City Tech Stories Podcast – City Tech Writer

City Tech Stories Podcast Episode 13 – City Tech Writer

In this episode of City Tech Stories, Junior and Nora interview Prof. Lucas Kwong, City Tech senior Emily Hu, and adjunct lecturer Atilio Barreda. Prof. Kwong is the current editor for City Tech Writer. Emily has contributed a piece to the journal and Atilio has helped program the site. They discuss the theme of this year’s journal, the recent anti-Asian attacks in New York, and much more.

A transcription of the episode will be available in the next few weeks.

Show Notes

Contribute to City Tech Writer

Share your Asian American experience

Swank at City Tech

AVON

Data for Black Lives (Twitter)

Emily Hu (Instagram)

Workshop, 4/6 11-11:30: Get Evidence! Scholarly Metrics for your PARSE and CV

Google Scholar Profile of Albert Einstein

Get Evidence! Scholarly Metrics for your PARSE and CV (Express Workshop)
Wednesday April 6, 2022, 11-11:30 AM

Covers Google Scholar Profile for citations and Google Scholar for journal rankings, Scimago for journal rankings, Altmetric Attention Scores for social media, and download reports from Academic Works (and other repositories). We’ll also touch on finding individual journal acceptance rates as well as Journal Impact Factors. The workshop will briefly address books and book chapters as well.
Registration 

Our Scholarly Publishing Clinic is available on-demand and during our office hour at 4PM every last Thursday of the month. We provide one-on-one consultations as well as workshops that fit your schedule. Find more scholarly communications and publishing support from the library on our website. Questions? Contact Prof. Monica Berger mberger@citytech.cuny.edu

41st Annual Literary Arts Festival

Join City Tech student writers and award-winning poet Layli Long Soldier to share ideas and creative work on Thursday, March 24th at 4:30pm on Zoom as part of the College’s 41st Annual Literary Arts Festival.

Layli Long Soldier earned a BFA from the Institute of American Indian Arts and an MFA with honours from Bard College. She is the author of the chapbook Chromosomory (2010) and the full-length collection Whereas (2017), which won the National Books Critics Circle award and was a finalist for the National Book Awards. In 2015, Long Soldier was awarded a National Artist Fellowship from the Native Arts and Cultures Foundation and a Lannan Literary Fellowship for Poetry. She was also awarded a Whiting Writer’s Award in 2016.

This event is free and open to the public. For more information and to register, please visit bit.ly/3hS8FmH.

41st Annual Literary Arts Festival

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pirate Queens Event TODAY 6PM at the City Tech Theater

In celebration of Women’s History Month in March, City Tech will be hosting an event for author Leigh Lewis and illustrator, Communication Design (COMD) Department own Prof. Sara Gómez Woolley on their National Geographic book tour for Pirate Queens the Dauntless Women who Dared to Rule the High Seas !

Pirate Queens image depicting several women pirates.
Pirate Queens Event at the New Academic Complex Theater

Thursday, March 17th from 6 – 8 pm, THEATER
Q&A and book signing to follow.

Join illustrator Sara Gómez Woolley and author Leigh Lewis for a behind-the-scenes look at the making of National Geographic Kids’ new book, PIRATE QUEENS.

Moderated by Professor George Garrastegui as part of the COMD Meet the Pros series, this conversation will discuss the intersection of research and illustration, to the written manuscript and will illuminate the process behind creating a culturally and historically accurate illustrated book. Through these Illustrations we will explore the lives of these amazing women who lived outside the roles assigned to them by gender and birth, turning to piracy and ruling their day.

Books will be available for purchase and signing at the event.

For More information please visit our event page.

March 16: Freedom of Information Day

“Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive, and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.” Article 19, UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Freedom of information is a fundamental ideal in American society. According to our federal laws, the American public have the right to know about the activities of the government. Government records are the people’s records by law.

The Freedom of Information Act was proposed by John Moss, a Democratic Congressman who believed that “government secrecy could end in a dictatorship.” He argued that the public needed adequate knowledge of government actions and decision-making processes in order to make intelligent decisions about their government and particularly elected representatives.

In 1966, President Lyndon Johnson signed the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) into law, saying, “A democracy works best when the people have all the information that the security of the Nation permits. No one should be able to pull curtains of secrecy around decisions which can be revealed without injury to the public interest.”

The Freedom of Information Act is one of the most significant laws ever passed by Congress. It protects the right of American citizens to access government information, such as records from federal agencies, unless the information is classified. Federal agencies are required to disclose records upon receiving a written request for them, except for specific types of protected information. FOIA requests must satisfy three requirements: the request be made in writing, the request must reasonably describe the records being sought, and the request must follow the agency’s FOIA regulations.

By making records of federal agencies available upon request, FOIA protects the public’s right to inspect government documents. FOIA and other transparency laws are intended to make our government more open, so we (the public) can participate in decision-making and also hold politicians accountable for their actions. Public records are vital for protecting our right to know how our taxes are spent and what our government officials are up to.

National Freedom of Information Day is an annual event celebrated on March 16th. The holiday honors the Freedom of Information Act and highlights its importance for American citizens. The holiday also celebrates the March 16th birthday of President James Madison, a strong advocate for transparency in government.  On Freedom of Information Day, the American Library Association gives awards “to recognize those individuals or groups that have championed, protected, and promoted public access to government information and the public’s right to know.”

FOIA 101: Tips and Tricks to Make You a Transparency Master: A compilation of FOIA advice from MuckRock.

The FOIA Wiki: is a free and collaborative resource on the Freedom of Information Act, provided by the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

Federal FOIA Request Samples: Sample letter templates for requests, appeals, and fee waivers, as well as Privacy Act letters for access, appeals, and amending records.

State FOIA Request Samples: Sample letter templates for each state that you can use for preparing and submitting your open records request under your state’s public disclosure laws.

Save these dates for Spring 2022 Scholarly Publishing Workshops

Save these dates to get help with your publishing and documenting the impact of your work!

Get Evidence! Scholarly Metrics for your PARSE and CV (Express Workshop)
Wednesday April 6, 2022, 11-11:30 AM

Covers Google Scholar Profile for citations and Google Scholar for journal rankings, Scimago for journal rankings, Altmetric Attention Scores for social media, and download reports from Academic Works (and other repositories). We’ll also touch on finding individual journal acceptance rates as well as Journal Impact Factors. The workshop will briefly address books and book chapters as well.
Registration 


Get Organized! Zotero Basics
Tuesday May 3, 2022, 4-5 PM
Attendees will learn the capabilities of this powerful, free open-source reference management software program. The session covers the functionalities of the Zotero client, adding the Zotero plugin to your browser, and importing citations to generate a bibliography. To maximize our workshop time, please download Zotero from https://www.zotero.org and create your username and password in the Zotero client software by going to EDIT > PREFERENCES > >SYNC
Registration


Increasing your Visibility as a Scholar (Faculty Fridays)
Friday, May 13, 2022, 12-1:00 PM
Learn how to improve the impact of your scholarship or creative works and your overall profile as an academic. We’ll cover how you can increase your visibility using Google Scholar Profiles, Academic Works and other open access platforms to share your work, and ORCID IDs. We will also touch on using personal websites and social media to promote your scholarship.
Registration from Faculty Commons forthcoming


Who is this Weird Publisher? Avoiding Predatory Journals and Conferences
Monday May 16, 2022 4-5 PM
Predatory journals and conferences are a hot topic but frequently misunderstood. We’ll debunk some myths and learn more about predatory journal and conference characteristics as well as how to thoughtfully evaluate a journal or conference before submitting. This workshop will include hands-on activities.
Registration


Our Scholarly Publishing Clinic is available on-demand and during our office hour at 4 PM every last Thursday of the month. We provide one-on-one consultations as well as workshops that fit your schedule. Find more scholarly communications and publishing support from the library on our website. Questions? Contact Prof. Monica Berger mberger@citytech.cuny.edu

New book by Jen Hoyer and Nora Almeida: The Social Movement Archive

The Social Movement Archive

Jen Hoyer, Instructor and Eresources, Technical Services Librarian and Nora Almeida, Associate Professor,  Instruction and Outreach Librarian published The Social Movement Archive with Litwin Books. The
introduction is available open access in Academic Works and the full book is available for purchase from Litwin Books.

In 2-3 sentences, describe your scholarship or creative work to someone unfamiliar with the field.
This publication represents an intersection of Jen and Nora’s scholarship that focuses on archival theory, social movement history, and material culture. This is a book about archives but also about cultural ephemera and the role that cultural production and art serves in social movement organizing. This book might interest to archivists and library professionals as well as activists or scholars who study social movements or new materialism.

What makes you particularly proud of this work?
One of the best parts of this project was that it gave us an opportunity to talk to movement activists and artists supporting social movement organizing. We also see this book filling a gap in current literature about alternative archives–many scholars are advocating for more inclusion of the perspective of content creators in archives by involving them in description but rarely include these perspectives in their own scholarship.

Add anything else you’d like the reader of our blog to know about your work
This book is illustrated and contains full color reproductions of primary source material created by contributors. People interested in this book might want to know more about the social movements represented which include: women’s liberation, disability rights, housing justice, Black liberation, anti-war, Indigenous sovereignty, immigrant rights, and prisoner abolition, among others.

Meet Your Librarian, Jen Hoyer

Image of Jen Hoyer, Technical Services and Electronic Resources Librarian
Jen Hoyer

Meet Jen Hoyer (she/her/hers) recently joined the City Tech Library as the Technical Services & Electronic Resources Librarian.

In a nutshell, what do you do at the City Tech Library?
There are two main parts to my job as Technical Services & Electronic Services Librarian. The first part — technical services — means that I manage the team of folks who catalog all the books that come to the library. Cataloging books is what makes them available for folks to search in our library catalog, and then what makes it easy to go from finding something in the online catalog to locating it on the shelf.

Not everything in the library is a physical book, though, and that’s what the second part of my job — electronic resources — entails. The library provides access to tens of thousands of electronic books and journals, as well as databases of all kinds of amazing research materials — statistical data, videos, and more. It’s my job to make sure those are set up properly so folks can find them through our website and our online catalog, and so they can be used seamlessly either on campus or anywhere else. If someone is having trouble getting access to electronic resources — for example, setting up your personal login for free online New York Times access or using your CUNY login to access databases from home — I’m here to help troubleshoot and make sure those are working properly.

What is your academic and library background?
I have a Bachelor of Music and a Masters in Library and Information Studies. Before working at City Tech, I spent five years at Brooklyn Public Library’s Brooklyn Collection. My job there involved more time visiting classrooms around Brooklyn than in the library itself, so, if you attended school in Brooklyn and your class participated in the Brooklyn Connections program through the Public Library, we might have already met. And, I’ve spent the last eight and a half years volunteering at Interference Archive in Brooklyn; I love spending time in and around libraries and archives!

What made you want to become a librarian? Was there any event or person that influenced you?
I hung out in libraries growing up, and I loved not only that they gave me access to all the books and CDs I wanted to read and listen to, but also that they provided anyone with access to information they needed for so many different things: getting a job; learning to read or helping someone else learn to read; exploring new interests; getting a free movie to watch on the weekend; and just figuring out the world. I think I had a pretty clear idea, as early as middle school, that I would enjoy working in a library someday.

What were your first impressions of life at City Tech? Were there any surprises?
I started at City Tech during the pandemic, which is a pretty strange time to start a job anywhere. Everyone was really helpful and welcoming, which made up for the lack of people! And thankfully I had visited City Tech a few times in the past and knew what it was like to walk through the halls with other people around.

What are some of your favorite City Tech library resources?
One of the first new electronic resources I worked on setting up after I started at City Tech was AVON — Academic Video Online . I’ve loved exploring it because it’s such an amazing collection of video, free for anyone with a City Tech login to watch from anywhere. The videos available include a lot of amazing independent content; I was so excited to find videos produced by Third World Newsreel and by Freedom Archives. There’s also a lot of great PBS content on AVON, and as someone who didn’t grow up in the United States and isn’t familiar with a lot of the cultural references that connect back to PBS, I’ve been catching up with AVON.

What books, tv, films, and/or music are you currently listening to?
I love a good detective novel and have been enjoying the Kopp Sisters Series by Amy Stewart; they’re set (initially) near Paterson, NJ, and are based on the real-life adventures of Constance Kopp, the first female Deputy Sheriff in the United States, and her sisters. I also just enjoyed Authorized Heritage: Place, Memory, and Historic Sites in Prairie Canada, by Robert Coutts. All of these books really feed my interest in how we interpret diverse kinds of source material in order to tell ourselves stories about the history of places and communities around us.

I’m a big podcast listener; lately I’ve been listening a lot to By the Book, the Secret Life of Canada, Love to See it, and No Such Thing as a Fish. And of course I’m a longtime listener to City Tech Stories!

The Power of She: Women and the Word Virtual Event – Thursday, March 17 @ 4:00pm

In celebration of Women’s History Month, Student Life & Development invites you to participate in our upcoming spoken word event, “The Power of She: Women and the Word”,  Thursday, March 17th at 4:00 pm on Zoom.

Guests include:

Caroline Rothstein, acclaimed writer, poet, and performer with works appearing in Cosmopolitan, Marie Claire, The Guardian, BuzzFeed, NYLON, Narratively, The Forward, and elsewhere.

Mahogany L. Browneauthor of recent works: Chlorine Sky, Woke: A Young Poets Call to Justice, Woke Baby, & Black Girl Magic. Browne is the founder of the diverse lit initiative, Woke Baby Book Fair; and is at work on her latest poetry collection. 

Ramya Ramana, an American poet based in New York City and winner of the Youth Poet Laureate of New York City award. 

Rio Cortez, New York Times bestselling author of The ABCs of Black History, The River Is My Sea and Golden Ax, a poetry collection

Christina Olivares, author of No Map of the Earth Includes Stars (2015), winner of the 2014 Marsh Hawk Press Book Prize, and of the chaplet Interrupt (2015), published by Belladonna* Collaborative. Olivares is a queer Cuban-American writer and educator from the Bronx in New York City. She earned an MFA from CUNY Brooklyn College in Poetry. She moves with Black Lives Matter and works towards poverty abolition.

Register in advance:
https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZAtfuiurj8tHtAhHrVaFT-1Ddb19PhdDJTi