juz realised my preferred browser Firefox has released its Version 2 since 24th Oct. grab your copy now if you have not updated from ver 1.5 like me 🙂 *slow*
[off topic] ???????????
accession number ???
accessioning, accession of books ???????
acquisition department ???
alphabetical index ????
annual circulation ?????
associate librarian, deputy librarian, sub-librarian ???
audio-visual book ??????????????????????????????
audiovisual studio ???
author card ???
author catalogue ????
author index ????
back cover ??
back issue, back number ????
book ??
book card ??
book carrier, book conveyor ???
book case ??
book lift, book elevator ?????
book pocket ??
book reservation ??
bound volume ???
briefs, synopsis ????
call number ???
call slip ???
card ??
card catalogue ????
card catalogue cabinet ?????
cassette tape recorder ???????
catalogue card ????
catalogue room ???
cataloguer ???
cataloguing ??
cataloguing department ???
chief librarian, librarian ????
circulation department ????
circulation desk, delivery desk ???
classified card ???
classified catalogue ????
classified index ????
classifying ??
clerk ???
closed shelves ???
contents ??
copier, duplicator xeroxing machine ??
copyright page ???
current issue ????
daily periodical card ?????
date slip ???
description ??
descriptor ???
disinfection of books ????
display window ???
double-sided book shelves ????
exchange of books ????
exhibit rack, display rack ???
exhibition room, exhibition hall ???
fly page, flyleaf ??
front cover ??
gift ??
guide card ???
in circulation, out ??
index ??
information ??, ??
information material ????
information media ??????????????????????
information retrieval ????
information science ???
information storage ????
inter-library loan ????
international loan ????
ISBN (International Standard Book Number) ????????
ISSN (International Standard Serial Number) ????????
keyword ???
label ??
ledger catalogue ?????
librarian ??
library stamp ?????
loose-leaf catalogue ????
magazine binder ???
MARC, machine-readable catalogue ????
microcard ???
microfiche ????
microfilm ????
microfilm reader ?????
microprint ?????
miniature edition ???
missing issue ????
network ??
newspaper clipping ??
newspaper file, newspaper rod ???
newspaper rack ??
newspaper reading room ?????
non-book materials ???????????????????
non-print media ????????????
not for circulation ???
open shelves ???
opening hours, hours of service, hours of loan service ????
overdue notice ????
pamphlet, booklet ???
periodica rack ???
periodical index ????
periodical reading room ?????
periodical record card ?????
pocket book ???
projector, film projector ?????
punched card ???
rare book ??
reader’s card, admission card ???
reading room ???
re-cataloguing ????
renewal ??
retrieval ??
roller shelf ????
sample copy ??
scroll rack ???
secondhand book ??
shelving ??
slide projector ???
stack room ??
subject card ???
subject catalogue ????
subject index ????
supplementary issue ??
tape recorder ?????
terminal ??
terminal user ??????
thesaurus ????
title card ???
title catalogue ????
title index ????
title page ???
turnover of books ????
TV set ???
unique copy ??
Universal Copyright Convention ??????
video tape recorder ?????
adapted from here
Yahoo Time Capsule
this comes a bit slow, but there’s still about 8 days left, if you have not contributed your bit to history and would like to do, check out Yahoo Time Capsule now …
and this is my little contribution: permalink
Edublogging n Podcasting in Higher Education
Sharon Stoerger has put together these 2 annotated bibliographies which give good overview of articles on edublogging and podcasting in higer ed.
Gotten this link off EDUCAUSE.
October-November Issue of Innovate
this issue of Innovate has many articles on Open Source Software
The October-November 2006 issue of Innovate (www.innovateonline.info)
focuses on the potential of open source software and related trends to
transform educational practice.
Our first four articles map out the current state of open source technology
and offer recommendations for how educational institutions can benefit from
its advances. David Wiley sets the stage by offering a recent history of
the open source movement and discussing its recent impact in the
educational sector. (See http://www.innovateonline.info/index.php?view=article&id=354 )
In turn, Robert Stephenson argues that the community networks established
by open source software initiatives provide a model for similar networks in
the educational sphere. In his commentary Stephenson outlines his concept
of open course communities, a “knowledge ecosystem” in which the
development and assessment of course materials would arise from
technology-enhanced grassroots collaboration among educators, designers,
librarians, and students themselves. (See http://www.innovateonline.info/index.php?view=article&id=345 )
Meanwhile, for many institutions the actual adoption of open source
software still remains an open question; focused advocacy and strategic
foresight thus remain the watchwords in our next two articles. In their
commentary Gary Hepburn and Jan Buley first describe the implementation
strategies available to schools considering open source software, and they
subsequently address the key sociopolitical factors that must be taken into
account by advocates of such implementation. (See
http://www.innovateonline.info/index.php?view=article&id=323 )
Patrick Carey and Bernard Gleason note that open source software has
resulted in significant advances in commercial software as well, which has
led to the possibility of adopting modular combinations of open code and
proprietary applications. In order to take full advantage of these trends,
they argue, institutional planners should ensure that their systems provide
an open, standards-based architecture that allows for a flexible range of
software options. (See
http://www.innovateonline.info/index.php?view=article&id=314 )
The remaining articles contain detailed accounts of the development,
design, and use of specific open source applications as well as a study of
how the process of open source development provides a valuable model of
pedagogical design in its own right. Toru Iiyoshi, Cheryl Richardson, and
Owen McGrath introduce readers to the KEEP Toolkit, a set of software tools
designed to provide graphic representations of teaching practice and
thereby support focused inquiry into pedagogical strategies. (See
http://www.innovateonline.info/index.php?view=article&id=339 )
Harvey Quamen illustrates how he used MySQL software and PHP code to create
a database that streamlines editorial tasks and procedures for a journal on
humanities research. (See
http://www.innovateonline.info/index.php?view=article&id=325 )
Kun Huang, Yifei Dong, and Xun Ge propose that the collaborative work
environment of open source development has a distinctively pedagogical
value for instructors. In illustrating this claim, they describe a graduate
computing course in which student teams worked on software design projects
in an online environment modeled after the virtual workspaces of open
source software initiatives. (See
http://www.innovateonline.info/index.php?view=article&id=324 )
Finally, in his Places to Go column, Stephen Downes introduces readers to
Intute, an open access Web site that represents a significant step forward
in the evolution of learning object repositories. Through the distinctive
design of its search feature, Intute gives readers free access to a much
broader network of resource providers than typically provided by other
repositories. With its plans to release its own software as open source,
Intute also promises to spur the growth of similar repositories that will
further fuel vital innovations in teaching practice. (See
http://www.innovateonline.info/index.php?view=article&id=398 )
Please forward this announcement to appropriate mailing lists and to
colleagues who want to use IT tools to advance their work. Ask your
organizational librarian to link to Innovate in their resource section for
open-access e-journals. Finally, please take advantage of our discuss
feature within each article to add your commentary on this important topic.
Thanks!
Jim
James L Morrison
Editor-in-Chief, Innovate
http://www.innovateonline.info
Professor Emeritus of Educational Leadership
UNC-Chapel Hill
http://horizon.unc.edu
