528 research outputs found
The representation of effectiveness in management : an investigation into knowledge, meaning, and discourse
The thesis investigates the representation of knowledge and meaning in
management, with special reference to 'effectiveness' in library and information
services. It is argued that management is a socially constructed and negotiated
reality in which the meaning of management is the management of meaning.
Knowledge paradigms, ideologies, and values form key components of this reality,
and operate in a state of change, particularly that arising between 'service'
and 'entrepreneurial' models of library management over the last decade. Issues
of consensus, hegemony, organisational culture, and learning are investigated
with reference to practitioner ('expert') and student ('novice') managers, and to
the dialectic between traditional managers ('craftsman managers') and adaptive
generalistic managers ('gamesman managers'). The research methodology is based
on ethnographic, ideographic, grounded theory, and semio-narrative principles.
These are selected as being appropriate and effective interpretative ways of
obtaining an understanding of what managers know and know they know, and how
they reflect an how they act. It utilises a range of test instruments (including
consensus table, scalogram and narrative structure analysis) to elicit knowledge
and meaning from representative groups of respondent managers. The central
component of this approach is a referential hierarchy. This consists of four
major forms of discourse (concepts, propositions, scripts, and stories), in
terms of which it is possible for researchers to elicit, and then
comprehensively organise and analyse, the main ways in which managers express
knowledge and meaning. A model is constructed in which six dimensions of
knowledge and meaning receive effective expression through such discourse : the
experiential, the teleological, the axiological, the deontic, the epistemic, and
the praxiological (acronymically, the PETADE model). it is argued that this
approach brings together work hitherto dispersed over a wide variety of
disciplines and that it provides an important and useful method of
understanding and eliciting the representation of knowledge and meaning in the
domain of management
Management education and training for librarians in Scotland.
This paper is a report on research into management education and training for librarians, which was initiated and funded by the Library and Information Services Committee (Scotland) [LISC(S)]. It outlines the origin of the proposal in the current debate about management education in the United Kingdom (UK), and in the growing concern to ensure that librarians' managerial abilities are fully developed. It provides background material on management education in Scotland, and on the provision of short courses in management for librarians in the UK. A survey of Heads of library and information services and the managers who report to them was undertaken in early 1991 to identify the management competences required by librarians. The resources available for staff development were investigated, as were the relative priorities attached to management development compared with general professional development. The review found that managerial development has clearly been identified as organisationally or personally important by some librarians. However, it appeared that the overall perception of librarians as managers is still low. There was a very considerable diversity in support for management development in Scottish libraries. The review concluded that, at the moment there does not appear to be a basis for a programme of management education and training specifically for librarians. The increase in financial allocations required to sustain such a programme would be unrealistic in present circumstances, and librarians should make more use of alternative, in-service methods of management development
Essential Law for Information Professionals
Stuart Hannabuss picks another winner but wonders whether legal essentialism is enough for information professionals
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