Monday, January 27, 2014

Education

From: Herron, Nancy L. The Social Sciences: A Cross Disciplinary Guide to Selected Sources, 3rd ed. Greenwood Village, Colo. : Libraries Unlimited, 2002. pp. 289-295
Education
Justina O. Osa
ESSAY

Nature of the Discipline 
Education, broadly defined, involves the instruction and training by which people learn to use their physical, moral, and cognitive powers. It can also be defined “as the deliberate, systematic and sustained effort to transmit, evoke, or acquire knowledge, attitudes, values, skills and sensibilities, and any learning that results from the effort, intended or unintended.” 1 Although much of the human learning occurs informally and even unconsciously, most societies have institutionalized some aspects of education. The discipline of education, as a profession and as a scholarly enterprise, is concerned primarily with formal human learning. In this light, Page and Thomas define education as the “process in which one achieves social competence and individual growth, carried on in a selected, controlled setting which can be institutionalized as a school or college.”

Each of the many participants involved in formalizing education carries out different roles. Teachers used to practice the art and science of imparting “to each generation the organized knowledge of the past.” 3 Today the passive acceptance of information that leads to knowledge is passé. Currently teachers are being called upon to package learning materials in such a way that students are stimulated to put their own personal stamp, as it were, on what they are learning. The voice of advocates of active, self-initiated learning is loud and clear. The theory of constructivism is gaining ground and is being applied to instructional activities. 
Constructivism is a theory, based on research from constructive psychology, that advocates that people learn by constructing their own knowledge through an active learning process, rather than by simply absorbing knowledge directly from another source. 4 Teachers are now being expected to assume the role of facilitator, coach, and guide in the teaching and learning process. In an effort to increase their knowledge, students make a serious study of subjects while actively constructing knowledge based on their individual personal context of prior knowledge, skills, dispositions, and feelings. Policy makers influence the conditions under which education occurs by being responsible for the authoritative educational decisions that guide other decisions. 5 
As a result of society demanding change and accountability in the educational arena, policy makers and leaders are faced with complex and multifaceted questions about educational policy making, finance, governance, and management. Scholars of education study the institutionalized process of education in its various settings. At the present time, scholars are being called upon to conduct research that will help devise creative and effective strategies to bring about the changes and reform that are desperately needed to create a fulfilling educational experience. 
Education and the social sciences
Education comprises the formal and informal educational practices from infancy through adulthood, as well as all the knowledge from scholarly disciplines associated with education. A wide range of social science and humanities disciplines form the “foundations” of knowledge in education: psychology, sociology, history, philosophy, economics, anthropology, political science, and law.  
Education is not, precisely speaking, a science but rather a profession that uses virtually all of the social science methods, concepts, and theories. 6 For this reason, educational research has a definite interdisciplinary flavour. For example, much research is done in the history of education. The sociology of education concentrates on education as a social enterprise, examining the behavior and processes of groups in social institutions. The anthropology of education studies the educational functions within “primitive” societies and also anthropological methodologies such as ethnography to the study of education in modern settings. 
Researchers in the economics of education study the production and utilization of resources in society, drawing on related concepts from business administration, political science, and management. Educational policy analysts study matters such as federal, state, and local influence on education; school and university governance; educational law; and other issues derived from the general area of political economy. As a final example, educational psychology studies individual students and teachers in educational settings, focusing on such aspects as human development, attitudes, values, learning theory, metacognition, and learning models. 
Academic subdisciplines of education
Like most academic subjects, education is actually a loosely conjoined group of subspecialities. Although not all educational researchers would necessarily agree with the details of the discussion presented here, it is offered as one way to conceptualize the discipline of education. Another way to become familiar with educational specialities and methodological perspectives is to read relevant encyclopedia articles. 7 
Education as rational activity
The philosophy of education can be divided into two areas: normative, which is concerned with assessing educational aims and purposes, and analytical, which is concerned with explaining and clarifying basic educational terminology and concepts. 8 According to Watson, the philosophy of education tries to interpret the meaning of educational processes by showing its relationship to other human activities. 9 Philosophy of education specialists try to make educators aware of assumptions by asking questions such as, “Who should be educated?” “How should they be educated?” “To what extent does a particular educational system perpetrate injustice?” and “What is the proper way to teach ethical concepts?” 10 Philosophy of education also stimulates reflection on basic issues and concepts that are cardinal to education. Some of these include teaching, learning, knowledge, being educated, and the construct of a “good life”. The major philosophies that have influenced education in America are realism, idealism, pragmatism, progressivism, perennialism, essentialism, and existentialism. 
Educational research uses the same methods as researchers in the social, behavioral, biological, and physical sciences. 11 It is a systematic study of the field of education. The educational researcher uses many research methods and designs such as experimental, survey, historical, ethnographic, literary, and program evaluation. The literature of this academic area frequently addresses questions of validity and reliability. 
Educational specialists
Some educational practitioners and researchers specialize in a particular level of institutionalized education, roughly defined by age cohort. Early childhood education (birth to age eight) concentrates on the social, emotional, physical, and cognitive development of very young children. Infant education (birth to age three), a subset of early childhood education, has an added emphasis on parent/child relationships. These two fields draw heavily on the literatures of child psychology, developmental psychology, and human ecology (also known as family consumer sciences, child and family studies, or home economics). 
Other level-based educational specialities include elementary (grades 1-8), secondary (grades 9-12), and higher or postsecondary education. Professional educators and scholars in all three areas can concentrate on different subspecialities, such as instruction and curriculum development; administration; program evaluation; educational psychology; educational technology; and bilingual, multicultural, or special education. 
Educational inquiry also can center on non-traditional delivery systems—that is, institutionalized systems not necessarily associated with particular age cohorts. Adult and continuous education, sometimes referred to as “lifelong,” “recurrent,” or “informal” education, is an increasingly popular field. Education has become not just a period of formal schooling in students’ lives but life-long engagement. Many types of programs can be offered on a continuing education basis, such as literacy training, career development, vocational/technical training, equivalency education, professional development, and education for personal enhancement. Distance education, which includes independent study and correspondence or home study, is delivery of education for non-traditional students who are unable to attend in normal settings due to geographic isolation, job obligations, physical condition, or other limitations. Advances in new technologies now provide a broad range of technological options to those involved in distance education. Distance education increasingly uses such modern mass communication technology as interactive videoconferencing and electronic instructional audio tools, video tools, electronic data, computer-assisted instruction, computer-managed instruction, and computer-meditated education. Print materials are also used in distance learning. They include study guides, handouts, workbooks, textbooks, and course syllabi. 
Management of educational systems
Educational administration “is concerned… with directing and managing human energy in order to accomplish educational objects which have been formulated by governmental authority and expressed in written policies.” 12 Most people in this field focus on the management or leadership of schools and school systems. Educational administrators often assume many roles in the discharge of their duties. They are leaders, managers, initiators, crisis managers, facilitators, coaches, guides, dispensers of rewards and punishments, mediators, judges, counselors, and comforters. For these activities they need to be well grounded in administrative theory and techniques, politics, school, school law, finance, personnel, psychology, human relations, and other related areas. 
Teaching
Specialists in curriculum and instruction used to concentrate on the systematic transmission of information. The emphasis in teaching has moved away from a model of expert delivery of knowledge from the custodian of knowledge, the teacher, to the student, the empty glass coming to the class to be filled. Teaching has moved to a model in which the classroom becomes a community of learners. Those involved in curriculum and instruction analyze particular subjects—political science, economics, foreign language, science—to design developmentally appropriate instructional activities. Educational media technologists specialize in the creation of materials and procedures for individual students through the use of a variety of multimedia delivery systems, such as computer-assisted learning and interactive television. The marriage between teaching and technology is gaining increased attention as a current trend and issue in education. When one looks into the crystal ball that holds the future of technology in teaching, one finds that the image is clear in places, cloudy in others, but surely a presence is observable. Many in the field of education would prefer that pedagogy drive the use of technology and that technology remain a tool to enhance teaching and learning. 
Learning
Educational psychologists, interested in both cognitive and affective differences among individual students, design and administer tests that measure levels of achievement, aptitude, intelligence, and other personal characteristics. They also carry out research on the psychology of the learning process. The study of multiple intelligence is influencing the theory of how people learn. Howard Gardner, the father of multiple intelligence, asserts that there is not a single intelligence, but rather seven. His view is that multiple intelligences are seven different ways to demonstrate intellectual ability. The seven types of multiple intelligences are visual/spatial, verbal/linguistic, logical/mathematical, bodily/kinesthetic, musical/rhythmic, interpersonal and intrapersonal. 13 
Guidance and counseling specialists use knowledge about normal human growth and development to help students solve personal problems or make career and educational choices. In recent years experts in the field have written extensively about redesigning school counseling programs into a comprehensive format. Integral to the Comprehensive School Counseling Model is the developmental approach. It is an attempt to identify certain life skills and experiences that students need to have as part of going to school and preparing for adulthood. They learn more about themselves and others in advance of problem moments in their lives. The eight strands included in the Comprehensive Developmental Guidance Program (pre-K through 12) are (1) self-knowledge and acceptance, (2) interpersonal and communication skills, (3) responsible behavior, (4) conflict resolution, (5) decision making/problem solving, (6) motivation to achieve, (7) goal setting, and (8) career planning. 14 
Educational occupations
Some educators concentrate on preparing students for particular occupations. Professional pedagogies (e.g. music education, art education, physical education) prepare students to teach in these areas. Professional education prepares students to be competent practitioners of specialized occupations such as medicine, nursing, or law. Vocational, cooperative, or distributive education is part of the baccalaureate degree. 15 Teacher education transmits to future teachers the “body of knowledge and skills surrounding the process of learning and teaching.” 16 It also provides continuing educational training for practicing teachers and can be formal or informal courses, seminars, or workshops. The National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE) monitors how effectively teacher education programs prepare students to teach. NCATE is the only national body charged with the responsibility for maintaining standards and ensuring accountability and continuous improvement in teacher preparation in all teacher education programs. NCATE develops standards and design strategies and processes to ensure and maintain quality in teacher preparation through the initial and continuing accreditation of teacher education professional units at all levels. The new NCATE standards are performance based and have moved from “know what” to “know how”. 
Special cohorts
Other areas of educational practice and research focus on specific groups within society. “Multicultural education is an educational process or strategy involving more than one culture, as defined by national, linguistic, ethnic, or racial criteria.” 17 The aim of multicultural education is to recognize the integrity, contributions, strengths, and viability of people from different backgrounds, while helping students adjust to a modern pluralistic society. 18 The changing demographic characteristics of the American population, and consequently American schools, is a major ongoing phenomenon that characterizes the social fabric of American society and schools. Multicultural education aspires to help all students develop positive cross-cultural attitudes, values, dispositions, perceptions, and behaviors. Multicultural educators believe that identity and positive self-esteem are based on the pride that each child has in his or her cultural group’s history, achievements, solidarity, and loyalty. This belief drives the mandate that the school curriculum, instructional materials and activities, school personnel and school services reflect the multicultural nature of the student body. 
Special education provides educational services designed for exceptional students. Exceptional students are defined as those who have physical, mental, or behavioral disabilities. Special education law and practices have greatly increased access to activities and opportunities that used to be withheld from these students. The inclusion movement promotes the integration of students with disabilities into the regular classroom as opposed to putting students with disabilities in separate schools or classes. Supporters of full inclusion argue that that the practice of segregated education for students with disabilities is a violation of their rights to receive an education as good as that being offered to “regular” students. Both advocates and opponents of inclusion use budgetary reasons to defend their stands. A genuine cooperation between the special education and general education teachers is a crucial variable in the success of inclusion policy. Gifted and talented students are often considered part of this population. 
At-risk education is targeted for a more specific population than either urban or multicultural education and is designed to help students who are likely to fail or be failed by the educational system. It is designed for students who have a high probability of dropping out of school or not achieving in school. The issue of at-risk students has generated a major concern for educators. There is an increase in studies and developmental activities designed to improve the education of students at risk. Some of the predicaments of this group of learners are due to disadvantaged background, low socioeconomic status of their families, geographical location, and weak language and numerical skills. At-risk education includes early intervention programs, specialized curricula, and development of retention and reentry programs. 19 
Urban education is concerned primarily with education that occurs in, and is affected by, the various factors generated by an urban environment. Urban educational specialists can be challenged by having to deal with such problems as a diverse student population, racial segregation, violence, poor housing and living conditions, and significant teacher turnover. Diane Ravitch strongly believes that the new wave of school reform now underway rejects the idea that the failure of a huge proportion of poor children in the inner cities is inevitable. The rescue of urban schools entails dismantling entrenched and patronage-driven school board bureaucracies, holding schools accountable for their performance, and encouraging well-planned experimentation with charter and contract schools and vouchers. 20 
Comparative and international education
As we move into the early part of the twenty-first century, we find a growing set of international economic and social imperatives that are stimulating the globalization of education. Because schooling serves as a strategic instrument for promoting national economic development, globalization of educational policy and reform leads to a significant increase in the emphasis on global awareness. 21 Arnove observed that comparative and international education is enjoying a renaissance. Globalization has infused the ever-present need to learn about each other with an unprecedented urgency and emphasis. 22 
Education and technology
It is expected that a high proportion of jobs in our nation in the future will require some level of computing skills. Positions in education will certainly be affected by the use of computer technology. In educational situations, computers mediate the flow of information, communications, and instructional materials. 23 It is not surprising, therefore, to find that advances in electronic technology are transforming education, causing the educational process to be redesigned, and changing the way students, both young and old, are learning. Technology is promoting the effectiveness of school reform. It enhances the development of new methods of teaching and learning inside and outside the classroom. There are online resources such as lesson plans, simulations, course materials, and research sources to assist both students and teachers in the teaching and learning process. Data, picture, video, and sound bytes are used to revolutionize education. Technology is removing classroom walls as students and teachers interact with colleagues and experts through chat rooms, live video conference, e-mail, and fax machines. Students, teachers, administrators, educational researchers, educational psychologists, educational media technologists, educational specialists, and others involved in the educational process are finding dramatic changes occurring in how they define and carry out their roles. 
In the computer-based learning environment, students are becoming more active learners and better prepared for the digital economy they will function in as adults, and teachers are becoming facilitators. Administrators at all levels are dealing with the cost of providing new resources, as well as using the capabilities of the technologies to improve their work environment. Educational researchers are finding that the Internet and e-mail are having a dramatic effect by facilitating cooperative efforts between participants who are widely separated geographically. Educational psychologists are seeing an effect on learner thinking and the entire learning process. Educational media technologists are facilitating the use of interactive videoconferencing, which is particularly useful in the delivery of distance education. The new technologies are opening up significantly increased educational possibilities for the at-risk student and the disabled. 
Electronic formats will continue to expand and enrich learning experiences. The challenge to education is to integrate the new technology into the instructional programs and to use it to improve learning, reduce costs, and increase accessibility to information. 
The reference environment
Many different types of people use the educational resources in the library. Members of the community are often involved on school boards or in parent-teacher organizations, or are simply concerned about current educational issues. High school students and their parents need information about colleges and the financing of a college education. Professional educators are interested in current developments in curriculum, education technology, and management. These people may either be searching for how-to literature or need scholarly materials. Educational policy makers at all levels of government seek data and opinions on the current status and possible future directions of education. Finally, educational scholars need access to the full range of bibliographic sources and research literature. 
As is always true in a reference situation, the librarian should identify resources appropriate to the needs of the individual in terms of subject, purpose, level of research, and format. For example, the needs of members of the community interested in current educational issues may well be met by popular, nonscholarly sources such as current magazines and newspapers. High school students and their parents, as well as undergraduates seeking information related to college selection, can find the answers to many of their questions in institutional and financial aid directories. 
Professional educators need to ground their practice in the best theories of the day, but they do not always have the time to read the primarily literature. Therefore, professional or trade journals, handbooks, and other meditating sources may meet their needs. A good professional should be aware of the important periodicals and major organizations that produce practitioner-oriented literature in the field. 24 Two of the most important tools for the busy practitioner are ERIC (I-68), a vast database maintained by the Educational Resources Information Center, and Educational Index (I-65).  
The needs of policy makers and scholars, including education students, are more complex and involve the whole range of material from primary to tertiary and from popular to theoretical. One important source of primary information in education is a series of national data-gathering programs largely financed by federal funds, listed in the biography current edition of 2001 edition of The Condition of Education (I-147) as NCES surveys. 25 Examples of educational datasets generated by these programs are the Higher Education General Information Survey (HEGIS), a yearly survey of postsecondary educational institutions in the United States, and the National Longitudinal Study of the High School Class of 1972. These information-gathering programs result in large numerical databases that can be manipulated by the individual researcher. 
Other sources of information potentially useful to the policy maker, scholar, student, or general citizen are listed in this chapter. Titles have been chosen according to their importance to the field. This list is necessarily selective and not comprehensive, and with the exception of a few retrospective titles and some classics in the field, titles included in this chapter represent basic education reference tools. Three books listed in the section on guides are particularly good for information on educational reference books omitted from the present discussion: Nancy O’Brien’s Core List of Books and Journals in Education (I-3), Dorothea Berry’s Bibliographic Guide to Education Research (I-4), and Peter Olevnik’s American Higher Education: A Guide to Reference Sources (I-2).

Given education’s close relationship to virtually all of the social sciences, the researcher must be cautioned not to limit inquiry to sources specifically identified as “educational.” Education is by nature an interdisciplinary field, and researchers and librarians should keep in mind that there may be vital materials located in other areas of the collection than in the obvious (Library of Congress) L class and the (Dewey) 300s. 
The librarian must be prepared to draw on any source listed in this book when dealing with an educational reference question. A major case in point is educational psychology, where much of the primary source material is covered by sources identified as “psychological” rather than “educational”. For this reason, only one educational psychology title is included in this chapter, The Handbook of School Psychology (J-66). Readers should refer to chapter 10 for important educational psychology sources, especially the “Works on Tests and Measurements” section.

Monday, January 20, 2014

Business

“Business is like oil. It won’t mix with anything but business.”


-J. Graham.

“In business, when things aren’t working it’s time to mix it up.”

-Donald Trump, The Apprentice

“When you work your own business, you only have to work half a day. You can do anything you want with the other twelve hours.”

-Anonymous

“Business administration and closely related disciplines probably generate more information sources than any other area in the social sciences.”

-Gary W. White. “Business.” in Herron, Nancy L. Social Sciences: A Cross-Disciplinary Guide to Selected Sources. 3d ed.

Considerable overlap between economics and business
Major functional areas

  • Accounting
  • Finance
  • Management
  • Marketing
Business research concepts
  • Public company
    • Public(ly held) companies are companies whose ownership is publicly traded. These companies are legally required by government agencies to disclose certain financial information to their shareholders. In Canada, public companies are subject to federal and provincial laws.
  • Private company
    • is owned by one or a few owners. Share ownership is not traded on an open market. Some private companies may require approval of sale/purchase of shares by a board of directors.
    • not required to make their financial information public
  • Parent company, subsidiaries, affiliates
  • Industries
Types of business periodicals
  • Trade journals
    • Typically for practitioners in a specific industry, often published by professional trade associations, e.g. Foodservice and Hospitatlity.
  • Popular
    • Available at newsstands, e.g. Canadian Business, Forbes
  • Scholarly
    • Aimed at academic users, e.g. Business Quarterly
Characteristics of business reference
  • Rapid change
  • Complicated
  • Hidden information
  • Fragmentation
  • Bad information (important to use more than one source to confirm data)
  • Lack of analysis or interpretation of data
  • Poorly prepared users
Business information libraries
  • Some public libraries have provided services to the business community for many years, tend to be in major population centres, e.g. Vancouver Public Library
    • Divisions in businesses
  • Canada/Manitoba Business Service Centre Library http://v1.canadabusiness.mb.ca//home_page/research__our_library/
    • Over country, co-operative between federal and provincial governments, focus on entrepreneurs
  • Local businesses
Business information specialist
  • Current awareness essential
    • Local, national, international
  • Need to network with others in the business library field
    • emails
    • listservs
  • Must keep up with current business terminology
  • Must be comfortable working with numbers
  • Online searching more important for business/economics than any other social science
    • Online sources typically more current and comprehensive
    • Average person will use Google to search, businesses may want money to provide information
Popular search topics
  • Company information
    • Competitive intelligence
    • Know the competition and what they are doing so one can incorporate and gain
  • Industry/trade information
    • NAICS or SICS codes
  • Management theory/best practice
    • e.g. TQM total quality management – associated with Japan, came out of US with a band wagon effect, varieties include team building
  • Business climate
    • Is it a good time to start? Is it a good time to expand?
  • Legal and regulatory
  • How to begin and maintain a small business
    • Popular product service
  • Career and jobs
    • Looking for positions instead of businesses to run
Business information sources and formats
  • Company product catalogs and price lists
    • e.g. Thomas Register
  • Annual reports, especially financial reports
  • House organs (internal magazines/newspapers)
  • Company and market studies by investment firms and banks
    • Weigh pros and cons
  • Working papers (discussion drafts of studies), especially regulatory agencies, financial and stock analysts, and trade associations (not all of these will be formally published). Finding aids include
  • Directories especially important
  • Local newspapers may have information not found elsewhere especially on smaller businesses
  • Standards
  • Business statics
    • Governments especially prone to releasing as pdf files which are harder to manipulate
Statistical sources
Information users
  • Business persons
    • Middle and senior management rarely use library personally, prefer personal networking
    • When library used often dealing with a proxy, e.g. admin assistant, secretary
      • Increased chance of miscommunication of actual want
  • Post secondary instructors
    • Current information about changing global business climate
    • Reference sources on variety of firms, industries, markets, e.g. annual reports
    • New approaches to management
  • Post secondary business students
    • Often work in groups or teams researching a particular company, product, or market
    • Trendy management literature popular
    • Preference for Internet sources
  • Non business post secondary students
    • Career and job market information
  • K-12 students and teachers
    • Current career information
  • Laypersons
    • Job material (hot, high paying, jobs of the future)
    • How to locate job listings
    • Resume writing, interviewing
    • Starting a small business
    • Financial management/planning
    • Retirement planning
    • “Suspect” titles abound, items should be popular yet authoritative
    • Beware of American (U.S.) titles in areas where Canadian legislation differs
    • Never give advice

Monday, January 13, 2014

Economics

If all the economists were laid end to end, they’d never reach a conclusion. 
George Bernard Shaw 
There are only two problems in my life. The political ones are insoluble and the economic ones are incomprehensible.

Alexander Douglas Horne
 What is economics?
  • Economics is the study of how human beings coordinate their wants and desires, given the decision-making mechanisms, social customs, and political realities of the society.
  • Economics is the study of how individuals and societies choose to use the scarce resources that nature and previous generations have provided.
Economics is…
  • The science of wealth. – Adam Smith (Father of Economics)
  • The study of men in the ordinary business of life. – Alfred Marshall
  • The study of how society uses its scarce resources. – Economics A-Z (Economist.com)
  • A study of supply and demand.
  • The term economics was coined around 1870 and popularized by Alfred Marshall, as a substitute for the earlier term political economy which had been used through the 18-19th centuries, with Adam Smith, David Ricardo, and Karl Marx as its main thinkers and which today is frequently referred to as the “classical” economic theory. Both economy and economics are derived from the Greek oikos- for “house” or “settlement”, and nomos for “laws” or “norms”.
Definitions
Definitions of economics on the Web: http://www.google.ca/search?hl=en&lr&cr=countryCA&oi=defmore&q=define:economics

Dept. of Economics. U of Manitoba. https://web.archive.org/web/20071129220541/http://umanitoba.ca/faculties/arts/departments/economics/index.html 


Economics
Two main branches
  • Microeconomics is the branch of economics that examines the functioning of individual industries and the behavior of individual decision-making units—that is, business firms and households.
  • Macroeconomics is the branch of economics that examines the economic behaviour of aggregates—income, output, employment and so on—on a national scale.
Microeconomics
  • Microeconomics is the study of individual choice, and how that choice is influenced by economic forces.
  • Microeconomics studies such things as:
    • The pricing policy of firms
    • Households’ decisions on what to buy
    • How markets allocate resources among alternative ends
Macroeconomics
  • Macroeconomics is the study of the economy as a whole.
  • It considers the problems of inflation, unemployment, business cycles, and economic growth.
  • Studies the entire economy in terms of the total amount of goods and services produced, total income earned, the level of employment of productive resources, and the general behavior of prices
  • Can be used to analyze how best to influence policy goals such as economic growth, price stability, full employment and the attainment of a sustainable balance of payments
Two main branches
  • Microeconomics
    • concerned with the small economic unit e.g. the household, a commodity, or an industry
    • dedicated to study of resource allocation (“making ends meet’)
  • Macroeconomics
    • economic relationships on the large scale
      (John Maynard Keynes. The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money. 1936)
  • Microecomics
    • impact of a plant closing on buying behaviour of employees' households
  • Macroeconomics
    • effect of plant closings on the unemployment rate of a province or country
Examples of Micro/Macro concerns
Production Prices Income Employment
Micro- economics Production
output in
individual
 industries
& businesses
How much
steel
How many
offices
How many
cars
Price of
individual
Goods & Services
Price of
medical
care
Price of gasoline
Food prices
Apartment rents 
Distribution
of Income & Wealth
Wages in the
auto industry
Minimum
wages
Executive
salary
Poverty 
Employment
by Individual Businesses
Industries
Jobs in the
steel
industry
Number of
employees
in a firm
Macro-economics National
Production
Output
Total Industrial Output
Gross Domestic Product
Growth Output
Aggregate
Price Level
Consumer prices
Producer
prices
Rate of
Inflation
National
Income
Total wages
& salaries
Total
corporate
profits
Employment 
Unemployment
in the
Economy
Total number
of jobs
Unemployment
rate 

Classical economics

  • Dates from publication of Adam Smith’s Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of the Nations in 1776
    • conflict versus growth; can’t count on everything in times of crisis and revolutions
  • Smith established the school of “political economy” [early name for economics]
  • Classical economics attempted to derive laws that would explain and predict production, distribution and consumption
    • things were changing, needed to record
  • Other noted political economists: David Ricardo, John Stuart Mill, Jean Baptiste Say, Thomas Malthus
    • Malthus noted that there were too many people in the world
Neoclassical

  • Focused on supply and demand and saw economic activity as the outcome of choice
  • Microeconomic orientation
  • Neoclassical theory holds that individuals, households, and companies rationally serve their best interests and that competition sorts out prices, wages, and the markets for goods and labor as the economy moved toward equilibrium.
  • Noted figure: Alfred Marshall.

Keysian economics
  • Based on the ideas of John Maynard Keynes, as put forward in his book The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, published in 1936 in response to the Great Depression of the 1930s
  • Keynes believed market forces will not guarantee full employment so government intervention is needed
  • Macroeconomic is in focus
To understand my state of mind, however, you have to know that I believe myself to be writing a book on economic theory which will largely revolutionize—not, I suppose, at once but in the course of the next ten years—the way the world thinks about economic problems. When my new theory has been duly assimilated and mixed with politics and feelings and passions I can’t predict what the upshot will be in its effects on action and affairs. But there will be a great change…
-John Maynard Keynes
Economics
  • A mathematically based discipline
    • consists of charts and graphics
  • Econometrics (application of statistics to economics) fastest growing field
  • Era of the global economy
    • NAFTA, WTO, EEC
  • Economists advise business, insurance companies, banks, securities firms, industry and trade associations, labor unions, and government agencies. They frequently prepare detailed, quantitative reports about business and economical and financial states.
Sources for economic data
The most important include:
  • National government agencies
  • Trade associations
  • Stock and commodity exchanges
  • Banks, other financial institutions
  • Newspapers, business periodicals
  • Credit institutions
  • Insurance companies
  • Mutual fund managers
  • Stock brokers
Problems and trends
  • decline in the number of undergraduate students majoring in economics
Enrolement 92/93 11,299 Enrolement 96/97 8,437 -25.3
Degrees granted 92/93  4,446 Degrees granted 96/97  3,179 -28.5 

  • Much research done outside universities
  • Difficult to understand – jargon
  • Requires competency in mathematics
  • Intertwining with politics
  • Neglected in typical K-12 curriculum
  • Increasing specialization
Economics
Information users
  • University/college teachers
    • Heavy reliance on textbooks
    • Current issues + economic history & thought
    • Methodology at undergrad level; how do you teach?
  • K-12 teachers
    • Clear popular treatments of basic issues
    • Topical issues, e.g. home financing planning
  • Adults
    • Investment information, RRSPs, RESPs, state of the economy and predictions about future that are clear and easy to understand
  • Children/teens
    • Material to support school curriculum
    • Saving for university
    • Economic aspects of marriage and family

Monday, January 6, 2014

Psychology

Psychology
Diane Zabel and Gary W. White
From: Herron, Nancy L. the Social Sciences: A Cross-Disciplinary Guide to Selected Sources, 3rd ed. Greenwood Village, Colo. : Libraries Unlimited, 2002. pp. 347-349.


Psychology is the scientific study of human and animal behaviour and is concerned with the mental, social, and biological processes influencing behaviour. Hermann Ebbinghaus, a nineteenth-century German psychologist, characterized psychology as having “a long past but only a short history.” 1 Philosophers and physicians in ancient Greece theorized about the relationship between mind and body. However, psychology did not emerge as a distinct discipline until the late nineteenth century. Thomas Hardy Leahey’s account of psychology’s history is a good choice for those who wish to know more about the development of psychology as a discipline. 2
The association between psychology and philosophy is evident in the treatment of psychology as a branch of philosophy in the Dewey Classification System. The literature of psychology is expansive because psychology has linkage to numerous disciplines beyond philosophy. There are connections to other social sciences, particularly sociology, anthropology, education, and business. Sociologists, anthropologists, and psychologists study behaviour in societies, although from different perspectives. Educators and psychologists are concerned with learning. Business has applied psychology to determine what motivates employees or why consumers behave as they do. 
Psychology, more than any other social science, has strong ties to the biological and natural sciences. Both physiology and psychology examine the relationship between the brain and behavior. Zoologists and psychologists study animal behaviour, although psychologists are generally more interested in using animals as substitutes for human populations when the conditions of an experiment make the use of human subjects inappropriate. The integration of mathematics and psychology has been recognised as a separate division of psychology. Because psychology measures and compares various mental processes in individuals and groups, statistics are an important tool. These strong links to the sciences have affected the dissemination of information in psychology. Many types of materials prevalent in the sciences, such as handbooks and annual reviews of research, are also used heavily in psychology. 
The interdisciplinary nature of psychology is reflected in the diversity of its major divisions. Research in experimental psychology concentrates on basic processes such as learning, motivation, and perception. Physiological psychology focuses on the relationship between the body and the mind, particularly the roles of the brain and the nervous system in controlling behaviour. Developmental psychologists observe how people interact with others and how society influences behaviour, particularly attitude formation. The diagnosis and treatment of mental and emotional disorders is the subject of clinical psychology. Educational psychologists study learning and develop instructional materials and teaching methods. Industrial/organizational psychology is concerned with people in the workplace. Psychometrics involve the design of tests and measures for the measurement of psychological variables such as intelligence, personality, and aptitude. 
Psychology is not only a discipline but a profession. In 1988, this dual quality led to a schism within the American Psychological Association (APA), the premier professional organization for psychologists in this country. Academic psychologists charged that the APA was dominated by practitioners and formed a separate group, the American Psychological Society, for psychologists whose focus is teaching and research rather than private practice. 3 Academic psychologists formerly made up the majority of the APA’s membership. This shift parallels a dramatic shift in psychology. Since World War II, applied psychology has grown dramatically. The subfields of clinical, counselling, educational, and school psychology have experienced the greatest growth. 4 Alan Bellack and Michael Hersen, editors-in-chief of a monumental clinical psychology encyclopedia published in 1998, note in their preface to the first of eleven volumes that there has been not only a phenomenal increase in the number of students and professionals in clinical psychology but a corresponding explosion in publishing in this area. 5 They report that hundreds of books are published annually in clinical psychology. In fact, this increasing specialization is an important trend. 
Although there may be tensions among factions of the profession, all subfields of the discipline have a common methodology. Psychology uses empirical methods to obtain data. Direct observation and experimentation are standard techniques used in psychological research. Information may also be obtained from case studies, questionnaires, interviews, and standardized tests. 
Some psychologists make use of machine-readable data files. Although there is no central source of information on datasets relevant to psychology, psychologists use well-known data archives such as the Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Science Research (ICPSR), which is located at the University of Michigan, and the Henry A. Murray Research Center of Radcliffe College. 6 
Almost two decades ago, Anne K. Beaubien outlined the nature of psychology literature in an essay on the research process employed by social scientists. 7 Much of what she wrote is still valid. Researchers often contact colleagues directly to exchange findings, but most of the controlled literature exists in the form of journal articles. Psychologists often collaborate on research; multiple authorship of an article or book is common. Psychologists are anxious to disseminate research results quickly, and books take too long to publish. Because the results of empirical research are published in research journals, articles are regarded as primary rather than secondary sources of information. An emphasis on current research contributes to the heavy reliance on journal literature. An early study of citation analyses in the social sciences documented that up to 69 percent of all citations from scholarly research in psychology were to journal articles. 8 In comparison, the citations to journal literature for the social sciences in general ranged from 29 to 43 per cent. 9 There is a large body of literature in psychology (published in both psychology and library science journals) using citation analysis as a tool to predict journal usage, determine core psychology journals, and guide collection development decisions. One of the best ways to identify these studies is through the excellent bibliography accompanying Margaret Sylvia’s 1998 case study on citation analysis as a methodology for assessing a journal collection in the behavioural sciences. 10 Sylvia analyzed the bibliographic citations to journal articles found in research papers written by undergraduate and graduate students in psychology. She found an overwhelming reliance on recent articles. In her study, 60 percent of the citations were to publications from the 1990s; 31 percent were to articles from the 1980s. 11 Prior to this, Sylvia (in conjunction with Marcella Lesher) had conducted a citation analysis of master’s theses and dissertations authored by psychology and counseling students to determine journal usage patterns of graduate students in psychology. 12 This article is important because it serves as a model that can be used in other disciplines. Two Israeli researchers also employed a citation analysis of master’s theses in psychology to determine how graduate students in psychology use library collections. 13 They found that graduate students make significant use of material from fields outside of psychology, reinforcing the notion that psychology is interdisciplinary. What is most interesting is their finding that these students make rather extensive use of publications that are at least twenty years old. This Israeli study showed much greater use of retrospective material (that is, publications that were published two or more decades ago) than Sylvia’s study. At the same time, however, their data indicated that there is limited use of publications published more than fifty years ago. Like other studies, their research demonstrated that the majority of citations were to journal articles. This pattern was also confirmed in a more recent citation analysis of dissertations in the field of clinical psychology. This Wright State University study found that 35 percent of the references were to books and book chapters while 62 percent were to journal articles. 14 
Monographs and retrospective bibliographies are viewed as less important for research in psychology. Books often take the form of a collection of readings that are directed to the undergraduate user. However, in the late 1980s the American Psychological Association noticed a trend toward more publishing in the form of chapters within books. The Association estimated that as much as 30 percent of the literature in psychology was in the form of books and book chapters. 15 This finding led to APA’s development of PsycBOOKS in 1989, an index of books and book chapters in psychology. Although PsycBOOKS was only published for four years, book and chapter indexing was added to PsycINFO, the major database in psychology, beginning in 1992. Another trend noted by experts is the notable increase in the number of edited books in psychology, perhaps a reflection of psychology’s collaborative tradition. 16 
There are several important German-language and many non-English language monographs published in psychology, but research has indicated that U.S. psychologists rely almost exclusively on English-language material. 17 Professional associations play an important role in the transfer of knowledge. The American Psychological Association alone publishes more than twenty-five research journals and is an important monographic publisher.
Psychology is one of the disciplines that made early use of the Internet to disseminate information. There are vast resources on the Web relating to psychology, many about common psychological problems. Several articles on Internet resources in psychology have addressed this proliferation of sites and the need for review of these sites. Lorrie King’s 1997 article on the Internet as a reference tool in psychology is still useful for background on this topic. 18 Another excellent evaluative article on psychology Web sites appeared in a 1998 “Webwatch” column of Library Journal. 19 In addition to browsing this column, psychology librarians will want to look for articles on Internet resources (as well as other articles pertaining to collection development, reference service, and bibliographic instruction) in Behavioural & Social Sciences Librarian, a scholarly journal focusing on the dissemination and use of information in the social and behavioural sciences.