
Andrew Weiss
Author of Beginning Mindfulness: Learning the Way of Awareness
About the Author
Andrew Weiss is a digital services librarian at California State University, Northridge, with more than ten years of experience working in an academic library. His current and prior research examines the impact of massive digital libraries Such as Google Books and the HathiTrust on Libraries and show more library users, the future directions of open-access publishing, information overload, and the intersection of big data and assessment in Libraries. show less
Series
Works by Andrew Weiss
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- male
Members
Reviews
For the past decade, it has become more and more apparent that the collection of a library is not necessarily “owned” but access is paramount. Already, most digital parts of the school library are much larger than the physical print collection. Websites, databases, audio books, ebooks, and network sharing with other types of libraries are now so commonplace that the OPAC is only one place for children and teens to search. Weiss is a fun read for us to think over in the school learning show more commons because it begins a major forecast into the collections future of all types of libraries. We learn what he means by a massive digital library that rivals the size of any of the largest print libraries we know including national libraries from a number of nations. We learn about efforts to digitize everything by Google and other large digitization efforts. And, it signals the need for a major collection development connection project aimed at children and young people. Utilizing the idea of the Virtual Learning Commons put forward by this reviewer, what is happening is the transfer of physical access to a collection to the access to huge data sources via a young person’s choice of a device in the hand. And, it not only indicates the need for access to the world of published information but also the collection and dissemination of the products that our students create. Perhaps it is time to assemble a brain trust to examine the possibilities of information access, equitable access, and the means to create a new world of information targeted specifically for young people. Reading Weiss just gives us a brief hint into the possibilities. It is a provocative read. Recommended for thinkers and futurists in our midst. show less
A Simple Manual That Really WorksKnowing that most people do not stop their lives to engage in spiritual practice, Buddhist teacher Andrew Weiss has always taught the direct application of practice to daily life. While also teaching sitting and walking meditation, he emphasizes mindfulness — the practice of seeing every action as an opportunity to awaken meditative inquiry. Over the years, Andrew has honed his teachings into an effective ten-week course with progressive steps and home-play show more assignments. Beginning Mindfulness is intended for anyone practicing in daily life without the luxury of long meditation retreats. Weiss skillfully blends the traditions of his teachers into an easy and humorous program of learning the Buddhist art of mindfulness. show less
This book is the closest thing I've got to a meditation teacher at the moment. It's really helping me stay on the path.
Statistics
- Works
- 6
- Members
- 178
- Popularity
- #120,888
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 3
- ISBNs
- 19


