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Autore principale: Coleman, Jennifer
Natura: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: 2007
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ762365
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author Coleman, Jennifer
author_facet Coleman, Jennifer
Coleman, Jennifer
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Browsing 101: How Do You Find a Good Book? Coleman, Jennifer Librarians Reading Material Selection Childrens Literature Simply defined, the term browsing means: "to casually look over or through an aggregate of things, especially in search of something of interest." When students come up to a librarian and say, "I don't know what book to get!" the cause is either they are not sure how to look through the collection of materials, or they are not sure where their interests lie. Usually a quick interview with the child gives the librarian an idea which problem is the case. It is now time to teach browsing strategies. Put a book in a child's hand without having the student become involved in the choosing is fine once or twice. Yet the real empowerment is teaching the child ways to browse, no matter the library setting. This article presents techniques for aiding the types of students who might need some help developing browsing strategies.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ762365
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2007
record_format eric
spellingShingle Browsing 101: How Do You Find a Good Book?
Coleman, Jennifer
Librarians
Reading Material Selection
Childrens Literature
Browsing 101: How Do You Find a Good Book? Coleman, Jennifer Librarians Reading Material Selection Childrens Literature Simply defined, the term browsing means: "to casually look over or through an aggregate of things, especially in search of something of interest." When students come up to a librarian and say, "I don't know what book to get!" the cause is either they are not sure how to look through the collection of materials, or they are not sure where their interests lie. Usually a quick interview with the child gives the librarian an idea which problem is the case. It is now time to teach browsing strategies. Put a book in a child's hand without having the student become involved in the choosing is fine once or twice. Yet the real empowerment is teaching the child ways to browse, no matter the library setting. This article presents techniques for aiding the types of students who might need some help developing browsing strategies.
title Browsing 101: How Do You Find a Good Book?
topic Librarians
Reading Material Selection
Childrens Literature
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ762365