Interview with Prof. Suzanne Miller, English Department

 
Suzanne Miller - Headshot
Interviewed by Prof. Anne Leonard
For our Spring 2015 issue, Prof. Anne Leonard, coordinator of library instruction and information literacy, interviews Prof. Suzanne Miller of the English department. For the past several semesters, Suzanne has worked with instruction librarians to bring her ENG 1101 students to the library for one additional research workshop, which is led by a librarian. Students prepare for this session by selecting a research topic. During the workshop, they search and evaluate articles, books, and other sources that fulfil the research requirement of their writing assignment. The extra session affords time for consultation about search strategies and keywords with a librarian as well as feedback about their topics from Professor Miller.
AL: Please tell us a little about yourself. How long have you been teaching at City Tech? Can you tell us a little about what you did before coming here?
SM: This is my sixth year at City Tech. I was an adjunct for two years before moving to a substitute line in the English Department. I joined the department as a full-time faculty member in the Fall of 2013. Before City Tech, I worked in the New York public schools as an artist-in-residence, teaching playwriting to fifth graders. If we want to go way back, I did this sort of work in Seattle and in Providence, while I was a graduate student at Brown (I received my MFA in playwriting in 1998.) While in Providence, I taught writing and theater courses at Brown and at the Rhode Island School of Design. All along, I’ve been working as a playwright.  I live in the Prospect Lefferts neighborhood of Brooklyn with my husband, two daughters (Margaret, 10 and Eloise, 9), and our labradoodle, Teddy.
AL: Why is the library important to your teaching? What does the library offer to you and your students?
SM: The students are savvy in many ways when it comes to gathering information, but they are not so savvy when it comes to distinguishing between good and bad sources. The librarians and the library instruction sessions give the students a basic understanding of what sources (both electronic and print) are out there, and how to recognize the credible ones. The library is essential to my teaching, especially when it comes to the research component of the writing courses. Without the librarians and the library instruction sessions, most students would rely solely on Internet search engines without knowing how to distinguish between good and bad sources.
AL: What abilities do your students come away with from their library instruction sessions?
SM: I think the students gain an awareness of what’s available beyond the Internet. Even if they are not convinced about actually using the library databases or print materials, the students leave the library sessions with a sense that there’s life beyond Google! Also, just being physically in the library is important. Sometimes the students do not know where the library is—and often they don’t know what the library has to offer beyond being a place to study and check out books. It’s great to make them aware of the reference librarians, for example.
AL: Can you describe the value that these abilities have for you students beyond the classroom, and beyond their course of study at City Tech?
SM: One of the most important life skills that students will hopefully take away from the library is learning to question the sources that they find online or anywhere— to develop a “don’t believe everything you read” mindset. Although the students may have this mindset regarding what they read on social media, they sometimes think that whatever information they find online with regard to research is fine and true. If we can teach students to approach their information sources with a healthy dose of skepticism, this will help them in their studies and in their lives.
AL: Is there anything more you’d like to see in City Tech Library?
I had occasion to use one of the small, private study rooms recently (to conduct a short rehearsal for a play reading), and I found it very helpful to have this space available. I think encouraging students to form study groups in the library (and to use these private rooms) would be a great way to help them improve their study habits and academic performance.
AL: What would you tell a colleague from another department to encourage them to bring their class to the library for an instruction session?
Many of the students are unaware of the resources available to them—especially the library databases. And even if the students are aware of the library resources, they may be intimidated by them. The instruction sessions give students a sense of how to navigate the databases; in addition, these sessions give the students a personal introduction to the library. I hope this personal touch makes it more likely that students will visit the library either in person or online.  In addition, I would say that while these sessions are, of course, focused on the students’ needs, I’ve also learned a lot about the library databases from the librarians, and I’ve used this knowledge to help me design my courses and in my own research.
Source: Newsletter
 

Student Reading for Pleasure: Graphic Novels and Prize Winners

by Prof. Monica Berger

Research shows that there is a relationship between recreational reading and the success of college students as undergraduates and in the workplace. Students who read for pleasure have better overall reading comprehension, increased verbal fluency, and develop greater critical thinking skills. The problem is that leisure reading of literary works has declined as the Internet and online culture has risen.

To address this issue, libraries create dedicated leisure reading collections for browsing. These collections help get books into students’ hands and ultimately stimulate student reading for enrichment and pleasure. At City Tech, we’ve have two longstanding, chiefly literary, collections: books in English and books in other languages including Chinese, Russian, and Spanish. These books are located under the main stairwell in the library that connects the library’s two floors.

A few years ago, we decided to develop a graphic novels collection. The books we bought were located in different parts of the library. Observing that City Tech students like to browse books and knowing that our library is fairly large with over 200,000 print volumes, we recognized that it might be challenging for our students to locate and browse our graphic novels. The solution was to arrange our over 250 graphic novels in one place.

Our graphic novels are now found under the stairwell, on the left side of the staircase when facing the plasma screen. Arranged by call number in their new location display, they can still be searched in the library’s catalog. Our collection features a wide variety of graphic novels and cartoon-related books including manga, underground comics, superhero comics, graphic novelizations of literary works, and covers subjects including science and history.AwardWinnerDisplaySign

Highly-regarded literary works are also mixed into our collection. In order to highlight some of the best poetry, fiction, and plays in the library, we created a new book display of award-winning books. This display greets students as they enter the library. We swap in a few new, different books every week as books get borrowed. These prize-winning books will stay on the display for the indefinite future. These examples of excellent writing will, we hope, inspire and excite our students and encourage them to explore further reading.


Source: Newsletter

City Tech Librarians Help Organize First Critlib Unconference in Portland

by Prof. Anne Leonard

A national discussion on critical librarianship has been taking place in libraries, on social media, and at professional conferences. Inspired by critical pedagogy, critical librarianship questions and contests traditional, oppressive power structures in libraries and institutions and strives to make library practice more just, equitable, and inclusive. City Tech librarians helped create an opportunity for an intensive set of discussions around issues related to this effort. Organized in part by Maura Smale, Ian Beilin, and Anne Leonard, the critlib unconference took place at Portland State University on March 25, in conjunction with the ACRL Conference at the Oregon Convention Center in Portland.

Unlike a traditional conference, an unconference is a meeting during which all discussion is determined by participants, and formal panels and presentations are rejected in favor of unscripted discussions. More information about the critlib unconference can be found on the website . A summary of social media posts can be found on Storify.


Source: Newsletter

Usability and the Mobile Web

by Prof. Junior Tidal

Prof. Junior Tidal, Multimedia & Web Services Librarian, recently published a book entitled “Usability and the Mobile Web: A LITA Guide” published under the American Libraries Association TechSource imprint. Usability is the measurement of how well a website functions to support users in efficiently finding and retrieving  information. The guide uses several examples that have driven the Ursula C. Schwerin Library website’s usability testing. The Library Information Technology Association (LITA) Guides provide information on emerging technologies applicable to libraries.

The book examines various aspects of mobile web usability. This includes a survey of devices, the concept of the mobile context, defining and differentiating mobile apps, websites, and hybrids, and the programming languages and frameworks to create these systems. The guide also provides sample usability tests, including scripts, consent forms, and analysis matrices. Readers will also learn how to apply usability testing data to make more effective user-centered designed websites.

The book is available at the Ursula C. Schwerin Library.


Source: Newsletter

300 Pearl Street: A Brief Look Back at City Tech’s Early Years

With the end of another school year fast approaching we thought we would look back at City Tech’s beginnings. You may recognize a few names here. This is the cover letter of Benjamin Namm’s first annual report way back in 1947. Look closely and you’ll note that he gives kudos to Otto Klitgord. Yes, Namm Hall and the old Klitgord Auditorium were named after these City Tech Founding Fathers.
Nammletter
A few other things worth noting are the school’s name and address. It was then 300 Pearl Street. Also, the school was originally known as the New York State Institute of Applied Arts and Sciences. These were the origins of City Tech nearly seventy years ago.
Click here for a PDF version of the letter.

Dibner Library at NYU-Poly to restrict access thru May 20

During the final exam period at NYU-Poly, the Dibner Library will be closed to people other than NYU-Poly students and faculty.
City Tech Library’s membership in ALB (Academic Libraries of Brooklyn) permits access to participating member libraries around Brooklyn, and any current City Tech student, faculty or staff member may obtain an ALB card at our library’s circulation desk. Have more questions about ALB? Post a comment here, or ask a reference librarian!

Extended Hours for Finals!

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We’re  happy to announce that the library will be open for extended hours this Sunday, 5/10, and next Sunday, 5/23 from noon-4:00pm. For more information about library hours, please visit our website.

Choose Privacy

ALA_Icon_180x180_B Almost everything we do online leaves a trail of digital breadcrumbs: our data. A lot of us don’t think twice about sharing our data with companies like Google, Amazon, or Facebook or realize how much data the United States Government collects.
While sharing data can improve our online experience–we are often delivered information and products that coincide with our interests–we often compromise our privacy for the privilege of personalization. Privacy is a political issue but it is also an important issue that can effect our personal autonomy and civil liberty. This week it’s Choose Privacy Week and the library invites you to join a national conversation about surveillance and privacy. Get informed and get involved! #chooseprivacy

Exquisite Corpse

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How to play
Submit a single line of poetry that will be absorbed into a collective Exquisite Corpse poem using the form above.

History of the Game
Exquisite Corpse (la cadavre exquis) is a collaborative drawing and poetry game that was invented in the 1920s by French Surrealist poets and artists.
The name “exquisite corpse” comes from the first sentence the Surrealists produced using this collaborative writing method:

The exquisite corpse will drink the new wine.