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Article
Publication date: 1 July 1966

Kathleen M. Allsop

In her second article on the Wool Board, Miss Allsop shows in detail how the Board has set about improving the quality of training in the industry.

Abstract

In her second article on the Wool Board, Miss Allsop shows in detail how the Board has set about improving the quality of training in the industry.

Details

Education + Training, vol. 8 no. 7
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0040-0912

Article
Publication date: 1 June 1966

Kathleen M. Allsop

In her first article on the activities of the Wool ITB, Miss Allsop outlines the progress made so far in an industry less disciplined than the engineering giants. The…

Abstract

In her first article on the activities of the Wool ITB, Miss Allsop outlines the progress made so far in an industry less disciplined than the engineering giants. The organizational structure is explained and local difficulties pointed. Next month the author will investigate in depth the methods the Wool ITB uses to raise the standards of training.

Details

Education + Training, vol. 8 no. 6
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0040-0912

Article
Publication date: 1 March 1971

R F Vollans writes:Nothing pleases me more than to see honours bestowed on those who are worthy of them, particularly if they are my close friends and personal colleagues. It was…

37

Abstract

R F Vollans writes:Nothing pleases me more than to see honours bestowed on those who are worthy of them, particularly if they are my close friends and personal colleagues. It was, therefore, with some delight that I read of the LA'S new awards—the McColvin and Besterman Medals.

Details

New Library World, vol. 72 no. 9
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0307-4803

Article
Publication date: 1 November 1966

With a view to introducing seminars, week‐end courses, and summer schools, the Cleaver‐Hume Group of Correspondence Colleges has opened a new centre at Aldermaston Court, a fine…

Abstract

With a view to introducing seminars, week‐end courses, and summer schools, the Cleaver‐Hume Group of Correspondence Colleges has opened a new centre at Aldermaston Court, a fine Victorian manor house in Berkshire.

Details

Education + Training, vol. 8 no. 11
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0040-0912

Article
Publication date: 1 October 1950

EVEN if library work with the young is the most written, and over‐written, subject in librarianship as is sometimes alleged, it still is the foundation of all library activity and…

Abstract

EVEN if library work with the young is the most written, and over‐written, subject in librarianship as is sometimes alleged, it still is the foundation of all library activity and must therefore come under continuous review. To some the subject is as dull as the essay questions set in the Entrance Examinations were alleged to be by a writer in The Library Assistant. To which we reply that all things have a certain dullness to those without sufficient imagination to look at them in other than the most conventional darkness. A Chesterton discourses entrancingly on a piece of chalk and brown paper, an empty train, a piece of string. So with our subject. We therefore make no other apology than this for a number of THE LIBRARY WORLD in which it is our main interest. Our children's libraries are, as yet, far from perfect; they issue too many drivelling books written by authors whose first essays in writing are children's books because they think them to be the easiest to write. The difference between a Ransome and—well, a thousand slush children's books—is as great as the difference between The Vicar of Wakefield and worst railway bookstall novelette. There is a great field being examined here by the more progressive children's librarians. There are many other questions, administrative and personal that have been and are under discussion. The writer of Letters on Our Affairs this month deals with some of these although, we may at once say, his views are not wholly those of THE LIBRARY WORLD.

Details

New Library World, vol. 53 no. 4
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0307-4803

Article
Publication date: 1 February 1975

H. SPENCER, L. REYNOLDS and B. COE

Bibliographical materials are often produced on a low budget and against a deadline, and the design of the material often does not adequately represent the structure of the…

Abstract

Bibliographical materials are often produced on a low budget and against a deadline, and the design of the material often does not adequately represent the structure of the information or facilitate its use. Two studies concerned with optimizing the effectiveness of design given certain practical constraints are reported here. In the first study, ten coding systems suitable for distinguishing between entries in typewritten bibliographies were tested. Subjects were given sections of author index typed in different styles, together with lists of authors' surnames to be found in the test material within a set time. The most effective system made a clear distinction between entries, and between the first element of each entry and the rest of the entry, by indentation. In the second study, the effectiveness of six spatial and three typographic coding systems for distinguishing between entries and between elements within entries in typeset bibliographies was tested for two different search tasks. In Experiment I, subjects were given lists of authors' surnames to find in the test material; in Experiment 2 they were given lists of titles. Spatial coding was more effective than typographic coding in Experiment 1; the reverse was true for Experiment 2. The most effective spatial coding systems in both experiments were those which clearly distinguished the start of each entry by line spacing or indentation. The use of capitals for authors' surnames was the most effective typographic coding system in Experiment 1; the use of bold for titles was the most effective in Experiment 2. The best compromise for both search tasks is likely to incorporate line spacing between entries with elements within entries running on, and bold titles.

Details

Journal of Documentation, vol. 31 no. 2
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0022-0418

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