Follow Up – Canadian Association of Law Libraries (CALL/ACBD) Student Member Services Survey (MLIS, Dual)

Thank you to those who completed The Canadian Association of Law Libraries (CALL/ACBD) Member Survey last week.  For those who have not had a chance there is still time: we have extended the survey’s completion date to March 13, 2013. CALL/ACBD is a national organization that represents the interests of law libraries and of law librarians across Canada. We are interested in knowing what benefits you value from a niche, professional association.

The survey will take approximately five minutes of your time, and the results will help shape CALL/ACBD student member services. Thank you.

https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/CALLACBDSTUDENTSURVEY

Resume Clinic + This Week’s 3MT Heats (All Students)

Registration is now open for:

Resume Clinic  @The Fred Kaiser Building, 2332 Main Mall, Point Grey Campus

Wednesday, March 13, 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm

For complete session information, see http://www.grad.ubc.ca/about-us/events/7728-gpscareer-services-event-resume-cover-letter-clinic

To register, please visit: https://www.surveyfeedback.ca/surveys/wsb.dll/s/1g23e1

The Three Minute Thesis Competition continues this week with the following heats:

Tuesday, March 5th @ 4:00PM Political Science and Philosophy Heat, Room B250, 2036 Main Mall

Tuesday, March 5th @ 6:00PM Interdisciplinary Heat at Marine Drive 2205 Lower Mall, Marine Drive Residence Commonsblock, Meeting Room #1

Wednesday, March 6 @ 4:30PM School of Population and Public Health, Faculty of Medicine Heat, Room A203, Buchanan A Building, 1866 Main Mall

Friday, March 8th @ 11:00AM Faculty of Medicine, Surgery Heat @ VCH Research Institute, Lecture Hall, Blusson Spinal Cord Centre, 818 West 10th Avenue

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

Royal Museums Greenwich UK Paid Internships in the History of Science and Technology

Deadline Monday 22nd April.www.rmg.co.uk/researchers/fellowships-and-internships/intern-programme/

For those considering further research at university, they offer the chance to try out a subject or an approach.

The main emphasis will be on the collections,the primary focus will be on the use of artifacts for research. (more…)

Invitation to Participate In Online Survey About Vancouver Restaurants (All Students)

We would like to let you know about an opportunity to take part in a 10-15 minute online survey about your interest and review of Vancouver restaurants.

The research objective is to better understand how online social environments can be more beneficial for their users.

To participate you need to be more than 19 years old and have a Facebook account.

You will be compensated by being enrolled in a draw that will give you the chance to win an iPad Mini and $50 restaurant vouchers.

You will be able to increase your chances of wining the draw by sharing the study with your Facebook friends at the end of the survey and by participating to a fun follow-up online exercise next month.

To take part to this study, click on this link: http://mytablevancouver.com

Thank you very much for your interest.
Doctoral Candidate Camille Grange / Professor Izak Benbasat
Sauder School of Business

International Visiting Research Scholar, Dr. William Wong, on “Visual Analytics in Financial Systemic Risk Analysis” (All Students)

The Peter Wall Institute is hosting a lecture by International Visiting Research Scholar, Dr. William Wong, on “Visual Analytics in Financial Systemic Risk Analysis”

The event is being held on Tuesday, March 12, 2013 from 12:30 pm to 2:00 pm, Dodson Room, 3rd floor at UBC

Visual Analytics in Financial Systemic Risk Analysis

Speaker: Dr William Wong, a Professor of Human-Computer Interaction. His research interest is in the representation design of information and the interaction design of user interfaces to support naturalistic decision-making in complex dynamic environments. The lecture will highlight how visual analytics can be used in analysing and managing financial systemic risk.

International Visiting Scholar, Dr. Colin Ware on “Visual Thinking Algorithms”(All Students)

The Peter Wall Institute is hosting a lecture by International Visiting Research Scholar, Dr. Colin Ware, on “Visual Thinking Algorithms”

The event is being held on Thursday, March 7, 2013 from 3:30 – 5:00pm in the Hugh Dempster Pavillion, Room 110, at UBC.

To see poster, please see: https://slais.sites.olt.ubc.ca/files/2013/03/20130307_PWIAS-Talk_Colin-Ware-hr.pdf

Will Rueter & Rollin Milroy: Free Alcuin Event (All Students)

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: William Rueter (Aliquando Press) with Rollin Milroy (Heavenly Monkey)

ADMISSION FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

On Thursday, March 21st, 2013, The Alcuin Society will present their sixth award for lifetime achievement in the book arts, The Robert R. Reid Award and Medal, to William Rueter of Aliquando Press (Dundas, Ontario). He will be interviewed by Rollin Milroy of Heavenly Monkey (Vancouver), accompanied by illustrations of Rueter’s work.
http://blog.alcuinsociety.com/2013/02/broadsides-for-everyone.html

William Rueter RCA MGDC is a private printer, hand binder, and printmaker living in Dundas, Ontario. He studied at the City Literary Institute, London, England, and the Ontario College of Art. From 1965 to 1998 he worked as a graphic designer specializing in book design, including employment as Senior Designer at the University of Toronto Press.
He established his private press, The Aliquando Press, in 1963, producing more than 100 books and many broadsides to date. The Press reflects Rueter’s interests in graphic design, typography, calligraphy, music, and a wide variety of poetry and literature. Work of The Aliquando Press won an honorary diploma at the Schönste Bücher aus aller Welt exhibition in Leipzig in 1987 and a bronze medal at the Internationale Buchkunstausstellung 1989.

Work of the Press has been shown throughout North America and in Japan and is included in public and private North American and European collections, including the Toronto, New York, and San Francisco public libraries; the College of William and Mary, Williamsburg; the British Library; and the Museum van het Boek, the Hague.

Rueter has taught graphic design and bookbinding in Canada and graphic design in Barbados and the Philippines. He explores the media of wood engraving and linocut in some of his own books and is challenged by the technique of monoprint. As a printmaker, bookbinder, and graphic designer he has been in solo and group shows in Dundas, Hamilton, and Toronto. He is a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Art and is a past nominee for the Saidye Bronfman Award for Excellence in the Crafts.

Place: Fletcher Challenge Room, Harbour Centre, Simon Fraser University, 515 West Hastings Street, Vancouver, BC
Time: Thursday, March 21, 7:30 pm
For more info:  Leah Gordon  awards@alcuinsociety.com or 604.732.5403

Wait Lists for Summer 2013 – Additional Instructions (All Students)

The Summer 2013 wait lists will open up on Friday, March 1st at 12 noon. Students who signed up on wait lists earlier yesterday or today will be deleted from the lists and will have to sign up again on the Summer wait lists tomorrow at 12 noon.

You are strongly advised NOT to register for more than two 3-credit courses in the same Summer term [May-June or July-August]. Each 3-credit summer course requires six in-class hours per week and approximately 18-24 hours outside class per week, for a total of 24-30 hours per week per course.

Taking two 3-credit courses in a Summer term is at least equivalent to taking four 3-credit courses in a Winter Session term.  The content and requirements for 6-week summer courses are the same as would be the case if the course were offered in a 13-week winter term. If you are not working and are essentially not doing anything other than taking courses it may be feasible for you to register for ONE 1-credit course in the May/June term if you are also taking two 3-credit courses, but you will be REALLY busy during those six weeks.

The web-delivered courses can often require more time per week than face-to-face on-campus courses [as you may be experiencing this term in 500], so keep that in mind when you select your courses.

William Wong on Make It Visible: Applying Cognitive Systems Engineering to Intelligence Analysis (All Studnents)

The School of Library, Archival and Information Studies, the iSchool at The University of British Columbia, is pleased to announce Dr. William Wong, Professor of Human-Computer Interaction and Head, Interaction Design Centre, at Middlesex University’s School of Science and Technology in London, UK, is the next speaker in our continuing series of lunchtime colloquia.He is presenting “Make It Visible: Applying Cognitive Systems Engineering to Intelligence Analysis” on Friday, March 1st, from 12 noon to 1 pm, in Room 301 at Hugh Dempster Pavilion.

In this talk, he will discuss how principles from Cognitive Systems Engineering, CSE, might be used to design Visual Analytics systems to support intelligence analysts. In designing systems to control processes such as nuclear power generation, CSE has been used to determine and model a priori the functional relationships that relate the performance of the processes with system outcomes. Visual forms are then created to represent these invariant relationships in ecological interface designs. Can cognitive systems engineering be applied to the domain of intelligence analysis? And if yes, how might this be? And how should CSE principles be applied to the design of visual representations in intelligence analysis to take advantage of the benefits we have seen when CSE is applied to causal systems?

Dr. William Wong’s research interest is in the representation design of information to support decision making in naturalistic environments. Recipient of over US$7.1 million in grants, and project coordinator for several projects, he is currently investigating the problems of visual analytics in sense-making domains with high information density and variability, in contexts such as intelligence analysis, financial systemic risk analysis, and low literacy users.

DiiG Talk presents Dr. Mary F. Cavanagh on Social-Biblio.ca: Meaning and Method Behind Public Library Micro-Blogging Practices (MLIS, Dual)

Dr. Mary F. Cavanagh, Assistant Professor from the University of Ottawa, School of Information Studies, is presenting “Social-Biblio.ca: Meaning and Method Behind Public Library Micro-Blogging Practices” on Thursday, March 21, 12-1 pm at the Dodson Room, Irving K Barber Learning Centre, 1961 East Mall at the University of British Columbia.

Twitter is the most well-known microblogging social media application structuring public library-client information interactions. The goal of this multi-phase project is to understand how Canadian public libraries are engaging with their clients through micro- blogging and what effects these interactions may be having on the broader library-community relationships over an extended period of time. This paper reports on two preliminary content analyses of public library tweets on two separate “events” and on the research framework proposed for the next phase of research.

The platform supporting this project was launched in February 2012. Social-biblio.ca is an open curated archive and web platform tracking micro-blogging activities by Canadian public libraries with institutional Twitter accounts. Currently 130 public library Twitter accounts representing 22% of all Canadian public library systems are tracked. Various Twitter typologies across different settings have been developed based on large data sets but few address organizational micro- blogging and in particular government agencies. We tested Lovejoy and Saxton’s (2012) information-community-action and early findings suggest this framework can illustrate new directions in how public libraries interact with their clients. Theoretical and methodological contributions to public sector social media and public participation research are anticipated.

 

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