Publications

Michael Adams (Graduate Center) contributed entries on Woody Allen, Stanley Donen, Bob Dylan, Jeff Goldblum, Pauline Kael, Michael Mann, and Arthur Penn to Great Lives from History: Jewish Americans (Salem Press, 2011).  He also contributed essays about film (overview), one-hundred major films of the decade, screwball comedy, and Victor Fleming to The Thirties in America (Salem Press, 2011).

Carlos Arguelles (Kingsborough) published “Evidence-Based Practice Mentors: Taking Information Literacy to the Units in a Teaching Hospital,” Journal of Hospital Librarianship 11.1 (2011): 8-22.

Marta Bladek (John Jay) published “Jewish American Postgenerational Returns to Eastern and Central Europe”  in Cultural Memory: Reformations of the Past in the Present, and Present in the Past (Plymouth University Press, 2010).  Marta and Karen Okamoto wrote “Terrorism: A Guide to Resources” published in Collection Building 30.1 (2011): 39-46.

Robin Brown (Borough of Manhattan) published, with Willis C. Walker of Bard, “Design and Analysis Challenges in a Multi-Campus Research Study” in Using Qualitative Methods in Action Research: How Librarians Can Get to the Why of Data (ACRL, 2011).  Brown also contributed, with Zhanna Yablokova, BMCC English professor, “Learning Together: A Cross-Disciplinary Approach,” in the Proceedings of the Association of College and Research Libraries, 2011.

Dorothea J. Coiffe (Borough of Manhattan) published “Participating in Oral Histories, Donating Papers to Archives” in Pre- and Post-Retirement Tips for Librarians (ALA Editions, 2011).

Kathleen Collins (John Jay) published “The Trouble with Archie: Locating and Accessing Primary Sources for the Study of the 1970s US Sitcom, All in the Family” in Critical Studies in Television 5.2 (2010).

Douglas Cox (Law) published “Archives and Records in Armed Conflict: International Law and the Current Debate Over Iraqi Records and Archives” in Catholic University Law Review 59.4  (2010): 1001-1056.

Frank Donnelly (Baruch) published “Evaluating Open Source GIS for Libraries” in Library Hi Tech 28.1 (2010): 131-151.

Raquel Gabriel (Law) published “Tying Diversity to Organizational Culture” in Law Library Journal 102.3 (2010) and “Finding Common Ground“   in Law Library Journal 103.2 (2011).  These essays are part of Raquel’s ongoing “Diversity Dialogues” series.

Harold Gee (Baruch) published “Residential Real Estate Data on the Internet: Benefits and Limitations” in Journal of Business and Finance Librarianship 15.2 (2010): 104-122.  With Jin Ma (Baruch), he published “A Comparative Review of Standard and Poor’s NetAdvantage and Mergent Online” in The Charleston Advisor 12.3 (2011): 15-22.  Harold and Rita Ormsby (Baruch) published “The Bologna Process Offers New Research Opportunities for Academic Business Librarians Worldwide” in Journal of Business and Finance Librarianship 16.1 (2011): 67-84.

Gerry Jiao (Baruch) contributed “Mixed Data Collection and Analysis Techniques for Conducting Research on Giftedness and Beyond” to Research Methodologies for Conducting Research on Giftedness (American Psychological Association, 2010).

Maria Kiriakova (John Jay) wrote a chapter on “International Criminal Justice: Printed and Electronic Media, Journals and Professional Associations” in International Crime and Justice (Cambridge University Press, 2011).

Louise Klusek and Christopher Tuthill (Baruch) published “Reference Training through a Co-Mentoring Program” in Reference Renaissance: Current and Future Trends (Neal-Schuman, 2010).

Clementine Lewis (LaGuardia) published “Enhancing the Role of the Library in the Research Process: A Review of the Research Review Competition” in Technical Services Quarterly 28.1 (2011): 17-30.

Christina Miller (York) contributed the entry on Cuyahoga River Fires to Encyclopedia of the U.S. Government and the Environment: History, Policy, and Politics (ABC-CLIO, 2011).

Rita Ormsby and Daniel Williams (Baruch) published “Information Literacy in Public Affairs Curriculum” in Journal of Public Affairs Education 16.2 (2010): 279-306.

Steven Ovadia and Scott White (LaGuardia) published “Bringing an Online Credit Research Class from Concept to Reality” in Library & Information Services in Distance Education 4.4 (2010): 197-207.  Steven also published “Open-Access Electronic Textbooks: An Overview” in Behavioral and Social Sciences Librarian 30.1 (2011): 52-56.

Mark Padnos (Bronx) contributed entries on Gottfried Benn and Shlomo Carlebach to Encyclopedia of the Bible and Its Reception (De Gruyter, 2010).

Ryan Phillips (Baruch) published “Factiva” in The Charleston Advisor 12.3 (2011): 26-30.

Sandra Roff (Baruch) published “The College Archivist as College Historian: Baruch College Celebrates Its Historical Roots” in Journal of Archival Organization 8.3/4 (2010): 251-259.

Seamus Scanlon (City) published “The Taliban: A Study of Book Collections on the Taliban in Academic, Public and West Point Libraries” in Collection Building 30.3 (2011): 131-134.  Seamus also contributed “Transforming an Off-Campus Library from Empty Space to Award Winner in One Year” and “How to Manage a Student-Centric Service for Non-Traditional Users” to Library Management Tips That Work (ALA, 2011).  He also published several short stories: “Galway Sews Rain into the Sky” in Journal of Experimental Fiction 39 (2011): 211-214; “Lucy Block Waited” in Review of Postgraduate English Studies 37 (2010): 9-15; and “Sorry Missus” in Beat the Dust.

Scott Sheidlower (York) contributed the entries on Antiquities Act 1906, John Muir, and Frederick Law Olmsted to Encyclopedia of the U.S. Government and the Environment: History, Policy, and Politics (ABC-CLIO, 2011).

Maura Smale (City Tech) published “Quality Counts: Evaluating Internet Sources” in Let the Games Begin!:  Engaging Students with Interactive Information Literacy Instruction (Neal-Schuman, 2011).

Inna Shpilko (Queens) published “Assessing Information-Seeking Patterns and Needs of Nutrition, Food Science, and Dietetics Faculty” in Library and Information Science Research 33.2 (2011): 151-157.

Catherine Stern (LaGuardia) published “The Role of Audiobooks in Academic Libraries” in College & Undergraduate Libraries 18.1 (2011): 77-91.

Di Su (York) published “The Tardy Recognition of J. S. Bach’s Sonatas and Paritas” in American String Teacher 61.2 (May 2011): 24.28.

Sandra Gall Urban (York) contributed the entry on urban renewal to Encyclopedia of the U.S. Government and the Environment: History, Policy, and Politics (ABC-CLIO, 2011).

Michael Waldman (Baruch) published “Libraries and the Transgender Community” in Serving LGBTIQ Library and Archives Users: Essays on Outreach, Service, Collections, and Access (McFarland, 2011).

In addition to these publications, also see CUNY Librarians Contribute to Polish-American Encyclopedia.


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