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Autore principale: Harper, Meghan
Natura: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: 2007
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ826429
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author Harper, Meghan
author_facet Harper, Meghan
Harper, Meghan
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents How Physical Design Can Influence Copyright Compliance Harper, Meghan Copyrights School Libraries Ethics Librarians Compliance (Legal) Space Utilization Interior Design Internet Electronic Libraries Library Automation Equipment Librarian Teacher Cooperation Student Behavior Teacher Behavior Information Technology Most school librarians do not think of copyright compliance and facilities planning in the same breath. Yet the design of space--physical and virtual--can discourage or promote compliance, or even help police it. Placement of and access to equipment, traffic patterns, signage, and student workspace all may influence copyright-compliance behavior in a school library. Similarly, the layout of Web resources, the databases available, the presence or absence of bibliographic instructional aids, and even recommended links all affect how visitors interact, including their ethical behavior, with a virtual facility. In this article, the author discusses how physical design can influence copyright compliance and offers some tips on how to identify what changes, adaptations, or additions can be made in the facility to encourage copyright behavior. To organize a copyright-compliance program, the author suggests librarians to think in terms of (American Association of School Librarians) AASL's four roles: (1) teacher; (2) instructional partner; (3) information specialist; and (4) program administrator. She also suggests to review the description of each role, and brainstorm ways to encourage copyright compliance from within each stance.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ826429
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2007
record_format eric
spellingShingle How Physical Design Can Influence Copyright Compliance
Harper, Meghan
Copyrights
School Libraries
Ethics
Librarians
Compliance (Legal)
Space Utilization
Interior Design
Internet
Electronic Libraries
Library Automation
Equipment
Librarian Teacher Cooperation
Student Behavior
Teacher Behavior
Information Technology
How Physical Design Can Influence Copyright Compliance Harper, Meghan Copyrights School Libraries Ethics Librarians Compliance (Legal) Space Utilization Interior Design Internet Electronic Libraries Library Automation Equipment Librarian Teacher Cooperation Student Behavior Teacher Behavior Information Technology Most school librarians do not think of copyright compliance and facilities planning in the same breath. Yet the design of space--physical and virtual--can discourage or promote compliance, or even help police it. Placement of and access to equipment, traffic patterns, signage, and student workspace all may influence copyright-compliance behavior in a school library. Similarly, the layout of Web resources, the databases available, the presence or absence of bibliographic instructional aids, and even recommended links all affect how visitors interact, including their ethical behavior, with a virtual facility. In this article, the author discusses how physical design can influence copyright compliance and offers some tips on how to identify what changes, adaptations, or additions can be made in the facility to encourage copyright behavior. To organize a copyright-compliance program, the author suggests librarians to think in terms of (American Association of School Librarians) AASL's four roles: (1) teacher; (2) instructional partner; (3) information specialist; and (4) program administrator. She also suggests to review the description of each role, and brainstorm ways to encourage copyright compliance from within each stance.
title How Physical Design Can Influence Copyright Compliance
topic Copyrights
School Libraries
Ethics
Librarians
Compliance (Legal)
Space Utilization
Interior Design
Internet
Electronic Libraries
Library Automation
Equipment
Librarian Teacher Cooperation
Student Behavior
Teacher Behavior
Information Technology
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ826429