through Adult<lb /><lb />* Discounts up to 70% Off<lb /><lb />* Now Two Adjacent Warehouses<lb />* Sturdy Library Bindings<lb /><lb />° 100% Fill<lb /><lb />* Cataloging/Processing Available<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />(904) 737-2649<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />* Over 21,000 Current &amp; Backlist Titles<lb /><lb />tion research. The action researcher con-<lb />centrates on the local school setting.<lb />Convenience sampling is used to iden-<lb />tify respondents, meaning that the<lb />school library media specialists may<lb />choose a grade level most likely to re-<lb />spond, or with whom they have a previ-<lb />ous relationship. Finally, most school li-<lb />brary media specialists are not trained in<lb />research techniques. For these reasons,<lb />action research usually is not easy to<lb />generalize because the results only apply<lb />in the context of one school setting.<lb /><lb />Conclusion<lb /><lb />Notwithstanding the above cautions,<lb />the value of action research to the school<lb />library media profession cannot be over-<lb />stated. The school library field has<lb />reached a level of maturity based on<lb />sound research findings underscoring<lb />the value of the school library media<lb />program in the educational process.<lb />These findings are widely reported in the<lb />school library media field. Action re-<lb />search is a tool for the school library<lb />media practitioner to give local school<lb />context to those research findings, so<lb />that school- and district-level decision-<lb />makers place the school library media<lb />center at the heart of the educational<lb />process in our schools.<lb /><lb />References<lb /><lb />1 John W. Tillotson, oStudying the<lb />Game: Action Research in Science Edu-<lb />cation,� Clearing House 10 (September<lb />2000): 31.<lb /><lb />2 Stephen Krashen, The Power of<lb />Reading; Insights from the Research<lb />(Englewood, CO: Libraries Unlimited,<lb />1993).<lb /><lb />3 Keith Curry Lance, oThe Impact of<lb />School Media Centers on Academic<lb />Achievement,� School Library Media<lb />Quarterly 22 (Spring 1994).<lb /><lb />4 Robert Evans, The Human Side of<lb />School Change; Reform, Resistance, and<lb />the Real-Life Problems of Innovation, (San<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />Nothing like seeing<lb />for yourself.�<lb /><lb />MUMFORD LIBRARY BOOKS, SOUTHEAST, INC.<lb />7847 Bayberry Road ¢ Jacksonville, Florida 32256<lb /><lb />FAX: (904) 730-8913<lb /><lb />MUMFORD<lb /><lb />RELIABLE WHOLESALER SINCE 1977<lb /><lb />North Carolina Representative " Phil May<lb /><lb />Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1996), 57.<lb /><lb />5 Jeffrey Glanz, oA Primer on Action<lb />Research for the School Administra-<lb />tor,� The Clearing House 72 (May-June,<lb />1999): 301.<lb /><lb />6 L. R. Gay, Educational Research:<lb />Competencies for Analysis and Applica-<lb />tion, (Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall,<lb />iIDSsyy Aloe<lb /><lb />7 Emily F. Calhoun, oAction Re-<lb />search: Three Approaches,� Educational<lb />Leadership 51 (October 1993): 62.<lb /><lb />8 John T. Gillespie and Diane<lb />Gillespie. Administering the School Li-<lb />brary Media Center. (New York: Bowker,<lb />1983), 12,74.<lb /><lb />9 Shirley Tastad and Julie Tallman,<lb />oLibrary Power: Vehicle for Change,�<lb />Knowledge Quest 26 (Jan./Feb. 1998): 17-<lb />Ze<lb /><lb />10 American Association of School Li-<lb />brarians, and Association for Educa-<lb />tional Communications and Technol-<lb />ogy, Media Programs, District and School<lb />(Washington, DC: ALA/AECT) 1975.<lb /><lb />11 For the latest reported survey, see<lb />Marilyn L. Miller and Marilyn L. Shontz<lb />oSmall Change: Expenditures for Re-<lb />sources in School Library Media Cen-<lb />ters: FY 1995-1996,� School Library Jour-<lb />nal 43 (October 1997): 28-30.<lb /><lb />12 National Center for Education Sta-<lb />tistics, School Library Media Centers:<lb />1993-94 (U.S. Department of Education,<lb />Office of Educational Research and Im-<lb />provement), August 1998.<lb /><lb />13 Keith Curry Lance, Lynda Welborn,<lb />and Christine Hamilton-Pennell, The<lb />Impact of School Library Media Center on<lb />Acamenic Achievement (Denver, CO:<lb />Colorado State Department of Educa-<lb />tion and the State Library and Adult<lb />Education Office). ERIC Document Re-<lb />production Service. 1990. ED353989.<lb /><lb />14 Lance has continued his original<lb />Colorado research and is replicating it<lb />throughout the nation. For updated<lb />studies on school library research, visit<lb />his Web site at www.Irs.org.<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />1-800-367-3927<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 " 19<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Collaborative Authorship in<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries:<lb /><lb />Past, Present, and Future<lb /><lb />n popular imagination, research<lb />and creativity bring to mind the<lb />efforts of the single individual<lb /><lb />working passionately in a given<lb />field, sharing the fruits of this la-<lb />bor, and increasing our understand-<lb />ing of the world. Many examples of<lb />these individuals can be cited from<lb />many disciplines. A major revolution in<lb />physics began in 1905 with the publi-<lb />cation of four research articles by Albert<lb />Einstein in Annalen der Physik. Alone on<lb />the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Tan-<lb />zania, Jane Goodall has spent decades<lb />observing chimpanzee behavior and has<lb />published several substantial books<lb />about her study of these primates. Us-<lb />ing paper, high-quality ink for his foun-<lb />tain pen, and a blotter, Shelby Foote<lb />penned his 1,650,000-word history, The<lb />Civil War: A Narrative.<lb /><lb />Yet we are also familiar with admi-<lb />rable examples of creative collaboration.<lb />Chemists Pierre and Marie Curie worked<lb />closely together in their Parisian labo-<lb />ratory to unravel the mysteries of ra-<lb />dium. The teamwork of Wilbur and<lb />Orville Wright resulted in the invention<lb />of the airplane. The unlikely partnership<lb />of a British physicist, Francis Crick, and<lb />an American zoologist, Thomas Watson,<lb />led to the discovery of the molecular<lb />structure of DNA. Clearly, collaboration<lb />between two or more individuals has re-<lb />sulted in accomplishments of the high-<lb />est degree of research and creativity.<lb /><lb />Although practicing librarians are<lb />not seeking out the secrets of radium or<lb />of DNA, we can experience the satisfac-<lb /><lb />20 " Spring 2001<lb /><lb />by Margaret Foote<lb /><lb />tion of working with others in pursu-<lb />ing research. How much collaboration<lb />takes place in library research? Do we<lb />prefer to work alone and publish our<lb />results singly, or does collaboration take<lb />place more often than we realize? As will<lb />be seen below, collaboration in library<lb />research has itself been a topic of re-<lb />search, but generally that study has been<lb />confined to several of the core academic<lb />journals within the field. Little atten-<lb />tion has been given to collaborative ar-<lb />ticles in state journals.<lb /><lb />Thus the first purpose of this study<lb />is to answer several questions about col-<lb />laborative authorship within a state<lb />journal, and the journal chosen for<lb />study is North Carolina Libraries. First,<lb />how many articles within a selected<lb />number of volumes of North Carolina<lb />Libraries are of sole authorship, and how<lb />many are of multiple authorship? What<lb />percentage of the total number of ar-<lb />ticles is of sole authorship and what<lb />percentage is of multiple authorship?<lb />How do these percentages compare with<lb />the results of research about collabora-<lb />tion in academic journals? Second, what<lb />can we learn about the collaborators?<lb />Do academic librarians collaborate only<lb />with other academic librarians, or does<lb />collaboration exist between different<lb />types of librarians? Do any of the col-<lb />laborators work at the same library, or<lb />do they work at different libraries?<lb /><lb />This study has a second purpose as<lb />well: to inform readers of North Caro-<lb />lina Libraries about collaboration in re-<lb />search and publication. What are the<lb /><lb />benefits of collaboration? What are the<lb />pitfalls? Finally, should collaboration be<lb />encouraged among future authors sub-<lb />mitting articles to North Carolina Librar-<lb />ies and, by extension, other state and<lb />regional journals?<lb /><lb />Literature Review<lb /><lb />WebsterTs Dictionary defines the verb<lb />ocollaborate� to mean oto work to-<lb />gether, especially in a joint intellectual<lb />effort.�! Ann E. Austin and Roger G.<lb />Baldwin, who have written about the<lb />role of collaboration in research, schol-<lb />arship, and teaching in higher educa-<lb />tion, state that opeople who collaborate<lb />work closely together and share mutual<lb />responsibility for their joint endeavor.<lb />According to this conceptualization,<lb />collaboration not only involves coop-<lb />erative action. It emerges from shared<lb />goals and leads to outcomes that ben-<lb />efit all partners.��<lb /><lb />Alice Harrison Bahr and Mickey<lb />Zemon note that for many decades in-<lb />creases in coauthored and multi-<lb />authored articles ohave been dramati-<lb />cally transforming the literature� of<lb />both the hard and the social sciences.?<lb />Austin and Baldwin report that othe so-<lb />called ~hardT sciences (chemistry, phys-<lb />ics, for example) are at the high end of<lb />the collaboration spectrum, the ~softT<lb />sciences (like sociology and political sci-<lb />ence) at the low end. Collaboration is<lb />not widespread in the humanities.�4<lb />The authors conclude that othe nature<lb />and the frequency of collaboration vary<lb />across disciplines. Contrary to conven-<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />tional wisdom, however, collaboration<lb />occurs in virtually all fields of study.�®<lb /><lb />How is collaboration perceived in<lb />the field of librarianship? Edgar<lb />Williamson and Josephine B.<lb />Williamson are of the opinion that the<lb />idea of collaboration has had a negative<lb />connotation for librarians. oIronically,<lb />librarianship, whose very reason for be-<lb />ing is to communicate ideas and infor-<lb />mation, comes late to an understand-<lb />ing of the significance of collaboration<lb />in its own field.�© They remark that<lb />omany librarians seem to think that col-<lb />laboration is a sign of poor scholarship,<lb />that such authors are not clever enough<lb />or dedicated enough to complete a<lb />scholarly article on their own.�� Within<lb />other disciplines, however, omany<lb />analyses of multiple authorship center<lb />on the idea that an increasing propor-<lb />tion of such articles in a field is a posi-<lb />tive sign for the scholarly growth of that<lb />field.�® Bahr and Zemon write that oli-<lb />brary science journals are just beginning<lb />to note increases in co- and<lb />multiauthored articles.�? They report<lb />the continuing trend towards collabo-<lb />ration in the scientific disciplines, and<lb />state that othe same trends are now evi-<lb />dent in library science.�!°<lb /><lb />Some study of collaborative efforts<lb />in library research has been made, espe-<lb />cially as part of larger studies about au-<lb />thorship in general. In her study of au-<lb />thorship in library research, Lois Buttlar<lb />analyzed 1,725 articles from sixteen li-<lb />brary journals; she reports that approxi-<lb />mately 27.9% of these articles are by two<lb />or more authors.!! Peter Hernon, Allen<lb />Smith, and Mary Bailey Croxen exam-<lb />ined the accepted, rejected, and pub-<lb />lished papers of College and Research Li-<lb />braries from 1980 through 1991. They<lb />found that omore than one-third<lb />(35.1%) of the accepted papers had more<lb />than one author.�!2 Weller, Hurd, and<lb />Wiberley studied the publication pat-<lb />terns of academic librarians from the<lb />period 1993 to 1997, examining 3,624<lb />peer-reviewed articles from thirty-two<lb />library science journals. Among the<lb />questions they asked about the publica-<lb />tion patterns was the frequency of sole<lb />authorship and coauthorship among<lb />academic librarians.!? Their data reveal<lb />that of the oarticles by academic librar-<lb />ians, 869 (55%) were that of the single-<lb />authored works.� The remaining 710<lb />articles (45%) had two or more au-<lb />thors.� !4 In another study, Peter Hernon<lb />and Candy Schwartz reviewed the con-<lb />tents of the first twenty volumes of Li-<lb />brary and Information Science Research,<lb />and found that oof the 353 articles which<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />have appeared in the journal, 238<lb />(67.4%) were by one author, 82 (23.2%)<lb />by two authors, 21 (6%) by three, 10<lb />(2.8%) by four, and 2 (.6%) had five au-<lb />thors.� !5 The total percentage of articles<lb />by multiple authors comes to 32.6%.<lb />Williamson and Williamson have<lb />investigated multiple authorship within<lb />state and regional journals. They exam-<lb />ined articles from five southeastern jour-<lb />nals: Southeastern Librarian, South Caro-<lb />lina Librarian, North Carolina Libraries,<lb />Georgia Librarian, and Tennessee Librar-<lb />ian. The authors chose to investigate<lb />volumes of these journals published be-<lb />tween 1977 and 1986. The percentage<lb />of multiple authorship was relatively<lb />low within each journal: 19.4% (South<lb />Carolina Librarian), 19% (Southeastern Li-<lb />brarian), 14.3% (Tennessee Librarian),<lb />12.6% (Georgia Librarian) and 10%<lb />(North Carolina Libraries).'° The authors<lb />speculate that the olower multiple au-<lb />thorship, especially in state journals,<lb />may be due to the fact that a greater<lb />percentage of their authors are new au-<lb />thors. They may not be established<lb />enough to be collaborating, getting<lb />grants or heading research efforts. At the<lb />same time, many such authors may be<lb />at small libraries, thus making the pos-<lb />sibility of collaboration less likely.� 17<lb /><lb />Methodology<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries, the quarterly<lb />journal of the North Carolina Library<lb />Association, was selected for this study<lb />of collaborative efforts within a state li-<lb />brary journal. This journal oseeks to<lb />publish articles, materials reviews, and<lb />bibliographies of professional interest to<lb />librarians in North Carolina. Articles<lb />need not be necessarily of a scholarly<lb />nature, but they should address profes-<lb />sional concerns of the library commu-<lb />nity in the state.�!* Each manuscript<lb />submitted to North Carolina Libraries is<lb />reviewed by the editor and two jurors<lb />before a decision is made whether or not<lb />to publish the submitted manuscript.<lb />The articles within each issue of<lb />North Carolina Libraries concentrate<lb />upon a topic of importance to librarians<lb />throughout the state. Themes of recent<lb />issues illustrate many aspects of the field<lb />that interest North Carolina librarians<lb />in their daily work. Such themes include<lb />leadership in libraries, young adult ser-<lb />vices, security and safety concerns, in-<lb />formation ethics, social issues in<lb />librarianship, government information,<lb />library telecommunication, resource<lb />sharing, and outreach. Sometimes issues<lb />focus upon libraries and their roles<lb />within the stateTs culture, offering a<lb /><lb />closer look at the preservation of popu-<lb />lar culture, the community of the book,<lb />and North Carolina writers. In several<lb />issues North Carolina Libraries has turned<lb />its attention to the profession itself, re-<lb />viewing the history of libraries within<lb />the state and remembering the innova-<lb />tors within the stateTs libraries. Every<lb />other year the fourth issue within a vol-<lb />ume presents a series of reports about<lb />the AssociationTs biennial conference.<lb /><lb />Ten volumes of North Carolina Li-<lb />braries were examined for data about<lb />collaborative efforts within a state jour-<lb />nal. The ten selected volumes (48-57)<lb />were published from 1990 through<lb />1999. Two issues were omitted from the<lb />study. The first, volume 48, number 1<lb />(Spring 1990), has as its theme oLibrary<lb />Humor,� and consists of a delightful set<lb />of short, humorous articles. The other,<lb />volume 56, number 2 (Summer 1998),<lb />presents a set of oral histories of North<lb />Carolina librarianship. After excluding<lb />these two issues, a total of thirty-eight<lb />issues remain to be examined for the au-<lb />thorship of its articles.<lb /><lb />Within each issue the articles con-<lb />cerning the theme of the issue were in-<lb />cluded in the study, as were articles pub-<lb />lished under the title oAnd In Edition.�<lb />The theme articles, as well as oAnd In<lb />Edition� articles, present researched in-<lb />formation. Excluded from the study are<lb />regularly featured columns, such as<lb />oPoint,� oCounterpoint,� oWired to the<lb />World,� and oLibrary Research in North<lb />Carolina,� pictorial essays, bibliographic<lb />essays, book reviews, columns by NCLA<lb />presidents, letters to the editor, and con-<lb />ference reports.<lb /><lb />Results<lb /><lb />Based on the criteria presented above, a<lb />total of 227 articles appeared in North<lb />Carolina Libraries between 1990 and<lb />1999. The number of these articles by<lb />single authors comes to 197; articles by<lb />multiple authors comes to 30. The<lb />percentage of articles by single authors<lb />is 86.8%, that of multiple authors,<lb />13.2%. Data about the articles by mul-<lb />tiple authors can be broken down fur-<lb />ther. The majority of these articles are<lb />by two authors; in fact, twenty-eight ar-<lb />ticles, or 93.4%, are coauthored. One<lb />article (3.3%) is by three authors, and<lb />one article (3.3%) is by five authors.<lb />Who are the authors of the thirty<lb />collaborative articles found in North<lb />Carolina Libraries? The total number of<lb />authors comes to sixty-four, and they<lb />represent a wide range of librarians and<lb />other professionals coming together to<lb />present information to their colleagues<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 " 21<lb /></p>
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          <lb />in North Carolina. By far the largest<lb />number of authors, twenty-six, are aca-<lb />demic librarians, academic institutions<lb />comprising, in this case, universities,<lb />colleges, and community colleges. That<lb />the largest group of authors should be<lb />academic librarians is not surprising,<lb />given that academic librarians must of-<lb />ten establish a record of scholarly re-<lb />search to achieve tenure and promotion.<lb />The next largest group of authors are<lb />public librarians, at fifteen. Seven me-<lb />dia coordinators, five library school fac-<lb />ulty, two corporate librarians, one state<lb />librarian, and one library science stu-<lb />dent coauthored articles. The occupa-<lb />tion of oneT author was not given.<lb /><lb />The six remaining authors are not<lb />librarians. Four of these authors are as-<lb />sociated with a state university: an asso-<lb />ciate professor of a school of education,<lb />an assistant to a vice chancellor for aca-<lb />demic affairs, a director of an ergonom-<lb />ics program, and an associate professor<lb />from a division of physical therapy. The<lb />remaining two authors are an architect<lb />and a coordinator of television program-<lb />ming at an educational center.<lb /><lb />Eighteen articles, more than half<lb />the total of coauthored articles under<lb />investigation, are written by collabora-<lb />tive partners within the same field of<lb />librarianship. Both multiauthored ar-<lb />ticles consist of authors from academic<lb />libraries. There are six coauthored ar-<lb />ticles as well by academic librarians, and<lb />six coauthored articles by pairs of pub-<lb />lic librarians. Two articles are each writ-<lb />ten by a pair of media coordinators, and<lb />one article is by the two corporate li-<lb />brarians. The remaining twelve articles<lb />show a variety of pairings. One article<lb />is written by an academic librarian and<lb />a media coordinator; another article is<lb />by an academic librarian and a library<lb />science student. One public librarian<lb />and one state librarian coauthored an<lb />article. Two library science school fac-<lb />ulty members each coauthored articles<lb />with public librarians; they also each<lb />coauthored articles with an academic<lb />librarian, a media specialist at an el-<lb />ementary school, and an associate pro-<lb />fessor from a school of education within<lb />a university. Some pairings of coauthors<lb />include one author as a librarian and<lb />one as anon-librarian. This includes an<lb />article written by an academic librarian<lb />and an assistant to a vice chancellor for<lb />academic affairs, an academic librarian<lb />and an architect, a media coordinator<lb />and a television coordinator. One article<lb />is coauthored by specialists in the field<lb />of ergonomics. A last article is by an<lb />academic librarian and an author of<lb /><lb />22 " Spring 2001<lb /><lb />unidentified occupation.<lb /><lb />Do the collaborators work at the<lb />same organization? Eleven articles,<lb />slightly more than one-third of the col-<lb />laborative articles, are written by librar-<lb />ians employed at the same institution.<lb />Included in this group is the article writ-<lb />ten by five academic librarians at one<lb />university and the article written by<lb />three academic librarians at another<lb />university. Three other articles are writ-<lb />ten by coauthors at an academic library,<lb />two articles are by coauthors at the same<lb />public library, three articles are by co-<lb />authors working for a public school sys-<lb />tem, and one article is by librarians of a<lb />corporate library. Of the nineteen ar-<lb />ticles written by coauthors from differ-<lb />ent institutions, four include an author<lb />who works at a public library, academic<lb />library, or library science school from<lb />out-of-state. Two articles in North Caro-<lb />lina Libraries are co-authored by aca-<lb />demic librarians from universities out-<lb />side of the state.<lb /><lb />Conclusions<lb /><lb />Only one previous study has been made<lb />of multiple authorship in North Caro-<lb />lina Libraries. As noted earlier,<lb />Williamson and Williamson investi-<lb />gated four state periodicals and one re-<lb />gional journal from the southeast; North<lb />Carolina Libraries is one of the periodi-<lb />cals they chose to examine. The authors<lb />selected volumes 34-44 of North Caro-<lb />lina Libraries, published from 1977<lb />through 1986; they excluded one issue,<lb />Summer 1982 (volume 40, number 2).<lb />Their criteria for articles selected for<lb />study were similar to the criteria for this<lb />study with one exception; they included<lb />annotated bibliographic essays in their<lb />total. According to their findings, the<lb />percentage of articles by single authors<lb />in North Carolina Libraries comes to 90%;<lb />the percentage of articles by multiple au-<lb />thors is 10%.!° This study found that<lb />out of 227 ar-<lb />ticles published<lb />between 1990<lb />and 1999, 13.2%<lb />are by multiple<lb />authors. Thus,<lb />the percentage of<lb />multiple author-<lb />ship between<lb />1977 and 1986,<lb />and 1990 and<lb />1999 has risen by a very modest 3.2%.<lb /><lb />The percentage of collaborative ar-<lb />ticles within North Carolina Libraries from<lb />1990 to 1999 is lower than the average<lb />for academic journals. As noted earlier,<lb />Buttlar found that 27.9% of the set of<lb /><lb />... Collaborative author-<lb />ship has proven to be<lb />beneficial in research<lb />and publication.<lb /><lb />articles she surveyed were coauthored;<lb />Hernon, Smith, and Croxen had a higher<lb />figure of 35.1%; Weller, Hurd, and<lb />Wiberley an even higher figure of 45%;<lb />and Hernon and Schwartz offer the fig-<lb />ure of 32.6% for multiple authorship. All<lb />of these figures indicate that at least over<lb />one-fourth and even one-third of aca-<lb />demic journals consist of collaborative<lb />authorship; in this selection of volumes<lb />from North Carolina Libraries the percent-<lb />age is between 10% and 15%.<lb /><lb />The authorship of the coauthored<lb />articles within the pages of North Caro-<lb />lina Libraries does illustrate a diversity<lb />of collaborative partnerships across<lb />boundaries. Although there are aca-<lb />demic librarians who collaborate with<lb />other academic librarians, public librar-<lb />ians who collaborate with public librar-<lb />ians, and so forth, there are examples<lb />of an author collaborating with another<lb />author from a different branch of<lb />librarianship: library science faculty<lb />coauthoring with public librarians, an<lb />academic librarian collaborating with a<lb />media coordinator, librarians writing<lb />with non-librarians. In collaborative<lb />partnerships, it seems that North Caro-<lb />lina librarians can step out of their niche<lb />(academic, public, school, and special)<lb />to collaborate with other librarians, as<lb />well as with those outside the profes-<lb />sion, to research a topic of value to the<lb />entire state library community.<lb /><lb />To Coilaborate or Not: That is<lb /><lb />the Question<lb />One possible reason for the low num-<lb /><lb />ber of collaborative articles within North<lb />Carolina Libraries is perhaps that some<lb />librarians have never considered writ-<lb />ing an article with another author or au-<lb />thors. Collaboration may not be wel-<lb />come at the library in which he or she<lb />works. Perhaps the very fear of writing<lb />an article prevents some from ventur-<lb />ing forth into publication, much less<lb />finding someone<lb />with whom to co-<lb />author an article.<lb />The next section<lb />of this article pre-<lb />sents some basic<lb />information<lb />about collabora-<lb />tion. Although<lb />many of the<lb />sources are aca-<lb />demic articles and monographs, the<lb />principles are applicable to anyone con-<lb />sidering collaboration.<lb /><lb />For many authors in any discipline,<lb />collaborative authorship has proven to<lb />be beneficial in research and publica-<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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        <p>ee<lb /><lb />tion. Joseph Moxley, in his book, Pub-<lb />lish, DonTt Perish: The ScholarTs Guide to<lb />Academic Writing and Publishing, states<lb />that coauthorship can be a highly re-<lb />warding experience. At its very best,<lb />owe can develop ideas collectively that<lb />are much stronger than any we could<lb />develop on our own. Developing profes-<lb />sional friendships, discussing possibili-<lb />ties, seeing how others write, having<lb />your manuscripts revised by a trusted<lb />colleague, learning new research tech-<lb />niques " these are some of the impor-<lb />tant benefits of collaboration.��° Austin<lb />and Baldwin present additional argu-<lb />ments in favor of collaboration. oEl-<lb />ementary social psychology explains<lb />that individuals are more likely to fol-<lb />low through on projects that involve<lb />commitments to others than projects<lb />with no external accountability. By<lb />joining their resources and dividing la-<lb />bor, academics can increase their pro-<lb />ductivity and attain goals that would be<lb />unreachable if they worked indepen-<lb />dently.�*! Bahr and Zemon note an-<lb />other important benefit of collabora-<lb />tion: a greater chance at successful pub-<lb />lication. oBecause journals are publish-<lb />ing increasing numbers of collaborative<lb />articles, these articles have a greater<lb />chance of being accepted for publica-<lb />tion. Studies indicate a relationship be-<lb />tween these two factors, particularly in<lb />fields where the majority of publica-<lb />tions are multiauthored.��<lb /><lb />Nonetheless, there is a flip side to<lb />the collaborative coin. Moxley men-<lb />tions several disadvantages of collabora-<lb />tion. oColleagues can fail to fulfill their<lb />obligations. If they are busy working on<lb />other projects, if their professional work<lb />isnTt all that significant to them, or if<lb />they are going through some sort of life<lb />crisis, they can miss deadlines or pro-<lb />duce shoddy work, requiring extra ef-<lb />fort on your part.��? Within higher edu-<lb />cation, collaboration can present prob-<lb />lems. oFair distribution of credit for co-<lb />authored work is a significant concern<lb />on some college campuses.... Adminis-<lb />trators and faculty colleagues often<lb />have difficulty evaluating the products<lb />of collaborative research or teaching.��"�<lb />Other problems with collaboration can<lb />arise over the order of authorship list-<lb />ing, assigned responsibilities, credit for<lb />ideas, and initiating projects/writing. *<lb />Finally, some authors simply do not<lb />work well with others, or prefer to work<lb />alone. The collaborative effort creates,<lb />rather than appeases, the anxiety that<lb />frequently accompanies the research<lb />and publication process.<lb /><lb />If one can avoid the pitfalls, how<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />does one author collaborate with an-<lb />other? Surprisingly, odespite the increase<lb />in coauthored articles, little in the litera-<lb />ture advises prospective coauthors on<lb />ways to work together successfully.�*° In<lb />what remains one of the best articles on<lb />the process of collaboration, Mary Frank<lb />Fox and Catherine A. Faver make a num-<lb />ber of recommendations for effective<lb />collaborative efforts. oThe first step in<lb />successful collaboration is to choose col-<lb />laborative partner(s) wisely.��T Intellectu-<lb />ally, the collaborators should match in<lb />their strong interest in the research, their<lb />otheoretical perspective and approach to<lb />the topic,� and in their oskills and com-<lb />petencies.�8 Personal factors play a role<lb />as well in collaboration. Collaborative<lb />partners should have a similar commit-<lb />ment to the project, and omust assess,<lb />and find a fit between, their personal<lb />work habits.�*° Finally, the partners<lb />should oconsider emotional tendencies and<lb />habits, such as levels of anxiety, persis-<lb />tence, and tolerance for risk.� The au-<lb />thors suggest that at the outset the col-<lb />laborative partners prepare an informal<lb />contract that includes developing a rea-<lb />sonable timetable for completion of the<lb />work, determining the order of authorsT<lb />names on the publication, and resolv-<lb />ing similar issues that could impede<lb />reaching the goal of a successful re-<lb />search project.<lb /><lb />Again, the literature on the topic of<lb />collaboration emphasizes the scholarly<lb />research conducted by university pro-<lb />fessors and, by extension, university li-<lb />brarians. Are there words of encourage-<lb />ment for collaboration from librarians<lb />who do not work in a university setting<lb />or who are not faculty in a library sci-<lb />ence program? Bahr and Zemon<lb />strongly favor collaboration for college<lb />and university librarians, but their state-<lb />ment could apply to all librarians. oCol-<lb />laborative contributions from librarians<lb />and others at smaller institutions,� they<lb />write, owould focus attention on issues<lb />of particular significance to these insti-<lb />tutions, broaden the literature, and help<lb />to determine what, if any, difference<lb />size has on services, collections, and<lb />staffing.�?! Weller, Hurd, and Wiberley<lb />make a more succinct statement: oPrac-<lb />titioners can make important contribu-<lb />tions to the scholarly publications in a<lb />practice-based discipline.�** The authors<lb />refer here to academic librarians, but<lb />their idea could be, and should be, ex-<lb />tended to public, school, and special li-<lb />brarians. Librarians have much to offer<lb />one another from their fields, and to<lb />publish these results collaboratively will<lb />benefit other librarians throughout the<lb /><lb />state and region.<lb /><lb />For Future Study<lb /><lb />The subject of collaboration within state<lb />journals remains a fruitful field for in-<lb />vestigation. This study examined a small<lb />set of data concerning collaboration<lb />within North Carolina Libraries. An ad-<lb />ditional study should be made of col-<lb />laboration within the journal since its<lb />beginnings. Do collaborative efforts<lb />within North Carolina Libraries show a<lb />pattern similar to academic journals, in<lb />which collaborative articles increase<lb />throughout the decades?<lb /><lb />The study of collaboration within<lb />four state journals and one regional<lb />journal in the southeast, conducted by<lb />Williamson and Williamson, should be<lb />updated with an examination of the<lb />same five journals covering the period<lb />from 1987 through 2000. Results should<lb />be compared with the Williamson study.<lb />A major study of collaborative author-<lb />ship in all state journals published in a<lb />given region, such as the southeast, over<lb />a particular period of time, would glean<lb />even more information about collabo-<lb />ration in state librarianship.<lb /><lb />The gathering of data from the<lb />pages of state journals represents one<lb />approach to the study of collaboration;<lb />another would be to survey authors in<lb />North Carolina or elsewhere about the<lb />collaborative experience. What are the<lb />advantages of collaboration as seen<lb />from the eyes of those who have writ-<lb />ten collaboratively? What are the dis-<lb />advantages? In this day of telephones,<lb />electronic mail, and fax machines, are<lb />collaborative efforts between librarians<lb />located at different organizations easier?<lb />Authors who have collaborated using<lb />the latest technologies could answer<lb />that last question.<lb /><lb />A Final Word<lb /><lb />In closing, the author, who has coau-<lb />thored four articles in the last four years,<lb />suggests that librarians across the state<lb />consider the benefits of collaborative<lb />authorship for librarians from all types<lb />of libraries: academic, public, special,<lb />and school. As noted above, collabora-<lb />tive authorship can be an effective<lb />means to conduct research that results<lb />in an article of value. In particular, col-<lb />laboration between different librar-<lb />ians " academic and public, public and<lb />special, or public and school " can fos-<lb />ter a deeper understanding of the roles<lb />these librarians play. Collaborative re-<lb />search between librarians can inspire<lb />confidence to research and then write<lb />about particular problems and to distrib-<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 " 23<lb /><lb />a ee<lb /></p>
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        <p>ute in print (or, in the future, in e-jour-<lb />nals or e-books) the results of that re-<lb />search. As librarians, we all strive to<lb />serve the needs of our users. Through<lb />collaborative efforts in state publica-<lb />tions, as well as in other publication<lb />venues, we can share our knowledge<lb />and further enhance the quality of our<lb />service to our users throughout North<lb />Carolina.<lb /><lb />References<lb /><lb />' Webster's II: New Riverside University<lb />Dictionary (Boston: Houghton Mifflin,<lb />1995), s.v. ocollaborate.�<lb /><lb />2 Ann E. Austin and Roger G. Baldwin,<lb />Faculty Collaboration: Enhancing the Qual-<lb />ity of Scholarship and Teaching, ASHE-<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />The Summer People<lb />John Foster West<lb /><lb />2000, 244 pp.<lb />ISBN: 1-887905-27-8 Softcover, $14.95<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />NC mountains for newly widowed 24-year-old<lb />Anna DeVoss. AnnaTs mother-in-law<lb />persuades her to spend some time alone in<lb />the familyTs Watauga County summer home.<lb />Winner of First Appalachian Consortium<lb />Fiction Award by John Foster West,<lb />acclaimed author of Lift Up Your Head, Tom<lb />Dooley, The Ballad of Tom Dula, and Time<lb /><lb />Was. (Reprint)<lb />Letters From James:<lb /><lb />A High Country Love Story<lb />Ruth Layng<lb /><lb />2000, 350 pp. ISBN: 1-887905-23-5,<lb />Softcover, 19,95<lb /><lb />Appalachian mountain life.<lb /><lb />Professor of English, ASU<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 releases:<lb />Allin a DayTs Work<lb /><lb />Londa L. Woody<lb /><lb />illustrations by Gail Blakely Wood.<lb />The Animals of<lb /><lb />24 " Spring 2001<lb /><lb />1974 is a summer of discovery in the unfamiliar<lb /><lb />James, a young Irishman fighting<lb />in France in WWI, corresponds<lb />| with Jennie, a native of Zionville, NC<lb />about the horrors of war as wellas<lb />the hardships and joys of<lb /><lb />new novel so mature and so<lb />enjoyable you wish it would not end.�<lb />John Foster West, Emeritus<lb /><lb />ISBN: 1-887905-44-8; 86 pp. Softcover; $9.95<lb />Historic general stories of Macon and surrounding<lb />North Carolina counties. Beautiful pen-and-ink<lb /><lb />Grandfather Mountain<lb /><lb />Laurie Mitchell Jakobsen<lb />A delightful autobiographical account of the day-to-day<lb />life of Grandfather MountainTs animal habitat keepers.<lb /><lb />P. O. Box 3678, Boone, North Carolina 28607<lb />Phone &amp; Fax: (828) 265-3993<lb /><lb />visit us at www.<lb /><lb />ERIC Higher Education Report No. 7<lb />(Washington, DC: George Washington<lb />University, School of Education and Hu-<lb />man Development, 1991), 4.<lb /><lb />3 Alice Harrison Bahr and Mickey<lb />Zemon, oCollaborative Authorship in<lb />the Journal Literature: Perspectives for<lb />Academic Librarians Who Wish to Pub-<lb />lish,� College and Research Libraries 61<lb />(September 2000): 411.<lb /><lb />* Austin and Baldwin, Faculty Col-<lb />laboration, 25.<lb /><lb />5 Ibid., 27.<lb /><lb />® Edgar Williamson and Josephine B.<lb />Williamson, oMultiple Authorship in<lb />the Southeast,� Southeastern Librarian 39<lb />(Spring 1989): 13.<lb /><lb />7 Ibid.<lb /><lb />Mason Jars<lb />in the Flood<lb />and Other Stories<lb /><lb />Gary Carden<lb /><lb />2000, xii, 210 pp.,<lb />ISBN: 1-887905-22-7.<lb /><lb />* Hardcover, $20.00<lb /><lb />Meet Gary Carden, storyteller, folklorist,<lb />playwright and author, and award-winning<lb />English instructor, drama director and grants<lb />writer for the Eastern Band of Cherokee<lb />Indians. Two plays, oThe Raindrop Waltz�<lb />and oLandTs End� have been recently<lb />produced in Atlanta, Key West, and San<lb />Francisco. His video, oBlow the Tannery<lb />Whistle!� has been presented on PBS, and<lb />is a perennial favorite with his storytelling<lb />audiences.<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />Grandfather<lb />Mountain:<lb /><lb />A Profile<lb />Miles<lb /><lb />Tager<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />PW arity<lb /><lb />1999, xvi, 110 pp., bibl,<lb />Photographs, Index.<lb />ISBN: 1-887905-17-0.<lb />Softcover; $14.95.<lb />Grandfather Mountain: A<lb />Profile returns to the origins of<lb />this living entity, tracing its unique<lb />development " geological,<lb />meteorological, natural,<lb />prehistoric, and modern humans<lb />" to the present day. Miles<lb />Tager, winner of numerous<lb />journalism awards and staff<lb />writer/editor for Boone, NCTs<lb />Mountain Times, lives at the base<lb />of Grandfather Mountain.<lb /><lb />or<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />Parkway Publishers, Inc.<lb /><lb />Toll-Free: (800) 821-9155<lb />parkwaypublishers.com<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />8 [bid.<lb /><lb />9 Bahr and Zemon, oCollaborative<lb />Authorship,� 411.<lb /><lb />OWIb IG AND<lb /><lb />"! Lois Buttlar, oAnalyzing the Library<lb />Periodical Literature: Content and Au-<lb />thorship,� College and Research Libraries<lb />52 January 1991): 41.<lb /><lb />12 Peter Hernon, Allen Smith, and<lb />Mary Bailey Croxen, oPublication in<lb />College and Research Libraries: Accepted,<lb />Rejected, and Published Papers, 1980-<lb />1991,� College and Research Libraries 54<lb />July 1993): 311.<lb /><lb />13 Ann C. Weller, Julia M. Hurd, and<lb />Stephen E. Wiberley Jr., oPublication<lb />Patterns of U.S. Academic Librarians<lb />from 1993 to 1997,� College and Research<lb />Libraries 60 (July 1999): 354.<lb /><lb />14 Thid., 356-57.<lb /><lb />'S Peter Hernon and Candy Schwartz,<lb />oEditorial: Library and Information Sci-<lb />ence Research " Marking the JournalTs<lb />20th Anniversay,� Library and Informa-<lb />tion Science Research 20, 4 (1998): 315.<lb /><lb />16 Williamson and Williamson, oMul-<lb />tiple Authorship,� 14.<lb /><lb />17 Thid., 14-15.<lb /><lb />18 oInstructions for the Preparation of<lb />Manuscripts for North Carolina Librar-<lb />ies,� North Carolina Libraries 56 (Sum-<lb />mer 1998): 59.<lb /><lb />1? Williamson and Williamson, oMul-<lb />tiple Authorship,� 13-14.<lb /><lb />20 Joseph M. Moxley, Publish, DonTt<lb />Perish: The ScholarTs Guide to Academic<lb />Writing and Publishing (Westport, CT:<lb />Praeger, 1992), 18.<lb /><lb />*1 Austin and Baldwin, Faculty Col-<lb />laboration, 6-7.<lb /><lb />22 Bahr and Zemon, oCollaborative<lb />Authorship,� 412.<lb /><lb />3 Moxley, Publish, DonTt Perish, 18-19.<lb /><lb />4 Austin and Baldwin, Faculty Col-<lb />laboration, 3.<lb /><lb />2S Ralph E. Matkin and T. FE. Riggar, Per-<lb />sist and Publish: Helpful Hints for Academic<lb />Writing and Publishing (Niwot, CO.: Uni-<lb />versity Press of Colorado, 1991), -52.<lb /><lb />26 Bahr and Zemon, oCollaborative<lb />Authorship,� 415.<lb /><lb />27 Mary Frank Fox and Catherine A.<lb />Faver, oThe Process of Collaboration in<lb />Scholarly Research,� in Scholarly Writ-<lb />ing and Publishing: Issues, Problems, and<lb />Solutions, ed. Mary Frank Fox (Boulder:<lb />Westview Press, 1985), 127.<lb /><lb />28 Ibid., 128.<lb /><lb />29 Thids 13d.<lb /><lb />30 Tbid.<lb /><lb />31 Bahr and Zemon, oCollaborative<lb />Authorship,� 417.<lb /><lb />32 Weller, Hurd, and Wiberley, oPub-<lb />lication Patterns of U.S. Academic Li-<lb />brarians,� 352.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />Publications and Sinners:<lb /><lb />Research from the Church Library Perspective<lb /><lb />(King James Version)<lb /><lb />Research<lb />It is the glory of God to conceal a thing: but the honour of<lb />kings is to search out a matter. (Prov. 25:2)<lb /><lb />And I gave my heart to seek and search out by wisdom<lb />concerning all things that are done under heaven: this<lb />sore travail hath God given to the sons of man to be<lb />exercised therewith. (Eccles. 1:13)<lb /><lb />Then shalt thou inquire, and make search, and ask diligently;<lb />and, behold, if it be truth, and the thing certain, that such<lb />abomination is wrought among you. (Deut. 13:14)<lb /><lb />They search out iniquities; they accomplish a diligent search:<lb />both the inward thought of every one of them, and the<lb />heart, is deep. (Ps. 64:6)<lb /><lb />By number and by weight of every one: and all the weight<lb />was written at that time. (Ezra 8:34)<lb /><lb />But the very hairs of your head are all numbered. (Matt. 10:30)<lb /><lb />Scholarship<lb />Ever learning, and never able to come to the knowledge of<lb />the truth. (2 Tim. 3:7)<lb /><lb />And I have heard of thee, that thou canst make interpreta-<lb />tions, and dissolve doubts: now if thou canst read the<lb />writing, and make known to me the interpretation thereof,<lb />thou shalt be clothed with scarlet, and have a chain of gold<lb />about thy neck, and shalt be the third ruler in the king-<lb />dom. (Dan. 5:16)<lb /><lb />And withal they learn to be idle, wandering about from house<lb />to house; and not only idle, but tattlers also and busybod-<lb />ies, speaking things which they ought not. (1Tim. 5:13)<lb /><lb />And further, by these, my son, be admonished: of making<lb />many books there is no end; and much study is a weari-<lb />ness of.the flesh. (Eccles. 12:12)<lb /><lb />For with what judgment ye judge, ye shall be judged: and<lb />with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you<lb />again. (Matt. 7:2)<lb /><lb />Write the things which thou hast seen, and the things which<lb />are, and the things which shall be hereafter. (Rev. 1:19)<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />That which is crooked cannot be made straight: and that<lb />which is wanting cannot be numbered. (Eccles. 1:15)<lb /><lb />Now the things which I write unto you, behold, before<lb />God, I lie not. (Gal. 1:20)<lb /><lb />How knoweth this man letters, having never learned? (John 7:15)<lb /><lb />Acknowledgements<lb /><lb />For we write none other things unto you, than what ye read<lb />or acknowledge; and I trust ye shall acknowledge even<lb />to the end. (2 Cor. 1:13)<lb /><lb />Editing<lb />He shall not search whether it be good or bad, neither shall<lb />he change it: and if he change it at all, then both it and<lb /><lb />the change thereof shall be holy; it shall not be re-<lb />deemed. (Lev. 27:33)<lb /><lb />For to this end also did I write, that I might know the proof<lb />of you, whether ye be obedient in all things. (2 Cor. 2:9)<lb /><lb />Publication<lb /><lb />Woe unto them that decree unrighteous decrees, and that<lb />write grievousness which they have prescribed. (Isa.<lb />LO)<lb /><lb />I had many things to write, but I will not with ink and pen<lb />write unto thee. (3 John 1:13)<lb /><lb />Moreover the LORD said unto me, Take thee a great roll,<lb />and write in it with a manTs pen concerning<lb /><lb />Mahershalalhashbaz. (Isa. 8:1)<lb /><lb />Now go, write it before them in a table, and note it ina<lb />book, that it may be for the time to come for ever and<lb />ever. (Isa. 30:8)<lb /><lb />And the rest of the trees of his forest shall be few, that a<lb />child may write them. (Isa. 10:19)<lb /><lb />Marketing<lb />And I wept much, because no man was found worthy to<lb /><lb />open and to read the book, neither to look thereon.<lb />(Rev. 5:4)<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 " 29<lb /><lb />aia a Aili 2 OE Aare hapa IDE gS Pie Sa Ee CP DME ils StS OE A CD EN Nin EA Reel Oe CC, BEE ENA lage Ben ean<lb /></p>
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        <p>NCLA | Candidates<lb /><lb />North Carolina Library Association 200 1 2003<lb /><lb />Candidates for President/Vice-President Elect ...<lb /><lb />Pauletta Brown Bracy Joline R. Ezzell<lb /><lb />Associate Professor, School of Library and Information Reference Librarian<lb /><lb />Sciences, North Carolina Central University and Resource Special-<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., Fisk University, Nashville; M.L.S., ist for Classical Studies,<lb /><lb />University of Pittsburgh; Ph.D., University of Michigan Medieval and Renais-<lb /><lb />Honors/Awards/Offices: ALA: Social Responsibilities sance Studies, and<lb /><lb />Roundtable, Coretta Scott King Taskforce, Coretta Psychology, Duke<lb /><lb />: Scott King Jury (chair); AASL: Task Force on Compe- University Library<lb />tencies for Library Media Specialists in the Twenty-first Education: B.A.,<lb />: Sie Century, NCATE Committee Co-chair, Nominating University of Maine;<lb /><lb />Committee Chair, Intellectual Freedom Committee Chair, School Library Media M.A., UNC-Chapel<lb />EducatorsT Section, Executive Board, and Nominating Committee Chair; Hill; M.S.L.S., UNC-Chapel Hill<lb />Durham County Juvenile Crime Prevention Council Secretary, and Parliamentar- Awards/Honors/Offices: Doralyn J. Hickey<lb />ian; Durham County Library Board of Trustees Vice President, and 1996 Award for article in North Carolina Libraries;<lb />Planning Task Force Chair; Durham County Literacy Council; National Council NCLA: RASS, Vice-Chair; North Carolina Libraries<lb />for Accreditation of Teacher Education (American Library Association-Appointed Editorial Board and Column Editor; LAMS, Treas.;<lb />Representative) Chair; National Library Power Evaluation Project (Univ. of Publication Comm.; RTSS, Sec/Treas.; ALA: LAMA<lb />Wisconsin-Madison) Regional Coordinator, 1994-1998; North Carolina Depart- Bd. of Directors; LAMA Fund Raising &amp; Financial<lb />ment of Public Instruction Information Skills Curriculum Writing Committee Development Sect., Chair; RTSD Serials Sect.,<lb />1997-1999; NCLA AIDS Materials Awareness Committee 1990-1997, Literacy Chair; UNC-CH SILS Alumni Assn., Pres; Beta Phi<lb />Committee; NCTE: Storytelling Committee of N.C. 1959-; State Library Mu, Epsilon Chap., Pres.; Phi Beta Kappa, Beta of<lb />Commission, 1991-. Duke, Pres.; Phi Kappa Phi.<lb /><lb />Candidates for Secretary ...<lb /><lb />Bao-Chu Chang Martha Davis<lb /><lb />Acting Division Chairperson, Library Services, Davidson County Community College<lb />Assistant Head, Education: B.S., East Carolina University; M.S.L.S., UNC-Chapel Hill<lb />and Principal T Honors/Awards/Offices: NCLA: Chair of Library Adminis-<lb />Cataloger, i. tration and Management Section (LAMS) 1999-2001,<lb /><lb />Cataloging mi Chair of Community and Junior College Library Section<lb /><lb />Department, (CJCLS) 1997-1999, ALA Councilor 1993-1997, Conference<lb /><lb />NCSU Libraries Registration Chairperson 1993, Community and Junior<lb /><lb />Education: College Library Section Director 1991-1993; Acting<lb /><lb />M.L.S., UNC- Treasurer of North Carolina Association of School Librarians<lb /><lb />Chapel Hill; (NCASL) 1990-1991; Secretary-Treasurer of NCASL 1985-<lb /><lb />M.Ed., NCSU. 1987; Community College Council of Library Administra-<lb />tors (CCCLA) Secretary 1999-2000. Phi Kappa Phi, Delta<lb />Kappa Gamma.<lb /><lb />Candidates for Treasurer ...<lb />Carl E. Keiper<lb /><lb />Operation Services Division |<lb />Manager, Cumberland<lb />County Public Library and<lb />Information Center<lb />Education: A.A.S.,<lb />Community College of the<lb />Air Force (in Logistics<lb />Management, and<lb /><lb />Diane D. Kester<lb /><lb />Associate Professor and Chair, Department<lb />of Librarianship, Educational Technology<lb />and Distance Instruction, School of<lb />Education, East Carolina University<lb />Education: BA, BS, Texas WomanTs<lb />University; MA Ed., East Carolina Univer-<lb />sity, Educational Media; MLS, East Carolina<lb />Information Systems University, Library Science; Ed.S., East<lb />Management); B.B.A., Carolina University, Educational Supervi-<lb />Campbell University (Accounting); M.L.S.,North Carolina sion; Ph.D., UNC-Chapel Hill, Library Science.<lb /><lb />Central University. Honors/Awards/Offices: Who's Who in American Women; Margaret<lb />Honors/Awards/Offices: Beta Phi Mu. Ellen Kalp Fellowship Award, UNC-CH.<lb /><lb />26 " Spring 2001 North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Candidates for Director ...<lb /><lb />Robert L. Canida, Il<lb />Assistant Librarian for<lb />Electronic Resources/Access<lb />Services, University of North<lb />Carolina at Pembroke.<lb />Education: B.A., Xavier<lb />University; M.L.S., University<lb />of Kentucky.<lb /><lb />Honors/Awards/ Offices:<lb />Certificate of Appreciation for<lb /><lb />Teresa L. McManus<lb /><lb />Associate Director for Collection Develop-<lb />ment, Charles W. Chesnutt Library<lb />Fayetteville State University;<lb /><lb />North Carolina Central University School of<lb />Library and Information Science, Adjunct<lb />Faculty.<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., The Evergreen State<lb />College; M.A., New School for Social<lb />Research, Graduate Faculty; M.L.S., Volunteer Service from<lb />University of North Carolina at Greensboro. former North Carolina State<lb />Honors/Awards/Offices: NCLA Resources Governor Hunt; Numerous Awards of Appreciation of<lb />and Technical Services Section Chair; Finance Committee, Chair. service from the Robeson County Public School system.<lb /><lb />Marc E. Pumphrey<lb /><lb />Library Director, Polk County Public Library, Columbus, NC.<lb /><lb />Education: B.A. University of Kentucky; M.S.L.S., University of Kentucky.<lb /><lb />Honors/Awards/Offices: American Correctional Association Institution Libraries Committee, Chair 1987-<lb />1989; ALA/ACA Joint Committee on Institutional Libraries, Co-Chair, 1987-89; ALA Bogle International<lb />Travel Grant Recipient, 1989, to speak on panel at IFLA preconference on International Prison Library<lb />Standards, Paris, France; Greater Columbia Literacy Council, (Columbia, SC) Vice-Chair, 1989-1991;<lb />Technology Committee, South Carolina Governor's Task Force on Workplace Literacy, 1990; Peer<lb />Reviewer, U.S. Department of Education Title VI Literacy Grants, 1990-1993; NC Literacy Association,<lb />1993-1995; NCLA Literacy Committe; SELA Media Utilization Committee, Chair, 1998-2000; Kiwanis<lb />Club of Tryon, President, 2000-present.<lb /><lb />James V. (Jim) Carmichael, Jr.<lb />Professor, Department of Library and Information Studies, School of Education, UNCG.<lb />Education: B.A. Emory University; MLn. Emory University; Ph.D. UNC-Chapel Hill.<lb />Honors/Awards/Offices: Beta Phi Mu; Recipient, Outstanding Young Men of America (Jaycees), 1980, 1981;<lb />sisi Louis Round Wilson Fellowship, University of North Carolina, 1985; Louis Round Wilson Award, best article in The<lb />OO Southeastern Librarian, 1986-88 biennium, SELA; Franklin M. Garrett Award, best article in Atlanta History: A<lb />Journal of Georgia and the South, 1989-91 biennium, Atlanta Historical Society; Ray Moore Award, best article in<lb />\ | o North Carolina Libraries, 1991-93 biennium, NCLA; Summer Research Excellence Award, UNCG, 1992; Ray Moore<lb />os : Award, best article in North Carolina Libraries, 1993-95 biennium, NCLA; Standing Ovation Award, Department of<lb />; Disabled Students, UNCG, 1996; Distinguished Alumnus Award, School of Information and Library Science,<lb />UNC-Chapel Hill, 1997; Biography, Who's Who in the South and Southwest 1997-98; 1998-99; Who's Who in<lb />America, 1999-2000, 2000-2001; Outstanding People of the Twentieth Century, [International: Cambridge, UK]; Dictionary of International<lb />Biography, 28th ed. (March/April 2000); Outstanding Intellectuals of the Twentieth Century (UK), Fall, 2000.<lb /><lb />Candidates for ALA Counselor ...<lb /><lb />Vanessa Work Ramseur<lb /><lb />Area Manager, Beatties Ford Road Branch, Public<lb />Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County.<lb />Education: B.S., Barber Scotia College; M.L.S.,<lb />North Carolina Central University; M.B.A.,<lb />Queens College; Certificate of Completion -<lb />NCLA Leadership Institute.<lb />Honors/Awards/Offices: Conference placement<lb />chair for SELA; BCALA Literary Award Jury; Local<lb />Arrangements Planning Committee for BCALA<lb /><lb />Sherwin Rice<lb /><lb />County Library Director, Bladen<lb />County Public Library,<lb />Elizabethtown, North Carolina.<lb />Education: A.B., Bladen Techni-<lb />cal College, Dublin, NC; B.A.,<lb />Fayetteville State University;<lb />M.L.S., North Carolina Central<lb />University.<lb />Honors/Awards/Offices: NCLA<lb /><lb />Intellectual Freedom Conference; NCLA Public Library Section<lb /><lb />Award,1993; NCLA Round Table for Ethnic Minority Director; Public Library Section Secretary; Chair<lb /><lb />Concerns RoadbuildersT Award, 1995; E. Floyd Martin of the Roundtable for Ethnic Minority Concerns;<lb /><lb />Achievement Award, 1997; Lumber River Workforce Newsletter Editor and Director of REMCo; NCLA Conference Planning<lb />Development Board; Summer Works Supervisor of the Committee; NCLA Archives Committee Chair; Director of NCLA<lb /><lb />Year, 1999; Snowbird Leadership Institute, Snowbird, UT, Executive Board; LAMA of NCLA; NCLA Leadership Institute Planning<lb />1994; American Library Association; Publications: In Our Committee, Treasurer; 2000 Conference Program Chair for NCLA;<lb />Own Voices: The Changing Face of Librarianship, Chapter: Planning Committee for the Charlemae Rollins Colloquium; NCCU<lb />oNotes From A Sparrow,� (Scarecrow Press, 1996). Branch Institute Planning Committee.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries Spring 2001 " 27<lb /><lb />te<lb /></p>
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        <p>Se<lb />of the<lb /><lb />NortuH CAROLINA LIBRARY ASSOCIATION<lb /><lb />One of the most significant milestones in the history of the North Carolina Library<lb />Association occurred in 1999 when the NCLA Endowment Fund was established with the<lb />North Carolina Community Foundation. The NCLA Endowment Fund recognized that<lb />NCLA can now look beyond its membership dues as a sole means to underwrite special<lb />projects, such as leadership institutes, scholarships, and continuing education programs, as<lb />well as the NCLA journal, North Carolina Libraries, which serves as a medium of continuing<lb />education and information for its members.<lb /><lb />The organization appreciates the generosity of the following who have taken the lead in<lb /><lb />contributing to the Endowment. These donors, as well as all who contribute by the end of<lb />October 2001, will be Founding Members of the Endowment.<lb /><lb />Elizabeth J. Laney, Chair<lb />Endowment Committee of NCLA<lb /><lb />Vth is gee tye On Sees a a a er Ae 4<lb />| o\ |<lb />| : | ] LA<lb />| e I want to contribute to the NCLA Endowment. l Contributors to NC: Endowment<lb />September 1999 " February 2001<lb />| Name(s) | Benefactor:<lb />| | Leland Park<lb />Address | ;<lb />Sustainer: Friend:<lb />| l Theresa Coletta Michael Cotter<lb />| Type of contribution: | Maureen Fiorello Betty Daniel<lb />t Fl R E<lb />L) Benefactor @ $1,000 Up L) Sustainer @ $100-$249 | es 2 wear<lb />| | Charlesanna Fox Carol Freeman<lb />L} Sponsor @ $500-$999 L) Friend @ $1-$99 . Elizabeth Laney Beverley Gass<lb />; (1 patron @ $250-$499 LU other @ s NCSU Libraries Spr niaceson<lb />| Mary Elizabeth Poole "_ Al Jones<lb />) Corporate @ $ Jerry Thrasher Pattie McIntyre<lb />| Company Name | Patrick Valentine Melissa Mills<lb />| | Allegra Westbrooks Margaret Randall<lb />l L) In Memory L) In Honor of: l Rashedine Wade Qiena<lb />| | Carol Southerland<lb />| Send form with payment to: NCLA Administrative Assistant | M<lb />| NCLA Endowment | niet<lb />| 4646 Mail Service Center |<lb />| Raleigh, NC 27699-4646 | _ For more information call NCLA at (919) 893-6252<lb />Gees Riese ey a Sas PARR TITOS prinnslS Siaiien ies 4<lb /><lb />28 " Spring 2001<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />luetooth is a new wireless tech-<lb />Bes that will be introduced<lb /><lb />over the next year or so. It is<lb />named after the 10th century Danish<lb />Viking King, Harald Blatand, or Blue<lb />tooth in English. It seems that Harald<lb />had a special affinity for blueberries, and<lb />without the power of baking soda, the<lb />results of his eating became permanent.<lb />Harald Blue tooth was a sort of 900s<lb />Garibaldi, who unified and Christian-<lb />ized Denmark. A contemporary inscrip-<lb />tion reads, oHarald the King ordered this<lb />monument to be raised in honor of<lb />Gorm his father and Thyra his mother,<lb />the Harald who won all Denmark and<lb />Norway and made the Danes Chris-<lb />tians.� Current day Bluetooth technol-<lb />ogy hopes to unite a number of portable<lb />cordless devices using small, portable,<lb />microwave radio links.<lb /><lb />The Bluetooth Consortium of com-<lb />panies developed this wireless connec-<lb />tion technology for portable computers,<lb />cordless phones, headsets, PDAs, MP3<lb />players, and digital cameras. The<lb />Bluetooth Consortium consists of<lb />Toshiba, Lucent, Microsoft, Motorola,<lb />Nokia, Ericsson, IBM, Intel, and 3COM.<lb />Using the 2.4 Ghz unlicensed radio<lb />band, Bluetooth works over about a 33-<lb />foot range at speeds up to about 721<lb />Kbps. It is not a replacement for USB or<lb />traditional cables, but rather an addi-<lb />tional method of communicating be-<lb />tween devices. If you are tired of look-<lb />ing at cable ends trying to find which<lb />one goes where, the Bluetooth will make<lb />yout life easier. Imagine walking around<lb />your library being able to connect with<lb />your local area network, answer the tele-<lb />phone, or update your PDA, all at the<lb />same time. A Bluetooth chip can be<lb />mounted on a number of devices, includ-<lb />ing a PCMIA LAN card, or a regular PC<lb />Ethernet card, or in a cordless phone. A<lb />small plastic antenna pokes out of the<lb />card and a light emitting diode blinks<lb />when the device is transmitting and re-<lb />ceiving data.<lb /><lb />The first Bluetooth PC wireless card<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />Bluetooth<lb /><lb />to come out has recently been intro-<lb />duced by Toshiba with the other mem-<lb />bers of the consortium set to release vari-<lb />ous products using the Bluetooth system<lb />later through the year 2002. The Toshiba<lb />card is inserted into the vacant PC slot,<lb />and then one has the joy of trying to get<lb />the software to work with the device.<lb />Hopefully this part of the system will get<lb />better with time. You of course need an-<lb />other Bluetooth device to communicate<lb />with. In a typical installation you would<lb />place Bluetooth cards in your network<lb />server, and any other devices (printers,<lb />computers, PDAs), within a 33 feet range.<lb />Bluetooth will not work as fast as tradi-<lb />tional fiber optic technology, but has the<lb />obvious advantage of being wireless.<lb /><lb />A good source of information on<lb />Bluetooth technology is the obluetooth<lb />resource center� at www.palowireless.<lb />com. This center has information on<lb /><lb />ABOUT THE AUTHORS ...<lb /><lb />Christopher Demas<lb /><lb />by Ralph Lee Scott<lb /><lb />publications, downloads, products, a<lb />newsletter, training, tutorials, and vari-<lb />ous FAQs. Bluetooth was originally de-<lb />veloped by Ericsson and can be identi-<lb />fied by a symbol (which I guess sort of<lb />represents two teeth?). Manufacturers<lb />hope that the cost of the chip will go<lb />down to as low as $5, but currently avail-<lb />able Bluetooth cards cost around $199.<lb />This technology has important implica-<lb />tions for libraries, both for staff and pa-<lb />trons. Besides making cables oold fash-<lb />ioned,� the technology will enable pa-<lb />tron-owned devices to connect with re-<lb />sources in the library. Patrons could<lb />download handouts, articles, schedules,<lb />and check for information online with<lb />these devices. Bluetooth has the poten-<lb />tial for revolutionizing the way librar-<lb />ians and patrons use the Internet and<lb />technology. All we need is the vision to<lb />use this new technology.<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., Western Carolina University; M.L.I.S., UNC at Greensboro<lb /><lb />Position: Graduate Assistant, UNCG<lb /><lb />Gail K. Dickinson<lb /><lb />Education: B.S., Millersville University; M.S.L.S., UNC at Chapel Hill;<lb /><lb />Ph.D., University of Virginia<lb />Position: Assistant Professor, UNCG<lb /><lb />Stefanie DuBose<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., M.A., M.L.I.S., University of South Carolina<lb />Position: Collection Development Librarian, Joyner Library, East Carolina University<lb /><lb />David Durant<lb /><lb />Education: A.B., M.S.I. (L.I.S.), University of Michigan; M.A., University of California,<lb /><lb />Los Angeles<lb /><lb />Position: Reference Librarian, Joyner Library, East Carolina University<lb /><lb />Margaret Foote<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., Mars Hill College; M.A., Ph.D., M.S.L.S., University of Kentucky<lb />Position: Interim Associate Director, Joyner Library, East Carolina University<lb /><lb />Julie Hersberger<lb />Education: B.S., M.L.S., Ph.D., Indiana University<lb />Position: Assistant Professor, UNCG<lb /><lb />Angela Leeper<lb /><lb />Education: B.A. College of William and Mary; M.L.I.S., University of Rhode Island<lb />Position: Educational Consultant, Evaluation Services, NC Dept. of Public Instruction<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 " 29<lb /><lb />arin ae ae ee Rm 2, TM oC ee 2 eke ieee ic ea Ne iat Ms Ices tc ce a 9.02). SE Re ABS Cea, Tecan yale a<lb /><lb />i<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />he aguiappe" North Caroliniana<lb /><lb />*Lagniappe (lan-yapT, lanT yapT) n. An extra or unexpected gift or benefit. [Louisiana French]<lb /><lb />compiled by Plummer Alston Jones, Jr.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Department of<lb /><lb />Public InstructionTs Jolly Good Fellows<lb /><lb />dmit it. When you browse<lb />through selection tools, have<lb />you ever wanted to be one of the<lb />reviewers who gets paid to evaluate a<lb />novel or Web site? What about when you<lb />receive the North Carolina Department<lb />of Public InstructionTs (NCDPI) bi-<lb />monthly publication, InfoTech, which<lb />recommends materials for North Caro-<lb />lina school libraries and supplemental<lb />materials for classroom use? As you read<lb />through it carefully at your school me-<lb />dia center, school district central office,<lb />or curriculum library, have you ever<lb />wondered who reviews the print, audio-<lb />visual materials, software programs, and<lb />Web sites for North Carolina schools?<lb />Each year since 1997, Evaluation<lb />Services of NCDPI has hosted two train-<lb />ing workshops for school library media<lb />specialists, classroom teachers, curricu-<lb />lum specialists, technology coordinators,<lb />and other educators. These workshops<lb />teach them how to evaluate print,<lb />nonprint, and technology resources. The<lb />spring training targets language arts, so-<lb />cial studies, and art educators " called<lb />Humanities Fellows " while the summer<lb />training focuses on science and math-<lb />ematics educators " called Eisenhower<lb />Fellows. After receiving training, Hu-<lb />manities and Eisenhower fellows may<lb />begin reviewing resources for InfoTech.<lb /><lb />When teachers become students<lb /><lb />The training sessions are two-day work-<lb />shops that take place at the Department<lb />of Public InstructionTs Evaluation Ser-<lb />vices in Raleigh. Set in the location<lb />where InfoTech comes to life, the partici-<lb />pants meet the Evaluation Services staff<lb /><lb />70 " Spring 2001<lb /><lb />by Angela Leeper<lb /><lb />and see all of the materials that have<lb />been recommended in the last two years,<lb />as well as recently published and pro-<lb />duced resources waiting for keen evalu-<lb />ators.<lb /><lb />Since books and videos are the most<lb />familiar resources to educators, the first<lb />day of training focuses on evaluating<lb />these formats using Evaluation ServicesT<lb />established criteria. Participants learn to<lb />judge an itemTs accuracy, appropriate-<lb />ness, scope, organization, and its appli-<lb />cations to the North Carolina Standard<lb />Course of Study. Even if a resource has<lb />won numerous awards, if it does not<lb />meet the North Carolina curriculum, it<lb />is not recommended by Evaluation Ser-<lb />vices. Of course, each format has its spe-<lb />cial considerations. Participants study a<lb />video's technical aspects and documen-<lb />tation, for example, and take into ac-<lb />count a bookTs layout and design. Espe-<lb />cially important are picture booksT text<lb />and illustrations, which work together<lb />to send a message to young readers.<lb /><lb />After an introduction to the review<lb />process, participants begin to apply the<lb />evaluation criteria to materials that have<lb />already been reviewed favorably. They<lb />usually discover " to their surprise "<lb />that they have missed strengths and<lb />weaknesses of some materials, and turn<lb />to the next resource with sharper eyes<lb />and a more in-depth analysis. Some dis-<lb />agreement concerning appropriate grade<lb />levels and applications usually arises.<lb />Evaluation Services welcomes this dis-<lb />cussion because it demonstrates that no<lb />single resource is perfect for every edu-<lb />cator and classroom and, therefore,<lb />evaluations must show a range of grade<lb /><lb />levels and instructional uses.<lb /><lb />Upon completion of these exercises,<lb />participants delve into the recently pub-<lb />lished items. As they review materials on<lb />their own, some participants find "<lb /><lb />again, to their surprise " that simply re-<lb /><lb />lying on an author's or publisherTs repu-<lb />tation alone does not ensure a resourceTs<lb />success in a school media center or class-<lb />room. The need for an established evalu-<lb />ation process becomes cleat.<lb /><lb />The second day of training centers<lb />on evaluating Web sites, both free and<lb />subscription-based. Previous workshops<lb />have given more emphasis to software<lb />programs, but with recent technology<lb />trends showing a drop in CD-ROM pro-<lb />duction and a rise in the research and<lb />development of online subscriptions,<lb />training sessions now reflect this change.<lb />Although electronic resources vary<lb />greatly from print resources, participants<lb />learn to apply similar evaluation crite-<lb />ria, including accuracy, appropriateness,<lb />scope, organization, and applications to<lb />the North Carolina Standard Course of<lb />Study. As would be expected, partici-<lb />pants give technical aspects, such as<lb />navigation and visual features, a more<lb />thorough review. After reviewing free<lb />and subscription-based Web sites as a<lb />group, participants begin to evaluate<lb />them individually.<lb /><lb />| know how to review materials<lb /><lb />The Humanities and Eisenhower Fel-<lb />lowsT workshops may sound like they are<lb />more applicable to novice educators;<lb />however, participant ratings after the<lb />trainings reveal that all educators ben-<lb />efit from them. John Brim, Section Chief<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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        <p>of Evaluation Services, explains, oThe<lb />format of the workshops provides even<lb />experienced teachers a unique opportu-<lb />nity to learn a new approach to evaluat-<lb />ing a variety of instructional resources.�<lb />Since the participants view an assort-<lb />ment of resources in numerous formats,<lb />they learn to integrate these various for-<lb />mats into the curriculum.<lb /><lb />The training also encourages edu-<lb />cators to rethink how they are selecting<lb />and using resources. Participants take<lb />into account different student popula-<lb />tions, such as at-risk or gifted and tal-<lb />ented students, as well as various cur-<lb />riculum uses. A book becomes more<lb />than a research tool and Web sites no<lb />longer rest alone in a computer center.<lb />Participants consider uses such as<lb />whole-class instruction, cooperative<lb />learning, remediation, enrichment, in-<lb />dependent study, leisure reading, or a<lb />combination of these. Cindy Taylor, a<lb />former Eisenhower Fellow and a media<lb />coordinator at R.J. Reynolds High<lb />School in Winston-Salem/Forsyth<lb />County, attests, oThe requirement in the<lb />review process to suggest a curriculum<lb />use for the review item is the most chal-<lb />lenging because it requires creative<lb />thinking to imagine any and all possible<lb />ways to highlight part of or all of the<lb />material, and it has allowed me to use<lb />items in ways I would not have thought<lb />of before.�<lb /><lb />What do educators gain from<lb />the workshop?<lb /><lb />In addition to professional development,<lb />participants receive a myriad of benefits.<lb />To allow educators to attend the work-<lb />shop, Evaluation Services reimburses<lb />them for their lodging, subsistence, and<lb />even their substitutes. Upon completion<lb />of the training, participants are awarded<lb />a one-year subscription to InfoTech and<lb />one CEU credit in technology.<lb /><lb />Participants, as well as Evaluation<lb />Services staff, have appreciated the net-<lb />working opportunities the workshops<lb />provide. Dan Sparlin, Technology Spe-<lb />cialist and Webmaster for Evaluation<lb />Services, facilitates the evaluation of<lb />Web-based products, and finds that the<lb />training creates an atmosphere oto es-<lb />tablish relationships with other educa-<lb />tors who come from different back-<lb />grounds and working environments. The<lb />interchange of ideas under these circum-<lb />stances is valuable for enhancing profes-<lb />sional development.�<lb /><lb />Educators also enjoy the opportu-<lb />nity to review the newest resources avail-<lb />able. Media specialists in particular ap-<lb />preciate the chance to see materials "<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />especially new fiction books " before<lb />they purchase them. Cindy Taylor finds<lb />the training a ogreat way to make class-<lb />room teachers aware of the well-written<lb />young adult fiction titles that are avail-<lb />able and are of high interest to reluctant<lb />readers.�<lb /><lb />Perhaps the most rewarding part of<lb />the workshop occurs after the training.<lb />If participants successfully complete the<lb />workshop, they may continue to review<lb />resources for InfoTech for one year and<lb />receive payment for their evaluations.<lb />All FellowsT reviews conclude with ei-<lb />ther the designation oA Humanities Fel-<lb />low Review� or oAn Eisenhower Fellow<lb />Review.�<lb /><lb />After one year, many participants<lb />find they have a knack for evaluating<lb />and remain with Evaluation Services as<lb />regular contractors. While on contract,<lb />educators are encouraged to use the<lb />materials with their students to obtain a<lb />more accurate reflection of strengths and<lb />weaknesses. oI have enjoyed contracting<lb />reviews from DPI since my [Humanities]<lb />training session and am constantly<lb />amazed at the variety and timeliness of<lb />the materials I am sent,� says Cindy<lb />Barlowe, Media Coordinator at Hibriten<lb />High School in Caldwell County.<lb /><lb />What does Evaluation Services<lb />gain?<lb />For over 30 years, Evaluation Services has<lb /><lb />maintained a rigorous set of criteria for<lb />evaluating resources. With trained evalu-<lb /><lb />ators who are objective and accurate,<lb />they continue to publish reviews that are<lb />consistently high-quality. InfoTech,<lb />therefore, remains a reliable source for<lb />collection development in North Caro-<lb />lina school libraries and classrooms.<lb /><lb />Sign me up!<lb /><lb />The 2001 Humanities Fellows training<lb />will take place March 29-30, 2001.* The<lb />2001 Eisenhower Fellows training will be<lb />held in the summer of 2001 (dates to be<lb />determined). To be considered for a Hu-<lb />manities or Eisenhower Fellows Training,<lb />candidates must fill out an application<lb />form. Application forms for the Humani-<lb />ties training were mailed with the No-<lb />vember 2000 InfoTech; applications for<lb />the Eisenhower training will be mailed<lb />with the March 2001 InfoTech. For the<lb />first time, online applications are avail-<lb />able in the oMedia/Technology Zone�<lb />and the oTeacher Zone� at NC WISEOWL<lb />www.ncwiseowlL.org. To attend, par-<lb />ticipants also must have written permis-<lb />sion from their principal, and must com-<lb />plete a one-page essay that explains their<lb />interest in attending the workshop.<lb /><lb />For more information on the Hu-<lb />manities and Eisenhower Fellows train-<lb />ing, contact John Brim, Section Chief of<lb />Evaluation Services, at 919-807-3288 or<lb />by e-mail at jbrim@dpi.state.nc.us.<lb /><lb />*Note: Due to state budget shortfall, NCDPI<lb />Humanities Fellows training has been<lb />postponed.<lb /><lb />Dyiecon<lb />Titles, Inc.<lb /><lb />RY La Le OL<lb /><lb />Books and Other Media<lb /><lb />for Children &amp; Adults<lb /><lb />Davidson Titles, Inc.Ts exclusive products and various<lb />publishers are presented to schools and libraries by sales<lb />people throughout most of the United States. Most of our<lb />sales personnel have professional and efficient access to<lb />all of our titles and prices through laptop computers; they<lb />can provide fast and convenient ordering.<lb /><lb />¢ Distributor for over 100 publishers.<lb /><lb />¢ Publisher of 4 creative and exciting childrenTs series:<lb />The Illustrated Rules of the Game<lb />The Dinosaur Dynasty<lb />Extremely Weird<lb />World Guides<lb /><lb />¢ Customized ordering &amp; processing.<lb /><lb />Davidson Titles, Inc.<lb /><lb />101 Executive Drive * P.O. Box 3538 + Jackson, TN 38303-3538<lb />(800) 433-3903 » Fax: (800) 787-7935 * Email: dtitles@usit.net<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 " 71<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />"" NORTH CAROLINA<lb /><lb />Dorothy Hodder, Compiler<lb /><lb />he June 1999 issue of USBanker magazine reported that North Carolina is at the top<lb />of the ranking of states with the most banking assets. This is a far cry from 1804,<lb />when the General Assembly of the Tar Heel state at last recognized the need to<lb />establish banks within its borders. North Carolina was the last of the original states<lb />of the Union to do so.<lb /><lb />The Bank of Cape Fear of Wilmington, North Carolina tells the story of one of the earliest<lb />banks in North Carolina. (The Bank of Newbern was technically chartered a few days after<lb />that of Cape Fear, but was the first bank actually to do business in North Carolina. This bank<lb />did not attain the status of Cape Fear, however, and was liquidated in 1835.) The Bank of Cape<lb /><lb />Fear received its charter on December 17, 1804, and remained in<lb />business 60 years, more than twice as long as any other antebel-<lb /><lb />Robert S. Neale. lum bank in North Carolina.<lb />For his research, photographer, numismatist, and amateur<lb /><lb />The Bank of Cape Fear of historian Robert Neale relied heavily on books, manuscripts files,<lb /><lb />and documents from the North Carolina Room of New Hanover<lb /><lb />Wilming ton, North Carolina. County Public Library and the files of the Lower Cape Fear<lb /><lb />eon ye ; Historical Society. The project is clearly an outgrowth of his<lb />Wilmington, N.C.: Lower Cape Fear Historical Society, interest in collecting obsolete bank notes, a fascinating sub-<lb /><lb />in association with the author, 1999. 130 pp. specialty within numismatics, which informs the history in<lb />$15.00. ISBN 0-9673815-2-5. interesting ways. For example, he reports some unusual denomina-<lb />tions such as three-, four-, six-, seven-, eight-, and nine-dollar<lb />notes. Some color plates of the currencies are included, with<lb />speculation on the reasons for their circulation.<lb /><lb />Neale interweaves a rich sampling of local history and biography along with numismatic<lb />lore and banking matters. Devastating fires and disease played a significant role in<lb />WilmingtonTs history, due to the oclose proximity of wooden structures, open fires, and<lb />relatively primitive medical practices.� The Bank of Cape Fear was touched by these events<lb />throughout its history. Losses from an early morning fire in November 1819 approached $1<lb />million, and included the estate of the BankTs third President, John London. In 1840 a blaze<lb />that began in a dry goods store bridged the street and osubstantially damaged the bankTs<lb />exterior.� Epidemics of yellow fever in 1821 and 1862 took the lives of many citizens in<lb />Wilmington, affecting the local economy and many of the bankTs customers. A fascinating<lb />story is that of Charles Jewkes Wright, the eldest son of the BankTs second President, Judge<lb />Joshua Grainger Wright. Charles, a twenty-nine year old attorney, contracted the fever in 1821<lb />during a brief trip into town to retrieve some papers from his law office, and died shortly after.<lb />Nearly forty years later a ospiritualistic medium� came to Wilmington to give a series of<lb />séances, and it is reported that Charles omade contact� with his nephew during one of these.<lb /><lb />The date of the actual closing of the Bank of Cape Fear is unclear. Some evidence suggests<lb />that regular operations ceased in 1866, with private debt settlement continuing into 1868.<lb />This would be the end of the story but for the BankTs Salem Branch, which, through a series of<lb />events recounted in this volume, ultimately became part of todayTs Wachovia Corporation.<lb /><lb />The history of this important early bank also intersects with the histories of a number of<lb />other North Carolina cities and towns. In addition to Wilmington, the Bank of Cape Fear<lb />established agencies or branches at various times in Fayetteville, Raleigh, Salisbury, Hillsboro,<lb />Salem, Washington (N.C.), Raleigh, Greensboro, and Asheville. Both the historical and<lb />numismatic content of this slim volume make it a reasonable choice for academic and larger<lb />public libraries.<lb /><lb />" Bryna Coonin<lb />East Carolina University<lb /><lb />32 " Spring 2001 North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />n the midst of the Cold War crisis of the 1960s, Americans who tuned in their<lb />radios on Friday evenings expecting to catch the news or weather might<lb />instead have heard oRadio Free Dixie,� a program produced in Fidel CastroTs<lb />Cuba, featuring the voice of Robert F. Williams. Williams, a Black radical from<lb />North Carolina and an active member of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee,<lb /><lb />had fled the country in the midst of racial violence following attempts to carry out<lb />peaceful demonstrations in Monroe.<lb /><lb />TysonTs compelling central thesis, that Robert WilliamsTs oarmed self defense�<lb />operated side by side and in uneasy partnership with legal efforts and nonviolent<lb />protests on behalf of civil rights, adds a fresh perspective to studies of the era. Tyson<lb />reveals the gun-wielding ex-Marine as an example of oan indigenous current of<lb />militancy� among African Americans, willing to defend home and community by force<lb />if necessary. When justice by white supremacist government failed African Americans,<lb />Williams and others like him asserted othe American tradition of armed resistance to<lb /><lb />tyranny.�<lb /><lb />In practice Williams, one of the most notorious Black militants of his time, sought<lb /><lb />Timothy B. Tyson.<lb />Radio Free Dixie:<lb /><lb />Robert F. Williams and<lb /><lb />the Roots of Black Power.<lb /><lb />Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1999.<lb />416 pp. Cloth, $29.95. ISBN 0-8078-2502-6. Paper, $16.95.<lb />ISBN 0-8078-4923-S.<lb /><lb />Robert F,<lb />|\Williams &amp;<lb />lthe Roots<lb />jof Black<lb />\Power<lb /><lb />Timothy B.<lb />Tyson<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />to perpetuate a strategy of nonviolent protest that was little<lb />different from that of Martin Luther King, Jr. and other<lb />liberal activists, and avoided outright bloodshed where<lb />possible. His larger significance was giving hope and<lb />courage to African Americans caught up in the arduous and<lb />frequently violent process of reforming the SouthTs Jim<lb />Crow tradition. Tyson sees this as laying the groundwork in<lb />communities like Monroe for Black Power, which altered<lb />and transformed the Black freedom movement after the<lb />mid-1960s.<lb /><lb />Tyson attempts to get outside the standard interpreta-<lb />tions of the civil rights movement as having been won by<lb />the nonviolent strategy of Martin Luther King, Jr. and his<lb />supporters. In spite of its strengths and the literary quality<lb />of its prose, his study does little to put the Robert Williams<lb />story into the perspective of the victories won by liberal<lb />civil rights leaders. Williams, who anticipated the approach<lb />of later Black nationalists such as Stokely Carmichael,<lb />Albert Cleage, and Louis Farrakhan, was not a black<lb />Geronimo plotting bloody guerilla raids, but an authentic<lb />American hero who asserted values consistent with the<lb />American Revolution, drawing upon oviolence as a vehicle of libera-<lb />tion� in response to White terrorism. It is a fact, however, that main-<lb />stream figures such as King, Roy Wilkins, North CarolinaTs Kelly<lb />Alexander, and a host of others openly opposed the militant from<lb />Monroe and regarded him as a threat. Unfortunately, Tyson does little<lb />to explain the reasons for this or to illuminate the true political role of<lb />such figures as Jesse Helms, the stateTs right-wing nemesis.<lb /><lb />TysonTs rhetoric will seem familiar to contemporary readers<lb />steeped in recent criticism of the liberalism of the 1960s. King is de-<lb />scribed as a Black oprince� out to suppress and discredit Robert Will-<lb />iams; Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. is a ocourt intellectual� for JFK; Gover-<lb />nor Terry Sanford viewed Monroe as a otime bomb ticking� and called<lb />out the state patrol to protect the Klan from WilliamsTs well-armed<lb />forces. Cold War-era liberals, says Tyson, were guilty of helping to fos-<lb />ter an ounquestioning acceptance of U.S. foreign policy.� It seems un-<lb />fortunate that over 36 years after the passage of the Civil Rights Act of<lb />1964, this book should provide so little perspective on the movement<lb />that made it possible. Tyson snipes at 1960s liberals, while suggesting<lb />that White extremism, imminent race war, Black nationalism, and<lb />Black Power became the inevitable, central, and defining developments<lb /><lb />of the civil rights age. Historians may hope for other books to complete the picture of<lb />Williams, whom J. Edgar Hoover (as Tyson briefly acknowledges) regarded as a primary<lb />tool to discredit his opponents. This book is appropriate for public and academic li-<lb /><lb />braries.<lb /><lb />"John L. Godwin<lb />Wilmington, N.C.<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 " ry)<lb /></p>
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          <lb />eading Lynne HintonTs debut novel is like visiting with old friends. Set in Hope Springs,<lb /><lb />North Carolina, Friendship Cake is a warm novel that combines womenTs friendships<lb /><lb />and their recipes.<lb /><lb />The story centers on five friends who decide to undertake a church cookbook to raise<lb /><lb />funds for the Hope Springs Community Church, as well as to revive the WomenTs<lb /><lb />Guild, which is dwindling away. The cast of colorful characters includes Charlotte<lb />Stewart, freshman pastor, who experiences the joys and trials of a first congregation; no-nonsense<lb />widow Margaret Peele; the sometimes acerbic Louise Fisher; Jessie Jenkins, the only African American<lb />in an otherwise all-white church; and loyal but sometimes interfering Beatrice Newgarden.<lb /><lb />Humor and touching moments run throughout the book. Each character is introduced in her<lb />own chapter, with the recipe that she contributes. The lessons learned revolve around more than the<lb />completion of the cookbook, as the women and church face contemporary issues of small town life<lb /><lb />including biracial marriages, homosexuality, and the devastation of AlzheimerTs.<lb />As these women assemble their cookbook, they also come together as they make<lb /><lb />Lynne Hinton. sense of their past and present. The story reflects the solace, support, and<lb />° ° strength that they find in their faith and friendships.<lb />Fri en ds h Ip Cake. The recipes that open each chapter add authentic flavor to the story, with<lb />New York: HarperCollins, 2000. delectable Southern foods, including sweet potato casserole, prune cake, pecan<lb />210pp. $20 00. ISBN 0-688-171 47-8. pie, banana pudding, and corn relish. The book ends with the true ingredients<lb /><lb />for Friendship Cake.<lb />Author Lynne Hinton is the pastor of the First Congregational United<lb />Church of Christ in Asheboro, North Carolina. Although this is HintonTs first<lb />novel, she has written several other books about religion. A portion of the proceeds goes to Hospice of<lb />Alamance-Caswell Counties.<lb />Recommended for all collections where books by Jan Karon are popular.<lb />" Joan Sherif<lb />Northwestern Regional Library<lb /><lb />n The Balm of Gilead Tree, Robert Morgan has gathered together seventeen short stories, tales of<lb />people and place and circumstance that make the reader feel both kinship with and grateful<lb />distance from the central characters. Arranged chronologically from the 16th century to the<lb />present day, the ten new stories and seven earlier ones are integrated seamlessly into a whole<lb />that tells of peopleTs relationship with those around them, friend and foe, and with their world.<lb />oThe Tracks of Chief de Soto,� the opening title, is a young womanTs observation of the<lb />coming of the White man to her isolated native village and of the gradual changes which followed; the<lb />otracks� of the title refer not only to marks made on the earth. The closing story, oThe Balm of Gilead<lb />Tree,� is a manTs observation of a terrible airplane crash and his actions and reactions among the<lb />wreckage, the dead, and the Balm of Gilead trees. In between are<lb />tales of the hopeful and the fallen, of soldiers in many wars and<lb />their families, of peopleTs lives and deaths. oDark Corner� is the<lb />story of a familyTs desperate trip home to North Carolina and the<lb />unexpected help they receive from the people of the dangerous<lb /><lb />The Balm of Gilead Tree: town of Chestnut Springs. oSleepy Gap,� set during Prohibition,<lb /><lb />x describes one manTs crime, punishment, and rehabilitation as<lb />New and Selected Stories. __seen by another prisoner.<lb />Some of the stories are linked together by place, time, and<lb />Frankfort, KY : Gnomon Press, 1999. character " stories building upon one another to present a fuller<lb />344 pp. Paper, $17.95. ISBN 0-917788-73-7. picture of the events taking place. oA Brightness New &amp; Welcom-<lb />ing� is a soldierTs story of what could be called olife� in a Civil<lb />War prison camp. Preceding it is oLittle Willie,� a story about the<lb />fugitive slave boy a family saves and tragically loses. Following it<lb />is oPisgah,� narrated by a boy who could be the child of the<lb />prisoner of war in oBrightness.� Another trio of war stories is oMurals,� oThe Welcome,� and<lb />oTailgunner,� which take place during World War II and show the progression of events from the draft,<lb />to the homecoming of a prisoner of war, to the reminiscences of a veteran who was the lone survivor<lb />of a plane crash.<lb />Robert Morgan covers every imaginable scenario in this collection, writing in a way that invites<lb />you to observe his characters and their lives and leaves you hoping for them and aware of the place<lb />their story has in your own life.<lb /><lb />Robert Morgan.<lb /><lb />" Joan Ferguson<lb />University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill<lb /><lb />74 " Spring 2001 North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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        <p>6é heyTd stuck a little pink Post-it note on my head: A Born Loser. Sarah and Hannah meant it<lb />for a joke, to get the last word. But I couldnTt bear for them to think that, even for a joke.�<lb />Titania Gentry believes that if she records her life story, her daughters will see her not<lb />as a oborn loser� but as a person of character, adventure, and ideas. Although Titania never<lb />writes a word in the account ledger purchased for this job, her attempt stirs memories of<lb />her thirteenth year, the year she learned to twirl a fire baton. This reminiscence is the heart<lb />of Heather Ross MillerTs novel Champeen.<lb /><lb />Titania is the daughter of a beautiful, self-centered mother and an alcoholic, womanizing<lb />father. At age thirteen she enters adolescence and forms a crush on Sebastian McSherry, an injured<lb />war veteran living with his aging father. She also attends piano lessons insisted upon by her<lb /><lb />mother. Though Jane wants Titania to achieve the celebrity she<lb />never did, her daughterTs goal is as independent as the child herself:<lb /><lb />Heather Ross Miller. Titania wants to become a champeen fire-baton twirler.<lb /><lb />Cham p een. Heather Ross Miller presents a wonderful, realistic coming-of-age<lb />novel that summons sympathy, embarrassment, and admiration for<lb />Dallas: Southern Methodist University Press, 1999. her heroine. Miller easily slips between TitaniaTs 13-year-old voice<lb />285 pp. $19.95. ISBN 0-87074-446-1. and her 43-year-old voice. This technique allows a deeper under-<lb />standing of the character and the effects her childhood had on her<lb />adult life.<lb /><lb />Set in MillerTs own hometown of Badin, North Carolina, the story reflects small-town life in<lb />the 1940s. Most of the characters in the novel, including TitaniaTs friends Carol Jean Spence,<lb />Erskine oSonny� Kelly, and the heroic oSabby� McSherry, are wonderfully engaging. Titania herself<lb />is a remarkably rich character, and her determination and confidence are admirable and endearing.<lb />TitaniaTs father Franklin, on the other hand, appears in the narrative only to have an affair or drink<lb />copious amounts of whiskey, and the deeper side of his personality is not fully explored.<lb /><lb />Miller currently teaches at Washington and Lee University and is the author of fourteen books<lb />of poems, short stories, novels, and essays. Her experience is reflected in her elegantly constructed<lb />prose and her effective use of first person narration. The work explores issues relevant to any reader<lb />who has lived through adolescence and later reflected upon it. Though the book is aimed at older<lb />readers, it is appropriate for high school and public libraries. Because of its setting and its detailed<lb />portrait of BadinTs residents, the work is also suited for libraries interested in the collection of<lb /><lb />southern literature.<lb />" Laura Young Baxley<lb /><lb />The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill<lb /><lb />INFORMATION MANAGEMENT<lb /><lb />SELLA AT IE IEA LS TRO MOL SA OE AE LILI EEE EOE NEMEC<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries Spring 2001 " 79<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>orth Carolina, 1860s: to fight for the Confederacy or the Union? North Carolinians felt<lb />great reluctance to secede with the other Southern states, due to strong economic ties to the<lb />North. Also, North Carolinians did not have strong class ties to the Southern plantation<lb />and slave owners"most were poor white subsistence farmers. The state provided one-fourth<lb />of the ConfederacyTs draftees, but because of public sentiment it saw the highest rate of<lb />desertion of all Southern states.<lb /><lb />Reluctance to fight for the Confederacy, desertion, and even changing of loyalty to the Union side<lb />was exhibited by many North Carolinians like William McKesson Blalock, a.k.a. Keith Blalock. Rebels in<lb />Blue, a biographical account of BlalockTs struggles to remain true to his Union feelings while protecting<lb /><lb />his family from retribution by local Confederates, is a strong portrayal of<lb />an individual who acted as a Unionist guerilla.<lb />Blalock began the war by being forced away from his new wife, into a<lb />Peter F. Stevens. Confederate uniform. But as Keith was a strong person, so was his wife,<lb /><lb />| ° ; f Malinda Pritchard Blalock. She shaved her head and put on menTs cloth-<lb />Rebe Sin BI ue. Th e S tor y oO ing to join her husband. Because of pressures from their mountaineer<lb /><lb />° ° neighbors, they both put on Confederate uniforms against their Unionist<lb />Kei th an d M al in da BI al ock s beliefs, but at the earliest possible moment they contrived ways to get<lb />discharged. Returning to their mountain home, they began ferrying es-<lb />caped Union prisoners over the mountains to safety. As the war contin-<lb />ued, the two got further drawn into the Union cause, to the point where<lb />Keith was commanding men who were raiding Confederate strongholds<lb />in the North Carolina mountains.<lb /><lb />Peter Stevens has done a good job of painting Keith Blalock as a man consumed with his family,<lb />their Unionist leanings, and any slight brought against them. Keith is not a hero in any sense as he seeks<lb />revenge against former neighbors and retribution for perceived slights. This work gives a sense of how<lb />cruel and personal the Civil War was to North Carolinians. The author has done much research, using<lb />letters and personal accounts from contemporary individuals. The extensive bibliography and the index<lb />are two useful resources. One drawback is in the editing " on numerous occasions, errors in the citation<lb />of a year break the readerTs stride .<lb /><lb />This work would be good for any public or academic library, or any collection interested in Civil War<lb />history and the history of North Carolina.<lb /><lb />Dallas, TX: Taylor Publishing Co., 2000.<lb />254 pp. $24.95. ISBN 0-87833-166-2.<lb /><lb />" Caroline Keizer<lb />University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill<lb /><lb />John Higgins, Sales Representative<lb /><lb />P.O. Box 21011<lb />Columbia SC 29221<lb /><lb />1-800-222-9086<lb />Fax: 803-731-0320<lb /><lb />OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS ve QUALITY BOOKS INC.<lb /><lb />76 " Spring 2001 North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />n I-85/40, just east of Greensboro, is a sign directing travelers to the exit for the Charlotte<lb />Hawkins Brown Memorial historic site. Who was she, you may wonder, and why does she<lb />rate a historic site?<lb /><lb />Charlotte Hawkins Brown and Palmer Memorial Institute answers those questions. Both<lb />authors are well qualified on their subject. Charles Wadelington is the minority interpre-<lb />tations specialist for the North Carolina Historic Sites Section and the acknowledged<lb /><lb />authority on Brown. Richard Knapp, the SectionTs curator of research, has written several books on<lb />North Carolina history topics.<lb />Proceeding chronologically, the book begins with the birth of<lb />Charlotte Hawkins Brown in 1883 in Henderson, NC, and ends with<lb />the closing of Palmer Memorial Institute in 1971. In 1901 the eigh-<lb /><lb />Charles W. Wadelington and Richard F. Knapp. teen-year-old Brown arrived in Sedalia, NC, on the train from Massa-<lb /><lb />Charlotte Hawkins Brown and<lb /><lb />chusetts, to teach at Bethany Institute (soon to become Palmer Memo-<lb />rial Institute), run by the American Missionary Association (AMA).<lb /><lb />p a Im er M emo ria | | n stitute; From that time forward she devoted her life to Palmer to such an<lb /><lb />extent that the two became synonymous. This book, then, is at once a<lb /><lb />Wh at O ne Yo un g Africa n- history of Palmer and a biography of Brown.<lb /><lb />When the AMA decided to close Bethany a year after BrownTs<lb /><lb />A merica n Wo man C ou Id Do. arrival, she inaugurated a lifelong fundraising venture that enabled her<lb /><lb />to expand the school from one dilapidated classroom building to a<lb /><lb />Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina campus of several buildings, while increasing enrollment from SO<lb />Press, 1999. xvi, 303 pp. Cloth, $39.95. students to more than 200. She was by all accounts outstanding at<lb />ISBN 0-8078-2514-X. Paper, $16.95. raising funds, first from wealthy white businessmen in the North and<lb />ISBN 0-8078-4794-1. later from Greensboro residents and other Southerners, both Black and<lb /><lb />White. Her persuasiveness and persistence were the keys to her success.<lb />Brown held strong opinions about education for African Ameri-<lb />cans. She believed that they should be taught classical and scientific subjects, and educated spiritu-<lb />ally, morally, and mentally. She slowly changed the focus of her school, developing one of the finest<lb />preparatory schools for African Americans in the nation amid the suspicions of Whites and African<lb />Americans alike. By the late 1940s the student body consisted of Black youth from 31 states and four<lb />foreign countries, many from the countryTs wealthiest families.<lb /><lb />Wadelington and Knapp note that Brown believed God would guide her aright in realizing her<lb />dream of providing an excellent education for African Americans. Her dignified and cultured mien<lb />gained the respect of those whom she met. Frequently invited to lecture, she spoke in 47 states and<lb />Washington, D.C., on racial uplift, character, and education. She wrote two books, the most famous<lb />of which was The Correct Thing to Do"To Say"To Wear.<lb /><lb />Two other full-length biographies of Brown exist. Diane Silcox-Jarrett wrote Charlotte Hawkins<lb />Brown: One WomanTs Dream in 1995. Based on interviews with BrownTs friends and former students,<lb />it is, as the author states, oa creative nonfiction piece, based on fact with the creative part coming<lb />into the development of particular scenes.� The Lengthening Shadow of a Woman, by Constance Hill<lb />Marteena, ois for young people, especially those who may be discouraged.� Written in 1977, it<lb />focuses specifically on BrownTs life.<lb /><lb />Charlotte Hawkins Brown was a remarkable woman whose accomplishments were astounding,<lb />particularly during the Jim Crow era in the South. This well-researched, comprehensive book is<lb />generously illustrated with photographs and includes a chronology, copious notes, a bibliography,<lb />and index. It will be a welcome addition to public and academic libraries, strengthening their<lb /><lb />holdings of biographies, North Carolina history, and materials on African Americans.<lb />"Joline R. Ezzell<lb /><lb />Duke University Library<lb /><lb />Tired of making opermanent loans?�<lb /><lb />Ralph M. Davis, Sales Representative<lb />P.O. Box 144<lb /><lb />Rockingham, NC 28379<lb />1-800-545-2714<lb /><lb />7 Ch ~ i TomorrowTs Technology for TodayTs Libraries�"�<lb />le Ci (poin 550 Grove Road « P.O. Box 188  Thorofare, New Jersey 08086<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />(800) 257-5540 * TELEX: 84-5396 * FAX: (609) 848-0937<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 " 37<lb /></p>
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          <lb />OTHER PUBLICATIONS OF INTEREST ...<lb /><lb />Works of fiction include License My Roving Hands: Poems and<lb />Stories by 85-year old Juanita Tobin of Blowing Rock. (2000;<lb />Parkway Publishers, Inc., PO Box 3678, Boone, NC 28607; 57<lb />pp.; paper, $10.00; ISBN 1-887905-26-X.)<lb /><lb />Ruth Layng has turned the love affair between her mother-<lb />in-law, a Zionville, North Carolina, mountain girl, and<lb />father-in-law, an Irishman serving in the Canadian army in<lb />World War I, into a novel called Letters From James: A High<lb />Country Love Story. (2000; Parkway Publishers, Inc., PO Box<lb />3678, Boone, NC 28607; 349 pp.; paper, $19.95; ISBN 1-<lb />887905-23-5.)<lb /><lb />Alyson Hagy describes life along the Outer Banks in Grave-<lb />yard of the Atlantic, a collection of short stories. (2000;<lb />Graywolf Press, 2402 University Ave, Suite<lb />203, Saint Paul, MN 55114; 186 pp.; paper,<lb />$14.00; ISBN 1-55597-301-9.)<lb /><lb />Michael McFee follows his fine anthology<lb />of North Carolina poetry, The Language<lb />They Speak Is Things to Eat, published in<lb />1994, with This Is Where We Live: Short<lb />Stories by 25 North Carolina Writers. He has<lb />featured stories by a orising generation� of<lb />Tar Heels, giving the stateTs libraries a<lb />number of new names to watch. (2000; The<lb />University of North Carolina Press, PO Box<lb />2288, Chapel Hill, NC 27515-2288; 278 pp.;<lb />cloth, $29.95; ISBN 0-8078-2583-2; paper,<lb />$16.95; ISBN 0-8078-4895-6.)<lb /><lb />JUNE SPENCE, JENNIFER OFFILL, DALE RAY PHILLIPS, LAWRENCE NAUMOFF,<lb /><lb />A young girl watches her uncle, a Presbyte-<lb />rian minister, challenge old beliefs and<lb />traditions in JobTs Corner, North Carolina,<lb />during the Civil Rights movement in<lb />Patricia SprinkleTs The Remember Box. (2000;<lb />Zondervan Publishing House, 5249 Corpo-<lb />rate Grove, SE, Grand Rapids, MI 49512; 412 pp.; paper,<lb />$11.99; ISBN 0-310-22992-8.)<lb /><lb />John Foster West, Emeritus Professor<lb />of English at Appalachian State<lb />University, won the Appalachian<lb />Consortium Fiction Award for his<lb />third novel, The Summer People. It<lb />tells the story of a young widow who<lb />spends a summer alone in Watauga<lb />County, courted by two very differ-<lb />ent men, and making the choice of a<lb />new way Of life for herself. (2000;<lb />Parkway Publishers, Inc., PO Box<lb />3678, Boone, NC 28607; 243 pp.;<lb />paper, $14.95; ISBN 1-887903-27-8.)<lb /><lb />Sallie Bissell weaves a tale of suspense<lb />and psychological terror In the Forest<lb />of Harm. Mary Crow, tough young<lb />prosecutor from Atlanta, goes hiking<lb />in her native North Carolina moun-<lb />tains with two close women friends.<lb />A vengeful relative of one of her<lb /><lb />78 " Spring 2001<lb /><lb />~SHORT STORIES EY 25 CONTEMPORARY HORTH CAMOLINVA WRITERS. EDITED BY<lb /><lb />PROHAKL MOTE. MICHAEL PARKER, HEATHER ROSE MULLEN, TONY ZAMLEY,<lb /><lb />LUKE WHISHANT, JOHN HOLMAN, MANLY YOUMANS, MIELIRGA MALOUF,<lb /><lb />IMAMARNE CINGHER, CANDACE FLYNT, SANAH DESSEN, JOE ASHBY PORTER,<lb />DANIEL, WALLAGE, P. 8. PANAIB, PETER TUMCH, JOHN KESSEL, TOM MAWKING,<lb /><lb />PHILIP CKRARD, PETER MAKUCK, ROM RASH, RUTH MOOSE, ELLYN BACHE<lb /><lb />convicts is only one of the predators stalking the trio. Think<lb />Deliverance. (2001; Bantam Books, 1540 Broadway, New York,<lb />NY 10036; 305 pp.; cloth, $21.95; ISBN 0-553-80128-7.)<lb /><lb />Amy Rogers, Robert Inman, and Frye Gaillard have edited<lb />Novello: Ten Years of Great American Writing, an anthology of<lb />essays and stories celebrating the 10th anniversary of<lb />CharlotteTs well-known literary festival. Twenty-five authors<lb />who have read at the festival are represented, including Pat<lb />Conroy, Lee Smith, Charles Kuralt, and many other favor-<lb />ites. Many of the selections appear here in print for the first<lb />time. (2000; published by the Public Library of Charlotte &amp;<lb />Mecklenburg County in association with Down Home Press,<lb />distributed by John F. Blair, Publisher, 1406 Plaza Drive,<lb />Winston-Salem, NC 27103; 348 pp.; paper, $16.95; ISBN 1-<lb />878086-87-1.)<lb /><lb />Literary historians and critics will already be<lb />aware of Thomas WolfeTs O Lost: A Story of<lb />the Buried Life, published under the guidance<lb />of Maxwell Perkins as Look Homeward, Angel.<lb />The original text has been established and<lb />restored by Arlyn and Matthew J. Bruccoli<lb />for the centenary of WolfeTs birth. (2000,<lb />University of South Carolina Press, 937<lb />Assembly St., Carolina Plaza, 8th Floor,<lb />Columbia, SC 29208; 736 pp.; cloth, $29.95;<lb />ISBN 1-57003-369-2.)<lb /><lb />Shedding further light on the career of<lb />Thomas Wolfe, Matthew J. Bruccoli and Park<lb />Bucker have edited To Loot My Life Clean:<lb />The Thomas Wolfe-Maxwell Perkins Correspon-<lb />dence. (2000; University of South Carolina<lb />Press, 937 Assembly St., Carolina Plaza, 8th<lb />Floor, Columbia, SC 29208; 340 pp.; cloth,<lb />$29.95; ISBN 1-57003-355-2.)<lb /><lb />Donald Davis, prolific and well-loved North<lb /><lb />Carolina storyteller, gives us five more tales<lb />about his mountain boyhood in Ride the Butterflies: Back to<lb />School With Donald Davis. (2000; August House Publishers,<lb />Inc., PO Box 3223, Little Rock, AR 72203; 94 pp.; paper,<lb />$4.95; ISBN 0-87483-606-9.) Davis promotes the<lb />value of story telling as a teaching tool in Writing<lb />As a Second Language: From Experience to Story to<lb />Prose (2000; August House Publishers, Inc., PO Box<lb />3223, Little Rock, AR 72203; 139 pp.; paper,<lb />$11.95; ISBN 0-87483-567-4.)<lb /><lb />Two beautiful cookbooks: Robbin GourleyTs Sugar<lb />Pie &amp; Jelly Roll: Sweets from a Southern Kitchen,<lb />features 65 dessert recipes from her rural North<lb />Carolina childhood, illustrated with watercolor<lb />sketches. (2000; Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill,<lb />PO Box 2225, Chapel Hill, NC 27515-2225; 128<lb />pp.; cloth, $18.95; ISBN 1-56512-275-5.) Ben and<lb />Karen Barker share over 125 recipes from their<lb />Durham restaurant in Not Afraid of Flavor: Recipes<lb />from Magnolia Grill, lavishly illustrated with color<lb />photographs of their raw materials and finished<lb />products. (2000; The University of North Carolina<lb />Press, PO Box 2288, Chapel Hill, NC 27515-2288;<lb />253 pp.; cloth, $29.95; ISBN 0-8078-2585-9.)<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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        <p>""""""""""""""""<lb /><lb />Betty Leighton reviewed books for the Winston-Salem Journal<lb />for 30 years. She picked 160 for Books Enough &amp; Time: Selected<lb />Reviews 1970-2000. The book is divided into sections on<lb />prize winners, books that can be read at a sitting, mysteries,<lb />first novels, excellence, world authors, Southern writers,<lb />biographies of writers, and favorites. While it should be a<lb />unique and useful tool for book clubs, librarians will wish for<lb />an index. (2000; Wildwood Press, 2516 Village Trail, Win-<lb />ston-Salem, NC 27106; 389 pp.; $25.00;<lb />ISBN 0-9670974-1-X.)<lb /><lb />For the outdoor types, C. Franklin Gold-<lb />smith II], Shannon E. G. Hamrick, and H.<lb />James Hamrick, Jr. have picked The Best<lb />Hikes of Pisgah National Forest. The pocket-<lb />sized guide is indexed, and includes small<lb />maps. (2000; John F. Blair, Publisher, 1406<lb />Plaza Drive, Winston-Salem, NC 27103; 264<lb />pp.; paper, $14.95; ISBN 0-89587-190-4.)<lb /><lb />Judie Lawson Wallace and Ken Putnam, Jr.<lb />have mapped 56 Great Bike Rides In and<lb />Around Winston-Salem, ranging from one to<lb />70 miles in length. (2000; John F. Blair,<lb />Publisher, 1406 Plaza Drive, Winston-Salem,<lb />NC 27103; 268 pp.; paper, $12.95; ISBN O-<lb />89587-198-X.)<lb /><lb />Allen De Hart offers the first comprehensive<lb />guide to Hiking North CarolinaTs Mountains-<lb />to-Sea Trail, nearly 1000 miles of designated<lb />and planned hiking trails and bicycle paths<lb />connecting ClingmanTs Dome to JockeyTs Ridge. The detailed<lb />guide includes a great deal of information about the sur-<lb />rounding terrain and its history, making it a little heavy for<lb />the pack. (2000; The University of North Carolina Press, PO<lb />Box 2288, Chapel Hill, NC 27515-2288; 371 pp.; paper,<lb />$18.95; ISBN 0-8078-4887-S.)<lb /><lb />Stanley L. BentleyTs beautifully<lb />photographed Native Orchids of<lb />the Southern Appalachian Moun-<lb />tains is the perfect excuse to hike<lb />the mountains. The authoritative<lb />guide includes charts on flower-<lb />ing periods, range maps for each<lb />flower, glossary, bibliography,<lb />and index, all reflecting the<lb />authorTs 25 years of studying<lb />orchids. (2000; The University of<lb />North Carolina Press, PO Box<lb />2288, Chapel Hill, NC 27515-<lb />2288; 235 pp.; cloth, $39.95;<lb />ISBN 0-8078-2563-8; paper,<lb />$24.95; ISBN 0-8078-4872-7.)<lb /><lb />of the Southern<lb />Appalachian Mountains<lb /><lb />Frank Meacham covers over 100<lb />Public [sic] Owned Campgrounds in<lb />North Carolina, from the moun-<lb />tains to the sea. (2000; Frank<lb />Meacham, 5109 Forest Oaks<lb />Drive, Greensboro, NC 27406;<lb />220 pp.; paper, $18.95; ISBN O-<lb />9673362-0-1.)<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />Ss,<lb /><lb />The Secret Lives of Fishermen: More Outdoor Essays by Jim Dean<lb />follows Dogs That Point, Fish That Bite. Dean writes a column<lb />on oOur Natural Heritage� for Wildlife in North Carolina,<lb />where 39 of these pieces originally appeared. (2000; The<lb />University of North Carolina Press, PO Box 2288, Chapel<lb />Hill, NC 27515-2288; 163 pp.; cloth, $24.95; ISBN 0-8078-<lb />2580-8.)<lb /><lb />Jamie Cox has answered a lot of car trip<lb />questions in Talking Turkey: And Other<lb />Stories of North CarolinaTs Oddly Named<lb />Places. They are all listed in the Table of<lb />Contents, but unfortunately for the<lb />reference librarian, the book is not in-<lb />dexed. (2000; Down Home Press, PO Box<lb />4126, Asheboro, NC 27204; 183 pp.; paper,<lb />$14.95; ISBN 1-878086-82-0.)<lb /><lb />Daniel W. Patterson digs deep into North<lb />Carolina folklore in A Tree Accurst: Bobby<lb />McMillon and Stories of Frankie Silver.<lb />McMillon is an Appalachian singer and<lb />storyteller, one of many who have kept the<lb />story of the Silver murder fresh for nearly<lb />170 years. (2000; The University of North<lb />Carolina Press, PO Box 2288, Chapel Hill,<lb />NC 27515-2288; 240 pp.; cloth, $49.95;<lb />ISBN 0-8078-2564-6; paper, $18.95; ISBN O-<lb />8078-4873-5.)<lb /><lb />Ralph E. Lentz II is the author of W.R.<lb /><lb />Trivett, Appalachian Pictureman: Photographs<lb />of a Bygone Time. Trivett was a farmer and a self-taught<lb />professional photographer from Watauga County, living<lb />between 1884 and 1966. Ninety of his photographs of othe<lb />other Appalachia� are studied in this volume. (2001;<lb />McFarland &amp; Co., Box 611, Jefferson, NC 28640; 176 pp.;<lb />paper, $35.00; ISBN 0-7864-0927-4.)<lb /><lb />Ralph W. Johnson, a self-described Scotch-African<lb />barber in Davidson, tells his lifeTs story in David Played<lb />a Harp. Now in his 90s, Johnson made headlines<lb />when Davidson College faculty and students de-<lb />manded that he desegregate his shop in 1967. (2000;<lb />Blackwell Ink, PO Box 434, Davidson, NC 28036; 450<lb />pp.; $24.95; ISBN 0-9702713-0-1.)<lb /><lb />C. Daniel Crews and Lisa D. Bailey are the editors of<lb />the recently published Records of the Moravians in<lb />North Carolina, Volume XIU, 1856-1866 (2000; North<lb />Carolina Division of Archives and History, 109 E.<lb />Jones St, Raleigh, NC 27601-2807; paginated 6212-<lb />6765; cloth $40.00; ISBN 0-86526-290-X.)<lb /><lb />Two new editions of useful legal guides are William A.<lb />CampbellTs Notary Public Guidebook for North Carolina,<lb />8th ed. (2000; Institute of Government, CB# 3330<lb />Knapp Building, UNC-CH, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-<lb />3330; 106 pp.; paper, $12.00; ISBN 1-56011-382-0)<lb />and David M. LawrenceTs Local Government Property<lb />Transactions in North Carolina, 2nd ed. (2000; Institute<lb />of Government, CB# 3330 Knapp Building, UNC-CH,<lb />Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3330; 225 pp.; paper, $26.00;<lb />ISBN 1-56011-366-9.)<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 " 79<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />The Shelley Mueller Pew Learning Center-Martha Ellison Library<lb /><lb />of Warren Wilson College<lb />was renovated and<lb />expanded in 1999. The<lb />expansion, on the left<lb />side of the entrance,<lb /><lb />provides a late-night<lb />study area for students<lb /><lb />that is accessible through<lb /><lb />a separate door.<lb /><lb />40 " Spring 2001 North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />The new 7,500-square foot Fairview Branch Library of the Asheville-Buncombe Library<lb />System opened in 1999. The library proper is on the left of the photo, with the main lobby in the middle,<lb />and a community room with separate entrance on the right. The cost-efficient design of the library allows for<lb />later expansion into the patio behind the building.<lb /><lb />With the exception of the director's office, the library contains no interior walls. Changing<lb />ceiling heights provide a separate childrenTs area, seen to the right in the photo below.<lb /><lb />... i - , a<lb /><lb />Thanks to Farrell + Hargrove, the architectural firm that designed both of these projects, for the above photographs. If you have<lb />suggestions for photographs of library buildings or activities that could be shared with others through this column, please contact<lb /><lb />Joline Ezzell at (919) 660-5925 or joline.ezzell@duke.edu.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries Spring 2001 " 41]<lb />BM A ge eR cS SA a PN a Ne SR a RE aR ce ANN ea se aed SS<lb /></p>
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        <p>The magnificence of the public library<lb />is something that never stales with age.<lb />But the complex task of organizing all<lb />of the services you offer is not an easy<lb />one. Baker &amp; Taylor eases the load by<lb />sending your order processed, cataloged,<lb /><lb />and ready for shelving and circulation.<lb /><lb />Before you place an order with<lb /><lb />Baker &amp; Taylor, a Basic Profile is<lb />established, where you designate your<lb />fundamental choices in an area such as<lb />cataloging, which provides various<lb /><lb />classification options and standards.<lb /><lb />Processing your order can also be an<lb />intricate undertaking. Baker &amp; Taylor<lb />options include theft detection devices,<lb />mylar jackets, book pockets, spine labels,<lb />label protectors, bar code labels, and<lb /><lb />automated records, to name a few.<lb /><lb />ItTs been said that everything in the<lb />world ends up in a book. Call Baker &amp;<lb />~Taylor. We'll help you get it all on your<lb /><lb />shelves and in circulation so your<lb /><lb />patrons can easily find what they need.<lb /><lb />BAKER &amp; TAYLOR<lb /><lb />Information and Entertainment Services<lb /><lb />800-775-1800<lb />www.btol.com<lb /><lb />42 " Spring 2001 North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />NortTuH CAROLINA LIBRARY ASSOCIATION<lb />MINUTES OF THE EXECUTIVE BOARD<lb /><lb />January 26, 2001<lb />Durham Public Library<lb /><lb />Attending: Al Jones, Ross Holt, Sue Cody, Diane Kester, Philip Banks, Phil Barton, Theron Bell, Pauletta Bracy,<lb />Terry Brandsma, Ann Burlingame, Robert Canida, Bao-Chu Chang, Dale Cousins, Martha Davis, Joline Ezzell,<lb />Dave Fergusson, Carol Freeman, Paula Hinton, Elizabeth Laney, Teresa McManus, Carrie Nichols, Peggy Quinn,<lb />Patrick Valentine, Laura Weigand, Bobby Wynn, John Zika, and Maureen Costello.<lb /><lb />Welcome and Call to Order: President<lb />Al Jones called the meeting to order<lb />at 10:15.<lb /><lb />Approval Of Minutes: The minutes of<lb />the October 20, 2000 meeting were<lb /><lb />- approved as written. The minutes can<lb /><lb />be found at http://www.mindspring.<lb />com/~ncla/nclaoct.pdf.<lb /><lb />PresidentTs Report:<lb /><lb />Full report: http://www.mindspring.<lb />com/~ncla/jan2001/pres2001.pdf.<lb /><lb />Al Jones expressed his thanks for the sup-<lb />port he received from the membership<lb />during his recent ocardiac adventure.� His<lb />surgery went well, and he is recuperating<lb />slowly but surely. He reported that the<lb />revitalization of the school librariansT sec-<lb />tion has not yet come about. No one has<lb />come forward to take chair or vice chair<lb />positions, but we will wait to see if some-<lb />one comes forward later. The money in<lb />the NCASL account will remain there for<lb />now. Al received a note from the officers<lb />of the new North Carolina School Library<lb />Media Association and has corresponded<lb />with Karen Gavigan and Jackie Pierson<lb />about continuing to collaborate on the<lb />North Carolina ChildrenTs Book Award.<lb />The Endowment Committee is coming<lb />together for aggressive fundraising for the<lb />endowment. Al is working to revitalize the<lb />Library Paraprofessional Association.<lb />Meralyn Meadows, the associationTs first<lb />chair, has agreed to work with the section,<lb />including assisting with programming for<lb />the biennial conference. Finally, Al re-<lb />ported that Floyd relief continues. It will<lb />take years for affected libraries to recover.<lb /><lb />TreasurerTs Report:<lb /><lb />Computer problems prevented a printed<lb />report, but the TreasurerTs Report will<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />appear on the webpage as soon as data<lb />can be restored.<lb /><lb />Section/Roundtable Reports<lb /><lb />ChildrenTs Services Section:<lb /><lb />Full report: http:/.www.mindspring.<lb />com/~ncla/jan2001/CSS.htm.<lb /><lb />Chair Ann Burlingame thanked Diane<lb />Kester for assistance in preparing the<lb />sectionTs webpage, and the online version<lb />of the Chapbook. The program,<lb />oStorytelling and Beyond, Incorporating<lb />the Arts into Programming,� was a great<lb />success, with a total registration of 78.<lb /><lb />College and University Section:<lb /><lb />Chair Bobby Wynn reported that the sec-<lb />tion is negotiating for speakers for the<lb />biennial conference. Al Jones noted that<lb />if sections have potential speakers, but<lb />lack funds for speakersT fees, contact<lb />Vanessa Ramseur, program chair for con-<lb />ference. It may be possible to add the<lb />speaker to the all-conference program.<lb /><lb />Community and Junior College Librar-<lb />ies Section:<lb /><lb />Full report: http://www.mindspring.<lb />com/~ncla/jan2001/cjcs.htm.<lb /><lb />Chair Carol Freeman reported on confer-<lb />ence planning and invited other sections<lb />or roundtables to collaborate on a program.<lb />The section is also planning a workshop<lb />on webpage design for libraries at Guilford<lb />Technical College on May 18, 2001.<lb /><lb />Documents Section:<lb /><lb />Full report: http://www.mindspring.<lb />com/~ncla/jan2001/doc.html.<lb /><lb />Paula Hinton introduced herself as the<lb />sectionTs new chair.<lb /><lb />Library Administration and Manage-<lb />ment Section:<lb /><lb />Full report: http://www.mindspring.<lb />com/~ncla/jan2001/lams.html. Chair<lb />Martha Davis reported that the section is<lb />making plans for the conference and dis-<lb />cussing the design of a webpage.<lb /><lb />NC Association of School Librarians:<lb />No report.<lb /><lb />NC Public Library Trustee Association:<lb />Chair Theron Bell asked for a mentor in<lb />fulfilling her responsibilities as section<lb />chair. Lib Laney, Patrick Valentine, Phil<lb />Barton and Ross Holt volunteered to<lb />help, and typically the director at the<lb />chair trusteeTs library also assists with<lb />program planning. Among the ideas pro-<lb />posed to help were to plan a day of pro-<lb />gramming at the conference to appeal to<lb />trustees and friends of the library mem-<lb />bers, recognizing trustees at the confer-<lb />ence with a badge ribbon. The State Li-<lb />brary should be able to supply names of<lb />trustees and presidents of friends organi-<lb />zations. Teresa McManus offered to assist<lb />in identifying the leadership in academic<lb />librariesT friends groups.<lb /><lb />Public Library Section:<lb /><lb />Full report: http://www.mindspring.<lb />com/~ncla/jan2001/pls.htm. Chair John<lb />Zika mentioned several authors the sec-<lb />tion is contacting to speak at the confer-<lb />ence. He noted that working with pub-<lb />lishers is a good way to identify authors<lb />for the programs. E-books and electronic<lb />media have also been discussed as poten-<lb />tial conference topics.<lb /><lb />Reference and Adult Services Section:<lb />Full report: http://www.mindspring.<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 " 47<lb /></p>
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        <p>com/~ncla/jan2001/rass.htmI.<lb /><lb />Chair Phillip Banks reported on the suc-<lb />cess of the sectionTs oVirtual Patrons�<lb />workshop, attended by 44 registrants.<lb />The evaluations showed that the partici-<lb />pants appreciated the half-day format.<lb /><lb />Resources and Technical Services Section:<lb />Full report: http://www.mindspring.<lb />com/~ncla/jan2001/rtss.htm. Chair<lb />Teresa McManus announced that Kathy<lb />Shropshire, Assistant Director, Greensboro<lb />Public Library has accepted appointment<lb />as Acquisitions Interest Group Chair, fill-<lb />ing the position vacated when Rick<lb />Anderson left to accept a position in Utah.<lb /><lb />New Members Round Table:<lb />No report.<lb /><lb />NC Library Paraprofessional Asso.:<lb />No report. Al Jones noted that Meralyn<lb />Meadows will work with the association<lb />to revitalize its activities.<lb /><lb />Round Table for Ethnic Minority<lb />Concerns:<lb /><lb />Full report: http://www.mindspring.<lb />com/~ncla/jan2001/remco.htm.<lb />Chair Robert Canida reported that the<lb />round table is planning both a spring<lb />program and conference programs.<lb /><lb />Round Table on Special Collections:<lb />No report.<lb /><lb />Round Table on the Status of Women<lb />in Librarianship:<lb /><lb />Full report: http://www.mindspring.com/<lb />~ncla/jan2001/rtsw.html. Chair Laura<lb />Weigand discussed efforts to revise bylaws.<lb /><lb />Technology and Trends Round Table:<lb />Full report: http://www.mindspring.<lb />com/~ncla/jan2001/tnt.htm.<lb /><lb />Vice-chair Terry Brandsma reported on<lb />the success of the LITA Regional Institute<lb />on Database-Driven Websites<lb /><lb />in High Point with attendance of 103,<lb />including some out of state registrants.<lb /><lb />Committee Reports<lb />Archives:<lb />Full report: http://www.mindspring.<lb />com/~ncla/jan2001/archive.htm. Chair<lb />Carrie Nichols reported that former<lb />board members of the NCASL sent in<lb />documents from the section, some dat-<lb />ing back to the 1980s. These records will<lb />be processed for the archives.<lb /><lb />Commission on Charter/Home Schools:<lb />Co-chair Pauletta Bracy reported that she<lb />and Marilyn Miller are working diligently<lb />on drafts of a survey.<lb /><lb />Commission on School Librarians:<lb />The commission has been abolished.<lb /><lb />44 " Spring 2001<lb /><lb />Conference:<lb /><lb />Full report: http://www.mindspring.<lb />com/~ncla/jan2001/conference.htm.<lb />Chair Ross Holt announced that a pro-<lb />gram plannersT meeting will be held in<lb />Asheboro on February 9. Exhibits chair<lb />Eleanor Cook attended the ALA Midwin-<lb />ter meeting and personally invited ex-<lb />hibitors to participate in the biennial<lb />conference. Ross reported on possible<lb />effects the withdrawal of the NCASL<lb />board may have on the conference and<lb />possible strategies for minimizing the<lb />loss were reviewed. Ross encouraged sec-<lb />tions, round tables, and committees to<lb />consider offering multiple programs, and<lb />noted the popularity of author programs.<lb /><lb />Constitution, Codes and Handbook<lb />Revision:<lb /><lb />Chair Bao-Chu Chang reported that ev-<lb />eryone should take one final look at the<lb />bylaws currently posted to be sure they<lb />are accurate and current. She announced<lb />that paper copies of the handbook<lb />should be available at the next meeting.<lb /><lb />Continuing Education:<lb />No report.<lb /><lb />Endowment:<lb /><lb />Chair Lib Laney reported high interest<lb />among committee members. A letter has<lb />been sent to all library directors in the<lb />state asking them as leaders to contribute<lb />$100 each to the endowment fund. Next,<lb />a similar letter will be sent to NCLA<lb />board members. The Endowment Com-<lb />mittee will try to have presence at the<lb />conference. The fundraising goal is to<lb />have $100,000 in the endowment by<lb />2004, NCLATs centennial.<lb /><lb />Finance:<lb />No report.<lb /><lb />Governmental Relations:<lb />No report.<lb /><lb />Intellectual Freedom:<lb /><lb />Full report: http://www.mindspring.<lb />com/~ncla/jan2001/if.htm. Ross Holt<lb />reported for Chair Jerry Thrasher. The<lb />full report provides detail about two re-<lb />cent book challenges and an update on<lb />the impact of the ChildrenTs Internet Pro-<lb />tection Act. A resolution concerning the<lb />lawsuit ALA has filed to challenge the<lb />law will be introduced in New Business.<lb /><lb />Leadership Institute:<lb /><lb />Teresa McManus reported for Chair<lb />George Taylor. The application deadline<lb />has bee extended to February 2, 2001.<lb />Sections and round tables were encour-<lb />aged to sponsor a participant. The $600<lb />cost, which includes meals and lodging,<lb />is quite reasonable compared to other<lb /><lb />similar programs. Discussion included a<lb />suggestion to compile a report on gradu-<lb />ates of the institute and ways to improve<lb />marketing of the institute. It has been<lb />emphasized that the goal of the institute<lb />is to develop leaders for the profession, as<lb />well as for NCLA.<lb /><lb />Literacy:<lb /><lb />Chair Pauletta Bracy reported on confer-<lb />ence planning that will focus on making<lb />one day literacy day. Three sessions, in-<lb />cluding a luncheon, will be sponsored by<lb />the committee on that day. The programs<lb />will be marketed to other literacy groups<lb />as well as NCLA membership.<lb /><lb />Membership:<lb /><lb />Chair Peggy Quinn reported that the<lb />tabletop display is near completion. It will<lb />be displayed at the next board meeting,<lb />and will be available for use by March 1.<lb />Contact Peggy or Maureen Costello to<lb />book its use. Peggy will attend the UNC-<lb />Chapel Hill career fair on February 14 to<lb />represent NCLA. A new membership bro-<lb />chure is nearly ready.<lb /><lb />Nominating:<lb /><lb />Chair Dave Fergusson presented a draft<lb />ballot, which will be completed before<lb />being released to the membership. Dale<lb />Cousins made a motion to approve the<lb />draft ballot with the addition of another<lb />vice-president/chair-elect candidate. Ross<lb />Holt seconded the motion, which was<lb />passed unanimously. During the discus-<lb />sion, it was noted that there is a lack of<lb />membership and leadership from the<lb />larger academic libraries in the state. Sev-<lb />eral suggestions were made about tech-<lb />niques to improve involvement. The bal-<lb />lot as approved by the board is:<lb /><lb />Vice President/President Elect<lb />Pauletta Bracy ° Joline Ezzell<lb />Treasurer (4 year term)<lb /><lb />Diane D. Kester °¢ Carl Keiper<lb />Secretary<lb />Bao-Chu Chang e Martha Davis<lb />Director (elect 2)<lb /><lb />Robert Canida  ¢ Mark Pumphrey<lb />Teresa McManus ¢ Jim Carmichael<lb />ALA Counselor (4 year term)<lb />Vanessa Ramseur ° Sherwin Rice<lb /><lb />Publications and Marketing:<lb />No report.<lb /><lb />Scholarships:<lb /><lb />Full report: http://www.mindspring.<lb />com/~ncla/jan2001/scholarship.htm.<lb />The scholarship application deadline is<lb />May 15, 2001.<lb /><lb />Other Reports<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries:<lb />Full report: http://www.mindspring.com/<lb />~ncla/jan2001/NCL.htm. Al Jones re-<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />ported for Editor Frances Bradburn. The<lb />winter issue, on research in librarianship,<lb />is in final stages of preparation. This is-<lb />sue will also include profiles of the nomi-<lb />nees. At its annual retreat, the editorial<lb /><lb />- board discussed the future of North Caro-<lb />lina Libraries. Publication frequency will<lb />be reduced from four to three issues per<lb />year. NCLA minutes will continue to be<lb />published in each issue. Regular columns<lb />oLagniappe,� oWired to the World,� and<lb />oIn View Of� will all be kept in their<lb />present format, but oBetween Us� will be<lb />an occasional feature. There will be fewer<lb />theme-based articles. Potpourri issues will<lb />allow greater flexibility for submission of<lb />articles. The possibility of rotating re-<lb />sponsibility for an article among sections<lb />and round tables was discussed.<lb /><lb />ALA Councilor:<lb />No report.<lb /><lb />SELA Councilor:<lb /><lb />Full report: http://www.mindspring.<lb />com/~ncla/jan2001/sela.html. SELA<lb />leadership will hold a workshop on the<lb />future association activities in Atlanta on<lb />April 6. An issue of the Southeastern Li-<lb />brarian will be sent to members soon.<lb />Councilor John Via is chairing an ad hoc<lb />committee on the SELA dues structure.<lb /><lb />Old Business:<lb /><lb />It was announced that the new Secretary<lb />of Cultural Resources, Lisbeth C. oLibba�<lb />Evans is from Winston-Salem, and has an<lb />excellent reputation for support of li-<lb />brary services.<lb /><lb />New Business:<lb /><lb />Ross Holt introduced a resolution sup-<lb />porting ALATs legal action against the<lb />Child Internet Protection Act. After dis-<lb />cussion and amendment, the resolution<lb />was unanimously approved as follows:<lb /><lb />A RESOLUTION SUPPORTING ALA<lb />LEGAL ACTION AGAINST CIPA<lb /><lb />WHEREAS the recently enacted Child<lb />Internet Protection Act (CIPA) man-<lb />dates that libraries and schools install<lb />and use filtering software on public<lb />Internet computers as a prerequisite for<lb />receiving federal funds, including LSTA<lb />and E-rate funds; and<lb /><lb />WHEREAS no filtering software success-<lb />fully differentiates constitutionally<lb />protected speech from illegal speech<lb />on the Internet; and<lb /><lb />WHEREAS the federal commission ap-<lb />pointed to study child safety on the<lb />Internet concluded filters are not effec-<lb /><lb />tive in blocking all content that some<lb />may find objectionable, but do block<lb />much useful and constitutionally pro-<lb />tected information; and<lb /><lb />WHEREAS the North Carolina Library<lb />Association does not recommend the<lb />use of Internet filters in libraries, and<lb />emphatically oppose attempts by fed-<lb />eral and state governments to set local<lb />policy; and<lb /><lb />WHEREAS the American Library Associa-<lb />tion has resolved to challenge CIPA in<lb />federal courts;<lb /><lb />THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED that the<lb />North Carolina Library Association<lb />endorses and supports this legal action<lb />by the American Library Association.<lb /><lb />Mandates:<lb />ALA President<lb />ALA Washington Office<lb />ALA Intellectual Freedom Committee<lb />ALA Chapter Relations listserv<lb /><lb />State Library And State Library<lb />Commission:<lb />No report.<lb /><lb />The meeting adjourned at 1:30 p.m.<lb />Respectfully submitted,<lb />" Sue Cody, Secretary<lb /><lb />Broadfoot's has TWO Locations Serving Different Needs<lb /><lb />Broadfoot's<lb />of Wendell<lb /><lb />6624 Robertson Pond Road ~ Wendell, NC 27591<lb />Phone: (800) 444-6963 ~ Fax: (919) 365-6008<lb /><lb />SOFTWARE<lb /><lb />|Broadfoot<lb />|Publishing<lb />Company<lb /><lb />1907 Buena Vista Circle ~ Wilmington, NC 28405<lb />Phone: (800) 537-5243 ~ Fax: (910) 686-4379<lb /><lb />SS rr nena neem cc<lb /><lb />MULTICULTURAL<lb /><lb />Pian<lb />SELECTIONS Recent Publications<lb /><lb />The Colonial &amp; State Records of NC (30 vols.)<lb />North Carolina Regiments (5 vols.)<lb /><lb />VISUALS<lb />Spring &amp; Fall Catalogs<lb /><lb />Are you on our mailing list?<lb /><lb />Roster of Confederate Troops (16 vols.)<lb /><lb />Tar Heel Treasures<lb />for<lb />natives &amp; newcomers<lb />young &amp; old<lb /><lb />Supplement to the Official Records (100 vols.)<lb /><lb />Full Color Catalog (free upon request)<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries Spring 2001 " 49<lb /></p>
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          <lb />NortTH CAROLINA LIBRARY ASSOCIATION 1999-2001 EXECUTIVE BOARD<lb /><lb />PRESIDENT<lb />Plummer Alston oAl� Jones, Jr.<lb />Corriher-Linn-Black Library<lb />Catawba College<lb />2300 W. Innes Street<lb />Salisbury, NC 28144<lb />Telephone: (704) 637-4449<lb />Fax: (704) 637-4304<lb />pajones@catawba.edu<lb /><lb />VICE PRESIDENT/<lb /><lb />PRESIDENT ELECT<lb />Ross Holt<lb />Randolph Public Library<lb />201 Worth Street<lb />Asheboro, NC 27203<lb />Telephone: (336) 318-6806<lb />Fax: (336) 318-6823<lb />rholt@ncsl.dcr.state.nc.us<lb /><lb />SECRETARY<lb />Sue Ann Cody<lb /><lb />Randall Library, UNC-Wilmington<lb /><lb />601 College Road<lb />Wilmington, NC<lb /><lb />Telephone: (910) 962-7409<lb />Fax: (910) 962-3078<lb /><lb />codys@uncwil.edu<lb /><lb />TREASURER<lb />Diane D. Kester<lb />East Carolina University<lb />105 Longview Drive<lb />Goldsboro, NC 27534-8871<lb />Telephone: (919) 328-6621<lb />Fax: (919) 328-4638<lb />kesterd@mail.ecu.edu<lb />Isdkest@eastnet.educ.ecu.edu<lb /><lb />DIRECTORS<lb />Phillip Barton, Director<lb />Rowan County Public Library<lb />P.O. Box 4039<lb />Salisbury, NC 28145-4039<lb />Telephone: (704) 638-3020<lb />Fax: (704) 638-3013<lb />bartonp@co.rowan.nc.us<lb /><lb />Patrick Valentine, Director<lb />Wilson County Public Library<lb />PO Box 400<lb /><lb />Wilson, NC 27893<lb /><lb />Telephone: (252) 237-5355<lb />Fax: (252) 243-4311<lb />pvalentine@wilson-co.com<lb /><lb />ALA COUNCILOR<lb />Jacqueline B. Beach<lb />Craven-Pamlico-Carteret<lb />Regional Library<lb />400 Johnson Street<lb />New Bern, NC 28560<lb />Telephone: (919) 823-1141<lb />Fax: (919) 638-7817<lb />jbeach@ncsl.dcr.state.nc.us<lb /><lb />46 " Spring 2001<lb /><lb />SELA REPRESENTATIVE<lb />John Via<lb />Forsyth County Public Library<lb />660 W. Fifth Street<lb />Winston-Salem NC 27101<lb />Telephone: (336) 727-2556<lb />Fax: (336) 727-2549<lb /><lb />EDITOR, North Carolina Libraries<lb />Frances Bryant Bradburn<lb />Educational Technology<lb />NC Dept. of Public Instruction<lb />301 N. Wilmington Street<lb />Raleigh, NC 27601-2825<lb />Telephone: (919) 807-3292<lb />Fax: (919) 807-3290<lb />fbradbur@dpi.state.nc.us<lb /><lb />PAST-PRESIDENT<lb />Beverley Gass<lb />M.W. Bell Library<lb />Guilford Technical College<lb />P.O. Box 309<lb />Jamestown, NC 27282-0309<lb /><lb />Telephone: (336) 334-4822<lb />x2434<lb />Fax: (336) 841-4350<lb /><lb />gassb@gtcc.cc.nc.us<lb /><lb />ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT<lb />Maureen Costello<lb />North Carolina Library Association<lb />c/o State Library of North Carolina<lb />4646 Mail Service Center<lb />Raleigh, NC 27699-4646<lb />Telephone: (919) 839-6252<lb />Fax: (919) 839-6252<lb />ncla@mindspring.com<lb /><lb />SECTION CHAIRS<lb /><lb />CHILDRENTS SERVICES SECTION<lb />Ann Burlingame<lb />Wake Forest Public Library<lb />400 E. Holding Avenue<lb />Wake Forest, NC 27587<lb />Telephone: (919) 554-8498<lb />Fax: (919) 554-8499<lb />aburlingame@co.wake.nc.us<lb /><lb />COLLEGE ANp UNIVERSITY SECTION<lb />Bobby Wynn<lb />Charles W. Chestnut Library<lb />Fayetteville State University<lb />1200 Murchison Road<lb />Fayetteville, NC 28301<lb />Telephone: (910) 486-1520.<lb />Fax: (910) 486-1312<lb />Bobby@Lib1.uncfsu.edu<lb /><lb />COMMUNITY ano JUNIOR<lb />COLLEGE SECTION<lb />Carol Freeman<lb />Forsyth Technical Comm. Col.<lb />2100 Silas Creek Parkway<lb />Winston-Salem, NC 27103<lb /><lb />Telephone: (336) 723-0371<lb />ext. 7291<lb />Fax: (336) 748-9395<lb /><lb />cfreeman@riscy.forsyth.tec.nc.us<lb /><lb />DOCUMENTS SECTION<lb />Mary Horton<lb />Z. Smith Reynolds Library<lb />Wake Forest University<lb />PO Box 7777<lb />Winston-Salem, NC 27109<lb />Telephone: (336) 758-5829<lb />Fax: (336) 758-5538<lb />hortonm@wfu.edu<lb /><lb />LIBRARY ADMINISTRATION anp<lb />MANAGEMENT SECTION<lb />Martha Davis<lb />Davidson County Comm. College<lb />PO Box 1287<lb />Lexington, NC 27293-1287<lb />Telephone: (336) 249-8186<lb />ext. 270<lb />mdavis@davidson.cc.nc.us<lb /><lb />NORTH CAROLINA ASSOCIATION OF<lb />SCHOOL LIBRARIANS<lb />No officers at present.<lb /><lb />NORTH CAROLINA PUBLIC<lb />LIBRARY TRUSTEES ASSOCIATION<lb />Theron Bell<lb />P.O. Box 1059<lb />111 Cornelius Drive<lb />Robbins, NC 27325<lb />Telephone: (910) 948-3448<lb /><lb />PUBLIC LIBRARY SECTION<lb />John Zika<lb />Public Library of Charlotte &amp;<lb />Mecklenburg County<lb />North County Regional Library<lb />16500 Holly Crest Lane<lb />Huntersville, NC 28078<lb />Telephone: (704) 895-0616<lb />jzika@plcmc.lib.nc.us<lb /><lb />REFERENCE ano ADULT<lb /><lb />SERVICES SECTION<lb />Phillip Banks<lb />Asheville-Buncombe Library System<lb />67 Haywood Street<lb />Asheville, NC 28801-2834<lb />Telephone: (828) 255-5213<lb />pbanks@ncsl.dcr.state.nc.us<lb /><lb />RESOURCES ano TECHNICAL<lb />SERVICES SECTION<lb />Teresa L. McManus<lb />Charles W. Chestnut Library<lb />Fayetteville State University<lb />1200 Murchison Road<lb />Fayetteville, NC 28301-4298<lb />Telephone: (910) 486-14312<lb />tmcmanus@lib1 .uncfsu.edu<lb /><lb />ROUND TABLE CHAIRS<lb /><lb />NEW MEMBERS ROUND TABLE<lb />Marian Lindsay<lb />Guilford Middle School<lb />401 College Road<lb />Greensboro, NC 27410<lb />Telephone: (336) 316-5833<lb />Fax: (336) 316-5837<lb /><lb />NORTH CAROLINA LIBRARY<lb />PARAPROFESSIONAL ASSO.<lb />Frances Lampley<lb />Project Enlightenment<lb />501 S. Boylan Avenue<lb />Raleigh, NC 27603<lb /><lb />ROUND TABLE FOR ETHNIC<lb /><lb />MINORITY CONCERNS<lb />Robert Canida II<lb />Sampson-Livermore Library<lb />UNC-Pembroke<lb /><lb />PO Box 758<lb />Pembroke, NC 28372<lb />Telephone: (910) 521-6369<lb /><lb />canida@uncp.edu<lb /><lb />ROUND TABLE ON SPECIAL<lb />COLLECTIONS<lb />Kevin Cherry<lb />State Library of North Carolina<lb />4640 Mail Service Center<lb />Raleigh, NC 27699-4640<lb />Telephone: (919) 733-2570<lb /><lb />ROUND TABLE ON THE STATUS<lb /><lb />OF WOMEN IN LIBRARIANSHIP<lb />Laura Weigand<lb />Forsyth County Public Library<lb />660 W. Fifth Street<lb />Winston-Salem, NC 27101<lb />Telephone: (336) 727-2549<lb />|_weigand@forsyth.lib.nc.us<lb /><lb />TECHNOLOGY AND TRENDS<lb />ROUND TABLE<lb />Susan Smith<lb />Box 7777 Reynolda Station<lb />Wake Forest University<lb />Winston-Salem, NC 27109<lb />Telephone: (336) 758-5828<lb />Fax: ig (336) 758-8831<lb />smithss@wfu.edu<lb /><lb />NCLA<lb /><lb />oNorth Carolina Library Association Library Association<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />UI ORTAT SSD AGE see, tg<lb /><lb />Editor<lb />FRANCES BRYANT BRADBURN<lb />Instructional Technology<lb />NC Dept. of Public Instruction<lb />301 N. Wilmington Street<lb />Raleigh, NC 27601-2825<lb />(919) 807-3293<lb />(919) 807-3290 (FAX)<lb />fbradbur@dpi.state.nc.us<lb /><lb />Associate Editor<lb />ROSE SIMON<lb />Dale H. Gramley Library<lb />Salem College<lb />Winston-Salem, NC 27108<lb />(336) 917-5421<lb />simon@salem.edu<lb /><lb />Associate Editor<lb />JOHN WELCH<lb />Enloe High School<lb />128 Clarendon Crescent<lb />Raleigh, NC 27610<lb />(919) 856-7910<lb />jwelch@wcpss.net<lb /><lb />Book Review Editor<lb />DOROTHY DAVIS HODDER<lb />New Hanover Co. Public Library<lb />201 Chestnut Street<lb />Wilmington, NC 28401<lb />(910) 772-7858<lb />dhodder@co.new-hanover.nc.us<lb /><lb />Lagniappe Editor<lb />PLUMMER ALSTON JONES, JR.<lb />Corriher-Linn-Black Library<lb />Catawba College<lb />2300 W. Innes Street<lb />Salisbury, NC 28144<lb />(704) 637-4449<lb />pajones@catawba.edu<lb /><lb />Indexer<lb />MICHAEL COTTER<lb />Joyner Library<lb />East Carolina University<lb />Greenville, NC 27858-4353<lb />(252) 752-8854<lb />cottermi@mail.ecu.edu<lb /><lb />Advertising Manager<lb />HARRY TUCHMAYER<lb />New Hanover Co. Public Library<lb />201 Chestnut Street<lb />Wilmington, NC 28401<lb />(910) 772-7857<lb /><lb />htuchmayer@co.new-hanover.nc.us<lb /><lb />Between Us Editor<lb />KEVIN CHERRY<lb />State Library of North Carolina<lb />4640 Mail Service Center<lb />Raleigh, NC 27699-4640<lb /><lb />(919) 733-2570<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />ChildrenTs Services<lb />PAMELA STANDHART<lb /><lb />Public Library of Charlotte &amp; Mecklenburg<lb /><lb />Cornelius Branch Library<lb />21105 Catawba Avenue<lb />Cornelius, NC 28031<lb /><lb />(704) 655-9409<lb />pstandhart@plcmc.lib.nc.us<lb /><lb />College and University<lb />ARTEMIS KARES<lb />Joyner Library<lb />East Carolina University<lb />Greenville, NC 27858-4353<lb />(252) 328-2263<lb />karesa@mail.ecu.edu<lb /><lb />Community and Junior College<lb />LISA C. DRIVER<lb />Pitt Community College<lb />PO Drawer 7007<lb />Greenville, NC 27835-7007<lb />(252) 321-4357<lb /><lb />Idriver@pcc.pitt.cc.nc.us<lb /><lb />Documents<lb />MICHAEL VAN FOSSEN<lb />Reference Documents<lb />Davis Library CB #3912<lb />University of North Carolina<lb />Chapel Hill, NC 27599<lb />(919) 962-1151<lb />mike_vanfossen@unc.edu<lb /><lb />Library Administration and<lb />Management Section<lb />JOLINE EZZELL<lb />Perkins Library<lb />Duke University<lb />Durham, NC 27708-0175<lb />(919) 660-5925<lb />joline.ezzell@duke.edu<lb /><lb />New Members Round Table<lb />RHONDA FLORENCE<lb />Florence Elementary School<lb />High Point, NC 27265<lb />(336) 819-2120<lb />rholbroo@guilford.k1 2.nc.us<lb /><lb />North Carolina Library<lb />Paraprofessional Association<lb /><lb />SHARON NOLES<lb /><lb />Southeast Regional Library in Garner<lb />908 7th Avenue<lb /><lb />Garner, NC 27529<lb /><lb />(919) 894-8322<lb />snoles@co.wake.nc.us<lb /><lb />Public Library Section<lb />JOHN ZIKA<lb /><lb />Public Library of Charlotte &amp; Mecklenburg<lb /><lb />North County Regional Library<lb />16500 Holly Crest Lane<lb />Huntersville, NC 28078<lb /><lb />(704) 895-0616<lb />jzika@plcmc.lib.nc.us<lb /><lb />Reference/Adult Services<lb />SUZANNE WISE<lb />Belk Library<lb />Appalachian State University<lb />Boone, NC 28608<lb />(828) 262-2798<lb />wisems@appstate.edu<lb /><lb />Resources and Technical Services<lb />PAGE LIFE<lb />Davis Library CB#3914<lb />UNC-Chapel Hill<lb />Chapel Hill, NC 27514-8890<lb />(919) 962-0153<lb />page_life@unc.edu<lb /><lb />Round Table for Ethnic Minority Concerns<lb /><lb />BRIGITTE BLANTON<lb />Greensboro Public Library<lb /><lb />PO Box 3178<lb /><lb />Greensboro, NC 27402-3178<lb />(336) 373-2716<lb />ncs0921@interpath.com<lb /><lb />Round Table on Special Collections<lb />MEGAN MULDER<lb />Wake Forest University Library<lb />PO Box 7777 Reynolda Station<lb />Winston-Salem, NC 27109-7777<lb />(336) 758-5091<lb />mulder@wfu.edu<lb /><lb />Round Table on the Status of Women<lb />in Librarianship<lb /><lb />JOAN SHERIF<lb /><lb />Northwestern Regional Library<lb /><lb />111 North Front Street<lb /><lb />Elkin, NC 28621<lb /><lb />(336) 835-4894<lb /><lb />jsherif@ncsl.dcr.state.nc.us<lb /><lb />Technology and Trends<lb />DIANE KESTER<lb />Library Studies and Ed. Technology<lb />East Carolina University<lb />Greenville, NC 27858-4353<lb />(252) 328-4389<lb />Isddkest@eastnet.educ.ecu.edu<lb /><lb />Wired to the World Editor<lb />RALPH LEE SCOTT<lb />Joyner Library<lb />East Carolina University<lb />Greenville, NC 27858-4353<lb />(252) 328-0265<lb />scottr@mail.ecu.edu<lb /><lb />Spring 2001 " 4/7<lb /></p>
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          <lb />N A North Carolina Library Association<lb /><lb />Use the application below to enroll as a member of the North Carolina Library Asssociation or to renew your<lb />membership. All memberships are for one calendar year. THE MEMBERSHIP YEAR IS JANUARY 1 THROUGH<lb />DECEMBER 31. Memberships postmarked during the last quarter of the year cover the next year.<lb /><lb />Dues (see below) entitle you to membership in the Association and to one section or round table. For each<lb />additional section or round table, add $5.00. Return this form with your check or money order, payable to<lb />North Carolina Library Association (see address below).<lb /><lb />NCLA DUES<lb />(Membership and One Section or Round Table)<lb />OQ FULL-TIME LIBRARY SCHOOL OY LIBRARY PERSONNEL<lb />STUDENTS (two years only) .... $10 Poets Up.tO $15,000.22, vncpeerserses $15<lb />Earning $15,001 to $25,000........... $25<lb />Ly RETIRED LIBRARIANS aieie ejarerelalelarereie $15 Earning $25,001 to $35,000 vane lene $30<lb />GQ NON-LIBRARY PERSONNEL: Earning $35,001 to S45 0002s $35<lb />(Trustee, Non-salaried, or Friends Earning $45,001 and above........... $40<lb />of TA acs PRE e ys ee = © CONTRIBUTING (Individuals, Associations,<lb />Q INSTITUTIONAL (Libraries &amp; and Firms interested in the work of<lb />Library/Education-related ING) GAN) ss Bac se eR Se hE Sr $100<lb />(J Contributing member acknowledged in North Carolina<lb /><lb />IZUISIIMESSES rtatccs conn se senwoelssss Sse 5<lb />) m0 Libraries unless this box is checked<lb /><lb />NORTH CAROLINA LIBRARY ASSOCIATION<lb />CHECK SECTIONS AND ROUND TABLES<lb />ONE IS INCLUDED IN BASIC DUES. (New Members &amp; First Time<lb /><lb />renewals should choose a section other than New Members Round Table.)<lb />Add $5.00 for each additional section or round table.<lb /><lb />please print or type<lb /><lb />New membership* Renewal**<lb /><lb />*Dues automatically include membership in New Members Round Table<lb />**Dues automatically include membership in New Members Round Table for FIRST TIME renewals.<lb /><lb />ChildrenTs Services<lb /><lb />College &amp; University Section<lb />Community &amp; Junior College Libraries Section<lb /><lb />Membership Number if Renewal<lb /><lb />Name - ; any Documents Section<lb />Last First Middle care,<lb />_____ Library Administration &amp; Management<lb />Title ____NC Association of School Librarians<lb />___NC Public Library Trustees Association<lb />Library ___ Public Library Section<lb /><lb />Reference &amp; Adult Services Section<lb />Resources and Technical Services Section<lb />New Members Round Table<lb /><lb />NC Library Paraprofessional Association<lb /><lb />Business Address -<lb /><lb />City State Zip ____ Round Table for Ethnic Minority Concerns<lb />_____ Round Table on Special Collections<lb />Daytime Telephone Number ___ Round Table on the Status of Women in Librarianship<lb />Area Code ___ Technology &amp; Trends Round Table<lb />(_} Check here if you NO NOT wish to be signed up for NCLA-L listserv AMOUNT ENCLOSED: (SEE ABOVE)<lb />$s Membership and one section/round table<lb /><lb />Mailing Address (if different from above)<lb /><lb />$5.00 for each additional section/round table<lb /><lb />TYPE OF LIBRARY I WORK IN: $ TOTAL (PLEASE DO NOT SEND CASH)<lb />__ Academic<lb />Se Public Mail Payment and Form to: North Carolina Library Association<lb />=. oSchool c/o State Library of North Carolina<lb />i Special 109 East Jones Street<lb />Other Raleigh, NC 27601-1023 ncla@mindspring.com<lb /><lb />THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT<lb />NCLA Office Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-1; Telephone (Voice &amp; FAX) 919-839-NCLA; E-mail: mcostello@ncsl.dcr.state.nc.us<lb /></p>
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          <lb />~ = ofer<lb />Adhest Wwe Fernie<lb /><lb />rodartTs new Online Supplies &amp; Furnishings Shopping for library supplies, equipment<lb />Catalog features a comprehensive search and furniture has never been easier!<lb /><lb />engine that helps you quickly locate the items you With the Brodart Online Catalog you can:<lb />need! And, the search results are organized and<lb /><lb />ranked in order of quality. Already know the<lb /><lb />* Save time when you reorder - Store up to five<lb />different Billing and Shipping Accounts!<lb /><lb />Brodart catalog number of the item you need? Go * Store your frequently ordered items too!<lb />ahead and put it right in our search box! You will * Shop 24-hours a day with our convenient<lb />go directly to that product. Shopping Cart.<lb />* Stretch your budget with our fantastic Monthly<lb />Specials and Factory Outlet discounts!<lb />Ke) * Get helpful ordering and product tips with<lb />DART our Product Selection Guides.<lb />¢ Track your order status to completion.<lb /><lb />* Receive fast &amp; friendly customer service by e-mail.<lb /><lb />Library<lb />Supplies &amp; Furnishings<lb /><lb />100 North Road, McElhattan, PA 17748<lb />Phone: 1.888.820.4377 Fax: 1.800.283.6087<lb />E-mail: supplies@brodart.com<lb /><lb />Call or fax today for a free 656-page 2001 Brodart<lb />Library Supplies and Furnishings Catalog!<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Unsolicited articles dealing with the above themes or any issue of interest to North Carolina<lb />librarians are welcomed. Please contact the editor for manuscript guidelines and deadlines.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries, published four times a year, is the official publication of the North<lb />Carolina Library Association. Membership dues include a subscription to North Carolina<lb />Libraries. Membership information may be obtained from the Administrative Assistant of<lb />NCLA. Subscription rates are $32.00 per year, or $10.00 per issue, for domestic<lb />subscriptions; $50.00 per year, or $15.00 per issue, for foreign subscriptions. Backfiles are<lb />maintained by the editor. Microfilm copies are available through University Microfilms.<lb />North Carolina Libraries is indexed by Library Literature and publishes its own annual index.<lb />Editorial correspondence should be addressed to the editor; advertisement<lb />correspondence should be addressed to the advertising manager. Articles are juried.<lb /><lb /></p>
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