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Russell Baker Quotation

“An educated person is one who has learned that information almost always turns out to be at best incomplete and very often false, misleading, fictitious---just dead wrong.” -Russell Baker . Russell Baker Quotation. Class Agenda. Announcements Dale Carnegie

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Russell Baker Quotation

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  1. “An educated person is one who has learned that information almost always turns out to be at best incomplete and very often false, misleading, fictitious---just dead wrong.” -Russell Baker Russell Baker Quotation

  2. Class Agenda • Announcements • Dale Carnegie • Quick Introduction to Module 2 • Basic Training in Library Research

  3. Competition Points Winners Losers As of 9/18/2019

  4. Extra Credit Submissions before 9/16 • If you submitted extra credit to the website before 9/16 and you want credit for it, you MUST resubmit it on the website before Friday 9/20 at 9PM to receive credit

  5. Community Service Update There are no more spaces available to sign up for Wilson Park.

  6. Community Service Opportunity • This Weekend is the Westcott Street Cultural Festival • One-Day Event onSunday, September 22nd • You must sign up for this event BEFORE attending this event • Volunteer assignments include set-up and take-down of chairs and tables, monitoring street barricades, facilitating activities with kids and managing the stages.  • THIS COULD FUFILL ALL 5 HOURS • Festivities start with a kickoff parade at noon and continue until 6:30 PM. Community service hours range from 10:30am-8pm. • You MUST fill out the form for the Westcott Street Cultural Fair and submit it – they will send an email confirmation

  7. Community Service Cont. • Meals on Wheels is having an event on September 24 and are looking for students to volunteer •  Located at 220 South Warren Street from 4:30 – 8:30 • Looking for greeters, people to ride the elevator to the top floor with attendees, clean-up crews, etc. •  Contact Tina Casella (478-5948 x213) asap in order to Volunteer

  8. Career Week Fall 2019 Go to these events to not be a LOSER!!! • Wednesday, September 18 (today) • Newhouse Communications Career Fair • Goldstein Auditorium (Schine Student Center) 4:00-7:00PM • Monday, September 23 • Syracuse University Career and Internship Fair • Barnes Center at The Arch 10:00AM-2:00PM • Includes VPA, Falk, CAS, Maxwell, and Architecture • Whitman School of Management Career Fair • Manley Field House 4:00-7:00PM • Tuesday, September 24 • School of information Studies (iSchool) Career Fair • Goldstein Auditorium (Schine Student Center) 10:00AM-2:00PM • College of Engineering and Computer Science Career Fair • Goldstein Auditorium (Schine Student Center) 3:00-6:00PM

  9. Meet Dale. Sup. • Dale Carnegie was born in Missouri and was raised by poor farmers. • By the end of his life, he had amassed a fortune and is called the founder of self-help. • His book How to Win Friends and Influence People has sold over 10 million copies.

  10. Why should YOU know him? • His principles will help you know how to successfully interact with others. • You will make a lot of friends and a lot fewer enemies. • Learning DC will change the way you view yourself, and in turn, help the way others view you. • His principles will allow you to succeed in life…

  11. Dale Carnegie • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O48JaCuiH34

  12. Dale Carnegie Fireside Chat Featuring…Evan!!

  13. Dale Carnegie Principles (Available on Website) • Don't criticize, condemn or complain. • Give honest and sincere appreciation. • Arouse in the other person an eager want. • Become genuinely interested in other people. • Remember that a man's name is to him the sweetest and most important sound in any language. • Be a good listener. Encourage others to talk about themselves. • Talk in the terms of the other man’s interest. • Make the other person feel important and do it sincerely. • Avoid arguments. • Never tell someone they are wrong • If you're wrong, admit it quickly and emphatically. • Begin in a friendly way. • Start with questions the other person will answer yes to. Let the other person do the talking. • Let the other person feel the idea is his/hers. • Try honestly to see things from the other person's point of view. • Sympathize with the other person. • Appeal to noble motives. • Dramatize your ideas. • Throw down a challenge. • Begin with praise and honest appreciation. • Call attention to other people's mistakes indirectly. • Talk about your own mistakes first. • Ask questions instead of giving direct orders. • Let the other person save face. • Praise every improvement. • Give them a fine reputation to live up to • Encourage them by making their faults seem easy to correct. • Make the other person happy about doing what you suggest.

  14. Famous DC Users http://www.bloomberg.com/bw/articles/2013-07-22/charles-mansons-turning-point-dale-carnegie-classes • Dale Carnegie Training shaped the lives of such people as Warren Buffett, Johnny Cash, Emeril Lagasse, and Charles Manson.

  15. What is Dale Carnegie? • It depends • A tool • A way of life • Good BS

  16. Introduction to Module Two Chapter 2: Use the library Chapter 3: Research players Chapter 4: Design a survey on a societal problem or policy in a specified geographic area

  17. PST 101 Module 2: The Academic Library • Michael Pasqualoni – Public Affairs & Political Science Librarian mjpasqua@syr.edu (315) 443-3715 https://library.syr.edu

  18. Crucial SU Libraries Resources for Module 2 Off-campus access to subscription databases and online articles, etc. –use your: SU NET ID/NET ID Password

  19. Bird Library = shelving location for books covering all Maxwell School disciplines (incl. PST 101) – lesser used books and many print periodicals and journals shelved at off-campus high density storage (aka: SU Libraries “Facility”)https://library.syr.edu/departments/facility.php– request forms appear on library classic catalog item record pages for titles located at the “facility” (next business day delivery Sunday thru Friday with articles delivered by email; books physically delivered to Bird Library’s 1st floor circulation desk) – vast majority of the collection’s periodicals, newspapers, journal articles, etc. available online, 24/7, via the library web site link labeled “journals”(and via 100s of licensed “databases”) Book Locations You can find scanners on the first floor of Bird Library, at almost every computer in the cluster near the book Check-Out Desk.

  20. Module 2 – Pre-Assignment Practice – Sept 18, 2019 PST101 1 point extra credit opportunity for three teams Exercise 2.1 {Locating Quantitative Data} Follow Module 2 instructions and navigate into ProQuest Statistical Insight. Locate a data table relevant to your societal category that contains three pieces of data relevant to that societal category

  21. Module 2 – Librarian Tips – Sept 18, 2019 PST101 Exercise 2.2 {Finding Periodical Articles} Calls for navigation into the main ProQuest database (not ProQuest Statistical Insight) Asks you to locate a newspaper or magazine article relevant to your societal category at any geographic level (but must not be non-U.S. context), which must have been published very recently (see module 2 instructions) and NOT from an academic journal CAN YOU IDENTIFY ACADEMIC JOURNALS? 1 POINT DISCUSSION BASED EXTRA CREDIT OPPORTUNITY

  22. Module 2 – Librarian Tips – Sept 18, 2019 PST101 Exercise 2.3 {Finding Books} You will follow Module 2 instructions and navigate into the library’s SUMMON search engine Objective will be to identify a book about your societal category published within the past 15 years. eBooks and titles published by the U.S. government cannot be used

  23. Module 2 – Librarian Tips – Sept 18, 2019 PST101 Exercise 2.4 {Using United States Government Publications} You will be starting at an open website called the Catalog of U.S. Government Publications http://catalog.gpo.gov

  24. Module 2 – Pre-Assignment Practice – Sept 18, 2019 PST101 1 point extra credit opportunity for three teams Exercise 2.5 {Using United States Census Data} You will use data from the U.S. Census, data finding tool called Quick Facts https://www.census.gov/quickfacts to fill in the entire table appearing in the instructions for this exercise. You will harvest eight variables for your home county (or city/town), a comparably sized county (or city/town) (see instructions) and for the U.S. as a whole Today in class, use the Quick Facts tool to go to the data table for your home “county” and locate the % of persons in poverty

  25. Module 2 – Librarian Tips – Sept 18, 2019 PST101 Exercise 4.5 {Examining News Media Treatment of Surveys} You will follow Module 2 instructions and navigate back into the full ProQuest database You are asked to locate a newspaper article from the past six months that presents survey results and was conducted on ANY subject, not necessarily one you selected in this module. Must be about a target survey population someplace in the U.S. (not another country)

  26. SU Libraries Homepage - SU Libraries Home Page https://library.syr.edu Four (4) Crucial Starting Points

  27. Keeping Track of Sources– Want More Examples of APA Style? For supplemental examples of APA citation style, consider also referring to:In-Text Citation – The Basics - Purdue OWL https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/560/02/ In-Text Citation – Authors – Purdue OWL https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/560/03/ Syracuse University Libraries – APA Guide http://researchguides.library.syr.edu/c.php?g=258089&p=1723658 For additional examples of citing government documents* Cornell University Library – How to Cite U.S. Government Documents - http://guides.library.cornell.edu/c.php?g=134360&p=880403 *Be wary, because formatting suggestions for citing government publications tend to vary. Best advice is to pick a format presented by one guide, matching “type(s)” of government documents you are citing, and stick with that as much as possible (ignore information on book locations applicable only to Cornell campus). Absolutely – model your citations using the APA Guide on the PST (PAF) 101 website – they are examples tailored to fit the Module 2 exercises!!!

  28. Librarian Action Figures Versions 1.0 and 2.0 Based on “Nancy Pearl,” former director, Washington Center for the Book, Seattle – and founder of “If All Seattle Read the Same Book,” a community shared reading initiative launched in 1998 Image and product source: Archie McFee (novelty company) - https://mcphee.com/

  29. DekaDancil Graduate of Syracuse University Works at Syracuse University in the Department of Inclusion, Communication, and Citizenship Focus: POVERTY Tori and Deka – Please Verbally Attack them (for points) • Tori Shires • Graduate of Syracuse University • Chief Development Officer at Syracuse Rescue Mission • Focus: POVERTY

  30. For Next Class • Choose topic and get exercises 2.1-2.3 done by Friday • Aim to finish 2.1-2.6 by next Monday • Start reading chapters 3 and 4 • Email prospective community service form to your TA by 9/27by 12:45 orLOSE 5 POINTS https://paf101.expressions.syr.edu/

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