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Leading the Reference Renaissance
Marie L. Radford
American Library Association, 2011

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Information Literacy Instruction that Works
A Guide to Teaching by Discipline and Student Population
Patrick Ragains
American Library Association, 2013

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RDA Glossary
RDA Steering Committee (RSC)
American Library Association, 2020

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Twenty Tellable Tales
Audience Participation Folktales for the Beginning Storyteller
Margaret Read MacDonald
American Library Association, 2005

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Becoming a Reflective Librarian and Teacher
Strategies for Mindful Academic Practice
Michelle Reale
American Library Association, 2016

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Becoming an Embedded Librarian
Making Connections in the Classroom
Michelle Reale
American Library Association, 2015

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The Indispensable Academic Librarian
Teaching and Collaborating for Change
Michelle Reale
American Library Association, 2018

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Meeting the Challenge of Teaching Information Literacy
Michelle Reale
American Library Association, 2020

While the profession has generated many books on information literacy, none to date have validated exactly why it is so difficult to teach. In her new book, Reale posits that examining and reflecting on the reality of those factors is what will enable practitioners to meet the challenge of their important mandate. Using the same warm and conversational tone as in her previous works, she

  • uses personal anecdotes to lay out the key reasons that teaching information literacy is so challenging, from the limited amount of time given to instructors and lack of collaboration with faculty to one’s own anxieties about the work;
  • examines how these factors are related and where librarians fit in;
  • validates readers’ struggles and frustrations through an honest discussion of the emotional labor of librarianship, including “imposter syndrome,” stress, and burnout;
  • offers a variety of approaches, strategies, and topics of focus that will assist readers in their daily practice;
  • looks at how a vibrant community of practice can foster positive change both personally and institutionally; and
  • presents “Points to Ponder” at the end of each chapter that encourage readers to self-reflect and then transform personal insights into action.
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Mentoring and Managing Students in the Academic Library
Michelle Reale
American Library Association, 2013

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Academic Libraries for Commuter Students
Research-Based Strategies
Mariana Regalado
American Library Association, 2018

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Censorship and Selection
Issues and Answers for Schools
Henry Reichman
American Library Association, 2001

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200+ Original and Adapted Story Program Activities
Rob Reid
American Library Association, 2018

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Animal Shenanigans
Rob Reid
American Library Association, 2015

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Cool Story Programs for the School-Age Crowd
Rob Reid
American Library Association, 2004

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Reid's Read-Alouds 2
Modern-Day Classics from C.S. Lewis to Lemony Snicket
Rob Reid
American Library Association, 2010

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Reid's Read-Alouds
Selections for Children and Teens
Rob Reid
American Library Association, 2009

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Something Musical Happened at the Library
Rob Reid
American Library Association, 2007

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What's Black and White and Reid All Over?
Something Hilarious Happened at the Library
Rob Reid
American Library Association, 2012

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The Sudden Selector's Guide to Anthropology Resources
Miriam Rigby
American Library Association, 2022

Anthropology is arguably one of the most diverse fields in academe. It ranges in focus from archaeology to evolution and primate studies, to linguistics, and to observation of current cultural practices. Methodologically, it may include any combination of lab work, library and archival research, and fieldwork. The materials vary significantly, including visual records such as film and photography, sound recordings, ancient artifacts, dusty notebooks, digital records, and biological materials. In practice it is highly interdisciplinary, intersecting with biology, political science, geography, art history, literature, religion, sociology, history, and more. Collection development for any subject can be a challenging task; anthropology, with its many subfields, may exceed the typical challenge. Whether you are brand new to anthropology, or well-versed in many of its facets, Sudden Selector’s Guide to Anthropology is designed to provide you with an access point to the diverse realms of the field and the resources that will allow you to build and maintain strong collections to serve your community, no matter where their research interests lie.

The Sudden Selector’s series is designed to help library workers become acquainted with the tools, resources, individuals, and organizations that can assist in developing collections in new or unfamiliar subject areas. This guide is designed to facilitate collection development processes in two ways: it is a bibliography of resources and can be used as a mini-course in anthropology librarianship.

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Cultural Programming For Libraries
Deborah A. Robertson
American Library Association, 2005

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The College Student's Research Companion
Finding, Evaluating, and Citing the Resources You Need to Succeed
Arlene Rodda Quaratiello
American Library Association, 2010

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Advocacy and Awareness for Archivists
Kathleen D. Roe
American Library Association, 2019

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A Year in the Story Room
Ready-to-Use Programs for Children
Dawn R. Roginski
American Library Association, 2014

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No Shelf Required 3
The New Era for E-Books and Digital Content
Mirela Roncevic
American Library Association, 2022

Many claim that the presence and importance of e-books in the library world have reached a saturation point, but the truth is that experimentation with new models, as well as refinement of existing ones, continues apace. Delving into the latest developments among the varied players in the e-book marketplace, including publishers, libraries, and vendors, the latest volume in the best-selling No Shelf Required series is written from a strong international perspective. Such cutting-edge contributors as Michael Blackwell, Mary Minow, Neil Butcher, and Tonya McQuade discuss a range of groundbreaking initiatives that tap into the potential of digital content to be omnipresent. Positive, uplifting, instructive, and goal-oriented, this volume’s coverage includes

  • the DPLA national e-book platform;
  • ReadersFirst, a movement to improve e-book access from libraries;
  • the AudiobookSYNC project, a free summer audiobook program for teens;
  • using e-books to teach poetry and publishing processes;
  • the Multnomah County Library Library Writers project;
  • the Internet Archive and e-books; and
  • e-books and sustainable literacy in Africa.
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Making Sense of Business Reference
A Guide for Librarians and Research Professionals
Celia Ross
American Library Association, 2020

“It reads as if you have an expert coach in business reference helping you each step of the way." That’s how Academic BRASS summarized the first edition of this unique, unparalleled resource authored by Ross, a past winner of the Gale Cengage Learning Award for Excellence in Business Librarianship. Now she’s revised and updated it to tackle even more “bizref” headscratchers related to investment and finance, consumer behavior and statistics, company, and industry research. In addition to general reference strategies in each chapter that give you the lay of the land, inside you’ll find

  • overviews of more than fifty databases for articles, company and industry, directories, consumer, international, or raw data;
  • 33 real-life "Stumper" questions, all new for this edition, drawn from librarians in the field;
  • why asking “who cares about this kind of question” reveals potential sources;
  • techniques for applying reference interview techniques to business questions;
  • advice on where to find the numbers for answering finance questions;
  • expanded coverage of venture capital research and business information literacy;
  • “Start Making Sense” suggestions for further skill-building; and
  • questions to consider when building a bizref collection.

This is the guide to keep at your side when serving business students, job-seekers, investors, or entrepreneurs in your library.

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Making Sense of Business Reference
A Guide for Librarians and Research Professionals
Celia Ross
American Library Association, 2013

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40+ New Revenue Sources for Libraries and Nonprofits
Edmund A. Rossman
American Library Association, 2016

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Defusing the Angry Patron
A How-To-Do-It Manual for Librarians
Rhea Joyce Rubin
American Library Association, 2010

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Demonstrating Results
Using Outcome Measurement in Your Library
Rhea Joyce Rubin
American Library Association, 2006

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Foundations of Library and Information Science
Richard E. Rubin
American Library Association, 2016

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Foundations of Library and Information Science
Richard E. Rubin
American Library Association, 2020

Richard E. Rubin’s book has served as the authoritative introductory text for generations of library and information science practitioners, with each new edition taking in its stride the myriad societal, technological, political, and economic changes affecting our users and institutions and transforming our discipline. Rubin teams up with his daughter, Rachel G. Rubin, a rising star in the library field in her own right, for the fifth edition. Spanning all types of libraries, from public to academic, school, and special, it illuminates the major facets of LIS for students as well as current professionals. Continuing its tradition of excellence, this text addresses

  • the history and mission of libraries from past to present, including the history of service to African Americans;
  • critical contemporary social issues such as services to marginalized communities, tribal libraries, and immigrants;  
  • the rise of e-government and the crucial role of political advocacy;  
  • digital devices, social networking, digital publishing, e-books, virtual reality, and other technology;
  • forces shaping the future of libraries, including Future Ready libraries, and sustainability as a core value of librarianship;
  • the values and ethics of the profession, with new coverage of civic engagement, combatting fake news, the importance of social justice, and the role of critical librarianship;
  • knowledge infrastructure and organization, including Resource Description and Access (RDA), linked data, and the Library Research Model;
  • the significance of the digital divide and policy issues related to broadband access and net neutrality;
  • intellectual freedom, legal issues, and copyright-related topics;
  • contemporary issues in LIS education such as the ongoing tensions between information science and library science; and
  • the changing character of collections and services including the role of digital libraries, preservation, and the digital humanities.

In its newest edition, Foundations of Library and Information Science remains the field’s essential resource.

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Complete Copyright for K12 Librarians and Educators
Carrie Russell
American Library Association, 2023
Particularly in places of learning, technology is all-pervasive; because everyone is always making copies, copyright is center stage. And copyright law, when misapplied or misinterpreted, affects not only the way that you teach but even what you teach. With decades of experience interpreting the intricacies of copyright law as it pertains to librarianship, Russell is the ideal authority to address the concerns of librarians, teachers, and teaching librarians who work in the K–12 environment. Her book will encourage you to stop allowing your fear of copyright issues to limit how and what you share or teach, and instead be more involved in shaping copyright law to better serve your learning community. Through scenario-based discussions, it covers key topics such as
  • the reasons librarians and teachers have so many misconceptions about copyright, and why understanding copyright is a process, not a one-time event;
  • recent legislative and policy developments that impact schools and libraries;
  • situations often encountered by educators, such as using copyrighted material in class assignments, digital lesson plans, bulletin board displays, social media, school plays, and band performances and talent shows;
  • the use of licensed content in a variety of settings;
  • what constitutes "fair use," so that you can be empowered by knowing exactly what's possible within the law; and
  • guidance on making long-term strategic decisions and developing copyright policies.
[more]

front cover of Complete Copyright for K–12 Librarians and Educators
Complete Copyright for K–12 Librarians and Educators
Carrie Russell
American Library Association, 2012


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