Tag Archives: conference

My first ACRL WA/OR … in the Pack Forest!

On the way to the Pack Forest for the ACRL WA/OR joint conference, Uta and I visited a few academic libraries  — slide show will be forth coming.  But this post is about my first visit to the amazing retreat center, in the woods at the Center for Sustainable Forestry at Pack Forest.

 

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There were about 90+ people in attendance, from a variety of academic libraries including research libraries and community colleges, for this 2 day event.  OSULP had about 7 of us in attendance (including our ACRL OR President Uta!).  Susan Barnes Whyte was the keynote to open up the day  “Your ACRL: An Update from the Board” so she mainly talked about ACRL nationally – its mission,  goals, demographics in the association etc. There was some discussion on ACRL nationally, should it be a part of ALA or its own entity (I feel strongly it should stay in ALA as we can learn from each other regardless of what type of library we are working in currently and we NEED to work together not in silos!) . Another short discussion was on if ACRL is supporting/recruiting  more paraprofessionals and offer more continuing ed leading to certification (not much time to discuss and this could be a great small group discussion at another time).  An interesting note in the national ACRL membership trends shows membership drop off after 5 years  is this perhaps until they get tenured?  What can ACRL do to keep people involved regardless of tenure?  Susan also noted that the  ACRL Plan for Excellence might be adding a 4th goal relating to how libraries effectively navigate changing landscapes.  She mentioned some upcoming library themes  (external pressures)  ACRL was researching:

  • credentialing/badges – might relate to non MLSers
  • curriculum/assessment
  • changing roles of librarians
  • future roles of conferences?
  • academic library as publisher
  • other HE organization
  • budgets!!!
  • professional ethics and large corporations and privacy

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Session 1: BLURRING THE LINES:  Encouraging Undergraduate Student Success Through Partnerships  (U of W librarians)

Key themes:

  • odegaard library  — focuses on UG/student learning focused
  • partnerships – for diverse viewpoints + collaboration –but be prepared to collaborate DEEPLY (more than colocation); sharing cultures, do not underestimate culture clashed, rethink what you want to assess together.
  • holistic view of the student – student support must transcend divisions
  • A need to support the “Hidden Curriculum” – understanding scholarship and inquiry which use to be the expectation by college – and includes subject content, college prep, working with new populations (1st generation, transfers), no GED curriculum —  so, how to transfer skills across courses?

odegardresearchwriting They created the OWRC (Odegaard writing and research center) 70+ tutors, 5 LIS students, 4 librarian tutors. both writing and research tutors collaborate: key:  “writing is where research issues come out, librarians need to be in the midst of that process”   … metalanguage for processes of inquiry – threshold concepts, joint writing and research librarians, recursive process employing reading, writing and discussion to create knowledge.

Other collaborative programming ideas from UW:

  • Health and wellness programming:  peer health educators in the library
  • Music Programming: 1 hour pop up performances such as a campus String Quartet.   “take a study session with a soundtrack”   Quiet areas for students too. Assessment show it calmed students and made them feel good while studying; Also it  connected them to the space and was a shared experience.
  • The gallup purdue index 2014 states  “feeling supported and having deep leaning experiences mean everything when it comes to long term outcome for college graduates” 

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Session 2: Let Your Love Open the Door To – Student Development Theories  (OSU Librarians!)

Their presentation will be better than me summarizing… and since they are local, just go ask them about it! https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B_xclEG6DYt7Rng1SVgyOVJoOEE/view

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LIGHTENING ROUNDS

1 – Emma at Pierce College discussed opening doors to work with adjunct faculty in teaching and working at the ref desk.  Spend time on boarding, allowing them time to share ref desk questions and project work, give them a chance at co-teaching,  integrated reflective practices, and host an in-service. Adjuncts need to be part of and understand the culture of the library, they need time to debrief on ref questions etc.  See more:  goo.gl/1FimYU 

2 – Beyond Academia “what happens after I graduate?” AND #3 – University of Western States in PDX  both spoke about similar ideas:   why not teach a workshop/class for those getting ready to graduate. They will not have access to library resources so show them Open Access resources, ILL options, where is your local public library, information through their prof organizations, etc .  One library now offers a class the last quarter of their study  “so you are graduating now what?”  Students are surprised they can’t access literature after graduating!  It’s about managing vs meeting expectations.  Offer them options to help guide them once they graduate. She actually shows them a license agreement contract that says “no alumni”  (so they know we arent just being mean 🙂  She also shows how to set up alerts for TOCs and RSS/Feedly and of course open source and government stuff.

DAY 2

Library as a Lightning (talk) rod for Cross Campus Collaboration (Poppy, UW Tacoma) 

  • determine the gaps saw in grad students
  • created TAC  talks (as in Tacoma – aka “TED talks”
  • like Scholars Studio at UW Seattle
  • one topic 10 lightening talk events, 20 slides, 15 sec each, timed
  • gives grad students a chance to practice presenting
  • why the library? already the connecting to research, neutral territory, interdisciplinary
  • refreshments and reception afterwards
  • materials added to the IR
  • then integrated a peer review process as well

Reference in your Pjs (Nano Burling WSL)

virtual reference – after hours references study what was asked during the night. found they asked a lot of high level research questions

Bringing the stacks to Buzzfeed (Emily, UW)

Taught 5 sessions of a course that was in both jewish & Spanish departments that was everything from stacks to spec collections.  Cool idea – had them do a browsing activity instead of scavenge hunt – send to a general section in the library to review books related to their specific area. She also asked them : where are you actually doing your reading (buzzfeed, blog, facebook, etc). She let them posted their final work on Blogs or Buzzfeed.

Library as Open Education Leader Grant Summary (CC librarians)

LSTA grant  for CC in WA – a need to put librarians within the Open Ed process; a need to create open education advocacy plans by librarians . These librarians  created a course to teach how to talk to people and create your advocacy plan (beyond what is OER).  They used Press Books for it. Suggested best practices:  envio scan and find your support networks;

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Trivia Night was also a lot of fun!

 

ACRL 2015… from BFW

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ACRL2015 in Portland was an exciting whirlwind of learning and chaos for me –  and I was super happy to drive a few hours north than fly across county for the conference 🙂

 

As part of the coordinating committee –  co-chair of the Innovations committee  – we were in charge of running the “fun” stuff such as the unCon, yoga, smoothie bikes, BigFoot, battledecks, 1st timer bingo, conference reads, lounge, lunch/food trucks, etc.

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IMG951517[2]I also had a blast presenting with an amazing group of librarians on a panel early Thursday morning – Keep it Green: Leading Sustainable and Successful Online Teams.  These are librarians I have worked with virtually and successfully within ACRL committees – all of them were also on Innovations.  We are hoping to present this panel talk again in a virtual format maybe through LLAMA or other venues as it was well received am I believe useful to many who are running online committee and groups.

I attended a number of other sessions, hit or miss at times (some poor speakers or not useful choices for me) but I always try to find at least one takeaway for any session.  One session slot had 3 different panels discussing student workers, advisory teams and using students in renovating a library, and a poster on empowering student workers all offered some ideas. Turning student library jobs into high impact practices talk shared ideas on setting up student workers with specific real world skills, connections to their courses, reflection time, and methods to connect with their  other student workers. By including students in this process the students could better use this library position in interviews and future employment. These librarians connected with other departments on campus who hired lots of students to share ideas, tips and co-training. The student advisory talk showed how the connection of student with the dean/director of the library really showed them how valuable their input was – but be sure not to include your student workers as they have a more biased view of the library.  If organized well, the advisory team could be a real boost to the students for their resume and skill set. The last speaker covered the design-model-build using students in an architecture department, to help assess, plan and design an outdoor sculpture area by the library. Working with students on real world projects  – wow great idea!  Though I have a feeling the Valley Library has already implemented a number of these ideas already so I hear…

I also attended a number of space planning, makerspaces, ethnographic workshops and UX sessions. I have read a lot about these concepts and done some of this work in past jobs so there wasn’t too much new information but always some takeaways. In the UX for the people talk, the biggest concept I took with me was “rethink when you have to say no to a user.”  The space planning/redesign session learned about new spaces such as teen booths or data diners created in little nooks, reservable and the 5×5 rule for weeding (is the item used less than 5 times, over 5 years and at least 5 in our consortium own it). Oh and the horticulture students creating a healthy snack option – an apple vending machine!  In the cognitive mapping session I found out about cartodb.com and floorplanner.com as tools for mapping. Interesting takeaway from their sharing was how our most heavily traffic areas of the library contained the most low identification items according to the students (items such as new books, librarian offices, journals, print materials in general).  The makerspaces session (pdf) included usingLegos in your library. Megan Lotts has some creative and inexpensive ways to bring creative and critical thinking skills to the library without buying a 3d printer and being high tech. There was also a session that shared survey results on academic libraries and resources lists (though the conference I ran on academic libraries and making missed his list 🙁

I enjoyed the lightening round sharing on Sustainability Across the Academic Library – there were a lot of panelist and a lot of ideas to follow up on from Charney’s  7 part sustainability action plan for her library, and Tanners Seed Lending Library tips. Most of this panel’s discussion is found in the book Focus on Educating for Sustainability: Toolkit for Academic Libraries by Jankowska.  And the BOF lunch with SustainRT folks is always refreshing!

On saturday I concluded with session on responsive web design (we already do that here  at the Valley Library, I now know!),  survey of our users (feeling questions and how do you use your time in the library were key), and applying  Universal Design and Accessibility to your website (design principles such as hierarchy, chunking, color, accessibility and layering were discussed)

Beyond that I enjoyed visiting the many posters, including some of our own, hanging with the ACRL bigwigs at the Chairs reception, and excitement over the next ACRL in my hometown of Baltimore in 2017!

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