Dominican University/College of St. Catherine’s

Graduate School of Library and Information Science

 

LIS 7440

Government Publications

Winter 2008

January 12 through April 29, 2008

 

Diane L. Velasquez

Assistant Professor

Office:  Crown 332

Email:  dvelasquez@dom.edu

Office Hours:  Mondays, 2-4 PM and by appointment; Greyslake – Tuesdays, 4:30 – 5:15 PM

Office Phone: 1-708-524-6594

 

Course Description (from Bulletin): Selection and acquisition of government publications; their organization and use for reference purposes.

(GSLIS Bulletin, 2006-2008, p 30)

 

Prerequisite or co-requisite: 7010 and 7040

COURSE OBJECTIVES:
To explore the vast, rich, and free information available using government resources and to discuss the policy implications that can occur on laws that are passed. To consider information policies and resources of the government of the United States and to develop an understanding of how these policies have evolved, and how they affect the political system, the average citizen, and the overall structure of information dissemination in this country.

Textbooks and Required Readings:  The textbooks will be available for purchase from the bookstore although you are welcome to purchase through other means (e.g. Amazon, Barnes & Noble.com).  Other required readings and their URLs are listed below.  Some readings will be available via a PDF file in Blackboard and will be so noted.

 

Required Texts:

 

Used copies of the book of Tapping the Government Grapevine are available from Amazon and http://www.abebooks.com/ for a reasonable cost. 

Hernon, P., Dugan, R. E., & Shuler, J. A. (2003). U.S. government on the web: Getting the information you need (3rd ed.). Westport, CT: Libraries Unlimited. ISBN: 1591580862.

Kerwin, C. M. (2003). Rulemaking: How government agencies write law and make policy (3rd ed.). Washington, DC: CQ Press. ISBN 156802780X

Robinson, J. (1998). Tapping the government grapevine: The user-friendly guide to U.S. government information source (3rd ed.). Phoenix, AZ: Oryx Press ISBN 1-57356-024-3

Recommended:

 

Reitz, J. M. (2006). ODLIS – Online dictionary for library and information science.  Westport, CT: Libraries Unlimited.  Retrieved August 1, 2007, from http://lu.com/odlis/

 

Additional readings will be assigned as appropriate in the course schedule and will be available on Blackboard or through the library.

 

Computer Accounts

If you do not have a College of St. Catharine’s email account, please obtain one. This will allow access to the university’s online databases.  This is how I will officially contact all students.

 

 

Grading Criteria

Percentage

Points

 

 

 

Kerwin Essays

10%

10

Government Reference Worksheets (5@10 points each)

50%

50

Legislative History Paper on a Public Law

10%

10

 

 

 

Group Project – Total

15%

15

Pathfinder on a Government Policy

 

10

Group Evaluation

 

5

 

 

 

Class Participation

15%

15

Total Points

100%

100

 

 

Description of Assignments

  1. All assignments are expected to be written at a graduate level. 
  2. Points will be taken off for grammatical errors and typos.
  3. Students are to use the APA style manual only. 
  4. All papers are to be double spaced and in a 12 point Arial or Times Roman font only and will be double spaced with the exception of the notes and block quotations... 
  5. Please make sure your name, the name of the class, semester and date is on the first page of each paper. 
  6. Utilize one (1) inch margins. 
  7. Indent the first word of a new paragraph rather than separating paragraphs with two double spaced returns. 
  8. Have page numbers on all pages – no exceptions. 
  9. Be submitted on time. Papers submitted after the due date will lose points before being marked for content and style. 
  10. Appendices, attachments, and bibliographies do not count as the required number of pages. 
  11. Assignments will have a naming convention of LastNameFirstInitialName of Assignment.  Example:  VelasquezDWksht1.  No exceptions.  Assignments that do not follow the naming convention will have a .5 deduction on the assignment.

 

Written assignments are due by 11:59 PM on the date assigned.  Assignments are to be turned in via Blackboard to the digital drop box unless previous arrangements have been made with the instructor.  Late assignments will be marked down one point per day late. No exceptions.

Method:  This class is conducted entirely on Blackboard.  There will be one face-to-face meeting at St. Catherine’s on January 12, 2008 at 9:00 AM until Noon.  There will be a Monday announcement each week discussing the topics of the lectures to be posted, discussion threads, and any assignments that are due. 

Participation:  15 Points

The Saturday, January 12, 2008 face-to-face meeting is mandatory unless other arrangements are made with the instructor in advance.  Please remember to be on time and to turn off all electronic devices including cell phones, pagers, PDAs, I Pods, and any other electronic equipment that may be with the student. 

Discussion Boards: Each student will be required to post substantively once a week to both of the two discussion board questions for the class.  The postings should not repeat information that has already been posted but should be a different aspect of the topic.  There will be two discussion threads posted each week. Discussion board questions will be posted on Tuesday and each student has until the following Monday at 11:59 PM to post a response.  Each post is worth half a point for a total of 1 point per week.  The 15 points that class participation is worth can make a significant difference on your total grade.

In addition to the two weekly discussion boards, there will be the following other discussion boards:

Faculty Office (FO):  This is where to post general questions about the general operation of the course.

Share Resources: This is one board that we will use all semester.  As you find interesting books, articles, web sites, conferences, or any other bits of information that are relevant to government documents, please post them here so that we can all benefit.

 

Community Café:  Any discussion that doesn't belong on any of the other boards goes here.  I won't keep up with this board; it is for you.

Readings: There will be readings for each week. It is expected that readings will be completed prior to the lectures and postings for the discussion boards. There will also be some optional readings that will be available. This will be listed in the Course Information section of Blackboard with the Week the readings pertain to.

No Disparate Treatment:  Everyone in the class plays by the same “rules.”  There are no “side deals.”

 

 

Kerwin Essays

Due:  February 5, 2005

10 Points

Paper: There will be three short essays chosen from five questions on the Kerwin book that will be worth 10 points. The essays will be due by February 5, 2008 at 11:59 PM.

Worksheet Assignments

Due:  February 19, February 26, March 11, March 25, and April 8, 2008

Worth:  5 worksheets at 10 points each for a total of 50 points (5 @ 10 points = 50)

For each worksheet, make sure your name is on the page along with the date.  Please save the files using your last name and first initial and what assignment it is (for example:  VelasquezDWksht1) and if this naming convention is not followed there will be a deduction on the assignment.  The worksheet assignments are to give the student practical experience in finding information on the web for government documents. Although there are print and microfiche still available in the libraries, the main focus will be the federal government on the Internet. The worksheet assignments will take a couple of hours to complete. The first worksheet will take more time than the others because it will be (in most cases) the first foray into government documents and government web sites. It is not unusual for the first worksheet to take four to five hours. These assignments should be done individually for the student to get the full exposure for this course. All assignments will be deposited to the digital drop box on Blackboard by 11:59 PM on the dates noted below.

Legislative Worksheet – due February 19, 2008:  The assignment will entail searching the Internet for basic information to acquaint the student with how government information is structured on the web for the Legislative branch of the government.  For example, Library of Congress’s American Memory, Government Printing Office, Congressional information on bills or laws, and other sites.  The outcome for the assignment is to effectively search for information in the legislative branch of government.  The students will need to provide the search strategy, web site URL, and provide the answer to the questions.  Please be aware that this can be an extremely time consuming assignment (think a four to five hours or more for the first time at least).  After the first assignment, it does become easier to find government information on the web. If all three parts of the answer (search strategy, web site URL, and answer) are not provided for each questions, partial points will be deducted for each thing missing.

Executive Branch, Part 1 Worksheet – due February 26, 2008:  The assignment will entail searching the Internet for government resources to find specific items in the executive branch as it relates to history and social science.  For example, White House, National Archives & Records Administration – Presidential Libraries and other sites.  The outcome for the assignment is to effectively search for information in the executive branch of government.  The students will need to provide the search strategy, web site URL, and provide the answer to the questions. 

Statistical Agencies Worksheet – due March 11, 2008: The assignment will entail searching the Internet for government resources to find statistical information. The outcome for the assignment is to effectively search for information on the major statistical web sites (Census Bureau, Bureau of Labor Statistics, etc.) for specific questions. The student should provide the search strategy, web site URL, and provide the answer to the question. In order to receive full points for each answer, those three requirements listed above must be there.  Just providing an answer and the URL will only gain partial credit.  The search strategy is just as important as the answer and URL.

Executive Branch Part 2 Worksheet – due March 25, 2008:  The assignment will entail searching the Internet for government resources to find specific items from the executive branch relating to the sciences and health.  For example, weather information from NOAA primarily hurricanes and tornados, science information on earthquakes, volcanoes, maps, Department of Interior information through United State Geological Survey (USGS), Fish and Wildlife (FWS), National Park System, and other sites.  The outcome for the assignment is to effectively search for information that relates to math, science, nature, and other sites of interest.  The students will need to provide the search strategy, web site URL, and provide the answer to the questions. 

Judicial Worksheet – due April 8, 2008:   The assignment will entail searching the Internet for government resources to find specific items for the judicial branch of the government.  For example, US Supreme Court cases, Bankruptcy and Circuit Court locations, information on decisions that impact the interpretation of the law, and other sites.  The outcome for the assignment is to effectively search for information in the judiciary branch of government.  The students will need to provide the search strategy, web site URL, and provide the answer to the questions. 

The worksheets will be worth 10 points each and each answer must have the following to receive full credit:

1.      Search strategy for each answer

2.      The web site URL

3.      The answer to the question

If any of the three items are missing, there will be deductions.

Legislative History Paper

Public Law Selections due:  February 26, 2008

Paper due:  April 15, 2008

10 Points

With the advent of the Internet and the numerous resources available through THOMAS and commercially on Lexis/Nexis or Westlaw, this research paper is not that difficult. Therefore, students will explore legislative histories of laws passed in the 1990s or earlier. This way you will be challenged to use resources that are less familiar and less friendly. While you may choose your own law by submitting a public number, the instructor cautions you to avoid popular ones which seem to require a law degree to figure out why Congress did what it did. There should be no duplications among students regarding the public laws that are selected. All public law selections are due by February 26, 2008 via email to the instructor. In the event of a tie on public laws selected, the time and date stamp of the earliest submission will be used to break the tie. The purpose of this paper is to force everyone to look at the variety of legislative/executive materials available, comparing commercial and public domain resources, and understanding documentation of the legal process. There is a page limit of 10 pages, double spaced, not including the bibliography in the APA citation style. The assignment will be due April 15, 2008 at 11:59 PM to the digital drop box. The paper should be saved as a MS Word document (.doc) or a rich text format (.rtf) if you have word processing software like Word Perfect or MS Works. I have personally done a number of legislative histories for papers and such and would be happy to answer any questions that come up through the "Faculty Office" discussion board.

Think of yourself as someone investigating the law that you have chosen and need to find out the salient points that would interest the public. You are building a paper trail of anything and everything you can find on the law – not analyzing the law at this point. Can you find the following?

1.      A copy of the bill(s) including who sponsored it, when it was introduced, what Congress and session it was introduced, etc. Including

a.      Committee activities (hearings, reports, prints, documents)

b.      Records of the full House/Senate debate if any and votes

c.      Presidential interest or lack thereof in the legislation

d.      How the law is reflected in the code, regulations, courts, news

2.      What reference tools were the most useful (Thomas, etc.)? What was the most frustrating? What is the most challenging about documenting this information (bibliographically)? Were the commercial tools (Lexis-Nexis Congressional, for instance) easier to use than the government produced through GPO Access or LC Thomas tools?

3.      Could you follow this exercise to assist users in working their way through the documentation?

4.      What could you study more if you found yourself working with legislative histories a lot?

The above is not an all inclusive list of things that can be discussed. There are many times in hearings, testimony, or discussions on the House or Senate floor that can have large implications for how the law is eventually passed.

Government Information Pathfinder Project

Topic due March 11, 2008 at 11:59 PM via email

Due April 29, 2008 at 11:59 PM

15 Points:        Pathfinder:                  15 Points

                        Group Evaluation:      5 Points

This is to be a group project of two to three students depending on the class size. The intent is to have the group use a number of resources/databases and what has been learned throughout the semester to prepare a bibliographic guide about a policy topic. The policy can be from any agency, however, it needs to be focused in a way that a normal citizen who does not have the expertise can find the information and understand it. Check the Catalog of Government Publications or Thomas. This is not to be webliography. Time may be an issue but let me reassure you that it always so in research librarianship. If you can do this in a timely and efficient manner, you will have the confidence to instruct/work with users so they can do so. The majority (90%) of the materials included on the bibliography must be government publications (.gov or print sources). The preferred format for this assignment is by creating web page using web page development software like Macromedia Dreamweaver or MS Front Page. If you choose to hand code using HTML or XML, please remember to allow enough time to get the project completed. All groups must have unique topics. Please turn in topic requests by March 11, 2008 at 11:59 PM via email to the instructor. Topic requests can be turned in prior to March 11, 2008. Remember first come, first serve on topics. In the event of a tie, the time stamp when it was received will be the determining factor.  There should be no more than 50 resources in each pathfinder.  All the links should be working when the pathfinder is turned as I will be checking every link in the pathfinder as part of the grade.

Background: In preparing a pathfinder on Database Legislation, what are the necessary documents and policy statements that would need to be included? For example, knowledge of the European Union (EU) policy would be necessary along with the current U.S. position. This should include a background on all information related to it. An example of this pathfinder will be posted on the Blackboard web site.

The dates of the assignments will be noted in the Course Calendar. These dates will be strictly adhered to. Late work will be accepted but will lose 5% of the grade for each day it is late. No exceptions.

Group Evaluation:

  1. Give your group number and list the members of your group.  
  2. Please evaluate each member of the group including you. Give each member a rating from 1-5 with a one being poor to five being excellent.  
  3. Please discuss the positive aspects of working with this group.
  4. Please discuss the negative aspects of working with this group.  
  5. Overall, how would you rate this experience of group work? (Rate: 1 poor through 5 excellent)

 

Grades and Grade Point Equivalents:

 

The following grades and their grade point equivalents for the Dominican University Graduate Schools are:

 

Alpha Grade

Numerical Equivalent

A

4.0

A-

3.67

B+

3.33

B

3.0

B-

2.67

C+

2.33

C

2.0

C-

1.67

 

 

Academic Honesty and Integrity:

 

Student plagiarism is the deliberate presentation of the writing or thinking of another as the student’s own. In written or oral work a student may make fair use of quotations, ideas, images, etc., that appear in others’ work only if the student gives appropriate credit to the original authors, thinkers, owners or creators of that work. This includes material found on the Internet and in electronic databases.

 

Cheating entails the use of unauthorized or prohibited aids in accomplishing assigned academic tasks. Obtaining unauthorized help on examinations, using prohibited notes on closed-note examinations, and depending on others for the writing of essays or the creation of other assigned work are all forms of cheating.

 

Academic dishonesty may also include other acts intended to misrepresent the authorship of academic work or to undermine the integrity of the classroom or of grades assigned for academic work. Deliberate acts threatening the integrity of library materials or the smooth operation of laboratories are among possible acts of academic dishonesty.

 

Learning in the Web-based course environment

How to get most from your e-learning experience in this course?

1.      Read the objectives for each learning unit.
2.      Read (and/or print out) the descriptive content of each unit provided in Course Material section of the course Web site.
3.      Participate weekly in the class discussions as described in the "Discussion Board" section below.
4.      Complete the assignments and group projects within in the time provided.

Organization of the course Web site on Blackboard:

ANNOUNCEMENTS:  Information of general importance to the students (news, reminders, changes, etc.). All announcements will be also sent to students e-mail addresses as listed in Blackboard. Posted: Regularly each Tuesday and as needed.

SYLLABUS: "One in all" document with instructor's contact information, course description and objectives, required readings, assignment descriptions, grading procedures, course schedule, course logistics for e-learning and other course policies. Posted: Once at the beginning of the semester.

FACULTY INFORMATION: Contact information, photo and short biographical profile of your instructor. Posted: Once at the beginning of the semester.

COURSE MATERIAL: Descriptions of individual instructional units with instructional goals, required readings, description of unit content, study questions and other materials relevant to successful mastering of the course. Posted: See the schedule.

ASSIGNMENTS:  Links to worksheet assignments, Kerwin essay, legislative history paper, and the final pathfinder group project that count toward the final course grade. Posted: See the schedule.

COMMUNICATION:  Area where students can communicate with other students in the course and the instructors. Features include: Send E-mail: For sending email to all fellow students, individual students, groups, and instructor. Important note: all course related e-mails that are not private in nature should be posted to the appropriate discussion list and NOT sent to the instructor personally. 
Roster: List of students enrolled in the course and their e-mails.

DISCUSSION BOARD: Place to participate in electronic discussions by posting questions and comments. 

Faculty Office: This discussion board is reserved for general discussion about course logistics (e.g., deadlines, technical problems).

Share Resources:  This is one board that we will use all semester.  As you find interesting books, articles, web sites, conferences, or any other bits of information relevant to government documents, please post them here so that we can all benefit.

Community Café: Any discussion that doesn't belong on any of the other boards goes here.  I don't plan on keeping up with this board.  It is for you.

Weekly Discussions This discussion board is reserved for substantive discussion of the content covered in individual instructional units of the course. The discussion lists will be moderated and regularly monitored by the instructor. The instructor reserves a right to remove any postings that contain content deemed to be unsuitable for academic communication in a course setting.

STUDENT TOOLS: Various electronic tools that help students make the best use of the Blackboard course Website. 

Digital Drop Box:  A place to electronically submit assignments.
Check Grade: A place where students' grades will be posted.
Manual: Online manual about using Blackboard courseware.

To submit documents in the digital drop box, below are some instructions to guide the student through them.  For word processed documents, you need to save the file as a Word document or Rich Text File only so that it can be viewed by your instructor.

1.      Save your document in a location on your computer that you can easily find.

2.      Login to BLACKBOARD as usual and access the course.

3.      Inside the course, select STUDENT TOOLS on the left hand menu.

4.      Inside the STUDENT TOOLS area, select the DIGITAL DROPBOX button.

5.      You will see the DIGITAL DROPBOX with two buttons.

6.      ALWAYS CLICK the SEND FILE button.

7.      Click BROWSE to attach the file you want to submit.

8.      Use COMMENTS to send a message (optional).

9.      Scroll to the bottom of the screen and click SUBMIT on the right side of the screen.


Course Schedule & Readings

Assignments are due to the digital drop box unless otherwise noted.

Week 1 – 1/12/08

Lecture

Introduction to LIS 744; Review Syllabus; Policymaking overview

In-class work

Introductions

Assignment

 

Readings

 

 

Week 2 – 1/22/08

Lecture

Policymaking

Assignment

 

Readings

Robinson, Ch. 9

Kerwin, Preface, Ch. 1-3

 

Week 3 – 1/29/08

Lecture

Policymaking

Assignment

 

Readings

Kerwin, Ch. 4-6

 

Week 4 – 2/5/08

Lecture

General Government Information

Assignment

Kerwin essay due by 11:59 PM

Readings

Hernon, et al., Ch. 1-3

Robinson, Ch. 1-4

 

Week 5 – 2/12/08

Lecture

Congress & Legislative Agencies

Assignment

 

Readings

Hernon, et al., Ch. 4

Robinson, Ch. 8

 

Week 6 – 2/19/08

Lecture

Executive Branch, Part 1

Assignment

Legislative Worksheet due by 11:59 PM;

Readings

Hernon, et al., Ch. 5

Robinson, Ch. 10

 

Week 7 – 2/26/08

Lecture

Census Bureau

Assignment

Executive Branch Pt. 1 Worksheet due by 11:59 PM; Public Law Choice for Legislative History due by 11:59 PM via email to dvelasquez@dom.edu

Readings

Hernon, et al., Ch. 8

Robinson, Ch. 12

 

Week 8 – 3/4/08

Lecture

Other Statistical Agencies

Assignment

 

Readings

 

 

Week 9 –3/11/08

Lecture

Executive Branch, Part 2: Science, Health & Technology

Assignment

Statistical Agency Worksheet due by 11:59 PM; Pathfinder Topic due via email to dvelasquez@dom.edu by 11:59 PM

Readings

Hernon, et al., Ch. 6

Robinson, Ch. 6&7

 

March 17-24, 2008, Spring Break

 

Week 10 – 03/25/08

Lecture

Quasi-Government Agencies

Assignment

Executive Branch, Part 2 Worksheet due by 11:59 PM

Readings

 

 

Week 11 – 04/01/08

Lecture

Judiciary Branch

Assignment

 

Readings

Hernon, et al., Ch. 7

 

 

Week 12 – 04/08/08

Lecture

CIPA, Patriot Act, FOIA

Assignment

Judiciary Worksheet due by 11:59 PM

Readings

Ashcroft Memorandum [FOIA]

Essex, D. (2004, November/December).  Opposing the USA Patriot Act:  The best alternative for American librarians.  Public Libraries, 43(6), 331-340.

Executive Order 13233 regarding restricting Presidential and Vice-Presidential materials and when they would be released to the public.  This particular EO caused litigation to be filed to overturn it.

Hamilton, S. (2004). The war on terrorism: Consequences for freedom of expression and the integrity of library users.  IFLA Journal, 30(3), 199-207.

Public Law 109-177 Section 106

 

 

Week 13 – 04/15/08

Lecture

E-Government

Assignment

Legislative History Paper due by 11:59 PM

Readings

Clinton, W. J. (1997, July 1). E-commerce and government memorandum.

Clinton, W. J. (1998, November 30). Memorandum re: e-commerce.

Clinton, W. J. (1999, December 17). Memorandum re: e-government.

E-Government Act of 2002

 

Week 14 – 04/22/08

Lecture

Wrap Up

Assignment

 

Readings

 

 

Week 15 – 04/29/08

Lecture

Evaluations

Assignment

Pathfinder, Paper, and Group Evaluations due by 11:59 PM

Readings

 

 

Assignments Due Dates

All assignments due at 11:59 PM to the Digital Drop Box unless otherwise noted

 

Due Date

Assignment

2/5/08

Kerwin Essay

2/19/08

Legislative Worksheet

2/26/08

Executive Branch Part 1 Worksheet

2/26/08

Legislative History Law choice via email

3/11/08

Pathfinder Topic choice via email

3/11/08