Innovation and the Library: The Adoption of New Ideas in Public Libraries

Author:   Verna Pungitore
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Volume:   No. 86.
ISBN:  

9780313286735


Pages:   208
Publication Date:   24 July 1995
Recommended Age:   From 7 to 17 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Our Price $140.00 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

Innovation and the Library: The Adoption of New Ideas in Public Libraries


Add your own review!

Overview

Today's rapidly evolving information-based society demands that public libraries implement planned, proactive, and innovative change to meet patron needs. Rapid, widespread, and substantive change and innovation in public librarianship depends on the ability of public librarians to share in the exchange of new ideas, regardless of the size of their communities. This book explores how managerial innovations are generated and disseminated among public librarians. To examine how new ideas are created and spread among public librarians, the volume focuses on the case of the dissemination of a particular innovation, a set of techniques developed and promoted by a national professional association, which allows public librarians to engage in user-oriented planning, community-specific role setting, and self-evaluation of library performance. This case study is placed within a larger context of classical models of the diffusion process and the literature on organizational change and innovation. Drawing on her findings, the author offers suggestions to facilitate public library change.

Full Product Details

Author:   Verna Pungitore
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Imprint:   Praeger Publishers Inc
Volume:   No. 86.
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.510kg
ISBN:  

9780313286735


ISBN 10:   0313286736
Pages:   208
Publication Date:   24 July 1995
Recommended Age:   From 7 to 17 years
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Preface Public Libraries, Change, and Innovation Public Libraries and Organizational Change: An Overview Diffusion and Adoption of Innovations Evolutionary Change in Public Libraries: 1920-1965 Life History of a Public Library Innovation Prelude to Innovation: 1966-1979 Development and Dissemination of the Innovation PLDP: The Modified Innovation Toward a Model of Public Library Innovation Diffusion Among Smaller Libraries: 1980-1990 Patterns of Implementation in Smaller Libraries Fitting the Public Library Experience to the Models Facilitating Innovation in Public Libraries References Index

Reviews

The book's value lies in the lessons it provides about instituting change by persuasion: commitment on the part of key people, a complex web of linkages among them, a long-term commitment by PLA and its elected officers, the need to involve helpers such as the state library agencies, and the need for strong training and educational components to get community librarians involved. As PLA has now begine to reevaluate these innovations in preparation for a new or revisde set of techniques for the 21st century, the lessons learned about the diffusion of innovations as described in this book will prove highly useful. -Collection Management This book is worthwhile to library students and public libraries for its PLA history. -Journal of the American Society for Information Science The primary purpose of this work is to use the planning process as an example to trace the development and diffusion of an innovation and to draw from this to develop a model for future dissemination of change...a substantial contribution to the profession. -Library & Information Science Research This book is recommended for public library administrators, trustee leaders, and libraries where 'planning meets resistance.' -RQ ?This book is worthwhile to library students and public libraries for its PLA history.?-Journal of the American Society for Information Science ?The book's value lies in the lessons it provides about instituting change by persuasion: commitment on the part of key people, a complex web of linkages among them, a long-term commitment by PLA and its elected officers, the need to involve helpers such as the state library agencies, and the need for strong training and educational components to get community librarians involved. As PLA has now begine to reevaluate these innovations in preparation for a new or revisde set of techniques for the 21st century, the lessons learned about the diffusion of innovations as described in this book will prove highly useful.?-Collection Management ?This book is recommended for public library administrators, trustee leaders, and libraries where 'planning meets resistance.'?-RQ ?The primary purpose of this work is to use the planning process as an example to trace the development and diffusion of an innovation and to draw from this to develop a model for future dissemination of change...a substantial contribution to the profession.?-Library & Information Science Research


?The book's value lies in the lessons it provides about instituting change by persuasion: commitment on the part of key people, a complex web of linkages among them, a long-term commitment by PLA and its elected officers, the need to involve helpers such as the state library agencies, and the need for strong training and educational components to get community librarians involved. As PLA has now begine to reevaluate these innovations in preparation for a new or revisde set of techniques for the 21st century, the lessons learned about the diffusion of innovations as described in this book will prove highly useful.?-Collection Management


The book's value lies in the lessons it provides about instituting change by persuasion: commitment on the part of key people, a complex web of linkages among them, a long-term commitment by PLA and its elected officers, the need to involve helpers such as the state library agencies, and the need for strong training and educational components to get community librarians involved. As PLA has now begine to reevaluate these innovations in preparation for a new or revisde set of techniques for the 21st century, the lessons learned about the diffusion of innovations as described in this book will prove highly useful. -Collection Management This book is recommended for public library administrators, trustee leaders, and libraries where 'planning meets resistance.' -RQ This book is worthwhile to library students and public libraries for its PLA history. -Journal of the American Society for Information Science The primary purpose of this work is to use the planning process as an example to trace the development and diffusion of an innovation and to draw from this to develop a model for future dissemination of change...a substantial contribution to the profession. -Library & Information Science Research ?This book is worthwhile to library students and public libraries for its PLA history.?-Journal of the American Society for Information Science ?The book's value lies in the lessons it provides about instituting change by persuasion: commitment on the part of key people, a complex web of linkages among them, a long-term commitment by PLA and its elected officers, the need to involve helpers such as the state library agencies, and the need for strong training and educational components to get community librarians involved. As PLA has now begine to reevaluate these innovations in preparation for a new or revisde set of techniques for the 21st century, the lessons learned about the diffusion of innovations as described in this book will prove highly useful.?-Collection Management ?This book is recommended for public library administrators, trustee leaders, and libraries where 'planning meets resistance.'?-RQ ?The primary purpose of this work is to use the planning process as an example to trace the development and diffusion of an innovation and to draw from this to develop a model for future dissemination of change...a substantial contribution to the profession.?-Library & Information Science Research


Author Information

Verna L. Pungitore is an associate professor in the School of Library and Information Science at Indiana University. Her previous publications include Greenwood's Public Librarianship.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

Aorrng

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List