HSS Library

February 28, 2006

Dictionary of Sociology

Filed under: For Sociology students — hsslibrary @ 3:42 am

An online Sociology Dictionary is available.

Search the NTU OPAC for A Dictionary of Sociology, written by Marshall, Gordon.

This online dictionary is a very useful reference tool, especially when reading highly theoretical Sociological texts.

Infodesk tip of the day

Filed under: Information for students, Useful tips — hsslibrary @ 3:21 am

If you are looking for an article published in a particular journal, try searching for it under the E-Journals page.

If NTU subscribes to that particular journal, the next page will indicate which database has access to that particular journal. This is much faster than scanning the list of journals which each database subscribes to.

February 14, 2006

Chinese Calligraphy @ HSS Library

Filed under: Commentaries and pictures of HSS activities — hsslibrary @ 5:22 pm

“Calligraphy + Old People = Boring” This was the equation in my head whenever the word is mentioned. My formula changed on the 10th of Feb 2006 when HSS Library played host to the Chinese Calligraphy session where we invited the famous artist, Dr. Tan Ching Yam.

I discovered that a few chinese characters, brushed on the red cloth carries deep meaning, a beauty only appreciated by the wise and deep thinkers.

I also learnt that during Chinese New Year, the Chinese will hang an inverted Fortune character (“FU”) at home. This is a symbol to signify their hope that wealth will descend in their home.



From the left: Tan Han Yong (Sociology Subject Librarian), Chia Yew Boon (Head of HSS Library), Mr Chew Ho Son (Divisional Director for Office of Finance/Calligrapher) and I, Lisa holding the inverted character, “FU”.

The Many Forms of E-Collaboration: Blogs, Wikis, Portals, Groupware, Discussion Boards, and Instant Messaging

Filed under: Information for students — hsslibrary @ 12:54 pm

Cheryl’s read of the week
Title: The Many Forms of E-Collaboration: Blogs, Wikis, Portals, Groupware, Discussion Boards, and Instant Messaging ,  By: Fichter, Darlene, Online, 01465422, Jul/Aug2005, Vol. 29, Issue 4
Database: Academic Search Premier
The following extracts are from the full text article:

KNOW YOUR ENVIRONMENT

When choosing a collaboration tool, you need to know your workplace culture and environment. What IT infrastructure is in place already that you can leverage? Are there financial and human resources available to purchase, install, and maintain an application? You need to know the users and their requirements. Are they early adopters of new tools? Will they take a chance and invest a bit of time? Are they skeptical and risk-adverse? Do you need to start with a leaner, easy-to-use tool to build demand for more advanced features, or is your user community demanding more granularity, security, and workflow options?

Who are the stakeholders and champions? Can they communicate the value of the new collaboration tool?

DEFINE YOUR REQUIREMENTS

Three requirements are paramount in choosing the right collaboration tool for your environment–communication, sharing, and management.

How frequently do people need to communicate? What types of communication is preferred–asynchronous or synchronous–text, voice, or video? What access is needed to previous communications?

How often do groups want to share documents and other digital objects? Do they need to do this in real time, or can material be shared in a document repository? Is it a community of trust? Can everyone see and edit all materials, or how granular do your permissions need to be? Is there a complex approval process or a simple one? Will documents be created collaboratively in the online space or with external desktop applications that are added to the system? Is version control needed?

How many users will be involved in more than one group or collaborative space? What degree of standardization from group to group is required?

COLLABORATION AND SOCIAL SOFTWARE

Collaboration tools such as Weblogs, wikis, and instant messaging open up the possibility of allowing organic self-supporting and self-organizing to form beyond the firewall. Many organizations aren’t ready for a bottom-up approach in which individuals seek to affiliate with others of similar interests. Think about how we use IM. We add our buddies, create our own groups, and organize them to meet our personal and work goals.

Your intranet team will need to carefully assess your workplace culture to find a good match between organization needs and the different collaboration tools. Sometimes bottom-up tools such as wikis and Weblogs will work best. In other cases, a bulletin board or commercial product developed to cater to the needs of communities of practice or portal toolkit is the best match. Keep in mind that you probably will need to provide a suite of tools. It’s unlikely that one tool will work for all. Take time to explore new collaboration tools so you’re ready to help out the next team or group that wants an online collaborative space.

Comments? E-mail letters to the editor to marydee@xmission.com.

 
 
 

February 13, 2006

Enter the realm of the wordsmith

Filed under: Cool sites, Information for students — hsslibrary @ 9:33 pm

Before I took the lexicology and lexicography course in University, I used to think that all words in the dictionary are all the words that existed. Any word that falls outside the printed dictionary pages are not “real” words. I gradually learnt that words change their meaning over time, new words are continuously coined and no dictionary editor can ever claim that they have documented every single word that existed in the language.

Check out the short snippet for more

www.wordsmith.com

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