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Main Authors: Pungitore, Verna L., And Others
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1989
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED317217
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author Pungitore, Verna L.
And Others
author_facet Pungitore, Verna L.
And Others
Pungitore, Verna L.
And Others
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents A Study of the Development and Diffusion of the Public Library Association's Planning and Evaluation Manuals. Final Report. Pungitore, Verna L. And Others Administrator Guides Change Agents Evaluation Criteria Information Dissemination Innovation Library Administration Library Associations Library Research Library Surveys Long Range Planning Organizational Objectives Program Evaluation Public Libraries State Libraries In 1988, with funding from the U.S. Department of Education, a research team from the School of Library and Information Science at Indiana University began a study of the origin, development, and diffusion of the Public Library Association's (PLA) planning and evaluation manuals. The study was intended to add to the general understanding of the means by which information about administrative innovations is currently disseminated among the nation's small- and medium-sized public libraries. For the first part of the study, researchers used telephone interviews, supplemented by published and archival records, to produce a narrative description of PLA's development and dissemination activities, and to compare these activities to the theoretical diffusion models that are found in the general literature on change and innovation. The second part of the study consisted of a mail survey of 48 state library development agencies and a nationwide mail survey of a random sample of 626 public libraries serving populations under 50,000. Major findings indicate that library size is less directly related to adoption of the innovation than was expected. It is suggested that the diffusion of managerial innovations among small- and medium-sized libraries is largely influenced by the extent to which library directors can utilize multiple channels of access to information about innovations. (SD)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED317217
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1989
record_format eric
spellingShingle A Study of the Development and Diffusion of the Public Library Association's Planning and Evaluation Manuals. Final Report.
Pungitore, Verna L.
And Others
Administrator Guides
Change Agents
Evaluation Criteria
Information Dissemination
Innovation
Library Administration
Library Associations
Library Research
Library Surveys
Long Range Planning
Organizational Objectives
Program Evaluation
Public Libraries
State Libraries
A Study of the Development and Diffusion of the Public Library Association's Planning and Evaluation Manuals. Final Report. Pungitore, Verna L. And Others Administrator Guides Change Agents Evaluation Criteria Information Dissemination Innovation Library Administration Library Associations Library Research Library Surveys Long Range Planning Organizational Objectives Program Evaluation Public Libraries State Libraries In 1988, with funding from the U.S. Department of Education, a research team from the School of Library and Information Science at Indiana University began a study of the origin, development, and diffusion of the Public Library Association's (PLA) planning and evaluation manuals. The study was intended to add to the general understanding of the means by which information about administrative innovations is currently disseminated among the nation's small- and medium-sized public libraries. For the first part of the study, researchers used telephone interviews, supplemented by published and archival records, to produce a narrative description of PLA's development and dissemination activities, and to compare these activities to the theoretical diffusion models that are found in the general literature on change and innovation. The second part of the study consisted of a mail survey of 48 state library development agencies and a nationwide mail survey of a random sample of 626 public libraries serving populations under 50,000. Major findings indicate that library size is less directly related to adoption of the innovation than was expected. It is suggested that the diffusion of managerial innovations among small- and medium-sized libraries is largely influenced by the extent to which library directors can utilize multiple channels of access to information about innovations. (SD)
title A Study of the Development and Diffusion of the Public Library Association's Planning and Evaluation Manuals. Final Report.
topic Administrator Guides
Change Agents
Evaluation Criteria
Information Dissemination
Innovation
Library Administration
Library Associations
Library Research
Library Surveys
Long Range Planning
Organizational Objectives
Program Evaluation
Public Libraries
State Libraries
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED317217