AASL Conference Student Award

AASL Conference Student Award

 

Purpose:

The AASL Conference Student Award is intended to introduce a library school student interested in a career in architecture school librarianship to the membership and activities of AASL through attendance at the organization’s annual conference. The upcoming conference will be held in Miami, FL, April 10-12, 2014.

 

Award:

1.    $500 for travel expenses (disbursed to the recipient following the annual meeting after the post-conference report is received by the Awards Committee Chair).

2.    waiver of the annual meeting registration fee

3.    waiver of annual AASL dues for a period of one year

 

Eligibility:

Any student who is currently enrolled in an ALA accredited graduate program and alumni of ALA accredited graduate programs who have graduated within twelve months of the application deadline are eligible to apply.

 

Guidelines:

Prior to the deadline applicants must submit:

1.    a completed online application form

2.    a current resume to the AASL Awards Committee Chair Elizabeth Schaub: eschaub@austin.utexas.edu

 

Requirements:

1.    The recipient of the award must confirm in writing via e-mail that s/he is able to meet the requirement of full conference attendance.

2.    The recipient of the award will submit a brief post-conference report for posting on the AASL Website. The report should outline conference activities and experiences and include an account of how the award supported professional development goals.

 

Deadline:

Friday, February 14, 2014, 12 am PST

 

Inquiries about the award should be directed to:

Elizabeth Schaub

Director, Visual Resources Collection

School of Architecture

The University of Texas at Austin

310 Inner Campus Drive, B7500

Austin, TX  78712-1009

 

 

Serendipity 2014: Children’s Literature in a Digital Age

Serendipity 2014: Children’s Literature in a Digital Age

Saturday, March 8, 2014

UBC Education Building | 8am-4pm (lunch is included)

From practical advice on using literature-based apps with children to learning how authors and illustrators are using social media and electronic publishing, Serendipity 2014 is a must-attend  event for educators, librarians, researchers and literature lovers looking to the future of books for young people.

We have invited presenters who are not only at the forefront of the rapidly-evolving world of technology and children’s books, but are also dynamic, engaging, and will leave you inspired and full of ideas:

Paul Zelinsky (@paulozelinsky): Caldecott-winning illustrator of over two dozen books

Arthur Slade (@arthurslade): Governor-general’s award-winning author

John Schumacher (@MrSchuReads): Library Journal Mover and Shaker, elementary school teacher-librarian, blogger, 2014 Newbery Committee member

Travis Jonker (@100scopenotes): School Library Journal blogger, elementary school teacher-librarian, 2014 Caldecott Committee member

Tim Federle (@TimFederle): Author of Better Nate Than Ever and the forthcoming sequel Five, Six, Seven, Nate! (January 2014)

REGISTER @ http://vclr.ca/registration/

EARLY BIRD REGISTRATION until January 31, 2014: Members $150, Non-Members $165, Students $75

REGULAR REGISTRATION starts February 1, 2014: Members $200, Non-Members $215, Students $100): Author of Better Nate Than Ever and the forthcoming sequel Five, Six, Seven, Nate! (January 2014)

Sarah Ellis – The Writer as Critic: Inside and Outside the Book

Sarah Ellis – The Writer as Critic: Inside and Outside the Book

A talk by the award-winning children’s writer.

12:00 – 1:00 pm
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
The Dodson Room
Level 3, Chapman Learning Commons
Irving K. Barber Learning Centre
1961 East Mall, UBC

Sarah Ellis has always appreciated children’s literature from the multiple perspectives of writer, reviewer, critic, and teacher of children’s literature and creative writing. She will discuss her experience as the insider crafting a story and the outsider striving to put that story into context.

Her fourteen children’s books have won many awards, including the Governor General’s and the TD Canadian Children’s Literature Award. Sarah received a master’s degree in children’s literature after a career as a children’s librarian, and is now on the faculty of the Vermont College of Fine Arts. She has also lectured in Japan, Venezuela, England, Ireland and various Canadian and American locations. She received the British Columbia Lieutenant Governor’s Lifetime Achievement Award in 2013.

The colloquium is sponsored by the Master of Arts in Children’s Literature Program, offered by the Creative Writing Program, the English Department, the School of Library, Archival and Information Studies, and the Department of Language and Literacy Education.

Call for Paper Proposals: “I Will Be Myself”: Identity in Children’s and Young Adult Literature, Media and Culture.

IWillBeMyselfPoster

Call for Paper Proposals

Deadline for submission: February 1st, 2014

A peer-reviewed graduate student conference on children’s literature with keynote speaker Dr. Phillip Serrato

University of British Columbia

Saturday, May 3, 2014

“I Will Be Myself”: Identity in Children’s and Young Adult Literature, Media and Culture is a one-day conference showcasing graduate student research that explores, questions, and analyzes the issues surrounding identity in various elements of children’s and young adult literature. You are invited to submit an academic paper proposal or a creative writing submission that contributes to the existing body of literature and research in the area of children’s and young adult literature studies, which includes novels, films, apps, and picturebooks, as well as other culturally produced modes of children’s literature. We are particularly interested in research and creative pieces that draw upon broadly interpreted themes of identity, which can include liminality, hybridity, Otherness or Othering, gender, and transformation.

Topics may include, but are not limited to:

  • Identity as a critical lens for reading children’s and young adult literature
  • The child or young adult choosing or combining identities
  • Issues of hybridity: hybridity of genre, multimodality, cultural identity, racial identity, sexual identity
  • How ‘otherness’ shapes identity in materials for children and youth
  • Negotiation of self and Other as represented in cultural texts
  • Liminality and other states of ‘being in between’
  • Indigenous identities
  • National identities
  • Boundaries, their creation and transgression
  • Multiple, cross-cultural, and/or transnational identities
  • The role of identity in constructing literature and literacies
  • Reconstructive identity and multiple selves
  • Imagined identities: dreams, fantasy and desire
  • The cultural markers of childhood and adolescence
  • Identity and performativity: a gendered discourse
  • Fluid subjectivities; multiplicity selves
  • The pedagogical implications of identity in various stages of literacy
  • Virtual selves in virtual worlds
  • The ‘coming of age’ trope in 21st century literature
  • Neoliberal capitalism and the individualistic ‘I’
  • Identity embodied: mixed abilities represented in YA and children’s literature
  • Marginalised identities represented in works of fiction for youth
  • Eco-critical understandings of subjectivity
  • Interwoven subjectivities and the individualistic ‘I’

Papers on any children’s or young adult genres are welcome, as are papers that discuss other children’s texts such as film, virtual texts, or graphic novels.  The topics above are a guideline for the proposals we would like to see, but we are eager to receive and review paper proposals on any topic related to children’s and young adult texts.

Please send a 250 word abstract that includes the title of your paper, a list of references in MLA format, a 50-word biography, your name, your university affiliation, email address, and phone number to the review committee at submit.ubc.gradcon@gmail.com . Please include “Conference Proposal” in the subject line of your email.

The conference fee of $18 CAD for students and presenters, and $35 CAD for faculty and professionals, includes morning and afternoon refreshments and a catered lunch.  Please visit our website for more information: http://blogs.ubc.ca/iwillbemyself/

 

 

Call For Papers: Indigenous Special Issue – Cataloging & Classification Quarterly

Guest editors, Cheryl Metoyer and Ann Doyle, invite contributions to an Indigenous Special Issue of Cataloging & Classification Quarterly. This special issue aims to engage an international and interdisciplinary dialogue about Indigenous approaches to cataloguing and classification.  It includes theoretical and applied research that examines processes of representing and organizing documents or their resultant products in Indigenous contexts.  It values practitioners’ perspectives and projects that envision new directions or inspire innovation drawing upon Indigenous methodologies and epistemologies.  The concept of the catalog is broadly defined as a tool for organizing and facilitating access to various kinds of information at different levels of granularity – archival collection, song, image, monograph, multimedia et al – that draws upon multiple sources of metadata in social, political, and ethical contexts.

Call for Proposals

Contributions are welcomed on a range of topics.  The list below is meant to be generative, and we encourage contributors to be creative in their interpretations of topics that fit the theme of representing, ordering, and accessing information in Indigenous contexts.

  • Indigenous theoretical, conceptual and methodological approaches to representing, ordering, and accessing information;
  • Indigenous and tribal libraries’ cataloguing and classification;
  • Structural bases for organizing information in Indigenous contexts;
  • Indigenous names, naming and authority control;
  • Collaboration and partnerships (community/academy; tribal and non-tribal institutions);
  • Indigenous information ethics/ ethics of Indigenous information;
  • Cataloguing and classification for reconciliation;
  • The UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UN 2007) and bibliographic control;
  • Development of iSchool education and curriculum for Indigenous cataloguing, classification, and knowledge organization;
  • Indigenous research agendas in cataloging and classification.

Proposals in the form of abstracts (approximately 300 words excluding references) should be sent to the guest editors by February 15, 2014.  Acceptance of a proposal does not guarantee publication.  All manuscript submissions will be double-blind peer reviewed, and should be in the range of 5,000-8,000 words.

Guest Editors

Cheryl Metoyer (Cherokee), University of Washington, is an Associate Professor and the Associate Dean for Research at the iSchool and Adjunct Associate Professor in American Indian Studies. Dr. Metoyer’s research interests include indigenous systems of knowledge with an emphasis on American Indian and Alaska Native tribal nations; information seeking behaviors in cultural communities; and ethics and leadership in cultural communities.  Ann Doyle is the Head of the Xwi7xwa Library at the First Nations House of Learning, the Aboriginal branch of the University of British Columbia Library. Dr. Doyle’s research interests focus on knowledge organization in Indigenous contexts, Indigenous education, and the interaction of knowledge domains.

IMPORTANT DATES

Abstract submissions (up to 300 words): February 15, 2014

Notification of abstracts review (results): February 28, 2014

Manuscript submission deadline: August 30, 2014

Peer review completed: October 30, 2014

Final manuscript revisions: January 15, 2015

Planned publication date: Spring/summer 2015

The complete special issue becomes available approximately 3 months after all pieces of the issue are received by the publisher.  The individual articles become available online (with DOI) as soon as they are completed (before the whole issue is out).

Cataloging & Classification Quarterly “is respected as an international forum for discussion in all aspects of bibliographic organization. It presents a balance between theoretical and applied articles in the field of cataloging and classification, and considers the full spectrum of creation, content, management, and use and usability of both bibliographic records and catalogs. This includes the principles, functions, and techniques of descriptive cataloging; the wide range of methods of subject analysis and classification; provision of access for all formats of materials; and policies, planning, and issues connected to the effective use of bibliographic records in modern society.” … http://catalogingandclassificationquarterly.com

Instructions for Authors:  “The journal deals with the historic setting as well as with the contemporary, and with theory and scholarly research as well as with practical applications. In a rapidly changing field, it seeks out and fosters new developments in the transition to new forms of bibliographic control and encourages the innovative and the nontraditional.” … http://catalogingandclassificationquarterly.com/instructions.html

Taylor & Francis’ Author Services – LIS Rights: 
“Copyright is retained by the author, who grants a license to Taylor & Francis to publish the version of Scholarly Record, but who remains copyright holder and is free to post versions of the Article – Author’s Original Manuscript (preprint) and Author’s Accepted Manuscript (postprint) – at any time, without embargo, with a link to the Version of Scholarly Record.” … (Definition of Terms. Paragraph 3) http://journalauthors.tandf.co.uk/preparation/lisrights.asp

 

Please direct proposal submissions and inquiries to the guest editors:

Cheryl Metoyer                                        Ann Doyle

E: metoyer@uw.edu                               E: ann.doyle@ubc.ca

Associate Dean for Research                    Head, Xwi7xwa Library

University of Washington                    University of British Columbia

USA                                                   Canada

 

Enrollment Information for LIBR 579G: Introduction to Archives for Librarians [MLIS Students]

Notice for MLIS students:

LIBR 579G: Introduction to Archives for Librarians is still accepting new students and has not yet held its first class meeting. The first meeting is next Wednesday, January 15, at 2pm. Students in the MLIS program should be aware that LIBR 579G is a prerequisite to LIBR 539H: Personal Archives.

The syllabus for LIBR 579G can be found here.

Reminder: Student Leadership Conference, Jan 11th

The Learning Centre is once again pleased to be a major venue for the annual UBC Student Leadership Conference.

The event will be held this coming Saturday, January 11th.

This year’s theme is “be infinite”.

 

As noted on the website approximately 1,300 people will attend.

Most of them will be in the Learning Centre at some point throughout the day, notably during the lunch period.

The Golden Jubilee Room on Level 4 will be dedicated to the conference the entire day.

Therefore you can expect high foot traffic and seating in the open study areas and book stacks will be affected.

 

Gordon Yusko
Assistant Director, Irving K. Barber Learning Centre
University of British Columbia
Tel: (604) 822-2298
Fax: (604) 822-3242
gordon.yusko@ubc.ca
www.ikebarberlearningcentre.ubc.ca

 

 

Application to Transfer to Dual Program Deadline – February 1

This is a reminder for students who are interested in transferring from the MAS or MLIS program to the Dual MAS/MLIS Program that applications are due by February 1, 2014.

Details regarding the application process can be found at the following link: RequestTransferToDual

Any questions can be directed to Dan Slessor, Student Services Coordinator, at dan.slessor@ubc.ca

 

International Educational Technology Conference 2014 IETC 2014 – CHICAGO, USA

INTERNATIONAL EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY CONFERENCE

IETC 2014

CHICAGO – USA

3-5 September 2014

 

Call for papers

IETC 2014 seeks a diverse and comprehensive program covering all areas of educational technology. The program includes a wide range of activities designed to facilitate the exchange of expertise, experience, and resources with colleagues. These include keynote and invited talks, full and brief paper presentations, panels and round table discussion sessions.

We would like to invite you to share your experience and your papers with academicians, teachers and professionals.

For more information please visit: www.iet-c.net

Placement opportunities (ARST 596) with the Vancouver Art Gallery and Vancouver School Board [MAS, Dual Students]

Several Professional Experience projects are available that require MAS or Dual student to begin work as soon as possible. Most urgently, the Vancouver Art Gallery is looking for a student to assist in archiving the Gallery’s rich philanthropic history. Full details of the VAG posting can be found here.

Another project available for MAS and Dual students is an opportunity with the Vancouver School Board. The project with the VSB requires a student to assist in organizing the District Archives (historical documents, photos, and artifacts at the district and school levels) from the ground up. Full details on the VSB posting can be found here.

Additional Professional Experience postings can be viewed on the iSchool News Blog, under the category ARST/LIBR 596: Professional Experience.

Students interested in either of these postings should contact Dan Slessor, Student Services Coordinator, at dan.slessor@ubc.ca

 

 

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