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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Petersen, Jes
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1979
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED185993
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author Petersen, Jes
author_facet Petersen, Jes
Petersen, Jes
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents The Handicapped in Reading and the Public Libraries. Petersen, Jes Audiovisual Aids Disabilities Foreign Countries Library Services Public Libraries Reading Reading Difficulties Use Studies After acknowledging that a large segment of the population does not use libraries due to difficulties of one kind or another in visiting them, this paper argues that people with reading handicaps constitute an even larger number of non-users. Surveys of the use of Danish libraries are briefly reviewed, and 11 groups of people with "reading difficulties" are identified. Fourteen types of materials that are now available, or should be available, to library users are listed, and methods for adapting the contents of a book to the needs of the reading handicapped, particularly the mentally retarded, are described. Finally, a list of suggestions to help public libraries intensify their efforts in serving people with reading problems is presented. Several bottom-of-the-page sentences have been lost in the process of copying this document. (JD)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED185993
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1979
record_format eric
spellingShingle The Handicapped in Reading and the Public Libraries.
Petersen, Jes
Audiovisual Aids
Disabilities
Foreign Countries
Library Services
Public Libraries
Reading
Reading Difficulties
Use Studies
The Handicapped in Reading and the Public Libraries. Petersen, Jes Audiovisual Aids Disabilities Foreign Countries Library Services Public Libraries Reading Reading Difficulties Use Studies After acknowledging that a large segment of the population does not use libraries due to difficulties of one kind or another in visiting them, this paper argues that people with reading handicaps constitute an even larger number of non-users. Surveys of the use of Danish libraries are briefly reviewed, and 11 groups of people with "reading difficulties" are identified. Fourteen types of materials that are now available, or should be available, to library users are listed, and methods for adapting the contents of a book to the needs of the reading handicapped, particularly the mentally retarded, are described. Finally, a list of suggestions to help public libraries intensify their efforts in serving people with reading problems is presented. Several bottom-of-the-page sentences have been lost in the process of copying this document. (JD)
title The Handicapped in Reading and the Public Libraries.
topic Audiovisual Aids
Disabilities
Foreign Countries
Library Services
Public Libraries
Reading
Reading Difficulties
Use Studies
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED185993