1965 Voting Rights Act

voter-rights_1The City Tech Library is commemorating the 1965 Voting Rights Act, a landmark piece of legislation that prohibits racial discrimination in voting.  There are books on display on the voting rights act and civil rights more generally.  The book display is located near the library entrance.

Also, we have videos relating to the Act in Kanopy, our video streaming database:

Freedom on my Mind – Mississippi Voter Registration in the 1960’s

Fannie Lou Hamer: Voting Rights Activist

Barber of Birmingham:  Foot Soldier of the Civil Rights Movement

Short and Sweet Learning Moments

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The first phase of redesigning our library resources is to identify the quality of the material we currently publish. I accomplished this by creating a content audit (an inventory a webpage’s elements including links, file formats, text, etc.)  of our tutorials and research guides. A few examples include a guide for navigating our physical library, guidelines for avoiding plagiarism, and pointers on creating research questions. The content in our guides are delivered over multiple platforms and formats, including text, images, slideshows, and videos.

Despite the variety of mediums in our tutorials, they all have one thing in common: they are bite sized learning moments, usually honing in under five minutes to complete.

This may seem like a lot of information to pack into a small amount of time, but could this be the way students learn best in the digital age? There are countless studies showing the decline in attention spans (When’s the last time you read an article from title to finish?), and an increase in ADHD diagnosis. As a result, user centered designers are constantly updating best practices for keeping users engaged.
How long should a video be? Will this site work on a mobile screen? What happens when the user loses connection to the web? These are all questions that come to mind when designing a digital experience, and in order to validate them we’ll need to be willing to test our assumptions of what works best for our students.

Consequences of Textbook markets moving to Access Codes

access-deniedStudent PIRGs – a powerful collective student advocacy body – has taken a prominent role in criticizing textbook publishers’ rising profit margins amid growing concern over college affordability. Its newest report focuses on textbook publishers’ shift to access codes as a strategy to maintain profit margins despite the emergence of free alternatives like open educational resources.
 

Here’s the full report:

 

“Access codes create a direct link between the ability to pay and the ability to get good grades.” 

 
More reports from Student PIRGs:
 
Covering the Cost – investigating the real impact of high textbook prices on today’s college students (2016)
Open Textbooks: The Billion Dollar Solution – alternative textbook model could save students a billion dollars (2015)

Hello world! Are you listening? UX in the Library

Hi! My name is Winter and I’m the new Instructional Design intern at Ursula C. Schwerin Library. I’m a UX Designer that’s interested in education technology, information architecture, and how people learn on the web. I’m excited to be working on a series of new projects with our elearning platforms. My first project is redesigning our current tutorials and research guides on our library website. Did you know we have over 40 + tutorials and guides living on our website? The goal of these guides are to help students locate, process, and verify useful information in their research.  I’m going to take a look at how students interact with the current guides and identify opportunities for improvement. My philosophy is that services should be designed with a learner-first perspective. So I’ll be seeking out feedback from the people that actually use the programs! Looking forward to meeting everyone!

It’s Banned Books Week

Every year, libraries all over America celebrate Banned Books Week in order to highlight the importance of freedom from censorship.
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Stand up for your right to read and access information! Read a banned book!

City Tech librarians have organized a Banned Books display near the entrance of the library. We’ve covered the books to illustrate how censorship can obscure intellectual value. Borrow one of these controversial “mystery” books to celebrate your right to read.

Now Streaming: Online Films at the Library Workshop

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The Ursula C. Schwerin Library is proud to present a Kanopy workshop conducted by Professor Junior Tidal.
Are you interested in showing films in class? Maybe your students need to view a film on their own time? Kanopy may be the solution! The City Tech library subscribes to the Kanopy Streaming service, an online resource for viewing films. This workshop will show students and faculty how to screen more than 26,000 films through the web.
Wednesday, 21 September 2016
2:00pm – 2:45pm
Room: Library A441
RSVP: kmuchowski@citytech.cuny.edu

New in the Library

Events and resources
We’re partnering with IDNYC to provide a week-long NYC ID pop up enrollment site in the library from September 26-30th.
We’re also collaborating with NYPIRG to register new voters during September and October. And we have lots of resources for use in and outside of the classroom; students might be particularly interested in signing up for a free digital subscription to the New York Times and streaming films through the database Kanopy.  


Open Educational Resources
Join us for an upcoming faculty workshop:
When the Textbook Falls Short: Exploring Alternative Course Materials
Tuesday, September 13th, 1-2 PM, Rm A432 in the Library
RSVP to: ccooney@citytech.cuny.edu
Are you concerned that students aren’t purchasing or reading the textbook you assign? Learn how alt / open educational resources (OERs) are sustainable, accessible, and engaging to students. Find out how to locate and adopt dynamic course materials that can supplement or replace textbooks.
Can’t make the workshop? Learn more about open educational resources and our paid OER Fellowships.


Academic Works. Enhance the impact of your scholarship by contributing to CUNY Academic Works. Want to learn how? Come to our two CUNY Academic Works Posting Parties. Bring your files and we’ll guide you through the process of posting your work. The final, peer-reviewed version of an article (not the published version) is best but feel free to bring what you have. Coffee and cookies will be served!
Thursday October 20, 2-3:30 and Wednesday November 2,10-11:30 am, Library Eclassroom, Atrium 432
RSVP and questions to Prof. Monica Berger mberger@citytech.cuny.edu
Can’t make the workshops? Learn more about Academic Works and learn how to Deposit Your Scholarship in Academic Works in Five Easy Steps.
Author Rights Workshop. And do you know your rights as a scholarly author? Join us for a workshop on November 1. Don’t sign away your rights! Your decisions today regarding your scholarship can affect you in the future. Learn how to better understand publisher contracts and how you can keep key rights to your scholarship by using the SPARC Author Addendum, a legal instrument that modifies the publisher’s agreement. Wine and cheese will be served!
Tuesday November 1, 4:00-5:30 pm, Library Multimedia Projection Room, Atrium 432
RSVP to Prof. Monica Berger mberger@citytech.cuny.edu
Can’t make the workshop? Learn more about your rights as an author.

Kanopy Selections for September

Below are Kanopy staff’s recommendations for this month of September. You can access Kanopy at City Tech here.
On September 21st, there will be a Kanopy workshop open to students and faculty. For more information, contact Prof. Keith Muchowski.

This film addresses the seismic shift in how the population is now viewing life and death. Reflecting the paradigm shift that has the enormous baby boomer population deciding how they want to live the rest of their lives “Mortal” celebrates the importance of end-of-life as much as the beginning.

Filmmaker Daphne Valerius’s award-winning documentary explores how media images of beauty undercut the self-esteem of African-American women. The film also features powerful commentary from rapper and activist Chuck D, actresses Regina King and Jada Pinkett Smith.
This film tells the story of acclaimed author Jimmy Santiago Baca’s transformation from a functionally illiterate convict to an award-winning poet, novelist and screenwriter. Based on the memoir of the same name, it takes viewers into Baca’s past to uncover how the power of the written word lifted him from violence and pain.
This film follows the path of Mardi Gras beads from the streets of New Orleans during Carnival – where revelers party and exchange beads for nudity – to the disciplined factories in Fuzhou, China – where teenage girls live and sew beads together all day and night, with sometimes toxic results.

Continue reading “Kanopy Selections for September”

Voter Registration on Campus

NYPIRG will be here to help the City Tech community register to vote. They will have a table outside the library entrance on the following dates:
9/21 6:00-8:00 pm
9/26 10:30 am-1:30 pm
9/29 12:00-2:30 pm
10/5 10:30 am-1:30 pm
10/13 12:00-2:30 pm [this date is provisional: please check back closer to the date to confirm]