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Article
Publication date: 1 December 1994

Thomas W. Ellacott

Describes a systematic approach to training, based on the actual tasksperformed by the job incumbent, which has proven to be the mostefficient and effective means of achieving the…

196

Abstract

Describes a systematic approach to training, based on the actual tasks performed by the job incumbent, which has proven to be the most efficient and effective means of achieving the highest level of job performance, especially in situations where complex training requirements are encountered. The Canadian Safeguards Support Program, in co‐operation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), has recently established a performance‐based training system in Vienna for IAEA safeguards inspectors assigned to Canada Deuterium Uranium (CANDU), the Canadian‐designed power reactor with on‐power refueling capabilities, worldwide. The approach embodies both the instruction and certification of the trainee on specific areas of the subject matter.

Details

Journal of European Industrial Training, vol. 18 no. 11
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0309-0590

Keywords

Article
Publication date: 1 October 1953

ONLY a mild flutter in the dovecotes was felt by the discovery, made public in the Justce of the Peace, one, that fines for the detention of library books were unauthorised by Law…

Abstract

ONLY a mild flutter in the dovecotes was felt by the discovery, made public in the Justce of the Peace, one, that fines for the detention of library books were unauthorised by Law and, two, that readers who declined to pay them could not be refused access to their own libraries. It is possible that this was known long ago to librarians and is not the reason why a very few libraries do not exact fines. Hewitt, however, tells us that although the practice of charging is universal no machinery exists for the recovery of fines. He does say that while recourse to the courts for their recovery is not to be recommended, exclusion from the use of the library would be admissible. Without arguing for or against fines, the fact that they persist and are in the view of many a commonsense and necessary way of ensuring the return of books, and that the Acts give authority for the making of byelaws for the good management of libraries, there appears to be a case for getting the matter settled one way or other. No librarian wants to act in disregard of law, but it is difficult to get a case heard as, for the sake of the small sum involved in a fine and remembering the relatively large sum involved in a court action, few borrowers will be found to challenge fines. It is our own business to see that our ways are legal.

Details

New Library World, vol. 55 no. 4
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0307-4803

Article
Publication date: 1 April 1953

LIBRARY ASSOCIATION CONFERENCE affairs occupy our foreground this month of course. The Llandudno meeting will, we understand, be the last to be held in the spring. Various…

Abstract

LIBRARY ASSOCIATION CONFERENCE affairs occupy our foreground this month of course. The Llandudno meeting will, we understand, be the last to be held in the spring. Various considerations, weighty enough, have made the early meeting undesirable. Municipal and county library authority members are occupied with elections and university and college librarians are pressed with imminent examinations. September, therefore, will hereafter be conference month, which, for those who so regard conferences, makes them a welcome extension of summer holidays. It also intrudes them into the holiday season and increases their cost and the difficulty of accommodating so large an assembly in halls and hotels.

Details

New Library World, vol. 54 no. 9
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0307-4803

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