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  • Members: 60
  • Category: Acupuncture
  • Founded: May 31, 2005
  • Language: English
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#425 From: "jamesemdy" <librarian@...>
Date: Thu Jan 19, 2012 10:53 pm
Subject: upcoming meeting in Chicago
jamesemdy
Send Email Send Email
 
The next meeting of the Library Committee will be on April 26, thursday, at 6:30
p.m.  I expect we will have telephone hookup for those who cannot attend in
person.  The meeting will be the Westin North Shore hotel near Deerfield, same
location as last time in Chicago.

Some agenda items:
--CCAOM.NET-- still pending full participation
--Accreditation document--pending updates from David Sales and others; some
sections need to be made more specific
New items:
--role of libraries in maintaining records related to recordkeeping in the
herbal dispensares.  At Baltimore, the chair of the Herbal Committee noted that
there may be a need for libraries to play a larger role in maintaining documents
regarding quality of herbs purchased, etc.

Please think of additional items.  thanks

#426 From: "Boni, Bethyn A. M.L.S." <bboni@...>
Date: Fri Jan 20, 2012 2:57 pm
Subject: RE: upcoming meeting in Chicago
librarian2360
Send Email Send Email
 

meeting of the Library Committee will be on April 26, Thursday, at 6:30 p.m.”

 

I’ve learned not to presume :-) - is this 6:30 pm CST

 

Thanks,

 

Bethyn

__________________________________________

Bethyn A. Boni, M.L.S., Library Director

New York Chiropractic College

2360 State Route 89

Seneca Falls, New York 13148

voice: (315) 568-3252 fax: (315) 568-3119

 

From: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of jamesemdy
Sent: Thursday, January 19, 2012 5:53 PM
To: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [ccaomlcaom] upcoming meeting in Chicago

 

 

The next meeting of the Library Committee will be on April 26, thursday, at 6:30 p.m. I expect we will have telephone hookup for those who cannot attend in person. The meeting will be the Westin North Shore hotel near Deerfield, same location as last time in Chicago.

Some agenda items:
--CCAOM.NET-- still pending full participation
--Accreditation document--pending updates from David Sales and others; some sections need to be made more specific
New items:
--role of libraries in maintaining records related to recordkeeping in the herbal dispensares. At Baltimore, the chair of the Herbal Committee noted that there may be a need for libraries to play a larger role in maintaining documents regarding quality of herbs purchased, etc.

Please think of additional items. thanks


#427 From: Librarian Jim Emdy <librarian@...>
Date: Fri Jan 20, 2012 8:03 pm
Subject: Re: upcoming meeting in Chicago
jamesemdy
Send Email Send Email
 
yes

On Fri, Jan 20, 2012 at 6:57 AM, Boni, Bethyn A. M.L.S. <bboni@...> wrote:
 

meeting of the Library Committee will be on April 26, Thursday, at 6:30 p.m.”

 

I’ve learned not to presume :-) - is this 6:30 pm CST

 

Thanks,

 

Bethyn

__________________________________________

Bethyn A. Boni, M.L.S., Library Director

New York Chiropractic College

2360 State Route 89

Seneca Falls, New York 13148

voice: (315) 568-3252 fax: (315) 568-3119

 

From: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of jamesemdy
Sent: Thursday, January 19, 2012 5:53 PM
To: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [ccaomlcaom] upcoming meeting in Chicago

 

 

The next meeting of the Library Committee will be on April 26, thursday, at 6:30 p.m. I expect we will have telephone hookup for those who cannot attend in person. The meeting will be the Westin North Shore hotel near Deerfield, same location as last time in Chicago.

Some agenda items:
--CCAOM.NET-- still pending full participation
--Accreditation document--pending updates from David Sales and others; some sections need to be made more specific
New items:
--role of libraries in maintaining records related to recordkeeping in the herbal dispensares. At Baltimore, the chair of the Herbal Committee noted that there may be a need for libraries to play a larger role in maintaining documents regarding quality of herbs purchased, etc.

Please think of additional items. thanks



#428 From: Naomi Broering <NBROERING@...>
Date: Fri Jan 20, 2012 9:19 pm
Subject: Re: upcoming meeting in Chicago
nbroering
Send Email Send Email
 
Jim, I will be out of town and not sure I can get a phone connection unless it is toll free.
I will be in Hawaii for those days.
Let me know what you think about connecting. I will have Internet and phone, but cannot handle long distance fee at hotel.
 
Naomi

On Thu, Jan 19, 2012 at 2:53 PM, jamesemdy <librarian@...> wrote:
The next meeting of the Library Committee will be on April 26, thursday, at 6:30 p.m.  I expect we will have telephone hookup for those who cannot attend in person.  The meeting will be the Westin North Shore hotel near Deerfield, same location as last time in Chicago.

Some agenda items:
--CCAOM.NET-- still pending full participation
--Accreditation document--pending updates from David Sales and others; some sections need to be made more specific
New items:
--role of libraries in maintaining records related to recordkeeping in the herbal dispensares.  At Baltimore, the chair of the Herbal Committee noted that there may be a need for libraries to play a larger role in maintaining documents regarding quality of herbs purchased, etc.

Please think of additional items.  thanks



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--
Naomi C. Broering, MLS, MA
Dean of Libraries
Pacific College of Oriental Medicine
7445 MIssion Valley Rd. Ste 101
San Diego, CA 92108
Ph: 619-574-6909 ext 134
Fax: 619-574-6641

#429 From: Librarian Jim Emdy <librarian@...>
Date: Sat Jan 21, 2012 1:07 am
Subject: Re: upcoming meeting in Chicago
jamesemdy
Send Email Send Email
 
the telephone connection is always toll free

On Fri, Jan 20, 2012 at 1:19 PM, Naomi Broering <NBROERING@...> wrote:
 

Jim, I will be out of town and not sure I can get a phone connection unless it is toll free.
I will be in Hawaii for those days.
Let me know what you think about connecting. I will have Internet and phone, but cannot handle long distance fee at hotel.
 
Naomi

On Thu, Jan 19, 2012 at 2:53 PM, jamesemdy <librarian@...> wrote:
The next meeting of the Library Committee will be on April 26, thursday, at 6:30 p.m.  I expect we will have telephone hookup for those who cannot attend in person.  The meeting will be the Westin North Shore hotel near Deerfield, same location as last time in Chicago.

Some agenda items:
--CCAOM.NET-- still pending full participation
--Accreditation document--pending updates from David Sales and others; some sections need to be made more specific
New items:
--role of libraries in maintaining records related to recordkeeping in the herbal dispensares.  At Baltimore, the chair of the Herbal Committee noted that there may be a need for libraries to play a larger role in maintaining documents regarding quality of herbs purchased, etc.

Please think of additional items.  thanks



------------------------------------

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--
Naomi C. Broering, MLS, MA
Dean of Libraries
Pacific College of Oriental Medicine
7445 MIssion Valley Rd. Ste 101
San Diego, CA 92108
Ph: 619-574-6909 ext 134
Fax: 619-574-6641



#430 From: "jamesemdy" <librarian@...>
Date: Fri Feb 24, 2012 12:07 am
Subject: liaison between library and herbal committees
jamesemdy
Send Email Send Email
 
I invited Jason Wright, Chair of the Herbal Committee, to address the library
committee. here is his response:
Hi Jim,

Unfortunately, I will not be able to attend the Library Committee meeting in
Chicago, as I need to attend the ACAOM public hearing on the first professional
doctorate.

The issue with prepared medicine information that has recently arisen has
nothing to do with libraries and their related resources.  The issue is that
herb vendors cannot provide information to the general public that relates their
products to clinical conditions, as this violates FDA regulations.  Schools can,
and should, be the primary resource for instructional material related to
clinical use of formulas and prepared products.

This issue is a challenging one for the herbal products industry, and as access
to information from companies is limited, it should result in more practitioners
using library resources.  Basic guidance for libraries is to be sure resources
related to prepared products are available, including contacting vendor
companies to request any printed product literature they may have available.

I will be working with Skye Sturgeon of Mayway to explore additional
possibilities, and as I uncover more information, I can let you know.  The
Herbal Committee meeting is Thursday morning.  If we discuss this topic, you are
more than welcome to attend.

Jason
This will be an agenda item for Chicago in April

#431 From: "jamesemdy" <librarian@...>
Date: Fri Feb 24, 2012 12:10 am
Subject: accreditation
jamesemdy
Send Email Send Email
 
Here is a statement written by Paul Karsten, who is working with me on
accreditation documentation.
Here is a draft of some language for the ACAOM standard.

Adequacy of learning resources is based on the assessment by the institutional
community of the library's capability to support the specific mission and
educational goals of the institution.  Annual library evaluation by the
institutional faculty and students shall provide at minimum assessment data on
the adequacy of the following; number of physical texts relevant to the program,
physical space available for study, hours of operation, computer resources and
online databases, library organization, journal collection appropriate for goals
of program, and professional assistance for library users.  This survey shall
also include opportunities for the community to provide recommendations for
library development.  This data, along with the annual inventory of library
holdings and data on library usage congruent with the school's educational
objectives, is used to demonstrate the learning resources are sufficient to
support the mission of the institution.

#432 From: "Boni, Bethyn A. M.L.S." <bboni@...>
Date: Fri Feb 24, 2012 1:36 pm
Subject: RE: accreditation
librarian2360
Send Email Send Email
 

number of physical texts relevant to the program

 

I request that we try to educate the accreditors to stop requiring libraries to have “numbers” of volumes.  Just because a library has 100 or 1000 volumes doesn’t make them a good library- what if the items are old, out-dated, and no longer relate to current course work? Honestly, to make numbers, libraries could just buy anything and everything remotely related to TCM - but that won’t make the items relevant or of value to the education of our students.  For about $1500.00 I could get 100 paperbacks from Amazon related to TCM, but are they really what we need?

 

To ask students if the library has enough “number of physical texts relevant to the program “ - it might be “no” every time if a library does not have a policy on whether or not textbooks are purchased by the library and the use of these materials (in-house reserve, limited circulation, etc.)

 

I believe it is a quality vs. quantity issue.  It might be better to use language that addresses a library’s ability to provide access to all material needed on a timely basis, and that the materials support the current curriculum.  It would be better to show high use for materials that support the curriculum, than to have 1000 texts, of which only 10% circulate and the rest are just to “make numbers.”

 

Thank you,

 

Bethyn

__________________________________________

Bethyn A. Boni, M.L.S., Library Director

New York Chiropractic College

2360 State Route 89

Seneca Falls, New York 13148

voice: (315) 568-3252 fax: (315) 568-3119

 

From: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of jamesemdy
Sent: Thursday, February 23, 2012 7:10 PM
To: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [ccaomlcaom] accreditation

 

 

Here is a statement written by Paul Karsten, who is working with me on accreditation documentation.
Here is a draft of some language for the ACAOM standard.

Adequacy of learning resources is based on the assessment by the institutional community of the library's capability to support the specific mission and educational goals of the institution. Annual library evaluation by the institutional faculty and students shall provide at minimum assessment data on the adequacy of the following; number of physical texts relevant to the program, physical space available for study, hours of operation, computer resources and online databases, library organization, journal collection appropriate for goals of program, and professional assistance for library users. This survey shall also include opportunities for the community to provide recommendations for library development. This data, along with the annual inventory of library holdings and data on library usage congruent with the school's educational objectives, is used to demonstrate the learning resources are sufficient to support the mission of the institution.


#433 From: "Rick Severson" <rseverson@...>
Date: Fri Feb 24, 2012 3:05 pm
Subject: RE: accreditation
rjseverson55
Send Email Send Email
 

I agree with Bethyn.  To rely upon surveys for assessment is a step backwards in the accreditation arena I think.  We need outcomes that are more objectively measurable, but tied to the curricula, not to the old “input” statistics (how many books, etc.).  That is the direction that regional accreditors are moving toward, and libraries are expected to follow in that direction.  Rick Severson, National College of Natural Medicine

 

From: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Boni, Bethyn A. M.L.S.
Sent: Friday, February 24, 2012 5:37 AM
To: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com
Subject: RE: [ccaomlcaom] accreditation

 

 

number of physical texts relevant to the program

 

I request that we try to educate the accreditors to stop requiring libraries to have “numbers” of volumes.  Just because a library has 100 or 1000 volumes doesn’t make them a good library- what if the items are old, out-dated, and no longer relate to current course work? Honestly, to make numbers, libraries could just buy anything and everything remotely related to TCM - but that won’t make the items relevant or of value to the education of our students.  For about $1500.00 I could get 100 paperbacks from Amazon related to TCM, but are they really what we need?

 

To ask students if the library has enough “number of physical texts relevant to the program “ - it might be “no” every time if a library does not have a policy on whether or not textbooks are purchased by the library and the use of these materials (in-house reserve, limited circulation, etc.)

 

I believe it is a quality vs. quantity issue.  It might be better to use language that addresses a library’s ability to provide access to all material needed on a timely basis, and that the materials support the current curriculum.  It would be be tter to show high use for materials that support the curriculum, than to have 1000 texts, of which only 10% circulate and the rest are just to “make numbers.”

 

Thank you,

 

Bethyn

__________________________________________

Bethyn A. Boni, M.L.S., Library Director

New York Chiropractic College

2360 State Route 89

Seneca Falls, New York 13148

voice: (315) 568-3252 fax: (315) 568-3119

 

From: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of jamesemdy
Sent: Thursday, February 23, 2012 7:10 PM
To: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [ccaomlcaom] accreditation

 

 

Here is a statement written by Paul Karsten, who is worki ng with me on accreditation documentation.
Here is a draft of some language for the ACAOM standard.

Adequacy of learning resources is based on the assessment by the institutional community of the library's capability to support the specific mission and educational goals of the institution. Annual library evaluation by the institutional faculty and students shall provide at minimum assessment data on the adequacy of the following; number of physical texts relevant to the program, physical space available for study, hours of operation, computer resources and online databases, library organization, journal collection appropriate for goals of program, and professional assistance for library users. This survey shall also include opportunities for the community to provide recommendations for library development. This data, along with the annual inventory of library holdings and data on library usage congruent with the school's educational objectives, is used to demonstrat e the learning resources are sufficient to support the mission of the institution.


#434 From: Naomi Broering <NBROERING@...>
Date: Mon Feb 27, 2012 2:00 am
Subject: Re: accreditation
nbroering
Send Email Send Email
 
The acreditation documentation looks fine.  They seem to be standd of practice.
Most reviewers ar enot sticky about numbers.  They seem more interested in online access to databases recently.
 
Naomi Broering

On Thu, Feb 23, 2012 at 2:10 PM, jamesemdy <librarian@...> wrote:
Here is a statement written by Paul Karsten, who is working with me on accreditation documentation.
Here is a draft of some language for the ACAOM standard.

Adequacy of learning resources is based on the assessment by the institutional community of the library's capability to support the specific mission and educational goals of the institution.  Annual library evaluation by the institutional faculty and students shall provide at minimum assessment data on the adequacy of the following; number of physical texts relevant to the program, physical space available for study, hours of operation, computer resources and online databases, library organization, journal collection appropriate for goals of program, and professional assistance for library users.  This survey shall also include opportunities for the community to provide recommendations for library development.  This data, along with the annual inventory of library holdings and data on library usage congruent with the school's educational objectives, is used to demonstrate the learning resources are sufficient to support the mission of the institution.



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--
Naomi C. Broering, MLS, MA
Dean of Libraries
Pacific College of Oriental Medicine
7445 MIssion Valley Rd. Ste 101
San Diego, CA 92108
Ph: 619-574-6909 ext 134
Fax: 619-574-6641

#435 From: "jamesemdy" <librarian@...>
Date: Tue Mar 6, 2012 12:42 am
Subject: item for chicago meeting april 2012
jamesemdy
Send Email Send Email
 
Here is a suggestion for agenda item from David Sales:

  I think the agenda could include any unfinished items from previous meetings.
On procedural issue that has not been clarified concerning #2 above is whether
each subcommittee should refer any joint recommendation back to their full
committee. I am open to having that occur at the Chicago meeting if you, Paul,
and/or Beth think that is necessary. If you do think it necessary, than review
by the Libraries Committee of the joint recommendation of the two subcommittees
could be an agenda item for your committee meeting. For the moment, however, I
just think you (and others on your committee who are interested) and Paul should
just move ahead on the standards.

#436 From: "jamesemdy" <librarian@...>
Date: Wed Mar 14, 2012 11:23 pm
Subject: updated accreditation document
jamesemdy
Send Email Send Email
 
Please read and comment.  is also being submitted to the accreditation
committee.

Evaluation points for OM libraries. Updated Draft document

Evaluation of library resources should not impose a rigid uniformity of
resources or detailed specific requirements, but should be judged in the light
of the stated goals and objectives of the parent institution, in accordance with
the evaluative criteria established by the Commission.

Adequacy of learning resources is based on the assessment by the institutional
community of the library's capability to support the specific mission and
educational goals of the institution. Annual library evaluation by the
institutional faculty and students shall provide at minimum assessment data on
the adequacy of the following; number of physical texts relevant to the program,
physical space available for study, hours of operation, computer resources and
online databases, library organization, journal collection appropriate for goals
of program, and professional assistance for library users. This survey shall
also include opportunities for the community to provide recommendations for
library development. This data, along with the annual inventory of library
holdings and data on library usage congruent with the school's educational
objectives, is used to demonstrate the learning resources are sufficient to
support the mission of the institution.


General consideration:

The library must be an integral partner in promoting the mission of the
institution
The collection and services provided should   reflect the institution's
teaching/healing focus.  Services offered and the nature and size of the
collection must reflect the general mission of the institution,  the style of
teaching/research and healing modalities employed.

Institutional communication..

Tthe library should be integrated into the governing structure of the
institution at all levels. Interdepartmental communication is essential to allow
the library to fulfill its function, advance the institutional mission and
further information literacy. An organizational chart showing the library's
place in the hierarchy should be available.

Collaboration between library staff and university faculty is an important part 
of  reinforcing what is being taught in the curriculum.. Library instructions
must give students the knowledge, skills and tools to obtain valid and recent
information in any format to foster library research skills.


Overall physical facilities.

The library should  have sufficient space to accommodate normal use by students,
staff and faculty and operating open hours that are sufficient to meet research
demands.  A means to periodically assess the adequacy of the physical space
should be in place, such as surveys and focus groups.

Computer and related facilities.

Does the library offer appropriate computer/online services such as:
--internet hardwired computers with printer capabilities.
-- WiFi.
-- Photocopiers.
--Remote 24 hour online access to library resources such as the library catalog
and research databases.
The services provided should be sufficient to provide for present needs and
allow for future expansion.





The collection.

The library must contain sufficient materials of all sorts to support the needs
of the institution and meet the institution's stated goals.   The collection
should be current and grow as new requirements are added.  The library should
have liaisons with other institutions in the areas which can provide services
and material which the library does not provide. This could be through the use
of public libraries or specific consortium-like arrangements.  Materials
available in the library or from nearby institutions should include all relevant
media, including DVDs and audio files.  In assessing the adequacy of the library
collection, attention should be focused on both qualitative and quantitative
measures.  Faculty, students and staff should be polled on a regular basis to
determine possible shortcomings in the library collection and usefulness of the
collection relative to the mission of the institution, regardless of the
absolute number of items.


Collection management.

Is management of the  library adequate to account for the collection through
software programs which are based either in-house or are internet based?. The
system should be robust enough to meet current needs and allow for further
expansion.
Users should have access to library holdings and other research aids through
computer/internet access.

Staffing

Is there library sufficient staffing to provide the research services required
by the user base and the institution's mission?  A professional librarian on
staff must be on staff to provide professional guidance provided, unless this
guidance is obtained from volunteer or contract arrangements.  Staff members are
required to have adequate training for stated tasks, and a training regimen must
be provided to upgrade service skills.

Research.

Does the library have a variety of resources the tools and materials necessary
to provide current awareness and literature competency?  Library staff should
receive sufficient training to provide guidance in doing research.  The library
will probably want to use other research facilities such as public or medical
libraries to supplement library services.

Information literacy and research

The library must be at the center of advancing the information literacy of
students and faculty and enhance research capabilities.  Library resources are
vital part of the curriculum effectiveness at all levels.  There must be in
place means to measure the efficacy of literacy programs and mechanisms to
augment and/or change existing
programs.





Finance.

Sufficient funds must be available to the library to support the abovementioned
criteria?  Overall sufficient support from the institution for library functions
should be demonstrated from institutional budget documents.


Future planning.

The library must in general be able to provide presently needed services but
also be part of the institution's plans for future development.  This
requirement encompasses constant in-house evaluation of present facilities,
services and software to ensure some flexibility in meeting future needs.

Jim Emdy
7/11/2011; 3/14/2012.

#437 From: "jamesemdy" <librarian@...>
Date: Fri Mar 23, 2012 7:10 pm
Subject: accreditation document- consideration for chicago meeting
jamesemdy
Send Email Send Email
 
From David Sales:
  Attachedis a draft of recommended guidelines regarding the evaluation of AOM
librarieson ACAOM site visits. These guidelines have been developed by a
jointcollaboration within subcommittees of the Council's Libraries Committeeand
the Accreditation Committee, as of March 15, 2012. It is expected thatthese
guidelines will be presented to the Core Curriculum Committee for its
considerationat the Council's upcoming meeting in Chicago. It would be
desirable,however, to provide the member colleges with an opportunity for
feedback beforethe Chicago meeting so that if the Core Curriculum Committee, and
then the fullCouncil, approves the guidelines at the Chicago meeting as a formal
recommendationto ACAOM, the guidelines will have received as much feedback as
possible fromwithin the Council. You may wish to include the AOM librarian at
your school indeveloping your feedback.

Evaluation points for assessing
Libraries
Background
When the CCAOM Accreditation Committee met in Baltimore on May 11, 2011, the
committee recommended that the Libraries of Acupuncture & Oriental Medicine
Committee
(Libraries Committee) develop recommendations for guidelines/outcomes concerning
ACAOM's site visits of AOM libraries. The guidelines below reflect a joint
collaboration within
subcommittees of the Libraries Committee and the Accreditation Committee
respectively, as of
March 15, 2012.
Guidelines
Evaluation of library resources should not impose a rigid uniformity of
resources or
overly specific requirements, but should be judged in light of the stated goals
and objectives of
the parent institution, in accordance with the evaluative criteria established
by the Commission.
Adequacy of learning resources is based on the assessment by the institutional
community of
the library's capability to support the specific mission and educational goals
of the institution.
Annual library evaluation by the institutional faculty and students shall
provide at a minimum
assessment data on the adequacy of the following:
1. number of physical texts relevant to the program
2. physical space available for study
3. hours of operation
4. computer resources and online databases
5. library organization
6. journal collection appropriate for goals of program
7. professional assistance for library users.
This survey shall also include opportunities for the community to provide
recommendations for library development. This data, along with the annual
inventory of library
holdings and data on library usage congruent with the school's educational
objectives, is used to
demonstrate that learning resources are sufficient to support the mission of the
institution.
General Consideration
The library must be an integral partner in promoting the mission of the
institution.
The collection and services provided should reflect the institution's
teaching/healing focus.
Services offered and the nature and size of the collection must reflect the
general mission of the
institution, the style of teaching/research, and healing modalities employed.
Draft Document (07.14.11, Rev. 03.15.12)
2
Institutional Communication
The library should be integrated into the governing structure of the institution
at all
levels. Interdepartmental communication is essential to allow the library to
fulfill its function,
advance the institutional mission, and further information literacy.
Collaboration between
library staff and college faculty is an important part of reinforcing what is
being taught in the
curriculum. Library instructions must give students the knowledge, skills, and
tools to obtain
valid and recent information in any format to foster library research skills. A
flow chart showing
the library's place in the organizational set-up should be provided.
Overall Physical Facilities
The library should have sufficient space to accommodate normal use by students,
staff,
and faculty and operating open hours that are sufficient to meet research
demands.
Computer and Related Facilities
The library should offer appropriate computer/online services such as:
1. Internet hardwired computers with printer capabilities
2. WiFi
3. Photocopiers
4. Remote 24-hour online access to library resources, such as the library
catalog and
research databases
The services provided should be sufficient to provide for present needs and
allow for future
expansion.
The Collection
The library should have sufficient materials of all sorts to support the needs
of the
institution and meet the institution's stated goals. The collection should be
current and able to
grow as new requirements are added. If there are certain services and materials
that the library
does not provide, the library should identify other institutions that can
augment library services
and materials, such as a public library or nearby medical research facility. The
library should
seek free or cooperative arrangements with such entities. Materials available in
the library or
from nearby institutions should include all relevant media, including DVDs and
audio files.
Adequacy of the collection should be validated using recognized assessment
tools.
Collection Management
The library should have adequate management of the collection through software
programs which are based either in-house or are Internet based. The system
should be robust
enough to meet current needs and allow for further expansion. Users should have
access to
library holdings and other research aids through computer/Internet access.
3
Staffing
The library should have sufficient staffing to provide the research services
required
by the user base and the institution's mission. A professional librarian must be
on staff to
provide professional guidance, unless this guidance is obtained through
volunteer or contract
arrangements. Staff members are required to have adequate training for stated
tasks and a
training regimen must be provided to upgrade service skills.
Research
The library should have a variety of resources, tools, and materials necessary
to provide
current awareness and literature competency. Library staff should receive
sufficient training to
provide guidance in doing research. As needed, the library should use other
research facilities
such as public or medical libraries to supplement library services.
Information Literacy and Research
The library must be at the center of advancing the information literacy of
students and
faculty and enhancing research capabilities. Library resources are a vital part
of the curriculum
effectiveness at all levels. There must be in place a means to measure the
efficacy of literacy
programs and mechanisms to augment and/or change existing programs.
Finance
The library should receive sufficient funding to support the abovementioned
criteria and
there should be overall sufficient support from the institution for library
functions.
Future Planning
The library must in general be able to provide presently needed services, but
also be part
of the institution's plans for future development. This requirement encompasses
constant inhouse
evaluation of present facilities, services, and software to ensure some
flexibility in meeting
future needs.
Compliance with Federal Regulations.
The library should be in compliance with relevant federal regulations, such as
ADA
requirements and adherence to copyright conventions.

this will be an item on the agenda for chicago in april. a betterformattedcopy
will be available in the files section soon.

#438 From: "jamesemdy" <librarian@...>
Date: Fri Mar 23, 2012 7:18 pm
Subject: item for chicago meeting: mixed method research
jamesemdy
Send Email Send Email
 
Here are two articles on using quantitative and qualitative research methods in
tandom. item for agenda in chicago april

http://mmr.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/1/1/77
Mixed Methods Sampling: A Typology With Examples.

From Journal of Mixed Methods Research 2007; 1; 77, by
Charles Teddlie and FenYu
  http://ptjournal.apta.org/content/early/2008/11/13/ptj.20070236.full.pdf
Advancements in physical therapy research:use of mixed methods

From Physical Therapy, Online publication November 2008, by Lauren Rauscher and
Bruce Greenfield

In PubMed, "mixed methods" is keyword only; qualitative research is a MeSH term.
I believe mixed method research is a promising approach to examining the
efficacy of OM.

#439 From: Daniele Perez-Venero <dperezvenero@...>
Date: Fri Mar 23, 2012 9:56 pm
Subject: Re: item for chicago meeting: mixed method research
dperezvenero
Send Email Send Email
 
Here are two very  recent articles about Mixed Methods Research found in PubMed:

1. Comput Inform Nurs. 2012 Mar 9. [Epub ahead of print]

Criteria for Quantitative and Qualitative Data Integration: Mixed-Methods Research Methodology.

Lee S, Smith CA.

Source

Author Affiliations: School of Nursing, Adelphi University, Garden City, NY (Dr Lee); and College of Nursing, University of Illinois at Chicago (Dr Smith).

Abstract

Many studies have emphasized the need and importance of a mixed-methods approach for evaluation of clinical information systems. However, those studies had no criteria to guide integration of multiple data sets. Integrating different data sets serves to actualize the paradigm that a mixed-methods approach argues; thus, we require criteria that provide the right direction to integrate quantitative and qualitative data. The first author used a set of criteria organized from a literature search for integration of multiple data sets from mixed-methods research. The purpose of this article was to reorganize the identified criteria. Through critical appraisal of the reasons for designing mixed-methods research, three criteria resulted: validation, complementarity, and discrepancy. In applying the criteria to empirical data of a previous mixed methods study, integration of quantitative and qualitative data was achieved in a systematic manner. It helped us obtain a better organized understanding of the results. The criteria of this article offer the potential to produce insightful analyses of mixed-methods evaluations of health information systems.

PMID: 22411415 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

Related citations

Click here to read



2. Man Ther. 2012 Mar 7. [Epub ahead of print]

Mixed methods research - So far easier said than done?

Mengshoel AM.

Source

Department of Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo, Box 1089 Blindern, Oslo, Norway.

Abstract

Mixed methods research (MMR) involves the application of both quantitative and qualitative approaches in a single study, and has been advocated for physiotherapy research. MMR studies are considered to be useful in cases where several different but related research questions are examined or when the purpose is to triangulate quantitative and qualitative data addressing one research question. Few MMR studies have been published in physiotherapy journals, and no papers are found to discuss the actual experience of conducting an MMR study. In this paper an MMR study is used to exemplify how a study applying a concurrent triangulation design was performed, and some aspects related to performing MMR are discussed. Some challenges are identified, and questions are raised about how to incorporate the findings of the two data sets and which skills are needed for doing MMR.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

PMID: 22405885 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

Related citations

Click here to read





 
Daniele Perez-Venero, MLIS
Health Sciences Librarian
Acupuncture & Massage College
10506 N. Kendall Drive
Miami, FL 33176
Tel.: 305-595-9500
www.amcollege.edu

From: jamesemdy <librarian@...>
To: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Friday, March 23, 2012 3:18 PM
Subject: [ccaomlcaom] item for chicago meeting: mixed method research

 
Here are two articles on using quantitative and qualitative research methods in tandom. item for agenda in chicago april

http://mmr.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/1/1/77
Mixed Methods Sampling: A Typology With Examples.

From Journal of Mixed Methods Research 2007; 1; 77, by
Charles Teddlie and FenYu
http://ptjournal.apta.org/content/early/2008/11/13/ptj.20070236.full.pdf
Advancements in physical therapy research:use of mixed methods

From Physical Therapy, Online publication November 2008, by Lauren Rauscher and Bruce Greenfield

In PubMed, "mixed methods" is keyword only; qualitative research is a MeSH term. I believe mixed method research is a promising approach to examining the efficacy of OM.




#440 From: "Rick Severson" <rseverson@...>
Date: Fri Mar 23, 2012 10:20 pm
Subject: RE: item for chicago meeting: mixed method research
rjseverson55
Send Email Send Email
 

Attached is an article from Drexel University regarding the paradigm shift in accreditation and assessment of libraries, from the old model of attending to “inputs” (how many books, hours of operation, staffing, etc.) to the new model of attending to “outputs” (how well does the library contribute to student success regarding learning outcomes in the curricula, particularly in the areas of critical thinking and information literacy?).  All the best,  Rick Severson, NCNM library

 

From: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Daniele Perez-Venero
Sent: Friday, March 23, 2012 2:57 PM
To: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [ccaomlcaom] item for chicago meeting: mixed method research

 

 

Here are two very  recent articles about Mixed Methods Research found in PubMed:

 

1.

Comput Inform Nurs. 2012 Mar 9. [Epub ahead of print]

Criteria for Quantitative and Qualitative Data Integration: Mixed-Methods Research Methodology.

Lee S, Smith CA.

Source

Author Affiliations: School of Nursing, Adelphi University, Garden City, NY (Dr Lee); and College of Nursing, University of Illinois at Chicago (Dr Smith).

Abstract

Many studies have emphasized the need and importance of a mixed-methods approach for evaluation of clinical information systems. However, those studies had no criteria to guide integration of multiple data sets. Integrating different data sets serves to actualize the paradigm that a mixed-methods approach argues; thus, we require criteria that provide the right direction to integrate quantitative and qualitative data. The first author used a set of criteria organized from a literature search for integration of multiple data sets from mixed-methods research. The purpose of this article was to reorganize the identified criteria. Through critical appraisal of the reasons for designing mixed-methods research, three criteria resulted: validation, complementarity, and discrepancy. In applying the criteria to empirical data of a previous mixed methods study, integration of quantitative and qualitative data was achieved in a systematic manner. It helped us obtain a better organized understanding of the results. The criteria of this article offer the potential to produce insightful analyses of mixed-methods evaluations of health information systems.

PMID: 22411415 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

Related citations

Error! Filename not specified.

 

2.

Man Ther. 2012 Mar 7. [Epub ahead of print]

Mixed methods research - So far easier said than done?

Mengshoel AM.

Source

Department of Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo, Box 1089 Blindern, Oslo, Norway.

Abstract

Mixed methods research (MMR) involves the application of both quantitative and qualitative approaches in a single study, and has been advocated for physiotherapy research. MMR studies are considered to be useful in cases where several different but related research questions are examined or when the purpose is to triangulate quantitative and qualitative data addressing one research question. Few MMR studies have been published in physiotherapy journals, and no papers are found to discuss the actual experience of conducting an MMR study. In this paper an MMR study is used to exemplify how a study applying a concurrent triangulation design was performed, and some aspects related to performing MMR are discussed. Some challenges are identified, and questions are raised about how to incorporate the findings of the two data sets and which skills are needed for doing MMR.

Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

PMID: 22405885 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

Related citations

Error! Filename not specified.

 

 

Daniele Perez-Venero, MLIS
Health Sciences Librarian
Acupuncture & Massage College
10506 N. Kendall Drive
Miami, FL 33176
Tel.: 305-595-9500
www.amcollege.edu


From: jamesemdy <librarian@...>
To: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Friday, March 23, 2012 3:18 PM
Subject: [ccaomlcaom] item for chicago meeting: mixed method research

 

 

Here are two articles on using quantitative and qualitative research methods in tandom. item for agenda in chicago april

http://mmr.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/1/1/77
Mixed Methods Sampling: A Typology With Examples.

From Journal of Mixed Methods Research 2007; 1; 77, by
Charles Teddlie and FenYu
http://ptjournal.apta.org/content/early/2008/11/13/ptj.20070236.full.pdf
Advancements in physical therapy research:use of mixed methods

From Physical Therapy, Online publication November 2008, by Lauren Rauscher and Bruce Greenfield

In PubMed, "mixed methods" is keyword only; qualitative research is a MeSH term. I believe mixed method research is a promising approach to examining the efficacy of OM.

 


1 of 1 File(s)


#441 From: Naomi Broering <NBROERING@...>
Date: Sat Mar 24, 2012 3:22 pm
Subject: Re: accreditation document- consideration for chicago meeting
nbroering
Send Email Send Email
 
Jim,
I gave feed back to our VP for Academic Afffairs, Gacy Gomes, who will be handling this for chicago meeting..
The report covers most the areas our LCAOM group reviewed.  I just made a few additions.  I believe she will be reporting.
Thanks
Naomi Broering

On Fri, Mar 23, 2012 at 12:10 PM, jamesemdy <librarian@...> wrote:
From David Sales:
 Attachedis a draft of recommended guidelines regarding the evaluation of AOM librarieson ACAOM site visits. These guidelines have been developed by a jointcollaboration within subcommittees of the Council's Libraries Committeeand the Accreditation Committee, as of March 15, 2012. It is expected thatthese guidelines will be presented to the Core Curriculum Committee for its considerationat the Council's upcoming meeting in Chicago. It would be desirable,however, to provide the member colleges with an opportunity for feedback beforethe Chicago meeting so that if the Core Curriculum Committee, and then the fullCouncil, approves the guidelines at the Chicago meeting as a formal recommendationto ACAOM, the guidelines will have received as much feedback as possible fromwithin the Council. You may wish to include the AOM librarian at your school indeveloping your feedback.

Evaluation points for assessing
Libraries
Background
When the CCAOM Accreditation Committee met in Baltimore on May 11, 2011, the
committee recommended that the Libraries of Acupuncture & Oriental Medicine Committee
(Libraries Committee) develop recommendations for guidelines/outcomes concerning
ACAOM's site visits of AOM libraries. The guidelines below reflect a joint collaboration within
subcommittees of the Libraries Committee and the Accreditation Committee respectively, as of
March 15, 2012.
Guidelines
Evaluation of library resources should not impose a rigid uniformity of resources or
overly specific requirements, but should be judged in light of the stated goals and objectives of
the parent institution, in accordance with the evaluative criteria established by the Commission.
Adequacy of learning resources is based on the assessment by the institutional community of
the library's capability to support the specific mission and educational goals of the institution.
Annual library evaluation by the institutional faculty and students shall provide at a minimum
assessment data on the adequacy of the following:
1. number of physical texts relevant to the program
2. physical space available for study
3. hours of operation
4. computer resources and online databases
5. library organization
6. journal collection appropriate for goals of program
7. professional assistance for library users.
This survey shall also include opportunities for the community to provide
recommendations for library development. This data, along with the annual inventory of library
holdings and data on library usage congruent with the school's educational objectives, is used to
demonstrate that learning resources are sufficient to support the mission of the institution.
General Consideration
The library must be an integral partner in promoting the mission of the institution.
The collection and services provided should reflect the institution's teaching/healing focus.
Services offered and the nature and size of the collection must reflect the general mission of the
institution, the style of teaching/research, and healing modalities employed.
Draft Document (07.14.11, Rev. 03.15.12)
2
Institutional Communication
The library should be integrated into the governing structure of the institution at all
levels. Interdepartmental communication is essential to allow the library to fulfill its function,
advance the institutional mission, and further information literacy. Collaboration between
library staff and college faculty is an important part of reinforcing what is being taught in the
curriculum. Library instructions must give students the knowledge, skills, and tools to obtain
valid and recent information in any format to foster library research skills. A flow chart showing
the library's place in the organizational set-up should be provided.
Overall Physical Facilities
The library should have sufficient space to accommodate normal use by students, staff,
and faculty and operating open hours that are sufficient to meet research demands.
Computer and Related Facilities
The library should offer appropriate computer/online services such as:
1. Internet hardwired computers with printer capabilities
2. WiFi
3. Photocopiers
4. Remote 24-hour online access to library resources, such as the library catalog and
research databases
The services provided should be sufficient to provide for present needs and allow for future
expansion.
The Collection
The library should have sufficient materials of all sorts to support the needs of the
institution and meet the institution's stated goals. The collection should be current and able to
grow as new requirements are added. If there are certain services and materials that the library
does not provide, the library should identify other institutions that can augment library services
and materials, such as a public library or nearby medical research facility. The library should
seek free or cooperative arrangements with such entities. Materials available in the library or
from nearby institutions should include all relevant media, including DVDs and audio files.
Adequacy of the collection should be validated using recognized assessment tools.
Collection Management
The library should have adequate management of the collection through software
programs which are based either in-house or are Internet based. The system should be robust
enough to meet current needs and allow for further expansion. Users should have access to
library holdings and other research aids through computer/Internet access.
3
Staffing
The library should have sufficient staffing to provide the research services required
by the user base and the institution's mission. A professional librarian must be on staff to
provide professional guidance, unless this guidance is obtained through volunteer or contract
arrangements. Staff members are required to have adequate training for stated tasks and a
training regimen must be provided to upgrade service skills.
Research
The library should have a variety of resources, tools, and materials necessary to provide
current awareness and literature competency. Library staff should receive sufficient training to
provide guidance in doing research. As needed, the library should use other research facilities
such as public or medical libraries to supplement library services.
Information Literacy and Research
The library must be at the center of advancing the information literacy of students and
faculty and enhancing research capabilities. Library resources are a vital part of the curriculum
effectiveness at all levels. There must be in place a means to measure the efficacy of literacy
programs and mechanisms to augment and/or change existing programs.
Finance
The library should receive sufficient funding to support the abovementioned criteria and
there should be overall sufficient support from the institution for library functions.
Future Planning
The library must in general be able to provide presently needed services, but also be part
of the institution's plans for future development. This requirement encompasses constant inhouse
evaluation of present facilities, services, and software to ensure some flexibility in meeting
future needs.
Compliance with Federal Regulations.
The library should be in compliance with relevant federal regulations, such as ADA
requirements and adherence to copyright conventions.

this will be an item on the agenda for chicago in april. a betterformattedcopy will be available in the files section soon.



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--
Naomi C. Broering, MLS, MA
Dean of Libraries
Pacific College of Oriental Medicine
7445 MIssion Valley Rd. Ste 101
San Diego, CA 92108
Ph: 619-574-6909 ext 134
Fax: 619-574-6641

#442 From: "Boni, Bethyn A. M.L.S." <bboni@...>
Date: Mon Mar 26, 2012 3:10 pm
Subject: RE: item for chicago meeting: mixed method research
librarian2360
Send Email Send Email
 

What is the agenda item?  Why are we looking at these two research methods?  Are we looking to compare the two methods to evaluate a library?  Is the discussion just to educate us on the types of survey methods we could/should use? I would not think it to our advantage to have an accrediting body tell us which type of survey to use. :-)

 

Bethyn

__________________________________________

Bethyn A. Boni, M.L.S., Library Director

New York Chiropractic College

2360 State Route 89

Seneca Falls, New York 13148

voice: (315) 568-3252 fax: (315) 568-3119

 

From: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of jamesemdy
Sent: Friday, March 23, 2012 3:19 PM
To: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [ccaomlcaom] item for chicago meeting: mixed method research

 

 

Here are two articles on using quantitative and qualitative research methods in tandom. item for agenda in chicago april

http://mmr.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/1/1/77
Mixed Methods Sampling: A Typology With Examples.

From Journal of Mixed Methods Research 2007; 1; 77, by
Charles Teddlie and FenYu
http://ptjournal.apta.org/content/early/2008/11/13/ptj.20070236.full.pdf
Advancements in physical therapy research:use of mixed methods

From Physical Therapy, Online publication November 2008, by Lauren Rauscher and Bruce Greenfield

In PubMed, "mixed methods" is keyword only; qualitative research is a MeSH term. I believe mixed method research is a promising approach to examining the efficacy of OM.


#443 From: "Boni, Bethyn A. M.L.S." <bboni@...>
Date: Mon Mar 26, 2012 4:28 pm
Subject: RE: accreditation document- consideration for chicago meeting
librarian2360
Send Email Send Email
 

Dear group,

 

As an institution that is currently working through our ACAOM Self-Study.... ;-)  This would have been great if most of it was in place.

 

Be careful about stating specifics.  For example, don’t state that we should have hard-wired computers.  Libraries should provide computers with Internet access, word processing and other software applications. Stating specifics instead of generalities makes it difficult to move forward.

 

I suggest combining the section titled Research with the section titled Information Literacy and Research.  Basically they say the same thing.

 

I suggest eliminating the section titled Compliance With Federal Regulations.  This really isn’t about libraries at all.  The items listed here should be institution-wide policies, not only for the library.  Maybe review the entire document again to make sure statements within apply directly to libraries?

 

And, you already know my feelings about 1. number of physical texts relevant to the program and 6. journal collection appropriate for goals of program - please don’t.  The section titled The Collection is great - “sufficient materials of all sorts ....:  As long as students/faculty/staff are able to get the article(s) needed in a timely fashion, that’s what matters. What if a library chooses to only pay for articles used?  Some libraries are contemplating ceasing most or all journal subscriptions and getting the necessary articles through interlibrary loan or directly from the publisher.  Why pay $1000 per year for a subscription if only 3 articles are used? (But that’s a topic for another day!)

 

A lot of work went into this.  Thank you to all who did so.

 

Bethyn

__________________________________________

Bethyn A. Boni, M.L.S., Library Director

New York Chiropractic College

2360 State Route 89

Seneca Falls, New York 13148

voice: (315) 568-3252 fax: (315) 568-3119

 

From: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of jamesemdy
Sent: Friday, March 23, 2012 3:10 PM
To: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [ccaomlcaom] accreditation document- consideration for chicago meeting

 

 

From David Sales:
Attachedis a draft of recommended guidelines regarding the evaluation of AOM librarieson ACAOM site visits. These guidelines have been developed by a jointcollaboration within subcommittees of the Council's Libraries Committeeand the Accreditation Committee, as of March 15, 2012. It is expected thatthese guidelines will be presented to the Core Curriculum Committee for its considerationat the Council's upcoming meeting in Chicago. It would be desirable,however, to provide the member colleges with an opportunity for feedback beforethe Chicago meeting so that if the Core Curriculum Committee, and then the fullCouncil, approves the guidelines at the Chicago meeting as a formal recommendationto ACAOM, the guidelines will have received as much feedback as possible fromwithin the Council. You may wish to include the AOM librarian at your school indeveloping your feedback.

Evaluation points for assessing
Libraries
Background
When the CCAOM Accreditation Committee met in Baltimore on May 11, 2011, the
committee recommended that the Libraries of Acupuncture & Oriental Medicine Committee
(Libraries Committee) develop recommendations for guidelines/outcomes concerning
ACAOM's site visits of AOM libraries. The guidelines below reflect a joint collaboration within
subcommittees of the Libraries Committee and the Accreditation Committee respectively, as of
March 15, 2012.
Guidelines
Evaluation of library resources should not impose a rigid uniformity of resources or
overly specific requirements, but should be judged in light of the stated goals and objectives of
the parent institution, in accordance with the evaluative criteria established by the Commission.
Adequacy of learning resources is based on the assessment by the institutional community of
the library's capability to support the specific mission and educational goals of the institution.
Annual library evaluation by the institutional faculty and students shall provide at a minimum
assessment data on the adequacy of the following:
1. number of physical texts relevant to the program
2. physical space available for study
3. hours of operation
4. computer resources and online databases
5. library organization
6. journal collection appropriate for goals of program
7. professional assistance for library users.
This survey shall also include opportunities for the community to provide
recommendations for library development. This data, along with the annual inventory of library
holdings and data on library usage congruent with the school's educational objectives, is used to
demonstrate that learning resources are sufficient to support the mission of the institution.
General Consideration
The library must be an integral partner in promoting the mission of the institution.
The collection and services provided should reflect the institution's teaching/healing focus.
Services offered and the nature and size of the collection must reflect the general mission of the
institution, the style of teaching/research, and healing modalities employed.
Draft Document (07.14.11, Rev. 03.15.12)
2
Institutional Communication
The library should be integrated into the governing structure of the institution at all
levels. Interdepartmental communication is essential to allow the library to fulfill its function,
advance the institutional mission, and further information literacy. Collaboration between
library staff and college faculty is an important part of reinforcing what is being taught in the
curriculum. Library instructions must give students the knowledge, skills, and tools to obtain
valid and recent information in any format to foster library research skills. A flow chart showing
the library's place in the organizational set-up should be provided.
Overall Physical Facilities
The library should have sufficient space to accommodate normal use by students, staff,
and faculty and operating open hours that are sufficient to meet research demands.
Computer and Related Facilities
The library should offer appropriate computer/online services such as:
1. Internet hardwired computers with printer capabilities
2. WiFi
3. Photocopiers
4. Remote 24-hour online access to library resources, such as the library catalog and
research databases
The services provided should be sufficient to provide for present needs and allow for future
expansion.
The Collection
The library should have sufficient materials of all sorts to support the needs of the
institution and meet the institution's stated goals. The collection should be current and able to
grow as new requirements are added. If there are certain services and materials that the library
does not provide, the library should identify other institutions that can augment library services
and materials, such as a public library or nearby medical research facility. The library should
seek free or cooperative arrangements with such entities. Materials available in the library or
from nearby institutions should include all relevant media, including DVDs and audio files.
Adequacy of the collection should be validated using recognized assessment tools.
Collection Management
The library should have adequate management of the collection through software
programs which are based either in-house or are Internet based. The system should be robust
enough to meet current needs and allow for further expansion. Users should have access to
library holdings and other research aids through computer/Internet access.
3
Staffing
The library should have sufficient staffing to provide the research services required
by the user base and the institution's mission. A professional librarian must be on staff to
provide professional guidance, unless this guidance is obtained through volunteer or contract
arrangements. Staff members are required to have adequate training for stated tasks and a
training regimen must be provided to upgrade service skills.
Research
The library should have a variety of resources, tools, and materials necessary to provide
current awareness and literature competency. Library staff should receive sufficient training to
provide guidance in doing research. As needed, the library should use other research facilities
such as public or medical libraries to supplement library services.
Information Literacy and Research
The library must be at the center of advancing the information literacy of students and
faculty and enhancing research capabilities. Library resources are a vital part of the curriculum
effectiveness at all levels. There must be in place a means to measure the efficacy of literacy
programs and mechanisms to augment and/or change existing programs.
Finance
The library should receive sufficient funding to support the abovementioned criteria and
there should be overall sufficient support from the institution for library functions.
Future Planning
The library must in general be able to provide presently needed services, but also be part
of the institution's plans for future development. This requirement encompasses constant inhouse
evaluation of present facilities, services, and software to ensure some flexibility in meeting
future needs.
Compliance with Federal Regulations.
The library should be in compliance with relevant federal regulations, such as ADA
requirements and adherence to copyright conventions.

this will be an item on the agenda for chicago in april. a betterformattedcopy will be available in the files section soon.


#444 From: Librarian Jim Emdy <librarian@...>
Date: Mon Mar 26, 2012 8:14 pm
Subject: Re: item for chicago meeting: mixed method research
jamesemdy
Send Email Send Email
 
the item on research methods is intended to be informational only.  it has nothing to do with specific requirements for survey methods.

On Mon, Mar 26, 2012 at 8:10 AM, Boni, Bethyn A. M.L.S. <bboni@...> wrote:
 

What is the agenda item?  Why are we looking at these two research methods?  Are we looking to compare the two methods to evaluate a library?  Is the discussion just to educate us on the types of survey methods we could/should use? I would not think it to our advantage to have an accrediting body tell us which type of survey to use. :-)

 

Bethyn

__________________________________________

Bethyn A. Boni, M.L.S., Library Director

New York Chiropractic College

2360 State Route 89

Seneca Falls, New York 13148

voice: (315) 568-3252 fax: (315) 568-3119

 

From: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of jamesemdy
Sent: Friday, March 23, 2012 3:19 PM
To: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com


Subject: [ccaomlcaom] item for chicago meeting: mixed method research

 

 

Here are two articles on using quantitative and qualitative research methods in tandom. item for agenda in chicago april



http://mmr.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/1/1/77
Mixed Methods Sampling: A Typology With Examples.

From Journal of Mixed Methods Research 2007; 1; 77, by
Charles Teddlie and FenYu
http://ptjournal.apta.org/content/early/2008/11/13/ptj.20070236.full.pdf
Advancements in physical therapy research:use of mixed methods

From Physical Therapy, Online publication November 2008, by Lauren Rauscher and Bruce Greenfield

In PubMed, "mixed methods" is keyword only; qualitative research is a MeSH term. I believe mixed method research is a promising approach to examining the efficacy of OM.



#445 From: "Boni, Bethyn A. M.L.S." <bboni@...>
Date: Mon Mar 26, 2012 8:35 pm
Subject: RE: item for chicago meeting: mixed method research
librarian2360
Send Email Send Email
 

I found the links and references very informative.  The article re: Drexel libraries was of particular interest.

 

Thank you. 

 

Bethyn

__________________________________________

Bethyn A. Boni, M.L.S., Library Director

New York Chiropractic College

2360 State Route 89

Seneca Falls, New York 13148

voice: (315) 568-3252 fax: (315) 568-3119

 

From: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Librarian Jim Emdy
Sent: Monday, March 26, 2012 4:15 PM
To: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [ccaomlcaom] item for chicago meeting: mixed method research

 

 

the item on research methods is intended to be informational only.  it has nothing to do with specific requirements for survey methods.

On Mon, Mar 26, 2012 at 8:10 AM, Boni, Bethyn A. M.L.S. <bboni@...> wrote:

 

What is the agenda item?  Why are we looking at these two research methods?  Are we looking to compare the two methods to evaluate a library?  Is the discussion just to educate us on the types of survey methods we could/should use? I would not think it to our advantage to have an accrediting body tell us which type of survey to use. :-)

 

Bethyn

__________________________________________

Bethyn A. Boni, M.L.S., Library Director

New York Chiropractic College

2360 State Route 89

Seneca Falls, New York 13148

voice: (315) 568-3252 fax: (315) 568-3119

 

From: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of jamesemdy
Sent: Friday, March 23, 2012 3:19 PM
To: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com


Subject: [ccaomlcaom] item for chicago meeting: mixed method research

 

 

Here are two articles on using quantitative and qualitative research methods in tandom. item for agenda in chicago april



http://mmr.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/1/1/77
Mixed Methods Sampling: A Typology With Examples.

From Journal of Mixed Methods Research 2007; 1; 77, by
Charles Teddlie and FenYu
http://ptjournal.apta.org/content/early/2008/11/13/ptj.20070236.full.pdf
Advancements in physical therapy research:use of mixed methods

From Physical Therapy, Online publication November 2008, by Lauren Rauscher and Bruce Greenfield

In PubMed, "mixed methods" is keyword only; qualitative research is a MeSH term. I believe mixed method research is a promising approach to examining the efficacy of OM.

 


#446 From: "jamesemdy" <librarian@...>
Date: Wed Mar 28, 2012 7:22 pm
Subject: some agenda items for chicago meeting
jamesemdy
Send Email Send Email
 
the meeting of the library committee of CCAOM takes place on April 26, Thursday,
6:30 pm CST at the North Shore Westin, Chicago.  I assume telephone connection
will be available.  Here are some suggestions for agenda items:

1. Consideration of the accreditation document, which may be ready for a vote by
the full council to submit ti ACAOM.

2. Informational discussion of using mixed method qualitative/quantitative
research methods in Oriental medicine.

3. Discussion of OM libraries and social media: does your library have a
facebook account?

4. Role of libraries in researching/maintaining information on herbal compounds,
vendor reliability, etc.

5. Progress report on library committee presence in CCAOM.NET.

6. Consideration of past unresolved issues, e.g. formation of a consortium.  On
this issue I feel that if we are to proceed, we need a fully involved committee
to work on this.

Supporting documents will be provided as needed. Please comment and make
suggestions.  Thank you.

#447 From: Naomi Broering <NBROERING@...>
Date: Mon Apr 2, 2012 7:16 pm
Subject: Re: some agenda items for chicago meeting
nbroering
Send Email Send Email
 
James, I will not be attending, but here is my input so far.
 1 We reveiwed the accreditation doc, looks OK. I sent a few suggestions to our VP who is attending.  Needs info on Digital Libraries and Web pages.
2. No comment, do not know what this is.
3. Yes, We have a facebook page, but it needs fixing, somehow it got integrated with mine. Looking into this.
4. No comment. we do not keep herbs
5. Yes we need to proceed with consortium.  I am ready to serve on this
 
 
6. Our Library got OVID e Books on TCM. It looks good maybe this is one we can try to get consortium discounts for in the future.
 
Question:  How are other libraries handling doctoral dissertations, do you scan and make available?  What is the copyright form your students have to sign?  Would like info on this.
 
Naomi Broering
 
 
 
On Wed, Mar 28, 2012 at 12:22 PM, jamesemdy <librarian@...> wrote:
the meeting of the library committee of CCAOM takes place on April 26, Thursday, 6:30 pm CST at the North Shore Westin, Chicago.  I assume telephone connection will be available.  Here are some suggestions for agenda items:

1. Consideration of the accreditation document, which may be ready for a vote by the full council to submit ti ACAOM.

2. Informational discussion of using mixed method qualitative/quantitative research methods in Oriental medicine.

3. Discussion of OM libraries and social media: does your library have a facebook account?

4. Role of libraries in researching/maintaining information on herbal compounds, vendor reliability, etc.

5. Progress report on library committee presence in CCAOM.NET.

6. Consideration of past unresolved issues, e.g. formation of a consortium.  On this issue I feel that if we are to proceed, we need a fully involved committee to work on this.

Supporting documents will be provided as needed. Please comment and make suggestions.  Thank you.



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--
Naomi C. Broering, MLS, MA
Dean of Libraries
Pacific College of Oriental Medicine
7445 MIssion Valley Rd. Ste 101
San Diego, CA 92108
Ph: 619-574-6909 ext 134
Fax: 619-574-6641

#448 From: "jamesemdy" <librarian@...>
Date: Thu Apr 5, 2012 9:17 pm
Subject: committee name change
jamesemdy
Send Email Send Email
 
CCAOM is proposing to rename the various committees. For the library committee,
the change would be
from
LCAOM
to
Libraries of AOM

a possible agenda item; please comment

#449 From: "Andi Houston" <andi.houston@...>
Date: Tue Apr 10, 2012 1:49 pm
Subject: Online test prep materials?
andi.houston
Send Email Send Email
 

More crowdsourcing!

 

Does your school use online test prep materials?

 

Is the library in charge of it?

 

Does the cost come out of the library budget?

 

What service/company do you use?

 

Would you recommend it to other schools?

 

Thank you!

Andi Houston

Academy for Five Element Acupuncture

352.335.2332 | acupuncturist.edu

 


#450 From: Naomi Broering <NBROERING@...>
Date: Tue Apr 10, 2012 6:21 pm
Subject: Re: Online test prep materials?
nbroering
Send Email Send Email
 
Andi,
I forwarded your inquiry to our student advisors.  Yes, the library has test prep software that students use.  The cost is covered by the College, but it is charged to the Library.
Re prep assistance the advisors can answere those questions.
 
Naomi Broering

On Tue, Apr 10, 2012 at 6:49 AM, Andi Houston <andi.houston@...> wrote:


More crowdsourcing!

 

Does your school use online test prep materials?

 

Is the library in charge of it?

 

Does the cost come out of the library budget?

 

What service/company do you use?

 

Would you recommend it to other schools?

 

Thank you!

Andi Houston

Academy for Five Element Acupuncture

352.335.2332 | acupuncturist.edu

 






--
Naomi C. Broering, MLS, MA
Dean of Libraries
Pacific College of Oriental Medicine
7445 MIssion Valley Rd. Ste 101
San Diego, CA 92108
Ph: 619-574-6909 ext 134
Fax: 619-574-6641

#451 From: Naomi Broering <NBROERING@...>
Date: Tue Apr 10, 2012 6:34 pm
Subject: Re: committee name change
nbroering
Send Email Send Email
 
I prefer the LCAOM.  It is shorter.
Naomi

On Thu, Apr 5, 2012 at 2:17 PM, jamesemdy <librarian@...> wrote:
CCAOM is proposing to rename the various committees. For the library committee, the change would be
from
LCAOM
to
Libraries of AOM

a possible agenda item; please comment



------------------------------------

Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
   http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ccaomlcaom/

<*> Your email settings:
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<*> To change settings online go to:
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--
Naomi C. Broering, MLS, MA
Dean of Libraries
Pacific College of Oriental Medicine
7445 MIssion Valley Rd. Ste 101
San Diego, CA 92108
Ph: 619-574-6909 ext 134
Fax: 619-574-6641

#452 From: "Aileen Huang" <AileenHuang@...>
Date: Tue Apr 10, 2012 8:02 pm
Subject: RE: Online test prep materials?
AileenHuang@...
Send Email Send Email
 

No, our library does not use online test prep materials.

 

 

Aileen Huang

Director of Learning Center

Shuji Goto Library, ACTCM

555 De Haro St. Suite 210

San Francisco, CA 94107

Tel. 415-355-1601 ext. 19

 

From: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Andi Houston
Sent: Tuesday, April 10, 2012 6:50 AM
To: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [ccaomlcaom] Online test prep materials?

 

 

More crowdsourcing!

 

Does your school use online test prep materials?

 

Is the library in charge of it?

 

Does the cost come out of the library budget?

 

What service/company do you use?

 

Would you recommend it to other schools?

 

Thank you!

Andi Houston

Academy for Five Element Acupuncture

352.335.2332 | acupuncturist.edu

 


#453 From: Candise Branum <cbranum@...>
Date: Tue Apr 10, 2012 8:04 pm
Subject: Re: Online test prep materials?
candisebranum
Send Email Send Email
 
We have Q-TestPrep. It comes in CD format (not online), but still effective. The library purchases an annual license, and students seem to like it.

Candise Branum, MLS
College Librarian
Oregon
College of Oriental Medicine
10525 SE Cherry Blossom Drive

Portland
, OR 97216
503-253-3443 ext.134
|
www.library.ocom.edu




On Tue, Apr 10, 2012 at 1:02 PM, Aileen Huang <AileenHuang@...> wrote:
 

No, our library does not use online test prep materials.

 

 

Aileen Huang

Director of Learning Center

Shuji Goto Library, ACTCM

555 De Haro St. Suite 210

San Francisco, CA 94107

Tel. 415-355-1601 ext. 19

 

From: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Andi Houston
Sent: Tuesday, April 10, 2012 6:50 AM
To: ccaomlcaom@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [ccaomlcaom] Online test prep materials?

 

 

More crowdsourcing!

 

Does your school use online test prep materials?

 

Is the library in charge of it?

 

Does the cost come out of the library budget?

 

What service/company do you use?

 

Would you recommend it to other schools?

 

Thank you!

Andi Houston

Academy for Five Element Acupuncture

352.335.2332 | acupuncturist.edu

 



#454 From: Librarian Jim Emdy <librarian@...>
Date: Tue Apr 10, 2012 9:41 pm
Subject: Re: Online test prep materials?
jamesemdy
Send Email Send Email
 
we do not subscribe to an online prep program.the opac catalog has link to NCAOM TEST HELP. DO YOU WANT this on the agenda for chicago?

On Tue, Apr 10, 2012 at 6:49 AM, Andi Houston <andi.houston@...> wrote:
 

More crowdsourcing!

 

Does your school use online test prep materials?

 

Is the library in charge of it?

 

Does the cost come out of the library budget?

 

What service/company do you use?

 

Would you recommend it to other schools?

 

Thank you!

Andi Houston

Academy for Five Element Acupuncture

352.335.2332 | acupuncturist.edu

 



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