2014 ALA BRASS Gale Cengage Learning Student Travel Award

Are you an aspiring business librarian or do you know someone who is?  Send us your nominations!

Applications for the 2014 Gale Cengage Learning Student Travel are being accepted until January 31, 2014.

The BRASS Gale Cengage Learning Student Travel award is a $1,250 cash award given to a student enrolled in an ALA accredited master’s degree program to fund travel to and attendance at the ALA Annual Conference in Las Vegas, NV and a one-year membership in the Business Reference and Services Section (BRASS) of RUSA.  Applicants should have demonstrated interest in a career as a business librarian, and a potential to be a leader in the profession as demonstrated by activities that may include (but are not limited to) coursework, internships, jobs, special projects, and publications.

More information as well as the nomination form can be found at: http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/rusa/awards/studenttravel

Please send the complete nomination packet in electronic format to the Committee Chair, Matt Brower at Matthew.Brower@Colorado.edu, with the subject line: 2014 BRASS Gale Cengage Learning Student Travel Award.

Questions?  Contact Matt Brower, Chair of BRASS Gale Cengage Learning Student Travel Award committee:  Matthew.Brower@Colorado.edu 303-492-7156

The True North Science Boot Camp

Science Boot Camp for Librarians is coming to Canada!  … and while we are still busy sorting all the details and adding them to the website, we want to make sure you block these dates off in your calendar so …

Save the dates!  2014 June 4-6

Save the website!  http://libguides.uleth.ca/TrueNorth2014

… and plan to attend the first Canadian-based True North Science Boot Camp for librarians to take place at the University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Wednesday June 4 to Friday June 6, 2014.   Started in Massachusetts and spreading throughout the USA, science boot camps for librarians are immersive 2.5 day events featuring educational presentations delivered by scientists.

Topics we are working on:  Arctic science, medical imaging, food studies, environmental science, not to mention the evening activities to facilitate getting to know each other.

Who’s this for?  Librarians involved in supporting research in the sciences or technology although anybody with an interest in science research is welcome.

What’s the cost?  $295CAD includes the camp plus 2 nights (dorm) accommodations with breakfast, lunch, breaks, and our official Boot Camp Dinner; $150 for commuters includes the camp plus lunch, breaks, and our official Boot Camp dinner.

 

iSchool@UBC Research Day 2014 – Call for Participation

iSchool@UBC Research Day 2014

INFORMATION AND RIGHTS

Friday, February 28th, 2014

 

CALL FOR PARTICIPATION

The iSchool@UBC, invites UBC faculty and students to share their research endeavors. The iSchool’s 4th Annual Research Day will be held on Friday, February 28th, 2014 at the iSchool’s facilities, 407 – Irving K. Barber Learning Centre. This event will showcase the contributions of iSchool students and faculty working at the intersections of archival, information, library and children’s literature studies.

iSchool scholars focus on issues related to the creation, collection, organization, preservation and ongoing use of physical and virtual cultural materials. It is increasingly common for these interactions to highlight questions of human rights & information. The relationship between information and rights can be approached from a plurality of perspectives. Information can be viewed as a resource that is necessary for individuals, communities, organizations and nation-states to access rights (i.e. civil, political, economic, social, cultural rights, etc.) and to ensure the protection of those rights. The State becomes a calculation center that captures, processes, and analyzes information about its citizens and their status with respect to State-granted rights and to educate its citizenry in the kind of entitlements they have the right to claim. Citizens, on the other hand, are required to provide basic information about themselves in censuses, surveys, elections, tax forms, etc. and hold the responsibility to be informed about their rights.

Another perspective treats information as a right in itself. Unrestricted access to public information, preservation and extension of the information commons, freedom of speech, censorship controls, universal access to technologies that become entry points to information, confidentiality and consent in medical issues, intellectual property rights, fair dealing, etc. are examples of this approach.

We invite contributions that seek to address (but are not limited) to the broad area of inquiry into Information & rights.

 

Example sub-topics include but are not limited to:

• Rights related to the creation, sharing, and stewardship of physical and virtual cultural materials

• Children’s rights to information

• The interaction of information and rights on individuals and communities

• Democratic and participatory design of information systems

• Information work and the protection of vulnerable communities

• Intellectual Property Rights, Copyright, and its impact on libraries, archives, and museums

• Information and the rights of visible and invisible minorities

• Information and the rights of non-human actors

• Universal access to information

• Rights to information & Information rights

• Intersectionality

While the theme of our gathering is Information and Rights, we welcome submissions on any topic related to children’s media, library, archival and information studies from iSchool students and/or faculty. Students are specially invited to submit products from their own research related activities, independent inquiries, or course-related projects.

SUBMISSION TYPES

Presentations: Talks and Posters

The presentation category is divided into short talks and posters. The majority of submissions will be accepted as posters, with a select few asked to provide short talks. When submitting to this category, please indicate whether you would like your submission to be considered for a short talk.

The interactive nature of the poster session is intended to encourage discussion and debate. People presenting posters will also participate in a 2-Minute Madness session. This is an exciting format for participants to present the core ideas of their research in a succinct, two-minute presentation.

Demonstrations

Demonstrations may consist of digital tutorials, search interfaces, or other digital files or applications that you wish to share with the community.

YOUR SUBMISSION

If you are interested in participating in the iSchool’s Research Day, please submit an extended abstract, 1-2 double-spaced pages in length (~400-500 words), in PDF format to ischool.researchday@ubc.ca.

Extended abstracts should include:

• The motivation for the work,

• An introduction to the idea and its context in the professional/academic literature,

• Method or approach proposed/taken,

• Actual or anticipated results or outcomes (if applicable), and

• Contributions of the work.

DEADLINES

Submissions will be reviewed and confirmation/feedback will be sent during the first week of February.

• Extended abstracts are due: Friday, January 17th, 2014, midnight PST.

• Confirmation and feedback sent to authors: Friday, February, 7th, 2014

 

Questions about Research Day can be directed to:

Dr. Richard Arias Hernandez, rarias@mail.ubc.ca Dr. Lisa Nathan, lisa.nathan@ubc.ca

Website information for Research Day available at: bit.ly/1bmDnez

Arts Graduate Research Awards – Competition now open (deadline: Feb 3, 2014)

The Faculty of Arts is pleased to announce the 2014 Arts Graduate Research Awards for PhD and MA graduate students.  These awards are designed to help graduate students with their research program associated with their degree.  Awards are up to $1000 and are to cover the costs of travel and other research-related expenses (but not conference or workshop attendance and travel).

Description:

The Faculty of Arts Graduate Research Awards are to assist graduate students (PhD and MA) based in the Faculty in research directly associated with their degree program.  Funds can be used for travel and direct research expenses.

Terms of Award:

·      These awards are for research-related expenses only, and applicants need to make clear how the funds will be used and how they directly relate to the program of research.

·      Awards are for up to $1000.

·      Students may hold this award only once during their degree program.

·      Awards must be used within one year of the date the grant is awarded.

·      Travel expenses are permitted, however funds cannot be used for conference or workshop attendance.

·      Salaries (for the applicant or for others) cannot be funded with these awards.

·      Funds are released to a research grant held by the applicant’s primary supervisor.

Application Procedures:

Full details and application form available at:  http://www.arts.ubc.ca/research/grant-funding-opportunities/funding-opportunities/arts-graduate-research-awards/

Application Deadline: February 3, 2014

Notification of awards will be made in March 2014 and can be used between April 1, 2014 and March 31, 2015.

FINAL Call for Proposals Workshop for Instruction in Library Use (WILU) 2014

FINAL CALL for Proposals for WILU!

Workshop for Instruction in Library Use (WILU) 2014 (Deadline:  December 9, 2013)

The WILU Program Committee invites proposals to be considered for presentation at WILU 2014, to be held at Western University in London, Ontario from May 21-23, 2014. WILU originated at Western in 1972 and returns to the Forest City in 2014, inviting you to “E-magine the Possibilities.”

For a full description of session types, for the link to the WILU 2014 proposal submission form, and for information on our Student Award, please visit:  www.lib.uwo.ca/wilu2014

Potential presenters will be notified by February 14, 2014. All presenters are responsible for their own registration, travel and accommodation.

Questions? Please email one of the Program Committee co-chairs, Debbie Meert-Williston (dmeertwi@uwo.ca) or Nazi Torabi (ntorabi@uwo.ca).

Call for Papers – UBC Conference: “I Will Be Myself”: Identity in Children’s and Yougn Adult Literature, Media and Culture

IWillBeMyself Poster

Call for Paper Proposals

Deadline for submission: January 15th, 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 of 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 – 2015 International Conference on Knowledge, Culture, and Change in Organizations – Berkeley, California, USA

Call For Papers

Fifteenth International Conference on Knowledge, Culture and Change in Organizations

Proposals for paper presentations, workshops or colloquia are invited for the Fifteenth International Conference on Knowledge, Culture and Change in Organizations to be held 19-20 February 2015 at the University of California, Berkeley, in Berkeley, USA.

We welcome proposals from a variety of disciplines and perspectives to contribute to the conference discourse. We also encourage faculty and research students to submit joint proposals for paper presentations, colloquia or panel discussions. Proposals for conference presentations or journal articles are invited that address issues on the Organization through one of the following categories:

Theme 1: Management Education

Theme 2: Change Management

Theme 3: Knowledge Management

Theme 4: Organizational Cultures

Presenters may also choose to submit written papers for publication in the fully refereedOrganization Collection of Journals. If you are unable to attend the conference, you may still join the community and submit your article for peer review and possible publication, upload an online presentation, and enjoy subscriber access to the journal collection.

The current deadline to submit a proposal (a title and short abstract) is 16 January 2014*. For more information on submitting your proposal and registering for the conference, please open the following link:

http://ontheorganization.com/submitting-your-work/conference-presentations?utm_source=M15%20Promo%201%20-%20Dan&utm_medium=Dan%20Promo%20-%20M15&utm_campaign=M15%20Promo%201

*Proposals are reviewed in rounds adhering to monthly deadlines. Check the website often to see the current review round.

 

Berkeley and The Organization Conference

In its landmark 15th year, the International Conference on Knowledge, Culture and Change in Organizations travels to the University of California at Berkeley on California’s progressive northern coast. With a strong history of enterprise as well as a robust culture of non-profit and community collaboration, Berkeley and the Bay area have long been considered one of the world’s epicenters for research, innovation and entrepreneurship. This, coupled with the legendary atmosphere of fresh thinking generated at UC Berkeley, makes for an ideal location to explore the many intricacies and complexities of the Organization and all its aspects.

 

 

ALPS December Meeting: Technology and the academic librarian: Emerging, merging, and changing the game

ALPS December Meeting: Technology and the academic librarian: Emerging, merging, and changing the game
Friday, December 6, 2013

WEBCASTING AVAILABLE FOR THE MORNING LIGHTNING TALKS!
Please note that the afternoon meeting will not be webcast and tickets for the live event are sold out.

http://www.ikebarberlearningcentre.ubc.ca/alps/

Program
9:30-12:00 lightning talks and discussion:
·     Online Instruction: Keeping it Personal — Ania Dymarz, Life Sciences Librarian (SFU)
·     To Use or Not To Use: Should Academic Libraries be Using Web 2.0 Tool to Engage Students and Faculty? — Laura Thorne,Learning Services Librarian (UBCO)
·     Teaching via Skype: The Rashomon Effect — Holly Hendrigan, Liaison Librarian for Education and Arts & Social Sciences (SFU)
·     Web Literacy Standards and Open Badges — Cynthia Ng, Accessibility Librarian (Langara)
·     Experimenting with Shifting Sands: UBC Library’s Localized Open Online Course (LOOC) Partnership — Erin Fields,Teaching & Learning Librarian (UBC)
·     Flexible Learning Support for a First Year Business Course — Lindsay Ure, Business Liaison Librarian (UBC)
·     Qualitative Data Analysis Support for Researchers — Nicole White, Head, Research Commons (SFU)

Thank you to the Irving K Barber Learning Centre for generously sponsoring the webcasting and recording of this event.  For more information about the Irving K Barber Learning Centre’s webcasts portal see:
http://www.ikebarberlearningcentre.ubc.ca/webcasts/

After the event the presentations will be deposited in cIRcle: UBC’s digital repository.
https://circle.ubc.ca/


Reminder: ARLIS/NA 2014 Gerd Muehsam Award

ARLIS/NA 2014 Gerd Muehsam Award

The Art Libraries Society of North America (ARLIS/NA) is accepting applications for the 2014 Gerd Muehsam Award. This award is given annually for a student paper or web project focused on a topic relevant to art librarianship or visual curatorship. Current students and recent graduates in library studies, art history, museum studies, and studio art are encouraged to apply.

The deadline for applications is December 6, 2013.

For detailed information about the award and application instructions please see the attached and/or the ARLIS/NA website: http://www.arlisna.org/about/awards/muehsam_info.html

Past recipients of the award are listed at http://www.arlisna.org/about/awards/muehsam_recipients.html

Deadline extension for Canada Graduate Scholarships-Master’s Program Applications

The deadline for submitting applications for the Canada Graduate Scholarships-Master’s Program (CGS M) via the Research Portal has been extended to Thursday, December 5, 2013 at 2:00pm Vancouver time (5:00 pm Eastern Time). Please note applications already received by the granting agencies are not impacted.

IMPORTANT: The Research Portal will be unavailable on Wednesday, December 4, from 6 to 8:00 a.m. (ET) due to scheduled maintenance.

Applicants are invited to review the instructions and other support materials available on the CGSM website (http://www.nserc-crsng.gc.ca/Students-Etudiants/CGSHarmonization-HarmonizationBESC_eng.asp), including frequently asked questions.  For technical support, applicants should contact the Online Services Helpdesk (http://www.nserc-crsng.gc.ca/ContactUs-ContactezNous/index_eng.asp). As they are currently experiencing a high volume of calls, it is preferable to send an e-mail to webapp@nserc-crsng.gc.ca or webgrant@sshrc-crsh.gc.cawith specific details on the issue they are experiencing. This should expedite the response time.

 

 

 

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