Libraries and the Arctic: Language Education Support
The Arctic inspires awe. This unique region of the world has been studied in many ways by many different disciplines. The discipline of librarianship can also add to its study. In this article, the authors, a practicing Canadian librarian at Brock University in Ontario and an Inuktitut student enrol...
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Institut für Bibliothekswissenschaft Berlin
2018
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.18452/19283 https://doaj.org/article/f60206deafa34fa78780b8ed0a74e345 |
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fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:doaj.org/article:f60206deafa34fa78780b8ed0a74e345 2023-05-15T14:31:36+02:00 Libraries and the Arctic: Language Education Support Karen Bordonaro Shelby Angalik 2018-05-01 https://doi.org/10.18452/19283 https://doaj.org/article/f60206deafa34fa78780b8ed0a74e345 de en ger eng Institut für Bibliothekswissenschaft Berlin 1860-7950 doi:10.18452/19283 https://doaj.org/article/f60206deafa34fa78780b8ed0a74e345 undefined Library Ideas, Iss 33 (2018) library Arctic language education document analysis Bibliothek Arktis Sprachausbildung Dokumentenanalyse info Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2018 fttriple https://doi.org/10.18452/19283 2023-01-22T19:35:52Z The Arctic inspires awe. This unique region of the world has been studied in many ways by many different disciplines. The discipline of librarianship can also add to its study. In this article, the authors, a practicing Canadian librarian at Brock University in Ontario and an Inuktitut student enrolled at the same university, offer a suggested role for libraries to play in the ongoing study of the Arctic. They explore and describe the role of libraries in supporting native Arctic language education. Support for learning and preserving native Arctic languages can be found in library collections, spaces and services. This article looks at support of native speakers and other interested language learners, support of language research, support of language preservation, and support of new publishing opportunities that can be provided by or through libraries. These language support examples come from a document analysis that perused web sites, conference proceedings, published scholarship in the form of books and articles, newspaper sources, and personal background knowledge of the authors. Documents were collected, categorized, and described. The language support categories that emerged illustrate the many different ways that libraries can engage in native Arctic language education support. In offering this role, the authors hope to provide a means for librarians to learn more about the Arctic as well as a way for libraries to contribute to knowledge of the Arctic. Article in Journal/Newspaper arctic language Arctic Arktis Arktis* inuktitut Unknown Arctic |
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German English |
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library Arctic language education document analysis Bibliothek Arktis Sprachausbildung Dokumentenanalyse info |
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library Arctic language education document analysis Bibliothek Arktis Sprachausbildung Dokumentenanalyse info Karen Bordonaro Shelby Angalik Libraries and the Arctic: Language Education Support |
topic_facet |
library Arctic language education document analysis Bibliothek Arktis Sprachausbildung Dokumentenanalyse info |
description |
The Arctic inspires awe. This unique region of the world has been studied in many ways by many different disciplines. The discipline of librarianship can also add to its study. In this article, the authors, a practicing Canadian librarian at Brock University in Ontario and an Inuktitut student enrolled at the same university, offer a suggested role for libraries to play in the ongoing study of the Arctic. They explore and describe the role of libraries in supporting native Arctic language education. Support for learning and preserving native Arctic languages can be found in library collections, spaces and services. This article looks at support of native speakers and other interested language learners, support of language research, support of language preservation, and support of new publishing opportunities that can be provided by or through libraries. These language support examples come from a document analysis that perused web sites, conference proceedings, published scholarship in the form of books and articles, newspaper sources, and personal background knowledge of the authors. Documents were collected, categorized, and described. The language support categories that emerged illustrate the many different ways that libraries can engage in native Arctic language education support. In offering this role, the authors hope to provide a means for librarians to learn more about the Arctic as well as a way for libraries to contribute to knowledge of the Arctic. |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Karen Bordonaro Shelby Angalik |
author_facet |
Karen Bordonaro Shelby Angalik |
author_sort |
Karen Bordonaro |
title |
Libraries and the Arctic: Language Education Support |
title_short |
Libraries and the Arctic: Language Education Support |
title_full |
Libraries and the Arctic: Language Education Support |
title_fullStr |
Libraries and the Arctic: Language Education Support |
title_full_unstemmed |
Libraries and the Arctic: Language Education Support |
title_sort |
libraries and the arctic: language education support |
publisher |
Institut für Bibliothekswissenschaft Berlin |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
https://doi.org/10.18452/19283 https://doaj.org/article/f60206deafa34fa78780b8ed0a74e345 |
geographic |
Arctic |
geographic_facet |
Arctic |
genre |
arctic language Arctic Arktis Arktis* inuktitut |
genre_facet |
arctic language Arctic Arktis Arktis* inuktitut |
op_source |
Library Ideas, Iss 33 (2018) |
op_relation |
1860-7950 doi:10.18452/19283 https://doaj.org/article/f60206deafa34fa78780b8ed0a74e345 |
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undefined |
op_doi |
https://doi.org/10.18452/19283 |
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