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         Florida School Media Centers:     more detail
  1. A Study of Combined School-Public Libraries (School Media Centers, No. 6) by Shirley L. Aaron, Jane Anne Hannigan, 1980-06
  2. A bibliography of state school library media publications, statutes, state board rules, and funding laws including demographic data by Thomas L Hart, 1987
  3. Non-print media : management by objectives: A plan for enrichment and assessment of collections and services by Nancy Wagoner Bush, 1972

61. OrlandoSentinel.com News
was graded by the state of florida, and compare Librarians at Maynard Evans High Schoolin Orlando request that schools take their media centers more seriously
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/education/orl-aseclibrary10021003feb10,0,338

62. Top Ten Reasons Brochure
CDROM, SUNLINK on the World Wide Web is the most popular way to access FloridaK-12 Current standards for school library media centers require media
http://www.sunlink.ucf.edu/publications/topten/
10. SUNLINK can increase student achievement. Many research studies indicate the positive effects that adequate and varied school resources have on student achievement. And one of the best predictors of student achievement is size of the collection. SUNLINK gives students access to over 16 million items through interlibrary loan. 9. SUNLINK increases students' access to information. With SUNLINK, not only do students have access to information and materials in other school library media centers in the district and the state, but SUNLINK's powerful search capabilities provide better access to materials in their own schools. Students can search by keyword, title, author, date, format and language to find the best information sources to meet their needs. Information and technology skills are imbedded throughout the Sunshine State Standards. More importantly, students need the skills that will help them locate, evaluate, and use information in many formats, and they need to learn to use technology efficiently and effectively because these are skills required in almost every occupation today. 7. SUNLINK provides teachers with access to resources that support the Sunshine State Standards.

63. Nancy Everhart's School Media Website
Librarians, an Outstanding Library media Program Award Award from the PennsylvaniaSchool Librarians' Association Library Science from florida State University
http://home.ptd.net/~everhart/schoolmedia.html
COURSES School Media Centers Creating Basic Audiovisual Media Internships
RESEARCH Web Page Evaluation Worksheet State Documents Dealing with Evaluation Issues for School Library Media Specialists
PUBLICATIONS Books Book Chapters Articles
Purpose The purpose of this web site is to facilitate information exchange about school library media topics and education to the students at St. John's University. An additional purpose is to serve as a forum for my research. It's still new, so check back frequently for updates! About Me I am an assistant professor in the Division of Library and Information Science at St. John's University located in Jamaica (Queens), New York. I teach the courses required for certification as a school library media specialist in New York State. Before becoming a professor, I was a high school library media specialist in Pennsylvania for 16 years winning the Microcomputer in the Media Center Award from the American Association of School Librarians, an Outstanding Library Media Program Award from the United States Department of Education, the Merit Award from Apple Computer, the Professional Development Award from the Pennsylvania School Librarians' Association, and the Outstanding Dissertation Award from the Association for Library and Information Science Education. I have a Ph.D. in Library Science from Florida State University, an M.Ed. in Educational Media from the University of Central Florida, and a B.S. in Library Science from Kutztown University.

64. MLS Career Links
school Library/media Centered Jobs Subscribe to a listserv for job postings managedby SLIS faculty, Daniel Callison school Librarianship as a Career. florida.
http://www.slis.indiana.edu/careers/mls_career_links.html
Search You are here: Site Map Contact Us Home SLIS HOME ... CONTACT US
MLS Career Links
Links to Key Human Resources and Information Pages:
Academic Library
General

Public Library

School Media Centers

See also MIS Career Links for:
Corporate/Information Science Companies and other resources

Non-Profit/Government
MLS Career Paths
MLS Dynamic Careers
...
MLS Alumni Profiles

Academic Library The Association of Research Libraries
Contains ARL related career resources. EDUCAUSE An organization for professionals associated with managing and using information resources in higher education. Post-Master's Residencies Explore these links for paid residency positions. These are great "first job" opportunities following graduation. They usually last one or two years, and most are offered by academic or research libraries. The Chronicle of Higher Education's Job List The Chronicle of Higher Education Career Network Library Science positions can be found by selecting faculty positions - then professional/vocational fields - then library sciences. Check the other categories, too.

65. Media Services
by the florida Department of Education, SUNLINK is florida’s K12 public schoolunion catalog, a shared database of materials in florida K-12 media centers.
http://elementarypgms.brevard.k12.fl.us/media.htm
Elementary Programs "Where Service and Support
Equal Success" Menu: Home What's New Representative Samples of Grade Level Expectations Ideas for Parents ...
Web Sites
Media Services LIBRARY MEDIA CENTER RESOURCES ONLINE All of our schools are authorized to access several online resources from The Gale Group. These online products are free to all students and teachers for use both at school and at home. These electronic reference collections include many full text periodicals, national newspapers, professional education journals, and articles from reference books such as almanacs, atlases, and encyclopedias. To access these resources, just click on the item you want from below and begin your search. Student Resource Center Junior Student Resource Center Infotrac Databases The PDF file below includes a series of lesson plans using the Gale Online Resources and ties to Sunshine State Standards. You will need to have Adobe Acrobat Reader, which can be downloaded for free from the internet, installed on your computer in order to read the file. Click here Gale Manual Contents1.pdf

66. SLMR Online © 2000 ALA
Judith Fields Davie, A Survey of school Library media Resources for ExceptionalStudents in florida Public schools (unpublished Ph.D. diss
http://www.ala.org/aasl/SLMR/slmr_resources/ref_callison2.html

67. DPS Sitemap
school Improvement Resource Center; school Library media Services; Sunlink. StudentLanguage Education Publications; The Research Paper for ESE in florida;
http://www.myfloridaeducation.com/dps/sitemap.htm
Division of Public Schools Site Map
Division of Public Schools Home

ORGANIZATIONAL
  • Organizational Chart NEWS OR HOT TOPICS ASSESSMENT/ TESTING
  • 68. State Departments Of Library Services
    Instructional Materials, Library media Services and Non schools/Home Education The florida Department of selection policy for school library instructional
    http://www.sldirectory.com/libsf/stlibs.html
    State Pages Relating to School Library/Media Services
    School Libraries on the Web : Main Directory Directory of US Web Pages School District Libraries National Library Pages ... Resources for Librarians Countries: Australia Canada United Kingdom Germany ... United States
    Australia
    Canada

    69. School District Departments Of Libraries
    Library media Services West Hartford Public schools. florida school Library mediaCenters - Yakima school District. Wisconsin Eau Claire Area school
    http://www.sldirectory.com/libsf/sdlibs.html
    Pages Maintained by School District Departments of Libraries/Media Services
    School Libraries on the Web : Main Directory Directory of US Web Pages State Departments of Libraries National Library Pages ... Resources for Librarians Countries: Canada United Kingdom United States
    Canada

    70. Sun-Sentinel.com - David Posnack Hebrew Day School
    them A new high school facility adjacent to the present campus is under construction.The stateof-the-art science labs, media and technology centers will be
    http://www.showtimeinteractive.com/top/1,1419,S-Sunsentinel-EducationShowcase-0!
    HOME NEWS SPORTS ENTERTAINMENT ... SHOPPING EDUCATION SHOWCASE
    NEWS Nation/World
    South Florida

    Cuba

    State legislature
    ...
    News quiz

    COMMUNITY INFO Property Records
    Multicultural Directory

    Next Generation

    CHANNELS CLASSIFIED
    Careers
    Homes Apartments ... Shopping Guide: Shop local merchants Advertisers Furniture Row TRAVEL THE EDGE Multimedia games and graphics. ENTERTAINMENT Dining Movies Festivals ... News by email THIS PAGE HAS MOVED. Click here to see The 2003 Education Showcase Special Section E-mail to a friend David Posnack Hebrew Day School The DPHDS/JCHS campus is at 6511 W. Sunrise Blvd. in Plantation. School officials point out that the school offers a number of advantages, among them: A new high school facility adjacent to the present campus is under construction. The state-of-the-art science labs, media and technology centers will be open to students in August. Small class sizes maximize learning opportunities for high school students. Honors and advanced placement courses are offered to qualified students. Opportunities for international study are also available. A broad curriculum is offered to students. It includes courses in accelerated math, science and technology. Extensive elective course offerings include drama, fine arts, debate, choir, instrumental ensemble, journalism, yearbook and computer programming.

    71. ISTE SIGMS Officers - Bio Of Donna Baumbach
    She is currently completing a study of florida’s school library mediacenters and the impact of media programs on student achievement.
    http://www.iste.org/sigms/officers/baumbach.cfm
    Bookstore
    NECC

    NETS

    About ISTE
    ...
    Legal Notice

    improve teaching
    and learning
    by advancing the effective use of technology in
    Back to
    Membership
    Special Interest Groups (SIGs)
    SIGMS Officers
    Donna Baumbach
    Director of the Instructional Technology Resource Center (ITRC) and the SUNLINK Project University of Central Florida 12443 Research Parkway Suite 402 Orlando, FL 32826 Office: 407.207.4962 Fax: 407.207.4965 Email: baumbach_d@popmail.firn.edu Back to SIGMS Officers Quick Links Join SIGMS SIGMS Community Learn more about SIGMS Access the SIGMS Online Community (SIGMS members only) Meet the SIGMS Officers ISTE Customer Service 480 Charnelton Street Eugene, OR 97401-2626 USA iste@iste.org 800.336.5191 (U.S.) www.iste.org 541.302.3778 (fax)

    72. EME6115.html
    florida state award, grades 38 juvenile fiction florida CHILDREN'S BOOK AWARD picturebooks NON-BOOK (magazines and non-print media) school LIBRARY JOURNAL
    http://www.coe.ufl.edu/school/syllabi/eme6115.html
    EME 6115
    SELECTION OF PRINT AND NONPRINT MATERIAL
    Instructor: J. Hurt G509 Norman Hall
    (352) 332-0705 ext. 258
    Course Description
    This course is designed to present students with concepts and criteria involved in the selection and acquisition of print materials, non-print materials and equipment contained in library/media center collections. It stresses the development of a selection policy that reflects a specific type and/or level of collection pertinent to each student's individual needs and interests. General guidelines and standards, general and specific criteria of selection, print and non-print selection tools and standard procedures of selection and acquisition will be discussed.
    Course Objectives
    Upon successful completion of EME 6115, students will be able to:
    1) Demonstrate an understanding of the importance of selection to the
    effective functioning of a media center.
    2) Identify and describe the various selection models.
    3) Demonstrate an understanding of the general concepts involved in selection of print and non-print material.
    4) Demonstrate an understanding of the need and techniques for assessing print and non-print collections.

    73. Panhandle Area Educational Consortium
    districts as well as the florida Department of to member and participating schooldistricts as mutual interest, such as shared media centers, testing programs
    http://www.paec.org/welcome/history.asp

    74. LION: Automation For School Libraries
    over 1200 K12 school libraries in florida. plan for automating and networking schoollibraries, along S. Gonzalez, Supervisor of Library media Services for
    http://www.libraries.phila.k12.pa.us/lion/auto.html
    Librarians Information Online Network
    Automation for School Libraries
    Provided here is information on automated circulation and catalog systems for school libraries, and related automation issues.
    Automated System Marketplace 2000
    Library Journal (April 1, 2000, vol. 125, no. 6, page 49) Library Journal publishes an annual survey of automation systems marketed to school libraries and other types of libraries. The survey includes a discussion of trends and developments in library automation, profiles of vendors and their products, and tables showing the number of systems sold by each vendor.
    Automating Media Centers and Small Libraries: A Microcomputer-based Approach
    By Dania Bilal Meghabghab. (Libraries Unlimited, c1997) ISBN 1-56308-472-4. The publisher provides a description of this book.
    Automating Small Libraries
    By James Swan. (Highsmith Press, c1996) ISBN 0-917846-78-8. This 100-page handbook is a step-by-step guide to assessing the need for automating, planning and selecting a system, converting the collection and the library's records, installation and training, orienting the library's users, and evaluating the need for future enhancements. Includes checklists, flow charts designed to illustrate the best conversion methods, and system comparison charts.
    Automation for School Libraries: How to Do It from Those Who Have Done It
    Edited by Teresa Thurman Day and others. (American Library Association, c1994) ISBN 0-8389-0637-0. This 150-page book includes six case studies that illustrate the process of automating a school library. Includes instructions for preparing a "Request for Proposal" to prospective vendors, evaluation of software products, retrospective conversion of existing catalog records to MARC format, and other issues.

    75. Direct Connect Editorial
    at the University of Central florida; Fran Cohen communities. Indeed, each of theschool libraries in our differences of opinions, five media centers rose to
    http://www.infotoday.com/MMSchools/may97/dconn597.htm
    DISCovering
    Excellence in School Libraries
    by Susan Veccia, Editor
    MultiMedia Schools

    All of these media centers serve as the technology wellspring for their schools. Using technology is no longer a luxury in the field of school libraries, but a requirement," wrote one of the finalists of the 1997 Gale DISCovering Program/MultiMedia Schools Information Technology Award. In school after school where this premise is only partially understood, technology is an "add-on"—something that is tacked on to a school program, not seamlessly integrated into the fabric of the school community. Not so in the five school media centers that earned a place in this year's Gale Research/MultiMedia Schools "winner's circle." All of these media centers serve as the technology wellspring for their schools. In these schools technology is harnessed; it is put to work for educational goals in the media center and throughout the school. It is not an "add-on," but the backbone that leverages information resources well beyond the walls of the media center. "Our goal is to achieve a library without walls and an information center without limits," wrote another finalist. In order to achieve this vision, media specialists are actively engaging themselves in school activities. Ongoing staff development provided by the media center has created a "teacher renewal," observed a middle school principal. "Technology helps bring people together" and creates a different learning experience for both teachers and students. What about those teachers who are reluctant to get involved with the technology? One student put us straight on that: "Teachers get reputations [among the students] you know. Students know which teachers stand up in front of the podium and lecture, and they don't sign up for those courses...."

    76. Vocational Education Resources
    s. Dartmouth Medical school, Interactive media Lab....... specific information for students in grades 612 can be found in the florida Course
    http://pegasus.cc.ucf.edu/~sorg/vocation.html
    The Vocational Education Resources page has been relocated to: http://reach.ucf.edu/~voced/mainresources.htm

    77. FLA 2001-2002 Section And Interest Group Chairs
    352629-8486. jeffwilliams@marioncountyfl.org. school LIBRARIES AND media CENTERSPatricia Bauer, Co-Leader. University of South florida. pbauer@chuma1.cas.usf.edu.
    http://www.flalib.org/library/fla/01-02sections.html
    Site Map Conference Membership Publications
    Go to.... FLA Home Page FLA Site Map FLA News About FLA Conferences Legislation Just for Friends Publications -Florida Libraries Membership Links 2001-2002 Florida Library Association
    LEADER VICE LEADER ACADEMIC LIBRARIES, LEADER Sarah H. Johnson Director of Information Technology Polk Community College James W. Dowdy Memorial Library 999 Ave. H NE Winter Haven, FL 33881 FAX: 863-297-1065 sarah_johnson@polk.cc.fl.us
    Academic Libraries section Web Page
    ACADEMIC LIBRARIES, vice LEADER Tina Neville Head, Reference Svcs. Univ. of S. Flat St. Pete Nelson Poynter Memorial Library 140 7th Ave. S. St. Petersburg, FL 33701 FAX: 727-553-1196 neville@nelson.usf.edu BIBLIOTHERAPY, LEADER Lisa A. Lobel Head of Reference Broward County Library System Riverland Branch Library 2710 W. Davie Blvd. Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33312 FAX: 954-791-1087 smlobel@earthlink.net

    78. CDC Media Relations: Facts About Youth Tobacco Surveillance United States, 1998-
    and 13 states in 1999 (Arkansas, florida, Georgia, Kansas 10 middle (57.9%) and high(55.6%) school students nationwide www.cdc.gov/od/oc/media/pressrel/fs2k1013
    http://www.cdc.gov/od/oc/media/pressrel/fs2k1013.htm

    Media Home
    Contact Us
    Local Contents "Centers" at CDC Summaries Archive Global Health Odyssey Media Relations Home Page ... Email Us
    October 13, 2000
    Contact: CDC, Center for Chronic Disease Prevention
    Facts About: Youth Tobacco Surveillance United States, 1998-1999
    National Youth Tobacco Survey (NYTS) The National Youth Tobacco Survey (NYTS) was conducted September-October 1999 by the American Legacy Foundation in collaboration with the CDC Foundation and with technical assistance from the CDC. The NYTS report provides first-ever national data on the prevalence of current tobacco use among middle school students and documents the emergence of bidis and kreteks among middle and high school students. Approximately 15,000 students in grades 6 through 12 from about 131 public and private schools participated in the NYTS. A previous report focusing on tobacco use prevalence was published in the January 28, 2000 issue of the MMWR.

    79. CDC Media Relations: ATSDR AND EPA Warn The Public About Continuing Patterns Of
    florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton, florida, removed metallic long periodsmay have trouble learning in school. www.cdc.gov/od/oc/media/pressrel/mercury
    http://www.cdc.gov/od/oc/media/pressrel/mercury.htm

    Media Home
    Contact Us
    Local Contents "Centers" at CDC Summaries Archive Global Health Odyssey Media Relations Home Page ... Email Us
    May 1997 ATSDR AND EPA Warn the Public About Continuing Patterns of Metallic Mercury Esposure Metallic mercury is a hazardous chemical that can cause serious health problems. Children (especially very young children) and fetuses are most vulnerable. The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR), part of the U.S. Public Health Service, and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) are jointly issuing an alert to the general public. There is a continuing pattern of metallic mercury exposure in children and teenagers and in persons using certain folk medicines or participating in certain ethnic or religious practices.
    It is important for the general public to understand that either short-term or long-term exposures to metallic mercury can lead to serious health problems. Human exposure to metallic mercury occurs primarily from breathing contaminated air. Other forms of mercury can be absorbed by drinking contaminated water, eating food (usually fish containing mercury), and from skin contact. At high levels, metallic mercury can cause effects on the nervous system and the developing fetus. Other forms of mercury can damage other organs. Even at low levels, metallic mercury can cause health problems.

    80. School Choice Links: State Legislative Agenda And Media Resources
    Advocacy Groups, Policy centers, and Think Tanks. State Legislative Agenda andMedia Resource Pages. school Choice and Pluralism. school Choice and Equality.
    http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/research/rapl/issues/schoolchoice/sc-legislation.html
    Home Search BC Home Contact Us ... Advocacy Groups, Policy Centers, and Think Tanks State Legislative Agenda and Media Resource Pages School Choice and Pluralism School Choice and Equality School Choice and the Ecology of Institutions School Choice and American Constitutional Law Issues: School Choice
    School Choice and Legislation
    As school choice options have made their way to the individual state as the various "laboratories of democracy," many on-line resources have been established to track legislation across the nation in individual states. Advocacy organizations have also established school choice web sites in individual states where legislation has been proposed. Lastly, there exist a number of general resource sites located at web site portals, search engines, and news media devoted to the topic of education. For an alphabetical list of all advocacy groups listed on this web site, click here School Choice Across the US: Current Legislation
    Several sites allow one to follow the legislative agenda of any state on the topic of school choice: Americans United for the Separation of Church and State: Legislative Update
    Advocacy organization site which sponsors an account of church/state issues across the nation (regularly updated).

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