NAEB Newsletter (September 1, 1966)

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AVAILABLE NAEB Personnel Service POSITIONS AVAILABLE.SEPTEMBER 1966 (For information, write Miss Yasmine Miria, Personnel Service, at the NAEB in Washington. In order to be considered through these channels, the reader must be an Individual Member of the NAEB, with credentials on file with the NAEB Personnel Service. Non-mem¬ bers can save time by sending the $15 annual dues and $15 place¬ ment registration fee at the time of inquiry.) Sept I Instructional coordinator, new statewide network, salary $13,800. Required: master's degree (one degree in education) curriculum and ETV expertise, and public school teaching and/or administrative experience. Sept 2 Radio Station Manager for 2.5 kw FM in rapidly growing midwestern univer¬ sity. Duties include programing and training of student operators. Facility is expected to go stereo in 1967 and boasts finest equipment available. Masters preferred. Salary range: $840-$1,000 per month for 12 months. Available Sep¬ tember. Sept 3 Chief Engineer for growing college in the Rocky Mountain are to be respon¬ sible for total technical operation, maintenance, design and development of all CCTV, FM radio and audio recording facilities. Salary $8,800 for a 50 week contract. Sept 4 Instructor in Broadcasting for large state university in the northwest. Position involves teaching of broadcasting courses, primarily in the radio area. Also occasional teaching of Fundamentals of Speech as well as advisory work with the student-operated university station. Applicant should have a Master's de¬ gree plus some experience in college teaching as well as in radio broadcasting. Salary $6,000. (Positions 5 through 7 are with an expanding state university in the northeast. Candidates with teaching experience preferred. Twelve month positions with one month vacation.) Sept 5 Senior producer-director to produce and direct ITV programs at the college level and to participate in the planning and development of a dynamic, grow¬ ing CCTV campus network. MA or equivalent. Extensive experience in ETV and/or ITV. $9,550-$ I 1,230. Sept 6 Producer-Director to produce and direct ITV programs primarily at the col¬ lege level, although some assignments may include elementary school tele¬ casts. MA or equivalent with experience in ETV and/or ITV. $8,270-$9,840. Sept 7 Producer-Director to produce and direct ITV programs primarily at the college level, although some assignments may include elementary school telecasts. BA degree and experience in ETV and/or ITV. $7,140-$8,540. Free to NAEB members, from the Pub¬ lications Office, University of Illinois, Ur- bana, Illinois 61801: TV and Higher Education, by the SREB, describes 10 examples in the South. Television Tape Recording Systems: A Guide for School Administrators, by Warren L. Wade. Equipment Guide for Classroom Televi¬ sion, published by Sylvania. Report: Programed Instruction in An Art Gallery, by R. M. Diamond, Uni¬ versity College, University of Miami. Summarizes a study supported by The Fund for the Advancement of Educa¬ tion. A Chance for Change details 17 individ¬ ual state programs conducted throughout the U. S., aimed at advancing educational levels for disadvantaged children. All proj¬ ects were funded under Title I, Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. Il¬ lustrated. Single copies free. U. S. Office of Education, Publications Unit, Washing¬ ton, D. C. 20202. 1966 Schoolman’s Guide to ETV Com¬ munications, outlines and evaluates basic systems, estimates budgetary costs. An ap¬ proach to planning based on needs and goals. By R. Walton Clarke. Jerrold Elec¬ tronics Corp., Systems Products, Distribu¬ tor Sales Division, 401 Walnut St., Phila., Pa. 19105. Specification and Selection of a Video¬ tape Recorder for Educational Applica¬ tions. $1 per copy. Western Radio and Television Association, 633 Battery St., San Francisco, California 94111. Choosing Films, Using Films, Selected Film Lists, Audio, a new 4-section cata¬ logue. Free from the Educational Film Li¬ brary Association, 250 West 57th Street, New York, New York 10019. Films What’s In a Word?, 24 half-hour pro¬ grams. Host is Robert Smith, English de¬ partment instructor, University of Santa Clara, California. The series was produced by KQED, San Francisco. At minimum fees, supplementary materials for distri¬ bution to viewers: (1) Dictionary of Eng¬ lish Word-Roots (2) Wall chart listing of common word roots. Cineposium, 13 half-hour programs, pro¬ duced by KQED. Actors, directors, pro¬ ducers, writers and film editors look at new and established films, voice their opinions. For information about either series, write Indiana University Foundation for Educa¬ tion Television Stations—NAEB, 317 East Second Street, Bloomington, Indiana 47401. UNESCO, Minds of Men, 16 mm. 29 min. Free. Write Films Officer, Office of Media Services, Department of State, Washington, D. C. 20520. Funds for Advanced Study The Nezv York State Herbert H. Leh¬ man Graduate Fellowships in Social Sci¬ ences and Public International Affairs: Ninety Fellowships are awarded annually for study at graduate schools in New York State. Applicants are not required to be New York residents, must be U. S. citi¬ zens. $4,000 and $5,000 per year categories. December 2 is the deadline for application. Write to Livingston I. Smith, Division of Higher Education, The State Educational Department, Albany, New York 12224. U. S. grants for study at a university in the American Republics Area, awarded un¬ der the Hays-Fulbright Act: Awards pro¬ vide round-trip transportation, tuition, books and maintenance for one academic year in one of 18 countries. Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree or equivalent, be proficient in the spoken language of the country selected. Graduate students up to and including the M. A. level are eligible. Preference is given to single students. Col¬ lege and university students may apply through campus Fulbright program advi¬ sors. If not affiliated with an educational institution, write the Institute of Interna¬ tional Education, 809 United Nations Plaza, New York, New York 10017, or an HE regional office in Chicago, Denver, Hous¬ ton, San Francisco, Washington, D. C. Closing date is Nov. 1, 1966. MEETINGS 1966 SEPTEMBER 14-15 ETS Program Service Committee, Bloomington, Ind. 17-18 NAEB Executive Committee, Wash¬ ington, D. C. 19-20 ETS Board of Directors, Washing¬ ton, D.C. 26-28 Wingspread Conference on Educa¬ tional Radio as a National Resource, Racine, Wisconsin OCTOBER 12-14 American Council on Education, New Orleans 23-26 NAEB Convention, Kansas City, Missouri 1967 MARCH 2-4 NAEB Region II, Jackson, Fla. APRIL 1- 2 NAB Association for Professional Broadcasting Education, Chicago 2- 6 NEA Department of Audio-Visual Instruction, Atlantic City MAY 1-3 Council on Medical Television, New York City NOVEMBER 4-8 NAEB Convention, Denver, Colorado WRVR-FM, Riverside Church, New York City, cites European jazz in several programs this month, featuring tapes and recordings collected by Max Cole. 4 NEWSLETTER