[bksvol-discuss] Re: What is Mandatory Vs what Are Guidelines for Books (was Re: Re: was Navigation what do members prefer?)

  • From: Regina Alvarado <reggie.alvarado@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sun, 25 Nov 2012 09:30:00 -0500

Judy:
Well put! This is an interesting thought! What are the requirements for the
publishers? Are they adhering to the 20, 18, 16, 14 convention? Are they
making sure there are page breaks, etc.? Not if what I have seen of
publisher books.  The few I have read don't even have page breaks or
numbered pages.  If Daisy is so darned important, why aren't the publishers
held to the same things we are as volunteers? I personally do not have any
problem with trying to make it as Daisy friendly as I can, but if someone
buys a book from iTunes or Amazon, they are not Daisy.  I read my books in
Braille, then transfer to Word in .doc and change to RTF.  Then I have to go
through fonts and bolding.  It is a lot of work that publishers just don't
do.
Reggie

-----Original Message-----
From: bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Judy s.
Sent: Saturday, November 24, 2012 7:41 PM
To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [bksvol-discuss] What is Mandatory Vs what Are Guidelines for Books
(was Re: Re: was Navigation what do members prefer?)

HI Evan and all,

Again, I entirely agree that and heartily promote that we follow what I 
originally posted, as that was pulled directly from the manual. smile. 
However, we've all been told repeatedly that these are not required 
standards and that books will not be rejected if they don't precisely 
meet them, and that most of what is in the volunteer manual is not 
mandatory.

We volunteers can all argue about this until the cows come home, but 
there is very little that has been written down as mandatory and required.

Here's what's required and mandatory, straight from Bookshare. Log in as 
a volunteer and go to this link for the full details: 
https://wiki.benetech.org/display/BSO/2.+Topics+for+Submitters+and+Proofread
ers

A.  Must contain both copyright holder and copyright date
B.  Cannot be copyrighted dramatic works
C.  Cannot be proprietary digital books, or obtained in breach of 
contract, or illegally
D.  Cannot be standardized testing materials
E.  Must not already be in the library, or must be of higher quality 
than the current version
F.  Must contain Page Breaks that correspond as closely as possible to 
the print edition (a book must have at least 90% of its page breaks)
G.  Must contain Page Numbers that correspond as closely as possible to 
the print edition (required to have page numbers on at least 90% of 
their page)
H.  Books must be complete (Title/author page, Copyright page, Table of 
Contents, Dedication, Acknowledgments, Main text of the book)
I.  Must be submitted in a single file
J.  Cannot be exams, Teachers' Editions, course packets, or sample 
course materials

That's it.  That's all that's required.  Everything else we do is 
encouraged, and often strongly encouraged, and often we're told it's 
required and then we're told it isn't, but when it gets down to it, 
those ten things are all that are mandated under Bookshare policy, at 
least as far as it's been shared with volunteers in writing.

As a volunteer, I find this frustrating. As staff rotate we get told 
various things are required, then they aren't, then they've changed, 
then they haven't. The confusion on this list reflects that constantly.  
We volunteers remember what we were taught under one staff member, and 
then another one comes in and someone else is taught something else, and 
that of course is what they remember. And then what we're supposed to do 
shifts back to what the first volunteer was told to do.  There is no one 
standard that sticks.

Personally, I've begged Bookshare staff for over five years now to make 
a whole lot of what we do, like font sizing for daisy navigation, very 
specific and required.  But I've been told again and again that setting 
these things as requirements chases off new volunteers, that it's too 
intimidating, and that the majority of volunteers who stay won't 
continue if they have to follow a whole bunch of standards other than 
the 10 listed above.

For me, it does the opposite. if I have a specific clearly laid out list 
of what has to be done that I can check off and say, yup, I did that, I 
learn how to do it through the process of meeting that standard. And I 
feel we wouldn't  end up with the confusion that we constantly have 
going on here.

But that's my opinion and I'm not in charge. grin. Plus, I don't work 
with the hundreds and hundreds of volunteers that the staff do, so I can 
only speak from what I perceive from my own little corner of my own 
little house. The big picture that staff sees of what works and what 
doesn't to train and retain volunteers could be vastly different. smile.

Judy s.

On 11/24/2012 1:26 PM, Evan Reese wrote:
> Hi Judy,
>
> While what I wrote earlier was technically correct, I do think it is 
> better to follow the approach of 16-point chapter headings. In 
> addition to having the advantages of consistency and simplicity, it 
> can also eliminate unnecessary work.
>
> As an example, I had a book which I recently submitted in which I 
> started by putting the titles of the parts in 16-point and the chapter 
> titles in 14-point. But then, well into the book, the author decided 
> to put some subheadings into one of his chapters. So I had to go back 
> and resize all of the fonts I had done. It didn't take a huge amount 
> of time, but it was still extra work.
>
> So I am backpeddling -) on what I said earlier. Because although it 
> wasn't exactly wrong, following the guidelines is a better approach 
> for multiple reasons: First, as others have pointed out, it is 
> consistent. Second, it is simpler to remember. And third, unless you 
> page through the entire book ahead of time, (and how many of us are 
> going to do that?), you can't be sure you won't have chapters with 
> subsections in them at some point.
>
> Apologies for any part I may have played in causing confusion.
>
> Evan
>
> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Judy s." <cherryjam@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> To: <bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Sent: Saturday, November 24, 2012 12:49 PM
> Subject: [bksvol-discuss] Re: was Navigation what do members prefer?
>
>
>> Hi Ann,
>>
>> While I agree with you in spirit regarding "how it's done", in fact 
>> Bookshare has very few actual requirements on what a book must have 
>> to enter the collection.  The volunteer manual, with few exceptions, 
>> provides guidelines on what a book should have in terms of contents 
>> and quality, and how it should be formatted, not requirements. smile.
>>
>> Judy s.
>>
>> On 11/24/2012 6:44 AM, Ann Parsons wrote:
>>> Hi all,
>>>
>>> Gary, the need for stars when there is a change of scene in a book 
>>> is not at issue here.  This all started because instead of repeating 
>>> that volunteers should follow the manual, some people have been 
>>> advocating a laissez faire attitude which is detrimental, especially 
>>> to new volunteers and to the consistency of copy on Bookshare.  They 
>>> talk about the preferred method instead of saying this is how it's 
>>> done. They talk about what you can do instead of what you should 
>>> do.  You can't have laissez faire, you have a manual, it should be 
>>> followed, period!
>>>
>>> BTW, please do not abbreviate Bookshare like that.  As you can guess 
>>> it looks odd, especially to Americans.  We all know we're talking 
>>> about Bookshare, if you need to specify, just say staff. I, for one, 
>>> find the abbreviation offensive.
>>>
>>> Ann P.
>>>
>>
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>
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