NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 4 results Save | Export
Iulian Vamanu – Journal of Education for Library and Information Science, 2023
This article argues that the MLIS curriculum should offer information ethics courses that enable future information professionals to develop their imaginative powers through close study and discussion of fiction. LIS students reading ethical theory and fiction bring the two into conversation and as a result reach a better understanding of both.…
Descriptors: Library Science, Information Science, Masters Degrees, Curriculum
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Dyson, G. Malcolm; Farradane, Jason E. L. – Journal of Information Science, 2002
Describes a syllabus developed by the Institute of Information Scientists Ltd. for post-graduate training in information work. Discusses the three main groups of the syllabus: language, writing, and editing; the flow of information, including communication theory; and information techniques, including information sources, storage, retrieval,…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Course Descriptions, Curriculum Development, Graduate Study
Yakes, Nancy Ann – 1982
Beginning in fall 1981, a course in communication and information theory was offered at the School of Natural Resources (University of Michigan). Throughout the course, emphasis was placed on comparing communication strategies and effectiveness as well as providing models for interdisciplinary research and data management. Case study materials and…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Course Content, Course Descriptions, Curriculum Development
de Mirander, Antonio L. Carvalho – 1987
This paper proposes minimum curricula and the foundations for future curriculum unification in teaching archeology, library science, and museology at the graduate level in Brazil, in view of current cultural and legal difficulties that hamper a radical and rapid transformation in implementing such a proposed curriculum. Background information…
Descriptors: Archives, Cultural Influences, Curriculum Development, Developing Nations