[Libs-Or] Writing Calls: Supporting Financial Literarcy & Maximizing Volunteers
Jennifer Maurer
jennifer.maurer at state.or.us
Thu Mar 5 14:55:40 PST 2015
FYI,
Jen
Jennifer Maurer
School Library Consultant
Oregon State Library
-----Original Message-----
From: carol smallwood [mailto:smallwood at tm.net]
Sent: Thursday, March 05, 2015 8:30 AM
To: alscpubsch at lists.ala.org
Subject: [alscpubsch] 2 Writing Calls
1. Library's Role in Supporting Financial Literacy for Patrons
Book Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Editor: Carol Smallwood, Library Services for Multicultural Patrons:
Strategies to Encourage Library Use Rowman & Littlefield, 2013
Chapters sought from U.S. and Canadian practicing academic, public, school, special librarians, LIS faculty, and other professionals sharing practical know-how.
Possible topics: Seeking and using collaborators in the financial industry; Job hunting help; Tax preparation programs; Recognizing fraud; Workshops for Senior Citizens; Case studies on what works and what doesn't in various types of libraries and patrons; other topics on financial literacy for library patrons you've had experience.
Concise, how-to chapters using bullets, headings, based on experience to help colleagues; creativity, innovation highly valued. Those able to write two chapters read first. No previously published, simultaneously submitted material; One, two, or three authors per chapter; each chapter by the same author(s). Compensation: one complimentary copy per 3,000-4,000 word chapter accepted no matter how many co-authors or if one or two chapters: author discount on more copies.
Please e-mail titles of 4 topics each described in a few sentences by March 31, 2015 with brief biography sketch on each author; place FIN, Your Name on subject line: smallwood at tm.net
2. Winning Strategies for Attracting, Retaining, and Maximizing Volunteers and Community Engagement
Book Publisher: McFarland
Carol Smallwood, co-editor; Bringing the Arts Into the Library (American Library Association, 2014); public library administrator, special, school librarian.
Lura Sanborn, co-editor; contributor, Women, Work, and the Web (Rowman & Littlefield, 2015); public, academic, school librarian.
Chapters sought from U.S. and Canadian practicing academic, public, school, special librarians and other professional sharing practical know-how about volunteers in tight economic times and staff cuts. Chapters are encouraged that could apply to more than one type of library: useful to public, school, special, LIS faculty. Award winning community volunteer efforts and case studies encouraged such as storywalks with Eagle Scouts, hosting coffee houses.
Possible topics: managing different age groups and special events; training and continuing education; recognition reinforcement; policies and manuals; recruitment and interviewing; scheduling; handling personality conflicts; technology instruction; legal, health, and security concerns.
Concise, how-to chapters using bullets, headings, based on experience to help colleagues; creativity, innovation highly valued. Those submitting two chapters are read first. No previously published, simultaneously submitted material; One, two, or three authors per chapter; each chapter by the same author(s). Compensation: one complimentary copy per 3,000-4,000 word chapter accepted no matter how many co-authors or if one or two chapters: author discount on more copies.
Please e-mail titles of 4 topics each described in a few sentences by March 31, 2015 with brief biography sketch on each author; place VOL, Your Name on subject line: smallwood at tm.net
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