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In spite of encountering a myriad of challenges in utilization of Electronic Information Resources and Services (EIRS), majority of academic libraries in Kenya are still embracing them. It is for this reason that this study sought to establish the challenges being faced by users of EIRS in academic libraries and to identify ways of overcoming them. The objectives formulated formed the basis of the reviewed literature on the challenges facing users of EIRS in academic libraries and how they overcame them. The study covered five well established academic libraries that use EIRS. The researcher used both quantitative and qualitative research approaches. To arrive at relevant and representative data, the study population was drawn from the five academic libraries. Purposive sampling was used in the picking of chief librarians while simple random sampling was used to select library users who participated in the study. A sample size of 319 was used. Both quantitative and qualitative data was collected and therefore both qualitative and quantitative data analysis procedures were used. On availability of EIRS, majority of the users were aware of EIRS in their respective libraries.
About the author
Mr John Mwaura Ireri has a wide experience in the field of information science. He joined the field in 2002 and has taught both diploma and undergraduate students. He has attended local and international conferences thereby championing library interests and also worked as a deputy librarian and involved in installation of integrated library system.
Summary
President John F. Kennedy lived an extraordinary life. He was awarded a Purple Heart for bravery in World War II. He won the Pulitzer Prize for his book Profiles In Courage. He was the youngest man ever elected president and the first president born in the twentieth century.His commitment to civil rights and his efforts to limit the use of nuclear weapons changed American life. President John F. Kennedy's life and, sadly, his early death, are part of history.
A voracious reader of biographies, President Kennedy has fittingly been the subject of many volumes himself. When asked why he enjoyed reading biographies, President Kennedy replied, "Because they answer the question 'What's he like?'"
In attempting to answer that question, author Shelley Sommer presents John F. Kennedy in his many roles -- as a boy, a young man, a war hero, a politician, a husband, a father, and finally a president. This look at John F. Kennedy, illustrated with photos from the Kennedy Family Collection and the Kennedy Library, gives young readers a look at a dynamic man whose personality and politics helped to shape the twentieth century and continue to influence American life today.