Also using Elazar, I put everything in the subject that I can. The shelf
and a half of Fiction are only those that have no subject in which to place
them. As others have said, it makes it easier for both me and my users to
find books on a particular subject. Holidays in particular are best
toget
I use pockets and cards. I buy them from Demco. They're not very
expensive. I have a stamp with our name/address, and I stamp the pockets.
I don't have due dates, so I chose cards that have one date, which is the
check out date, and a name. I have labels so one author/title/call # label
goes on
I used to do the same for the same reason.
Amalia W.
From: Robbin Katzin via Hasafran
Sent: Monday, March 21, 2022 6:44 PM
To: Hasafran; Michelle Sandler
Subject: Re: [ha-Safran] Jewish Children's Holiday Fiction Books Cataloged as
Nonfiction
I put most of the fiction holiday books under the a
Michelle, I have mostly put them in the holiday section as well, since this
is the best used area of the library.
Annette
Annette Y Goldsmith, PhD (she/her)
Part-time Faculty, Kent State iSchool; Librarian, Sephardic Temple Tifereth
Israel, Los Angeles
Member, 2022 Robert F. Sibert Informational
Hello. We have a small library - about 4500 books. We do not have a check out
system. I'd like to establish a manual system with pockets and cards. Could
someone please send me a simple process to put this into place? Can you give
me an estimate of the cost? Thanks much. Jill Weisberg, C
I also use Elazar and I've struggled with this too. For the sake of convenience
and clarity, I've chosen to place picture and board fiction books with the
holiday; there is a spot for them -- J 249.53 for Chanukah fictional stories,
for instance. It helps me when I need to grab everything on a h
I put most of the fiction holiday books under the appropriate Elazar holiday
number. It makes it much easier for the kids to find them, and for me and the
teachers to retrieve them as needed.
Robbin KatzinHillel Torah North Suburban Day SchoolSkokie, IL
On Monday, March 21, 2022, 07:15:51
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When cataloging Jewish Children's fiction holiday books do you p
To the Hasafran list:
Some of you know that I’ve been working for years to expose anti-Israel
propaganda in children’s literature in English. In 2019 I gave a talk on
this topic at the AJL Conference in LA.
I’ve recently begun to work with the pro-Israel media watchdog, Committee
for Accuracy in
Please join us for the upcoming AJL Roundtable:
*"A Time to Gather: Archives and the Control of Jewish Culture"*
Thursday, March 24, 2022
9:30AM PT / 12:30PM ET / 6:30PM Israel Time
Dr. Jason Lustig, Lecturer and Israel Institute Teaching Fellow at the
University of Texas at Austin’s Schusterm
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