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No. 35: The Industrial Book in the Industrial Era: 1820-1940 29 July - 2 August 1996 |
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1. How useful were the pre-course readings?![]() 1: Will be quite useful. 2: They were useful, but I would have appreciated more specific guidance, as these were huge overarching topics. 3: Fairly. 4: Useful, but I thought some of them too broad. I would have liked the entire bibliography (handed out the first day) to have been made available beforehand. 5: Very helpful. 6: Interesting, but not as stimulating as MW. 7: Quite. (But see no.7, below.) 8: Good ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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2. Were the course syllabus and other materials distributed in class useful (or will they be so in the future, after you return home)?![]() 1: Good, extensive bibliography will be quite useful. 2: The syllabus, only somewhat; the reading lists, very useful. I plan to plunge into them soon. 3: Very ![]() ![]() |
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3. Was the intellectual level of the course content appropriate?![]() 1: Yes ![]() |
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4. If your course had field trips, were they effective?![]() 1: Thoroughly enjoyed MW's presentation on Walt Whitman in Special Collections using the Whitman books! A tour de force. 2: To Special Collections ![]() |
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5. Did the actual course content correspond to its RBS brochure description and Expanded Course Description (ECD)? Did the course in general meet your expectations?![]() 1-2: Yes 3: Yes, very much so. 4: Yes; yes and no ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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6. What did you like best about the course?![]() 1: Liked the fact that it has evolved into more history ![]() ![]() |
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7. How could the course have been improved?![]() 1: Maybe a little more focused at times. Perhaps more field trips or hands-on experience. Maybe more on non-trade specialized publishing firms, though hard to cover everything in a week. 2: As I mentioned, pre-course reading could have been more specific. Otherwise it seemed a fine and balanced overview of a field which could easily fragment. 3: Even more "broad strokes" interpretation of what all the details add up to, but then I suppose this is wishing on a star if the research just hasn't been done. 4: I'd like a little of the last day on the first ![]() |
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8. Please comment at will on the quality/enjoyability of the various RBS activities in which you took part outside of class, eg Sunday afternoon tour, Sunday night dinner and videos, Bookseller Night, tour of the Etext Center or Electronic Classroom, printing demonstrations, evening lectures, &c.![]() 1: Really liked Dan Miller's talk on the American Service Editions ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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9. Any final thoughts?![]() 1: RBS is always intellectually stimulating, fun, and exhausting! I highly recommend the experience. 2: Since I only learned of RBS three months ago, I was stunned to learn that so many of the students returned year after year. But I'm going to try to come again myself, so I guess it no longer surprises me. 3: Thanks for the unbelievable weather! 5: Highly recommended. There's more to c19 books than crummy paper and insurmountable bibliographic problems! 6: Look forward to my seventh return visit. RBS is terrific. 7: Spend the time. Spend the money. It is worth it, without a doubt. 8: I have taken Sue Allen's and Michael Twyman's courses. I assumed/hoped that this course would address production processes and issues about c19 books not covered in those courses, even though that is not admittedly what the course description said it would do. Nevertheless, with a group of people with diverse backgrounds, MW managed to hit the high points (and some very detailed points) nicely. I think this was a hard course to teach to this group of people! MW describes it as a course in transition. If I were the instructor, I might like to define my audience more narrowly. Given all that, this was a very useful course. It was also thought-provoking in a way that most RBS courses aren't. So there was both information and intellectual content (which sometimes are different!). 10: Do it! Stay on the Lawn. |
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Number of respondents: 10 |
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*The tuition of one student (10%) was funded by a fellowship. |
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There were ten students: three were rare book librarians (30%), two were full-time students (20%), one was an antiquarian bookseller (10%), one was an archivist/manuscript librarian (10%), one was a conservator/binder/preservation librarian (10%), one was a general librarian with some rare book duties (10%), and one was a rare book/manuscript librarian/archivist/manuscripts (10%). |