Call For Proposals For the 2014 Manitoba Libraries Conference

Manitoba Libraries Conference 2014
Winnipeg, Manitoba
May 12-14, 2014

Theme: Unlimited Potential

The Manitoba Libraries Conference Program Committee is pleased to invite members of the library, archival, museum, records management, and educational communities to submit proposals for the Manitoba Libraries Conference, May 12 – 14, 2014 at the Delta Winnipeg

Libraries are experiencing a number of challenges in the form of shrinking budgets, rapidly changing information technology, outdated facilities, and a pressing need to develop relevant collections and adequate resources for diverse user communities. And yet, through ingenuity and innovation libraries continue to overcome these obstacles to provide exceptional programs and relevant services to their respective users. Recognizing the unlimited potential of the library community the Program Committee invites proposals for sessions on topics including, but not exclusive to:

  • e-Collection Development
  • Strategic Planning
  • New Ways of Measuring results. New Ways of Measuring Success
  • Marketing Value
  • Leveraging Open-Source Information Technology
  • Indigenous Libraries and Archives
  • Programming for Diverse User Communities
  • Success Stories and Epic Failures: Library Project Hits and Misses
  • The Other F Word: Problems and Solutions with Library Funding
  • Punching Above Their Weight: Excellence in Manitoba’s Rural Libraries
  • Stories from the Front: Highlighting Library Technicians in Manitoba
  • Management in a Changing Environment
  • Partnering for Success: Exploring Joint Library Initiatives

Submitting Proposals:

The 2014 Conference Program Committee welcomes proposals in a variety of formats including:

  • Pre-conference (full or half-day.)
  • Traditional Session: Individual or group presentations of approximately 20 to 60 min per speaker with questions as time permits.
  • Panel Discussion: Presentations of approximately 10-15 minutes with discussion to follow.
  • Roundtable: 5-7 minute presentations with open floor discussion.
  • Lightning Round Talk: 20 presentation slides presented at 20 seconds per slide. 6 minutes on a specific topic or focused debate.
  • Poster Session: Summarized information using text and images presented in a poster format.

*French Language Proposals are Encouraged

Please complete the Speaker Form attached and submit it to librariesconference2014@gmail.com

The deadline for proposals is Friday October 18th, 2013.

Please feel free to direct questions to:

Sarah Clark
Co-Chair MLC Program Committee
Sarah.Clark@umanitoba.ca

Jordan Bass
Co-Chair MLC Program Committee
Jordan.Bass@ad.umanitoba

To see attachment, go to:

SpeakerForm 2014_MLC_

 

GPS workshops: Statistics, Job Search Strategies and Resume Clinic + Mitacs webinar series

Registration is now open for:

GPS/SCARL Workshop: Planning a statistically sound research project

Wednesday, October 16, 2013 – 10:00am – 12:00pm

For a complete session description, please visit: https://www.grad.ubc.ca/about-us/events/10561-gpsscarl-workshop-planning-statistically-sound-research-project .

To register, see http://www.surveyfeedback.ca/surveys/wsb.dll/s/1g2bc0

 

GPS/CSI&C Workshop: Job Search Strategies

Thursday, October 17, 2013 – 1:30pm – 3:15pm

For a complete session description, please visit https://www.grad.ubc.ca/about-us/events/10635-gpscsic-event-job-search-strategies

Registration is open at:  http://bit.ly/1hwTyGD

 

GPS/CSI&C Workshop: Resume Clinic

Thursday, October 17, 2013 – 3:30pm – 5:00pm

For a complete session description, please visit https://www.grad.ubc.ca/about-us/events/10595-gpscsic-event-resume-clinic

Registration is open at: http://bit.ly/1e49MHq

 

There is still space available in this week’s workshops:

Create your Career  Tuesday, October 08, 1:00pm to 4:30pm https://www.grad.ubc.ca/about-us/events/10705-gpscsis-event-create-your-career )

To register, please visit: http://www.surveyfeedback.ca/surveys/wsb.dll/s/1g2b40

 

Overcoming Perfectionism Thursday, October 10, 9:30am – 12:30pm (https://www.grad.ubc.ca/about-us/events/10703-gpslcc-workshop-overcoming-perfectionism )

To register, please visit http://www.surveyfeedback.ca/surveys/wsb.dll/s/1g2b41

 

For upcoming GPS workshops, visit https://www.grad.ubc.ca/current-students/gps-graduate-pathways-success/gps-workshops-events

For CTLT, Library and Career Services workshops, visit https://www.grad.ubc.ca/current-students/gps-graduate-pathways-success/ubc-graduate-student-events .

 

NOTES: Below are a list of upcoming webinars being offered through the Mitacs Step program. For details on each session or for more information, please click on the links below or contact the Mitacs program www.mitacs.ca .

Finding an Industry Partner: Demystifying Industry Connections – On-Line Webinar

October 25– Register Here, November 1– Register Here or November 8– Register Here

Time Management October 15 REGISTER HERE

Writing Effective Emails October 21 REGISTER HERE

Writing Strategic Business Reports October 21 REGISTER HERE

The Power of Positive Networking October 16 REGISTER HERE or October 30 REGISTER HERE

Open UBC Week, October 22-23

OpenUBC_Program [pdf]

International Open Access Week is just around the corner, and the Open UBC Week planning committee has lined up an exciting array of speakers to celebrate the occasion. Highlights include:

On behalf of the planning committee, I just want to formally invite all of you to come out and enjoy some (or all!) of these fascinating sessions. The event will begin on the morning of Tuesday October 22nd and conclude the following afternoon, and all sessions will be held in the Dodson room in IKBLC. The full schedule is available online, and a PDF copy is attached for your convenience.

We’d also appreciate your help with promoting the event, so please spread the word far and wide. A promotional poster is attached, in case you’d like to share it over email or social media, or print off copies to post around campus and elsewhere.

In addition to our plans here in Vancouver, our colleagues in the Okanagan have organized their own schedule of events as well, so please do check out the many exciting sessions on offer at UBCO! Last but not least, many thanks go out to our main sponsors, IKBLC and COPPUL, whose generous support will enable us to live webcast both keynote speakers and archive the rest of the program for posterity.

Thanks in advance for your support, and we hope to see you all at the sessions in October! Please direct any questions you might have to the Open UBC planning committee at open-ubc@interchange.ubc.ca. Happy Friday, and have a wonderful weekend!

Devin Soper
Faculty Course Associate
Scholarly Communications & Copyright Office
University of British Columbia Library
devin.soper@ubc.ca | 604.827.2006
ubc-copyright@interchange.ubc.ca
http://copyright.ubc.ca

 

InfoCamp Seattle 2013, October 12 & 13

A message from the InfoCamp Seattle 2013 Planning Committee:

You’re invited to InfoCamp Seattle 2013!

InfoCamp is an unconference for the information community. It features an egalitarian, community-driven format in which the agenda is created during the event — so anyone can sign up to lead a session!

What: InfoCamp Seattle 2013
When: October 12 & 13
Where: Mary Gates Hall, University of Washington

We’ll be gathering once again at the University of Washington’s beautiful Seattle campus on October 12th and 13th. The Saturday opening festivities and keynote will be in the Kane Hall auditorium. The Sunday plenary as well as the sessions designed and led by you, our fearless InfoCampers, will happen in Mary Gates Hall.

This year, our Saturday opening keynote will be given by Joan Vermette. Joan Vermette is a User Experience Designer with Mad*Pow (http://www.madpow.com) in Boston, MA and creator of the game Organizational Parkour.

For more information, check out http://seattle.infocamp.org
To secure your spot at InfoCamp Seattle 2013, visit https://infocampseattle2013.eventbrite.com/

Free Student Membership: Calgary Law Library Group

October 2013

The Calgary Law Library Group is offering free memberships to students enrolled in a library and information sciences or library technician program. If you are interested in working in Calgary after graduation, consider joining CLLG. Benefits of membership include:

  • Connecting with professionals in many areas of librarianship including law firm, government, academic and corporate.
  • Access to the CLLG listserv.
  • Free professional development seminars on relevant topics of practice.  Access to presentation materials is available via Dropbox.

Most of all, CLLG is a relaxed and fun environment to meet many different types of librarians and potential employers. We are an active organization of approximately 60 professionals who like to socialize and to stay informed.

As a relative newcomer to the law library field, I cannot overstate the value of membership in an organization like CLLG. If you are interested in a free membership or in finding out more about CLLG, please do not hesitate to contact me.

Helen Mok
Calgary Law Library Group Student Committee Chair
Calgary Law Librarian
Parlee McLaws LLP
hmok@parlee.com

Aline and Cynthia accepted at Confia 2013 [All Students]

Congratulations to MACL candidates Aline Frederico and Cynthia Nugent who have been accepted to the CONFIA 2013 Conference < http://www.confia.ipca.pt/>  in Portugal. They will be presenting on meaningful repeatable interactive animations in story apps — a bilingual presentation. CONFIA, the International Conference in Illustration & Animation, takes place November 29-30.

Call for Proposals: 2014 Canadian Library Association (CLA) Conference, May 28 – 31, Victoria, BC

2014 CLA National Conference & Trade Show
Victoria, British Columbia
May 28 – May 31, 2014

The call for proposals for the 2014 CLA National Conference in Victoria is now open. This is your chance to contribute to CLA’s premier professional development opportunity. Help make 2014 CLA Victoria the must-attend event of the year!

We invite submissions from the library and other information-related communities for consideration to present at the conference. Proposals for pre-conference sessions, concurrent program sessions and poster presentations are welcome!

New this year are the Peer-to-Peer sessions formatted to allow participants to openly discuss and exchange ideas in a specific area of practice/community. These sessions can be 60 or 90 minutes and each proposal must have a champion (convenor) to reach out to the selected area of practice to determine top issues for discussion.

The Learning Lounge was introduced in 2013 in Winnipeg. The lounge consisted of short presentations (maximum 20 minutes) on very specific topics. We are pleased to advise this will be included in the 2014 program. We welcome proposals for these sessions from both the library/information and vendor communities. This informal experience is designed to encourage connection, discussion and engagement.

Detailed instructions for program submissions are available at www.cla.ca/conference/2014. The deadline for submissions is November 1, 2013. Accepted presenters will be notified by the end of December 2013.

We would appreciate your support by forwarding this information through your listserv or other means.

Questions may be addressed to Wendy Walton at 613.232.9625 ext. 302 or wwalton@cla.ca

See you in Victoria!

Barbara Clubb
Interim Executive Director of CLA

Rob Capra on Augmenting Web Search Surrogates With Images: Does It Help to Add Images To Web Search Results? [All Students]

The School of Library, Archival and Information Studies, the iSchool at University of British Columbia, is pleased to welcome Rob Capra, Assistant Professor, School of Information Library Science, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, as the next speaker in our 2013-14 Colloquium Series.  He is speaking Wednesday, October 2nd, from 11:30 AM to 12:30 PM on the topic of “Augmenting Web Search Surrogates With Images: Does It Help to Add Images To Web Search Results?”.

The talk will be given in the Dodson Room in the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre at UBC.  Registration is not necessary and the talk is open to all interested members of the community.

Abstract of the Talk: While images are commonly used in search results for vertical domains such as shopping and news, web search results remain primarily text-based.  In this talk, I present results of two large-scale user studies to examine the effects of augmenting text-based result surrogates with images extracted from the underlying webpage.  In short, I will address the question of, “Does it help to add images to web search results?”  We evaluated effectiveness and efficiency at both the individual surrogate level and at the results page level, and also consider the goodness of the image in terms of representing the underlying page content.  Results of these studies show tradeoffs in the use of images in web search surrogates, and highlight particular situations where they can provide benefits.

Biography of the Speaker: Dr. Robert Capra is an Assistant Professor in the School of Information and Library Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.  His research interests include human-computer interaction, personal information management, and digital information seeking behaviors, tools, and interfaces.  He holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science from Virginia Tech and M.S. and B.S. degrees in Computer Science from Washington University in St. Louis.  At Virginia Tech, he was part of the Center for Human-Computer Interaction where he investigated multi-platform interfaces, information re-finding, and interfaces for digital libraries.  Prior to Virginia Tech, he worked in corporate research and development, spending five years in the Speech and Language Technologies group at SBC Communications (now merged with AT&T Labs) where he focused on voice user interfaces, speech recognition, and natural language processing.

SLAIS IT Labs Renewal [All Students]

The PC workstations in the Terrace and Kitimat labs were all purchased in late 2007 as the School prepared to move into the new I.K. Barber Learning Centre.  In recent years many of the workstations have experienced hardware and software problems related to age and the system capabilities of the computers.

Thanks to the Faculty of Arts Academic Equipment Fund and to alumni and friends who donated to our Learning Enhancement fund, we are happy to announce that in early December we are going to renew and refresh the two labs:

  • All the existing PC workstations will either be sent to non-profit organizations or recycled if the workstations have significant hardware/software problems.
  • In the Terrace Lab 18 spaces previously occupied by the older workstations will be left empty so that we can institute a BYOD [bring your own device] strategy.  This will allow students use their own laptops and tablets using whichever operating system platform they prefer.
  • To meet the needs of those students who prefer not to provide their own devices, 12 new PC workstations will be purchased for the Terrace Lab. These will be networked to the printer in the Kitimat Lab and will have the current suite of lab software installed.
  • The Instructor’s workstation in the Terrace Lab will also be replaced with a new system with the same hardware and software configurations as the new student workstations.
  • Instructors will endeavour to use free open source software whenever possible in their courses so that students using different operating systems will all have access.
  • In the Kitimat Lab the existing 10 older workstations will be replace by up to 10 new machines, depending on the availability of funding. These new workstations will be networked to the printer in the Kitimat Lab and will have the current suite of lab software installed.
  • Due to the requirements of the shared hardware/software image, all of the new workstations in both labs will be identical.

We also hope to upgrade the Mac workstations in the Kitimat Lab in the near future, but we will not be able to do this in December due to funding limitations.

We hope you will all be as excited about these plans as the faculty and staff are.

If you have any questions or concerns about the lab renewal, please contact the Technology Coordinator, Susie Stephenson, at susie.slais@ubc.ca

Libraries in the Digital Age (LIDA) June 2014, Zadar, Croatia] [MLIS, Dual]

CALL FOR PARTICIPATION

LIBRARIES IN THE DIGITAL AGE (LIDA) 2014

Zadar, Croatia, 16-20 June 2014

University of Zadar, Zadar, Croatia

(http://www.unizd.hr/hr-hr/english/aboutus.aspx)

Full information at: http://ozk.unizd.hr/lida/ Email: lida@unizd.hr

Libraries in the Digital Age (LIDA) is a biennial international conference that focuses on the transformation of libraries and information services in the digital environment. In recognition of evolving online and social technological influences that present both challenges and opportunities, “ASSESSMENT” is the theme for LIDA 2014. The conference theme is divided into two parts. The first part addresses advances in qualitative assessment methods and practices and the second part covers assessment methods involving alternative metrics based on social media and a wider array of communicative activities, commonly referred to as “altmetrics.”

LIDA 2014 brings together researchers, educators, and practitioners from all over the world in a forum for personal exchanges, discussions, and learning, made memorable by being held in an enchanting and spectacularly beautiful city on the shore of the Adriatic Sea.

LIDA 2014 Theme: ASSESSING LIBRARIES AND LIBRARY USERS AND USE

Part I: Qualitative methods in assessing libraries, users, & use:

applications, results.

Contributions (types described below) are invited covering the following and related topics:

. New methodological developments and practical applications in qualitative assessments of libraries and information systems; . Application of qualitative methods to the study of library users and use; . Studies using a variety of qualitative methods, such as observations, surveys, interviews, focus groups, case studies, cultural studies, oral history, grounded theory, document studies, Delphi studies and others;  .

Qualitative study of a variety of library user groups or potential users:

by generation, by role or occupation, by level of education and technological literacy, and others . Assessment of library services in a variety of e-services, such as information literacy programs, e-learning, distance education, e-scholarship and others; . Practical transformations in library services as a result of assessment; . Emergence of new library visions and missions related to users and their reflection in new services as a result of assessment; . Discussion about general issues resulting from assessments: How are we to understand new or transformed library services in their own right? In relation to traditional library services and values?

Part II: Altmetrics – new methods in assessing scholarly communication and

libraries: issues, applications, results.

Contributions (types described below) are invited covering the following and related topics:

. Methodological developments and practical applications in altmetric assessments of scholarly communication, including caveats; . Related criteria for altmetrics, such as [articles, concepts, ideas] viewed, downloaded, reused, adapted, shared, bookmarked, commented upon; . Results from altmetric studies related to scholarly communication and evaluation; . Methodological  and practical applications in the use of altmetrics in libraries and information systems; . Effects of social media on libraries and information systems of all kinds; . Criteria and metrics for assessing library employment of social media; . Results from studies of use of social media in libraries, particularly involving any kind of assessment; . Changes in libraries’ use of social media; . Discussion about general issues: How can and should libraries use social media? How are libraries and information systems to respond to the ever growing importance of social media in society? What are opportunities and challenges?

Types of contributions

Invited are the following types of contributions:

1. Papers: scholarly studies and reports on research and practice that will be presented at the conference and included in the published proceedings. The proceedings will be published in print and on the LIDA web site.

2. Posters: short graphic presentations on research studies, advances, examples, or preliminary work that will be presented in a special poster session. Awards will be given for Best Poster and Best Student Poster.

3. Demonstrations: live examples of working projects, services, interfaces, commercial products, or developments-in-progress that will be presented during the conference in specialized facilities or presented in special demonstration sessions.

4. Workshops: two to four-hour sessions that will be tutorial and educational in nature. Workshops will be presented before and after the main part of the conference and will require separate fees, to be shared with workshop organizers.

5. PhD Forum: short presentations by Ph.D. students, particularly as related to their dissertation, in a session organized by the European Chapter of the American Society for Information Science and Technology (EC/ASIST); responses will be provided by a panel of educators at this forum.

Submissions: Instructions for all submissions and author guidelines are provided at LIDA 2014 site http://ozk.unizd.hr/lida/. All submissions will be refereed.

Important dates:

Papers and posters: an extended abstract by 15 January 2014.

Acceptance decision: announced by 10 February 2014.

Full papers and poster summaries for Proceedings: by 15 April 2014.

Workshops: a short proposal by 31 January 2014.

Demonstrations: a proposal by 1 March 2014.

PhD Forum: dissertation proposal or research description by 1 March 2014.

 

Conference contact information

Conference co-directors:

TATJANA APARAC-JELUSIC, Ph.D., Department of Information Science, University of Zadar; Zadar, Croatia; taparac@unizd.hr  (also for general

correspondence)

TEFKO SARACEVIC, Ph.D., School of Communication and Information, Rutgers University; New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA tefkos@rutgers.edu

Program chairs:

For part I: DAVID BAWDEN, Ph.D., Centre for Information Science, City University London, London, UK. db@soi.city.ac.uk

For part II: BLAISE CRONIN, Ph.D., D.S.Sc., School of Informatics & Computing, Indiana University, Indiana, USA. bcronin@indiana.edu

Venue

Zadar is one of the enchanting cities on the Adriatic coast, rich in history. It still preserves a very old network of narrow and charming city streets, as well as a Roman forum dating back to the first century AD. In addition, the Zadar region is one of unparalleled natural beauty that includes two national parks. On the Adriatic Sea is the Kornati National Park, an unusual and colorful group of some 100 small islands. The National Park Paklenica is also close by, for those who enjoy exploring a more mountainous terrain. Croatia is a great tourist destination of unspoiled beauty.

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