Report on Proposed National Periodicals Center in the United States

1977 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 316-316
Author(s):  
Howard A. Hood

Recognizing the high value of information and knowledge, as well as the need for a safe and efficiently retrievable storage of the records of such knowledge, the Congress of the United States established some years ago an independent agency known as the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science. This agency was entrusted with the responsibility of developing and recommending a plan leading to the improvement of library and information services in the United States. Its work has progressed slowly. Various committees and task forces have been appointed, and they are in the process of conducting their investigations and preparing their reports.

1977 ◽  
Vol 40 (9) ◽  
pp. 639-642
Author(s):  
BAILUS WALKER ◽  
THEODORE GORDON

In recent years substantial attention has been given to environmental health and food protection in jails and prisons in the United States. As a result several commissions and task forces, as well as the courts, have studied conditions in the correctional setting which are hazardous to the health and well-being of inmates. This report, based on an investigation of 100 selected jails and prisons, summarizes findings on foodservice operations and their role in penal and correctional institutions.


1985 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-77
Author(s):  
Sajjad Ur Rehman

Introduction Library and information servi-ces need to be attuned to the needs of the users. There has been tremendous research effort and writing on the front of user and use studies to articulate the user demands and develop a better understanding for the purpose of planning. Tobin reported 477 such studies indexed in the library literature from 1960-1973. Despite this voluminous body of research, it is felt that needs of communities and specialized groups are not addressed in the literature. Study of information needs is inherently complex, and an attempt of global formulation of user needs makes it so general that it becomes meaningless. Another important dimension of studying the information needs is the contextual perspective that totality of 'user's life world,' should be taken into account. Such a study centers upon the user's experience to meet his physiological, affective, and cognitive needs. Information seeking behavior is patterned by various internal and external motivators which are embedded in the user's social situations, cultural settings, and many more factors surrounding the complex personality of the user. The socio-cultural and physical environment of the user is the foundation to understand the individual's knowledge structures rooted in cognitive and social psychology which stimulates information needs.The information acquiring activity of the user can be investigated through study of external and internal conditions. The external conditions pertain to material, environmental, personal, and social factors. Sovenyhazy states that these personal and surrounding conditions deserve particular attention. The user needs can be identified by studying the compounding effects of numerous variables such as age, educational level, socio-economic status, occupation, language skills, ethnic background, exposure to the environmental and cultural milieu, housing location, and many more. Such an analysis is helpful in determining the information demands of the users and the deficiencies they perceive. Study of information needs becomes more meaningful if it is confined to a specialized group of users as the homogenity of the group ensures validity of generalizations and makes their application more logical. Determination of information needs, in an articulate way, becomes imperative when an agency is planning information services for its specialized clientele. However, the needs of special groups of users and researchers like ethnic and minority groups have been given little attention by the researchers so far. Realizing this deficiency, National Commission on Libraries and Information Science organized a Conference on the Needs of Occupational, Ethnic, and Other Groups in the United States with the objective of identifying the specific needs of individual groups to fulfill their information needs in a more precise and thorough way. The conference proceedings cover a few ethnic groups but again the discussions are directed to general needs of the masses. Bourne and colleagues conducted a study on the special needs of identifiable sub-groups in the setting of American Public Library. These disparate efforts indicate the professional emphasis on conducting a thorough and scientific analysis of information use patterns and behaviors of the clientele for whom the information services are to be developed ...


2017 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 165-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
Min Zhang ◽  
Feng-Ru Sheu ◽  
Yin Zhang

Although Twitter has been widely adopted by professional organisations, there has been a lack of understanding and research on its utilisation. This article presents a study that looks into how five major library and information science (LIS) professional organisations in the United States use Twitter, including the American Library Association (ALA), Special Libraries Association (SLA), Association for Library and Information Science Education (ALISE), Association for Information Science and Technology (ASIS&T) and the iSchools. Specifically explored are the characteristics of Twitter usage, such as prevalent topics or contents, type of users involved, as well as the user influence based on number of mentions and retweets. The article also presents the network interactions among the LIS associations on Twitter. A systematic Twitter analysis framework of descriptive analytics, content analytics, user analysis and network analytics with relevant metrics used in this study can be applied to other studies of Twitter use.


2022 ◽  
pp. 096100062110696
Author(s):  
Vinit Kumar ◽  
Brady Lund

This study compares attributes (authors, journals, populations, theories, methods) of information seeking behavior studies based in the United States and India, based on a search of published articles from 2011 to 2020 in relevant information science databases. The findings indicate major differences in information behavior research among the two countries. Information behavior research in the United States tends to focus more on health and medicine-related research populations, employ greater use of information behavior theories, and use a variety of quantitative and qualitative research methods (as well as mixed methods). Information behavior research in India tends to focus more on general populations, use less theory, and rely heavily on quantitative research methods—particularly questionnaires (88% of studies). These findings suggest a healthy and intellectually-diverse information behavior research area in the United States and ample room for growth of the research area within India.


2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
David W. Hayeslip ◽  
Terry Dunworth ◽  
Malcolm L. Russell-Einhorn

Author(s):  
Antonio Diaz-Andrade

Online journalism dates back to the end of the 1970s, when Knight-Ridder launched an initiative to develop a videotext service in the United States, which it later dropped, in 1986, after realizing enormous losses. In 1988, Knight-Ridder bought Dialog Information Services, Inc.; only a year later, the first signs of success appeared. By the end of the 1980s, Gannet launched a daily news piece in text format. In 1992, The Chicago Tribune became the world’s first daily to launch an electronic version of its newspaper. In 1993, Knight-Ridder started publishing what would eventually become one of the paradigms of electronic journalism, the San Jose Mercury Center. By 1994, the major newspapers in the United States offered readers an online version (Díaz & Meso, 1998). Now, Internet users can read newspapers, listen to the radio, and watch TV from anywhere, anytime (McClung, 2001).


1998 ◽  
Vol 162 ◽  
pp. 273-276
Author(s):  
D.B. Hoff

In 1981, in response to growing concerns that the United States was falling behind the rest of the world educationally, the federal Secretary of Education created a national commission on excellence in education. This commission was charged with gathering data about the status of U.S. education compared to the rest of the developed world and to define the problems which would have to be faced to successfully pursue the course of excellence in education.


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