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Auteur principal: Ebersole, Wm. Dale, Jr.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Langue:en
Publié: 1984
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Accès en ligne:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED277398
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author Ebersole, Wm. Dale, Jr.
author_facet Ebersole, Wm. Dale, Jr.
Ebersole, Wm. Dale, Jr.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Geographical Distribution of Academic and Public Library Collections in the United States: Some Socio-Economic Interpretations. Ebersole, Wm. Dale, Jr. Academic Libraries Educational Attainment Geographic Distribution Higher Education Housing Hypothesis Testing Income Library Collections Metropolitan Areas Public Libraries Regional Characteristics Regression (Statistics) Socioeconomic Influences Statistical Distributions Teacher Student Ratio In order to determine the relationship of the socioeconomic variable sets of education, general characteristics, and income and housing to geographic variations in the collection size of academic and public libraries in the United States, data for the 50 largest Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas (SMSAs) are analyzed using frequency distribution, correlation analysis, and regression analysis. Two hypotheses are tested: (1) the socioeconomic character of the SMSAs will relate to the collection size of both academic and public libraries, and (2) academic library collection size reveals greater correspondence with these socioeconomic characteristics than public library collection size. Analysis of data lends support to the first hypothesis but refutes the second, suggesting that the public library model is more strongly influenced by population. Supporting material is presented in 18 tables and 10 figures, and a bibliography is provided. An alphabetical listing and a listing ranked by population for the 50 largest SMSAs in 1973, frequency distributions, and regression tables are appended. (KM)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
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publishDate 1984
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spellingShingle Geographical Distribution of Academic and Public Library Collections in the United States: Some Socio-Economic Interpretations.
Ebersole, Wm. Dale, Jr.
Academic Libraries
Educational Attainment
Geographic Distribution
Higher Education
Housing
Hypothesis Testing
Income
Library Collections
Metropolitan Areas
Public Libraries
Regional Characteristics
Regression (Statistics)
Socioeconomic Influences
Statistical Distributions
Teacher Student Ratio
Geographical Distribution of Academic and Public Library Collections in the United States: Some Socio-Economic Interpretations. Ebersole, Wm. Dale, Jr. Academic Libraries Educational Attainment Geographic Distribution Higher Education Housing Hypothesis Testing Income Library Collections Metropolitan Areas Public Libraries Regional Characteristics Regression (Statistics) Socioeconomic Influences Statistical Distributions Teacher Student Ratio In order to determine the relationship of the socioeconomic variable sets of education, general characteristics, and income and housing to geographic variations in the collection size of academic and public libraries in the United States, data for the 50 largest Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas (SMSAs) are analyzed using frequency distribution, correlation analysis, and regression analysis. Two hypotheses are tested: (1) the socioeconomic character of the SMSAs will relate to the collection size of both academic and public libraries, and (2) academic library collection size reveals greater correspondence with these socioeconomic characteristics than public library collection size. Analysis of data lends support to the first hypothesis but refutes the second, suggesting that the public library model is more strongly influenced by population. Supporting material is presented in 18 tables and 10 figures, and a bibliography is provided. An alphabetical listing and a listing ranked by population for the 50 largest SMSAs in 1973, frequency distributions, and regression tables are appended. (KM)
title Geographical Distribution of Academic and Public Library Collections in the United States: Some Socio-Economic Interpretations.
topic Academic Libraries
Educational Attainment
Geographic Distribution
Higher Education
Housing
Hypothesis Testing
Income
Library Collections
Metropolitan Areas
Public Libraries
Regional Characteristics
Regression (Statistics)
Socioeconomic Influences
Statistical Distributions
Teacher Student Ratio
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED277398