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         Tennessee School Media Centers:     more detail

21. ALISE Statistical Report 1999: Table III-35
Long Island, school media centers Instructional Design Leadership, Simmons, DualDegree Option, media Archives. tennessee, Utilization of Instructional media
http://www.ils.unc.edu/ALISE/1999/Curric/tableIII-35.html
Table III-35
Courses Cross-Listed with Other Academic Units
Major Teaching Responsibility in Other Academic Unit School Courses Other Academic Unit Albany Fundamentals of Information Technology Alberta School Librarianship
School Library Collection Development
School Library Programs
School Library Information Materials
Organization of School Library Materials
Administrative Applications of Computing Education
Education
Education
Education Education Education Education Arizona Introduction of Graduate Study in Music Knowledge and Society Music Sociology Emporia Introduction to Genealogy History Indiana Music Bibliography Introduction to Archival Practice Bibliography of Sub-Sahara Africa Music History African Studies Iowa History of the Book Global Information Systems Telecommunications Health Informatics I Health Informatics II English Business Business Long Island School Media Centers Instructional Design Leadership Education Education Louisiana State Information Retrieval Systems Computer Science Michigan Music Bibliography Music Missouri Computer Applications in Health Care Introduction to Archives and Manuscripts Health Services History NC Central Instructional Technology Library Information Sciences Information Sciences Archives/Records Management Education NC – Chapel Hill Duke NC State Univ. At Wilmington

22. Background - School-Based Health Centers
Bumpers, brought their immunization campaign to tennessee and made stop at one ofMemphis' schoolbased health as both print and broadcast media converged for
http://www.healthinschools.org/sbhcs/publicrelations.asp
School-Based Health Centers - Communications
Public Relations As a Catalyst for School-Based Healthcare By Andrew Burness
Reprinted with permission from Public Relations Quarterly
Winter 1996-97
Last July, Louisiana Governor Mike Foster, a Republican, signed a $2.65 million line item in the state budget that authorized significant new funds for school-based health centers. This would not be so unusual unless one takes into account that, only a few years before, Las Vegas odds makers would have cast the probability of this outcome as something approximating the cancellation of Mardi Gras. What happened over time in Louisiana was due, in large measure, to superb public relations work, and it's symptomatic of a trend that has seen school-based health centers grow from 350 nationally in 1992 to nearly 900 this year. School-based healthcare that addresses a wide range of health problems traces its origins to the early 70s when medical visionaries in Boston, St. Paul and Dallas independently recognized that bringing healthcare to children in schools could overcome barriers to needed care. For many children, health problems - from sports injuries to depression, from asthma to substance abuse -stood a much better chance of being prevented and treated in schoo ls than in traditional medical settings. After all, emergency rooms weren't designed to solve basic health problems, and for children who lacked a regular source of care, a doctor's office or a community clinic was either unaffordable or located away from home or school. In the latter case, getting care was difficult for working parents and others who rarely have hours available to arrange appointments, travel to the health provider, and return home hours later.

23. Www.infomotions.com/serials/alawon/alawon-v8n0084.txt
Fifteen Colorado school library media centers were identified as models, to be HamiltonCounty Library and the City of tennessee for an afterschool program
http://www.infomotions.com/serials/alawon/alawon-v8n0084.txt

24. VEMA Recruitment Of Library Media Specialists
University of tennessee Knoxville, tennessee http//www.sis.utk.edu/rules.htm VEMAis the united voice for excellence in school Library media centers. .
http://www.vema.gen.va.us/recruitment.html
Back to Publications Home
Preparing Students For A World of Information
School Library Media Specialists... are key players in preparing students for a world of information. Library Media Specialists help prepare students with information literacy skills that will last a lifetime. As recommended in the ALA publication, Information Power: Building Partnerships for Learning , Library Media Specialists promote the following:
  • Information Literacy
    • Accessing information efficiently
    • Evaluating information critically
    • Using information effectively
  • Independent Learning
    • Pursuing information for personal interests
    • Appreciating literature
    Social Responsibility
    • Recognizing importance of information to democracy
    • Practicing ethical behavior
    • Participating effectively in groups
    Are Library Media Specialists important to schools?
    Patricia Taylor, Assistant Superintendent of Instruction in the Frederick County Public Schools, remembers a special librarian during her career. A special librarian who "invited all staff-and especially her principal-into an understanding of how to do our work more effectively. That librarian and many after her have reminded me of the power of a place in a school where all of us who are there to teach and to learn can come together and find the resources to do our best." Mrs. Taylor was speaking of Clara Beard, now retired and living in Richmond, who said, "If children can read and comprehend, they can have anything they want. When we serve children, we serve the future. They are our immortality."

25. LION: Organizations Of Interest To School Librarians
The organization includes a Section of school Libraries and Resource centers. SouthDakota school media Association. tennessee Association of school Librarians.
http://www.libraries.phila.k12.pa.us/lion/organizations.html
Librarians Information Online Network
Organizations of Interest to School Librarians
NATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
American Association of School Librarians
AASL sponsors the following Internet sites:
  • AASL Home Page
  • ICONnect This site is designed to support school library media specialists as they assume leadership positions in the use of the Internet in the school community. Includes online courses, student and family activities, and online tours to prepare school librarians for leadership roles.

American Library Association
Founded in 1876, the ALA is the oldest and largest library association in the world. Its 57,000 members represent all types of libraries public, school, academic, state and special.
Assembly on Literature for Adolescents (ALAN)
ALAN is a special-interest group of the National Council of Teachers of English. Its members include teachers, authors, librarians, publishers, and others with an interest in young adult literature. The organization publishes The ALAN Review , a journal emphasizing new books, research, and methods of teaching adolescent literature. The full text of the journal is available online.
Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT)
The mission of AECT is "to provide leadership in educational communications and technology by linking professionals holding a common interest in the use of educational technology and its application to the learning process." One of the 11 divisions of this large organization is the

26. Education Week - Registration - Access Restricted
tennessee. INSTRUCTIONAL COMPUTERS. (2001), Classrooms, 10.6. Computer labs,20.8. Libraries/media centers, 100.5. 94. National school Lunch Program, Eligible,93.
http://www.edweek.org/sreports/tc02/state_data.cfm?slug=35tn_data.h21

27. Technology Counts: What Data Should Be Collected?
But tennessee, for example, defines a modern computer as one with a 386 What percentageof school media centers have a fulltime media specialist who is
http://www.edweek.org/sreports/tc/intros/in-s1.htm
Read the main story, "Taking Techology's Measure."
What gets measured, gets money, some policy analysts say. The flip sidewhat gets money, gets measuredmay be equally true. Perhaps for both reasons, state policymakers are showing greater interest in getting accurate, up-to-date data on technology in public schools. Many states conduct at least limited surveys of the hardware, software, and infrastructure in their schools, or they glean those data from the surveys of market-data firms. But state officials say they need comparable data from all the states, so leaders can make comparisons and highlight the policies and practices that prove most effective. Currently, data on school technology are "very fragmented, very scattered, not compiled, not standardized," says Mary Fulton, a policy analyst at the Education Commission of the States in Denver. She notes that data collected by states are often inconsistent with those collected by other states. "It's often comparing apples and oranges, cranberries and peanuts," Fulton says. One problem is that surveys by different states often don't use common definitionssuch as what constitutes a "modern" computer.

28. Big List
Mary's school, Oak Ridge; Staley Coach; Star Unclaimed Property; State of TennesseeUnclaimed Property; University; State University Libraries and media centers;
http://www.travel-tennessee.com/PageS.html
Page S

29. Automation Of School Library Media Centers
The University of tennessee school of Information Sciences. AUTOMATION OF schoolLIBRARY media centers A STUDY OF CHILDREN’S SUCCESS AS USERS AND
http://classroom.jc-schools.net/mccurdya/520paper.htm
The University of Tennessee
School of Information Sciences AUTOMATION OF SCHOOL
LIBRARY MEDIA CENTERS:
A STUDY OF CHILDREN’S SUCCESS AS USERS
AND IMPLICATIONS FOR AUTHENTIC LEARNING
A Theoretical Discussion Paper
by
Amy McCurdy Presented to
Dr. Peiling Wang For
Information Sciences 520
Spring 1999
Document sections: Abstract Introduction The Move Towards Automation Review of the Literature ... Works Cited
ABSTRACT
Return to the top of this document.
INTRODUCTION
It is the mission of the school library media specialist to ensure that students are effective users of ideas and information (Kuhlthau 1993, 11). Dedicated library media specialists should make it their goals to understand that children and youth need access to information to find answers to problems, to pursue independent discovery of who they are and who they want to become, to obtain information that can assist them to overcome their weaknesses and enhance their strengths, and to allow them to build lifelong information-seeking patterns. Age should not be a barrier to the ability to access, receive, and utilize information. (Hooten 1989, 267) School media specialists have been presented with a challenge in obtaining their mission with the introduction of online catalogs into school libraries.

30. GSLIS - Resources: Jobs
The Graduate school of Library and Information Science has compiled a large list of library employment Category Reference Libraries Employment Job Listings...... tennessee Library Association Listing of LIS jobs in tennessee; Texas State Libraryand Archives school Libraries/media centers school Library Journal;
http://alexia.lis.uiuc.edu/gslis/resources/jobs.html

GSLIS Job Information

Faculty, staff, and graduate assistantship and graduate hourly positions available at the Graduate School of Library and Information Science and other libraries/information centers at UIUC and the Champaign-Urbana area. UIUC Library Employment Information
Faculty (librarian), graduate assistantships, student hourly and clerical staff positions available in the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library Library Organizations and Associations
A comprehensive listing of national and international library-related organizations and professional associations. Many of these sites will have links to jobs resources. Employment Websites and Listservs This is not an all-inclusive list to online resources for finding LIS-related jobs at all LIS-related corporations, libraries, etc., but rather a list of general sites that have collections of LIS job postings. If you know of any that are not listed here please send the URL to webmaster@alexia.lis.uiuc.edu

31. Notifications Received From Organizations On The Proposals For Fair Use Guidelin
National Association of Regional media centers, Yes, Yes. National school BoardsAssociation, No Position, Yes, No, tennessee Board of Regents media Consortium, Yes,
http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/dcom/olia/confu/notif.htm
NOTIFICATIONS RECEIVED FROM ORGANIZATIONS ON THE PROPOSALS FOR FAIR USE GUIDELINES
Organization Digital Images Guidelines Distance Learning Guidelines Educational Multimedia Guidelines Statement Received Agency for Instructional Technology Yes Yes American Association of Community Colleges No Position No Position Yes Yes American Association of Law Libraries No Yes No Yes American Association of Museums Yes Yes American Association of School Administrators No Yes (Joint with NAIS, NAESP, NASSP, NEA, NSBA, USCC) American Association of State Colleges and Universities No No No Yes (Joint with NASULGC) American Bar Association Section on Intellectual Property Yes No American Council of Learned Societies No Yes No Yes American Council on Education No No No Yes (Joint with AAU) American Historical Association No No No Yes American Intellectual Property Law Association Yes No American Library Association No No No Yes American Society of Composers, Authors and Performers Yes Yes American Society of Journalists and Authors No Position Yes Yes No American Society of Media Photographers Yes Yes Art Libraries Society of North America No No No Yes Yes Yes Association for Information Media and Equipment Yes Yes Association of American Colleges and Universities Yes Yes Association of American Publishers Yes Yes Association of American Publishers Yes Yes (2) Association of American Universities No No No Yes (Joint with ACE) Association of American University Presses No Position

32. CONFU Conclusion Of First Phase Of CONFU, Conclusions 3
National Association of Regional media centers 203. National school Boards Association235. tennessee Board of Regents media Consortium 259. Time Warner 261.
http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/dcom/olia/confu/conclu3.html
VOLUME TWO I. NOTIFICATIONS RECEIVED FROM ORGANIZATIONS AND INSTITUTIONS CONCERNING THE PROPOSALS FOR FAIR USE GUIDELINES Organization/Institution (Page) II. COMMENTS AND STATEMENTS RECEIVED FROM INDIVIDUALS CONCERNING THE PROPOSALS FOR FAIR USE GUIDELINES Name (Page) III. LETTERS FROM U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCIES CONCERNING THE PROPOSALS Agency (Page) Last Modified: 30 September 1997

33. Appendix A - Resources For Technical Assistance
Carolina, Kentucky, South Carolina, tennessee, Virginia, West states, LEAs, teachers,school library and K12 classrooms, library media centers, adult literacy
http://www.ed.gov/offices/OESE/MEP/PrelimGuide/appendix.html
Preliminary Guidance for Migrant Education Program, Title I, Part C Public Law 103-382
Appendix A Resources for Technical Assistance
To help all children reach high academic standards, many states, school districts, and schools will need a new kind of technical assistance. They will need comprehensive assistance that is driven by the needs of families and children and that can provide tools and information to help them leverage all available resources in order to improve teaching and learning for all children. To that end, the Department is creating regional technical assistance centers to provide comprehensive, high-quality assistance and information. The Depart ment is also changing the way it relates to the field by shifting its focus from monitoring for compliance to providing support to enhance program quality.
Regional Service Teams and Integrated Programs Reviews
The Office of Elementary and Secondary Education (OESE), which houses the Office of Migrant Education, has a new organizational structure that is built around ten regional service teams. Existing program offices, including the Office of Migrant Education, will retain a small program base, but will provide most services to OESE grantees through teams that have staff with expertise in OESE's programs. This new structure signals a new relationship with states and local operating agencies. Rather than focus on providing program-specific advice, the restructured OESE will use cross-program teams to encourage and support state and local efforts to integra te services and collaborate across programs. In anticipation of this change, OESE began in 1994-95 to conduct integrated reviews of federally funded education programs. Integrated reviews are on-site observations and assessments performed by a team of s taff members from two or more program offices within the Department. Each focused on the progress of systemic reform efforts within a state and explored how individual federal programs fit within that broad reform effort. The Office of Migrant Education participated in all of the initial integrated reviews.

34. School Library Journal | Reed Business Information
New Jersey, New Mexico, Oklahoma, tennessee, Rhode Island school boards and administratorsare beginning to merits of staffed library media centers when they
http://slj.reviewsnews.com/esec/Article_152998.htm
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Dr. Nancy Everhart 9/1/1998
Features > Illustrations by David Bamundo For states that did not respond, data are from Public School Student, Staff, and Graduate Counts by State, School Year 1995-96 , U.S. Dept. of Education (NCES 97-541). States not responding were: Alabama, Arizona, Delaware, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Rhode Island, Utah, Washington, and W. Virginia. To create this national report on school library staffing, SLJ asked me to survey school library media officials in state libraries or education departments in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. All but 15 responded.

35. School Library Journal | Reed Business Information
University of tennessee/Knoxville; University of Wisconsin the state library agencyand in library media centers. Laura Bush, a former school librarian, earlier
http://slj.reviewsnews.com/esec/Article_218584.htm
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Bestsellers Children's Bestsellers
from Publishers Weekly My Friend Rabbit, Rohmann, Eric Philadelphia Chickens, Boynton, Sandra ... Events Register Here for all subscription services including e-mail newsletters and print publications.
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Sections News Features ArtSpeak Book of the Week ... Learning Quarterly Resources Authors on the Highway Bestseller Lists Buyers Guide Free Trial Zone ... Publishers Weekly Newsletters Academic Newswire Library Hotline Corporate Library Update
Average Book Prices
... SLJ Indexes Inside SLJ About Us Advertise Editorial Calendar Author Guidelines ... Subscriptions Powered By: This site is best viewed with
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Filling the Void By Nancy Everhart 6/1/2002
Features > Many states are taking steps to remedy the rising shortage of school librarians Kathy Ruhmann lives in a part of southern Illinois where you can't find another certified library media specialist even if you hunt for one. Despite a state mandate, Ruhmann is the only certified school librarian in her district of Sparta, a rural town with five schools and about 1,800 students. She's convinced that an aide will replace her once she retires from the Sparta Lincoln Middle School. After all, that's what happened to two of her colleagues almost a decade ago. Now two aides without teaching degrees staff the town's primary and high schools. Ruhmann, who's been a school librarian for 16 years, received her library certification from Southern Illinois University, but the program's no longer being offered. The only on-campus option is to drive 70 miles to Washington University in St. Louis or four hours to the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Illinois's librarian shortage is classified as 'severe' in

36. Marshall County School
High school media centers mission is to provide MARSHALL COUNTY schoolS. JOHNDAVID PIERCE, DIRECTOR OF schoolS. 700 JONES CIRCLE. LEWISBURG, tennessee 37091
http://www.mykristi.org/single-woman-looking-for-man.htm

37. Education And Competencies Of School Library Media Specialists A
specialist. Ed.D. diss., University of tennessee. Lance, KC 1994. Theimpact of school library media centers on academic achievement.
http://www.ala.org/aasl/SLMR/vol5/litreview/litreview_main.html
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  • 38. Elon University School Of Communications
    two apiece from Georgia, Pennsylvania, tennessee and Virginia Working with the school'sDirector of Internships in regional or national media centers with major
    http://www.elon.edu/academics/communications/fellows.asp
    FOR PROSPECTIVE STUDENTS
    Fellows of distinction
    Twenty high school seniors are selected each year to be new Journalism and Communications Fellows at Elon.
    Our freshman Fellows this year hail from Maine and Florida, Ohio and West Virginia, Maryland and New Jersey, two apiece from Georgia, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and Virginia, and six from North Carolina. Eleven are male, and nine are female. They are the third Fellows class in the School of Communications. Members of the first class now are junior Fellows, and the second class are sophomore Fellows.
    Journalism and Communications Fellows are among the most active students on campus. For example, freshman Fellows learn how to operate television cameras and how to direct a show. A group of advanced Fellows is producing a documentary on the media coverage of the civil rights movement, which includes interviews with journalists who covered the events.
    Theoretical concepts learned in special Fellows courses come alive as students gain real-world experience working with the student-run newspaper, radio or television, the campus film society or through an internship at a regional or national media site.

    39. Education World ® : School Administrators: Outdated School Libraries: What Can
    Librarians in Chattanooga, tennessee, reported that the area's school librariesare Highlights of the school Library media centers Survey This report
    http://www.educationworld.com/a_admin/admin181.shtml
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    Related Resources ... Funding School Administrators Article S C H O O L A D M I N I S T R A T O R S A R T I C L E
    Outdated School Libraries: What Can You Do to Update Yours?
    In Baltimore, library coordinator Della Curtis keeps examples of outdated books from the county's school libraries on a "shelf of shame." Curtis spearheaded a drive in Baltimore that led county officials this year to fund $10.5 million for the purchase of new books. Today, Curtis tells Education World writer Mary Daniels Brown how she accomplished that. Included: Comments from librarians and other experts on the state of our schools' libraries and advice from Della Curtis on mounting your own successful campaign for funding for new library books. In May 2000 the Baltimore (Maryland) County Council approved a $10.5 million budget for the purchase of new books for libraries in all of the county's middle and high schools. "Replacing the collections will bring us up to 80 percent of state standards," Della Curtis, coordinator of the county schools' office of library information services, told Education World. Baltimore County is the 24th largest school district in the country. The Baltimore County secondary schools need this money for new library materials. According to

    40. Educational Research, Policy Centers, And Institutes
    of Excellence funded by the state of tennessee. local educational agencies, teachers,school library and into K12 classrooms, library media centers, and other
    http://www.acenet.edu/resources/presnet/viewsubCategory.cfm?subcategoryID=4

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