[Skip to Content]
Visit us on Facebook Visit us on FacebookVisit us on Twitter Visit us on TwitterVisit our RSS Feed View our RSS Feed
NEC Spotlight November 17th, 2024
CategoriesCategoriesCategories Contact UsContact Us ArchivesArchives Region/OfficeNEC Main Site SearchSearch

Posts by archive: October 2016

You are viewing the post list, filtered by archive date. Select a post below for the full content.


Oct

28

Date prong graphic

How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Logic Models (The Chili Lesson)

Posted by on October 28th, 2016 0 comments

By Michelle Malizia, Director of Library Services for the Health Sciences, University of Houston I’ll start with a full disclosure: I am a late convert to logic models. Many years ago, I worked in a department that, for a period of time, became governed by logic models. This experience made me fear… no, hate… logic models. … Read More »

Posted in: Blog

Oct

21

Date prong graphic

How Many Interviews Does It Take to Assess A Project?

Posted by on October 21st, 2016 0 comments

FAQ from NEO users: How many interviews or focus groups do we need for our qualitative assessment project? Our typical response: Um, how much money and time do you have? At which point, our users probably want to throw a stapler at us. (Karen and I work remotely out of an abundance of caution.) Although… Read More »

Posted in: Blog

Oct

14

Date prong graphic

Meet the NEO’s New Program Assistant Kalyna Durbak

Posted by on October 14th, 2016 0 comments

I am pleased to introduce the NEO’s new program assistant, Kalyna Durbak, MLIS, who joined our staff on October 3.  Kalyna will be our go-to person for managing the NEO website, providing technical support with webinars, and helping with the “roll-up-your-sleeves” work involved in carrying out evaluation projects. Kalyna began working for the UW Health… Read More »

Posted in: Blog

Oct

07

Date prong graphic

What’s in a Name? Convey Your Chart’s Meaning with a Great Title

Posted by on October 7th, 2016 0 comments

Some of you may be working on conference posters and paper presentations for Fall conferences.  And some of those will probably include charts to demonstrate data representing a lot of hard work on your part.  In most cases you have minutes to use that chart to get your audience to understand the data. Stephanie Evergreen… Read More »

Posted in: Data Visualization

This project is funded by the National Library of Medicine (NLM), National Institutes of Health (NIH) under cooperative agreement number UG4LM012343 with the University of Washington.

NNLM and NETWORK OF THE NATIONAL LIBRARY OF MEDICINE are service marks of the US Department of Health and Human Services | Copyright | HHS Vulnerability Disclosure | Download PDF Reader