about us | submit | past issues | links

articles

Kevin McDowell and Derek Henson on working at a Japanese library

Will Ascarza on the fundamentals of resource allocation

Virginia Sanchez on attending conferences

Traci Glass on book jackets

Heather Phillips librarian movie reviews

 

 

Submission Guidelines:

What can I submit?
Articles, essays, photo essays, book reviews, poems, interviews, or anything else tangentially related to library and information science including but not limited to: your experience as a SIRLS student and/or information worker, your own research in the field, and your opinions about major information-related issues. We'd love to hear any ideas you have, especially if you are interested in writing a regular column.

There are no strict requirements for length, but no more than 1,500 words is a good limit to keep in mind. Shorter is great. Reading on the web is different from reading on paper and readers' attention spans are shorter. For class papers you are editing to submit for this magazine, consider making it more readable by perhaps reducing the number of examples or supporting information in the body of your paper. We can help with this!

How do I get it to you?
The web editor would love to get your submission in normal HTML, but she has found Microsoft Word-generated HTML code to be not so fun to work with. If the only way you to know to use HTML is to "save as" in Word, please "save as" rtf or txt instead. Submissions go to Erica Hanke. If you are including photos or other images, send them as separate attachments in JPG or GIF format (72 dpi, if you know how to adjust the resolution - otherwise, don't sweat it).

Deadline: Email Erica Hanke to discuss this difficult question.

What do you do with it?
You will retain all copyrights to your own work. You may submit the same material to another publication at any time. By submitting to this magazine, you are giving permission for your material to be included in BiblioTech and also for it to be retained in the BiblioTech archives in perpetuity. We retain the right to edit for grammatical and spelling errors. We may also make suggestions for altering content to better suit a web-based format.



about us | submit| past issues | links


BiblioTech is brought to you by the Library Student Organization, An American Library Association Student Chapter,
School of Information Resources & Library Science, The University of Arizona
E-mail: elhanke@emai.arizona.edu , URL: http://www.sir.arizona.edu/lso/webzine.htm