Disabilities and the Library: Fostering Equity for Patrons and Staff with Differing Abilities
Cuvânt înainte de Blanche Woolls Editat de Clayton A. Copelanden Limba Engleză Paperback – 10 noi 2022 – vârsta până la 17 ani
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781440859076
ISBN-10: 1440859078
Pagini: 532
Ilustrații: 16 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 mm
Greutate: 1.09 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Libraries Unlimited
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1440859078
Pagini: 532
Ilustrații: 16 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 mm
Greutate: 1.09 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Libraries Unlimited
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Offers advice to strengthen services, programming, collection development, accessibility, and legal compliance
Notă biografică
Clayton A. Copeland, PhD, is director of the SLIS Laboratory for Leadership in the Equity of Access and Diversity (LLEAD).
Recenzii
Even after decades of legislation enacted into law and much persuasive advocacy, individuals who are differently abled are still in need of access to information and materials available through libraries. Each chapter is a rich collection of reliable sources useful in understanding differences and perfect for fostering community engagement to address equity, diversity, and inclusion for the betterment of the community. Library staff in all library sizes and types-and faculty teaching pre-service librarians-should immediately make this book a primary professional development source.
Shouldn't information be available to all who seek it? Barriers exist, but they can be removed, and access can be made more accessible. This timely and essential guide to understanding the importance of accessibility of libraries to differently abled patrons is a perfect primer for all those charged with curating, conserving, and sharing the world's collective knowledge.
As a cheerleader and advocate for the visually impaired and print disabled, Dr. Copeland exemplifies what it means to be our brother and sisters keeper. As a true pathfinder, she finds joy in guiding each user with rich job searching tools, while ensuring that all have access to resources galore.
Dr. Copeland has provided much-needed perspectives and guidance for librarians striving to enable equitable access and inclusion within libraries and the communities they serve.
An essential volume offering specific guidance to help information professionals carry out their primary charge: to provide information access to everyone. These chapters include background and practical guidance for enabling practitioners to consider accessibility and universal design in every aspect of their practice, and they give LIS educators much-needed tools for integrating this training into their coursework. Readable and absolutely accessible, this powerful toolkit paves the way for making 21st century libraries what they should always have been: a place of welcome for all.
As a wheelchair user with Cerebral Palsy, an MLIS graduate, and a health equity access consultant, I'm thrilled by this new book! In plain language, the contributors show the LIS community that-from library user to library employee-people with disabilities aren't a scary "other;" we're just humans who crave information as much as anyone else. This work shows LIS professionals how they can be most effective in the lives of people with disabilities.
As an LIS educator and DEI officer, I am constantly searching for credible, comprehensive, practical, and compassionate resources to further my own knowledge and equip others with tools to implement in their personal and professional lives; I struck gold with this book. With its emphasis on inclusion of people of all abilities, this is exactly the book the LIS profession needs at exactly the right time!
I am so happy to see more evidence in this book of what has always been my pleasure: to provide mirrors, windows and doors for differently abled as well as typically abled students and friends.
Dr. Copeland's book is essential reading for information professionals who aim to craft accessible library spaces for empowering patrons and staff with differing abilities. For the accomplished scholars featured within, accessibility requires a transformative mindset rather than a checklist of actions.
As a librarian and a parent of a child who is differently able, I know the struggles and frustrations of entering the library (physically or virtually) and not being able to access the information that is wanted and needed. The authors of this book have laid out workable plans for staying current with evolving challenges so that libraries remain relevant and accessible for all of our users!
An informative guide to constructing an environment that fosters diverse inclusivity.
Through the collection assembled here, Dr. Copeland shows that barriers are still present for many people with disabilities in accessing our libraries. More importantly, though, this collection offers true excitement and promising opportunities for libraries to embrace universal design and access. As a disability-led organization, we see this as a welcome and important primer for current, and future, librarians on their role in promoting equal access for all individuals.
Shouldn't information be available to all who seek it? Barriers exist, but they can be removed, and access can be made more accessible. This timely and essential guide to understanding the importance of accessibility of libraries to differently abled patrons is a perfect primer for all those charged with curating, conserving, and sharing the world's collective knowledge.
As a cheerleader and advocate for the visually impaired and print disabled, Dr. Copeland exemplifies what it means to be our brother and sisters keeper. As a true pathfinder, she finds joy in guiding each user with rich job searching tools, while ensuring that all have access to resources galore.
Dr. Copeland has provided much-needed perspectives and guidance for librarians striving to enable equitable access and inclusion within libraries and the communities they serve.
An essential volume offering specific guidance to help information professionals carry out their primary charge: to provide information access to everyone. These chapters include background and practical guidance for enabling practitioners to consider accessibility and universal design in every aspect of their practice, and they give LIS educators much-needed tools for integrating this training into their coursework. Readable and absolutely accessible, this powerful toolkit paves the way for making 21st century libraries what they should always have been: a place of welcome for all.
As a wheelchair user with Cerebral Palsy, an MLIS graduate, and a health equity access consultant, I'm thrilled by this new book! In plain language, the contributors show the LIS community that-from library user to library employee-people with disabilities aren't a scary "other;" we're just humans who crave information as much as anyone else. This work shows LIS professionals how they can be most effective in the lives of people with disabilities.
As an LIS educator and DEI officer, I am constantly searching for credible, comprehensive, practical, and compassionate resources to further my own knowledge and equip others with tools to implement in their personal and professional lives; I struck gold with this book. With its emphasis on inclusion of people of all abilities, this is exactly the book the LIS profession needs at exactly the right time!
I am so happy to see more evidence in this book of what has always been my pleasure: to provide mirrors, windows and doors for differently abled as well as typically abled students and friends.
Dr. Copeland's book is essential reading for information professionals who aim to craft accessible library spaces for empowering patrons and staff with differing abilities. For the accomplished scholars featured within, accessibility requires a transformative mindset rather than a checklist of actions.
As a librarian and a parent of a child who is differently able, I know the struggles and frustrations of entering the library (physically or virtually) and not being able to access the information that is wanted and needed. The authors of this book have laid out workable plans for staying current with evolving challenges so that libraries remain relevant and accessible for all of our users!
An informative guide to constructing an environment that fosters diverse inclusivity.
Through the collection assembled here, Dr. Copeland shows that barriers are still present for many people with disabilities in accessing our libraries. More importantly, though, this collection offers true excitement and promising opportunities for libraries to embrace universal design and access. As a disability-led organization, we see this as a welcome and important primer for current, and future, librarians on their role in promoting equal access for all individuals.