1,721,159 research outputs found

    [Jane Johnson 1976]

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    Photograph of Jane Johnson sitting in the passenger side of a car with it's door open. She is holding a book in her hands. [1976, Dallas, TX

    Dwight Wetencamp Serves Jane Johnson Dinner

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    Dwight Wetenkamp, newly elected president of the Vernal Chamber of Commerce, serves a stead dinner to Jane Johnson at the Chamber party at Merkley Park

    Sara Jane Johnson

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    This photograph of Sara Jane Johnson was taken by Doris Ulmann in the Brasstown, N.C. area, in 1933 or 1934. Johnson was the wife of Marion Johnson and mother of Gyp Johnson, who was an early woodcarver for the John C. Campbell Folk School. The Johnson family was one of several local families who supported the school's creation and were involved with many of the school's social and community activities in the 1920s and 1930s

    [Terri Stewart, Mary Jane Johnson, and Paul Ellsworth]

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    Photograph of Terrie Stewart (seated), Mary Jane Johnson, and Paul Ellsworth for the Symphony Orchestra Commencement Concert in 1972

    197. Shawl owned by Mrs. Jane Johnson of Kanab, Utah

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    Photographs of and document for a shawl owned by Mrs. Jane Johnson of Kanab, Utah. Belonged to father\u27s grandmother, Margaret Meckle

    Open access policymaking: roles for academic librarians as “change agents” in research institutions

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    Many institutions have voted to pass open access policies. It has often been stated that a “faculty champion” needs to be identified in order for any policy to move successfully through various university stakeholder groups. Librarians have been warned not to make open access a “library issue.” At the same time, academic librarians already possess demonstrated expertise in repository development, have established liaison relationships with departmental faculty, and are most likely to have deep knowledge of scholarly communication and publishing trends. Librarians can leverage this expertise and experience by taking on open access leadership roles in the wider institution. Academic librarians can become true change agents in the transformation of institutional scholarly communication practices. Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, working through a small Senate open access subcommittee with librarian leadership provided by the authors, successfully passed an open access policy resolution in October, 2012.This paper, presented at the QQML Conference in Rome in June, 2013 will be published in the QQML e-journal.Mullen, Laura Bowering and Jane Johnson Otto (2013). "Open access policymaking: roles for academic librarians as “change agents” in research institutions." Paper presented at the 5th International Conference on Qualitative and Quantitative Methods in Libraries, June 4, 2013, "La Sapienza" University, Rome Italy.Superseded by Accepted Manuscript.Peer reviewe

    Open access policymaking: roles for academic librarians as “change agents” in research institutions

    No full text
    Many institutions have voted to pass open access policies. It has often been stated that a “faculty champion” needs to be identified in order for any policy to move successfully through various university stakeholder groups. Librarians have been warned not to make open access a “library issue.” At the same time, academic librarians already possess demonstrated expertise in repository development, have established liaison relationships with departmental faculty, and are most likely to have deep knowledge of scholarly communication and publishing trends. Librarians can leverage this expertise and experience by taking on open access leadership roles in the wider institution. Academic librarians can become true change agents in the transformation of institutional scholarly communication practices. Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, working through a small Senate open access subcommittee with librarian leadership provided by the authors, successfully passed an open access policy resolution in October, 2012.Mullen, Laura and Jane Johnson Otto. "Open access policymaking: roles for academic librarians as 'change agents' in research institutions." QQML e-journal (2014)Peer reviewe

    Box 31, Neg. No. 56080B: Melba Jane Johnson

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    This black and white photograph features a portrait of Melba Jane Johnson - she is wearing a light colored dress and is sitting on a bench. Mrs. W.S. Johnson ordered the photograph. The girl\u27s name is Melba Jane.https://scholars.fhsu.edu/stafford_county/4684/thumbnail.jp

    Jane Johnson e o discurso feminino para crianças em Inglaterra na primeira metade do século XVIII

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    Quando Jane Johnson, nascida em Inglaterra em 1706 e falecida em 1759, organizou um conjunto de materiais diversificados para os seus quatro filhos, não podia imaginar que muitos anos mais tarde o seu trabalho viria a ser procurado e analisado por investigadores dispersos pelo mundo. Jane Johnson nunca foi escritora, no sentido que vulgarmente se aplica a este termo, tendo sido desconhecida até há pouco tempo atrás. Com efeito, os seus dados biográficos continuam envoltos em algum mistério, embora se saiba que era filha do Esquire de Warwick, e que casou com o Reverendo Woolsey Johnson em 1737. Só em 1986 é que a sua obra foi detectada na colecção particular de livros para a infância de Elizabeth Ball, residente em Muncie, Indiana, nos Estados Unidos da América. Hoje, é pertença da Universidade de Indian
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