12,815 research outputs found

    Information Literacy Instruction for Upper-Year Undergraduate Students: A Stratified Course-Integrated Approach

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    Undergraduate students face many potential barriers to learning about the process of conducting research. Information literacy instruction provided through faculty-librarian collaboration in an effort to expand the abilities of the “novice researcher” can ease the experience of undergraduate students. In addition, information literacy instruction may invoke increased student participation in the scholarly discourse of their chosen discipline. The implementation of a stratified course-integrated approach may be particularly valuable to upper-level undergraduates in preparation for completing a thesis or other culminating project in their final year of study. This claim is examined within the context of an instruction session observed as a component of a third-year undergraduate Materials Science and Engineering course

    Bridging the Gap: Training Needs Assessment of the Immigrant Workforce in Onondaga County, NY

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    [Excerpt] This report addresses one small facet of the skills dilemma facing Onondaga County; that is, can the growing immigrant/refugee population in Syracuse satisfy local employers’ demand for labor? With support from a grant provided by the Economic Development Administration (U.S. Department of Commerce) University Center at Cornell University, members of the ILR School’s Extension faculty interviewed employers,immigrants and other English-as-a-secondlanguage (ESL) workforce newcomers, service providers, labor unions, and government planners during the winter of 2007 to assess the training needs of the county’s immigrant and ESL workforce. Our research was facilitated and aided by the Onondaga County Office of Economic Development

    Two steps forward, one step back: Achievements and limitations of university-community partnerships in addressing neighbourhood socioeconomic disadvantage

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    This article discusses a partnership initiative that involved a major Australian research university (University of Melbourne), a local government and a network of local community service organisations. The partnership projects aimed to promote public access to university infrastructure for poor and marginalised residents, enhance the local value of research and teaching activities, and create employment opportunities. The article draws on an evaluation of the partnership, which focused on four keynote projects. It found that the partnership appeared to achieve positive outcomes for residents but was limited by tensions associated with the university’s ambivalent commitment to the value of such partnerships. These tensions remained difficult to resolve because they signalled present contestation over the foundational values of contemporary public universities.Keywords: university-community partnerships, neoliberalism, neighbourhoods, community developmen

    What's Going on in Community Media

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    What's Going On in Community Media shines a spotlight on media practices that increase citizen participation in media production, governance, and policy. The report summarizes the findings of a nationwide scan of effective and emerging community media practices conducted by the Benton Foundation in collaboration with the Community Media and Technology Program of the University of Massachusetts, Boston. The scan includes an analysis of trends and emerging practices; comparative research; an online survey of community media practitioners; one-on-one interviews with practitioners, funders and policy makers; and the information gleaned from a series of roundtable discussions with community media practitioners in Boston, Chicago, Minneapolis/St. Paul, and Portland, Oregon

    Literacy Applications for Today\u27s Learner

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    Common Core English Language Arts Standards and changing technologies have shifted the ways students and teachers select and read text. Reasons for the lack of digital literacy implementation in instruction are due to the large amount of choices available without sufficient background information on how to critically evaluate literacy applications. This article presents the framework of the Common Core English Language Arts Standards and how they are used to enhance literacy instruction through implementation of literacy technology applications. Limitations and advantages of digital applications are explored, descriptions of the applications are provided, and strategies for implementation in the English/Language Arts classroom are discussed

    Audit of Moving Image Education & Media Access Centres in Scotland

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    Poverty, educational attainment and achievement in Scotland : a critical review of the literature

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    Library Focus (Fall 2013)

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    The fall 2013 issue of Library Focus, the newsletter of University Libraries, includes articles on Dr. B\u27s Book Club; the Civil War 150 Lecture Series; Science Cafes at Cook Library; a showcase of local artists at the Gulf Coast Library; Bridging Cultures Bookshelf: Muslim Journeys; University Libraries on Facebook and Twitter; Chat Reference at Cook and Gulf Coast Libraries; Jennifer Brannock selected for the Mississippi Library Leadership Institute; and much more. The Spotlight on
 article features Stephen Haller, Curator of Historical Manuscripts and Archives.https://aquila.usm.edu/libraryfocus/1004/thumbnail.jp

    From Silos to Seamlessness: Towards a Cross-sectoral Funding Model for Post-compulsory Education and Training

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    educational finance, postcompulsory education, vocational education, higher education, adult education, recurrent education
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