Faculty Workshops – Fall 2013

Workshops are open to all City Tech faculty and staff!

 

All workshops are held in the library in A441 unless otherwise noted.

RSVP: Prof. Maura Smale, Information Literacy Librarian, msmale@citytech.cuny.edu, x5748

 
 
Encouraging Good Googling: Helping Students Learn to Evaluate Internet Sources
Wednesday September 25 @ 1-2pm
How can we help students learn to distinguish the good from the bad (or the ugly) online? We’ll discuss strategies to boost students’ evaluation skills and help them find credible information on the internet.
 
Advanced Search Techniques for Library and Internet Resources
Wednesday October 9 @ 1-2pm
Improve your research skills and go beyond the basics with Boolean operators, truncation, limiters, and other sophisticated search strategies in library databases, Google, and more.
 
Textbooks: Why is there a problem? What are some solutions?
Wednesday October 23 @ 1-2pm (held in the Faculty Commons N227)
What are the problems with textbooks? Why do students sometimes resist buying them? Come to this Open Access Week workshop to discuss open educational resources. Hear from faculty across the college who use them, and learn more about library resources and support for open educational materials.
 
Open Access Happy Hour: Open Access for the Arts
Thursday October 24 @ 4-5:30pm (held in the Faculty Lounge A632)
Using or producing creative works online requires artists and scholars to work with a nuanced (and complicated) copyright, license, and use guidelines. Find out ways to use public domain and open access resources in your creative work, and how to protect the rights of artists in online environments.
 
Finding Scholarly Information with Google Scholar
Wednesday November 6 @ 1-2pm
Explore the resources found in Google Scholar (conference papers, preprints, journal articles, etc.). We’ll also customize Scholar preferences to facilitate full-text access from home or office computers.
 
Using Photoshop to Create Graphics for Instruction
Wednesday November 13 @ 1-2pm
Are you interested in creating graphics for your class or resizing your digital photographs? Learn how to use Photoshop, including the toolbar, layers, cropping, image filters, text, special effects, and more.
 

Looking for a workshop that you don’t see here?

Consider requesting a custom workshop for faculty and staff.

Visit our website to learn more:

http://cityte.ch/requestworkshop

 
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I was drawn to librarianship because I’m always interested in learning something new. While conversing with other librarians, it occurs to me that a great many of us are generalists, and I’d have to class myself as one, too. But I’ve always loved the history of art and architecture. People’s passions often come alive when they are able to create memories around their interests. I love to travel and experiencing the art and architecture of another place is a big part of what makes travel so exhilarating to me.
 
What book (or other source) would you recommend to others from City Tech Library’s collection, and why?
 
I’m really enthusiastic about our subject guides! They are succinct, easily navigable web pages designed to direct students to a broad scope of resources among different disciplines. Often, it can be difficult to find a springboard when tasked with research because there is so much information to sift through. I find the subject guides especially practical because they steer the student toward developing a research plan, and provide a welcome jumping off point.
What do you like to do outside of work?
I like to be surrounded by as much green as possible in my free time. I frequent the Brooklyn Botanic Garden on a weekly basis and have most recently taken advantage of the CUNY summer schedule to make trips to New England during the extended weekends. As much as I love being in the great outdoors, I am also a huge visual consumer of New York’s cityscape; I try to look up and around me constantly. It’s the best way for me to relax!
 

Library Technology Projects By Prof. Songqian Lu

The library’s Information Technology team has undertaken several projects this summer to improve our technical facilities and services for supporting teaching and learning activities. The highlights of the projects are:
New Projectors in the Library Electronic Classroom
With great help from campus Media Services, two new Vivitek projectors have been installed in the Library’s electronic classroom.  The new projectors use advanced DLP ® (Digital Light Processing) technology and can project dazzling digital images from a variety of video sources.
NetOp Upgrade
NetOp, the classroom management software used in all library classrooms, has been upgraded to provide  expanded functionality and is now capable of connecting to student iPads or Android tablets using the app.
 
In Progress
Projection Room Renovation
The renovation of theLibrary’s Projection Room includes:  two 60 inch Sharp television screens and a new podium.  The projection room also received a fresh coat of paint. We are thankful again to campus Media Services for their hard work on the installation.
 
New Library Server 
A powerful new Dell server will enable the library to combine several important services on one piece of equipment. This new sever will provide a more dependable login and printing system, maximize  the system’s ability to respond quickly to unexpected hardware or software failures (making computer use more reliable), and create an automated digital inventory system.
 
Library Computer Services Management System Development
A web-based library computer services management system is under development for management of all public library computers. This system will automate application updates, monitor available network connectivity and/or issues, and wake up computers remotely. The system takes a command-and-control approach which can be easily updated for future needs. The purpose of the system is to improve our computers’ reliability and efficiency for the library’s users.
 
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I was drawn to librarianship because I’m always interested in learning something new. While conversing with other librarians, it occurs to me that a great many of us are generalists, and I’d have to class myself as one, too. But I’ve always loved the history of art and architecture. People’s passions often come alive when they are able to create memories around their interests. I love to travel and experiencing the art and architecture of another place is a big part of what makes travel so exhilarating to me.
 
What book (or other source) would you recommend to others from City Tech Library’s collection, and why?
 
I’m really enthusiastic about our subject guides! They are succinct, easily navigable web pages designed to direct students to a broad scope of resources among different disciplines. Often, it can be difficult to find a springboard when tasked with research because there is so much information to sift through. I find the subject guides especially practical because they steer the student toward developing a research plan, and provide a welcome jumping off point.
What do you like to do outside of work?
I like to be surrounded by as much green as possible in my free time. I frequent the Brooklyn Botanic Garden on a weekly basis and have most recently taken advantage of the CUNY summer schedule to make trips to New England during the extended weekends. As much as I love being in the great outdoors, I am also a huge visual consumer of New York’s cityscape; I try to look up and around me constantly. It’s the best way for me to relax!
 

City Tech Library Awarded Two National Endowment for the Humanities/American Library Association Muslim Journeys Grants

In January 2013, City Tech Library was awarded a National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH)/American Libraries Association (ALA) grant entitled “Bridging Cultures Bookshelf: Muslim Journeys.”  The award includes twenty-five books, four DVDs and a one-year subscription to the Oxford Islamic Studies Online database. The grant is intended to help students, faculty, staff, and the public at large explore the great diversity of Islam, Islamic art and culture, and the experiences of Muslims around the world, particularly in the United States. All of City Tech Library’s Muslim Journeys books may be checked out for three weeks – you can find them on display on the stand just to the right after you enter the library (see image). DVDs must be viewed in the Library’s Multimedia Center. The Muslim Journeys website also includes many interesting audiovisual resources.
Subsequently, in May, the library was awarded an additional grant entitled “Let’s Talk About It: Muslim Journeys,” supporting a series of discussions on five books related to a specific theme from the Muslim Journeys Bookshelf. The Library has chosen the theme “American Stories,” which explores the experiences of Muslims in the United States from eighteenth century to the present. We are currently seeking students to participate in these discussions, which will take place over the Fall and Spring semesters, and which will be led by expert scholars. The first twenty-five students to sign up for the series will receive free books. If you know any students who might be interested in participating, please contact Prof. Ian Beilin at ibeilin@citytech.cuny.edu or Prof. Tess Tobin at TTobin@citytech.cuny.edu. In addition, throughout the Fall and Spring semesters, the library will be highlighting books and themes from the “American Stories” selections on its website, blog, Facebook, and Twitter pages.
 
City Tech Library Awarded NEH/Gilder Lehrman Grant, “Created Equal”
 
In July the City Tech Library was awarded a grant to participate in a national initiative entitled “Created Equal: America’s Civil Rights Struggle.” The sponsors, the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History, provide programmatic and material support. The award allows the library to host several programs and screenings discussing the history of the Civil Rights Movement in America. The “Created Equal” programs will foster discussion and are intended to help bridge the deep racial and cultural divides in American civic life.
 
Along with 473 institutions across the country, City Tech Library will screen four documentary films chronicling the history of the Civil Rights Movement. These powerful films, The Abolitionists, Slavery by Another Name, Freedom Riders, and The Loving Story include dramatic scenes of incidents in the 150-year effort to achieve equal rights for all. The films, which were all produced with NEH support, tell remarkable stories of individuals who challenged the social and legal status quo of deeply rooted institutions, from slavery to segregation.  Freedom Riders received an Emmy Award in 2012, and The Loving Story and The Abolitionists have been nominated for Emmys in 2013.
 
 
The Library will be hosting discussion sessions of each film for students with scholars who are experts in African-American Studies. Our discussion of Slavery by Another Name will be led by Professor James Downs of Connecticut College’s Department of History, and author of Sick from Freedom: African-American Illness and Suffering during the Civil War and Reconstruction (Oxford University Press, 2013). Professor Kevin Noble Maillard from Syracuse University’s School of Law and co-editor of Loving v. Virginia in a Post-Racial World: Rethinking Race, Sex, and Marriage (Cambridge University Press, 2012), will discuss The Loving Story. The other two discussions will be led by faculty members from City Tech’s African American Studies Department, which is co-sponsoring the Library’s Created Equal events.
 
Additionally, related resources will also be available through the library’s website and social media networks. Library card holders will be able to view the films at any time in the library’s Multimedia Resource Center.
 
Visit Created Equal website for more information about the grant in general. If you or your students would like to participate in the film discussions, please contact Prof. Junior Tidal (jtidal@citytech.cuny.edu) or Prof. Ian Beilin (ibeilin@citytech.cuny.edu).
 
About the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Founded in 1994, the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History is a nonprofit organization that promotes excellence in the teaching and learning of American history. Programs include publications, teacher seminars, a national Affiliate School Program, traveling exhibitions, and online materials for teachers, students, and the general public. www.gilderlehrman.org.
 
About the National Endowment for the Humanities
Created in 1965 as an independent federal agency, the National Endowment for the Humanities supports learning in history, literature, philosophy, and other areas of the humanities. NEH grants enrich classroom learning, create and preserve knowledge, and bring ideas to life through public television, radio, museum exhibitions, and programs in libraries and other community places. www.neh.gov.
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Do you have a favorite subject of study or a favorite author (or both)?
I was drawn to librarianship because I’m always interested in learning something new. While conversing with other librarians, it occurs to me that a great many of us are generalists, and I’d have to class myself as one, too. But I’ve always loved the history of art and architecture. People’s passions often come alive when they are able to create memories around their interests. I love to travel and experiencing the art and architecture of another place is a big part of what makes travel so exhilarating to me.
 
What book (or other source) would you recommend to others from City Tech Library’s collection, and why?
 
I’m really enthusiastic about our subject guides! They are succinct, easily navigable web pages designed to direct students to a broad scope of resources among different disciplines. Often, it can be difficult to find a springboard when tasked with research because there is so much information to sift through. I find the subject guides especially practical because they steer the student toward developing a research plan, and provide a welcome jumping off point.
What do you like to do outside of work?
I like to be surrounded by as much green as possible in my free time. I frequent the Brooklyn Botanic Garden on a weekly basis and have most recently taken advantage of the CUNY summer schedule to make trips to New England during the extended weekends. As much as I love being in the great outdoors, I am also a huge visual consumer of New York’s cityscape; I try to look up and around me constantly. It’s the best way for me to relax!
 

City Tech’s Newest Librarian: Cailean Cooney

Interview by Prof. Ian Beilin
The Ursula C. Schwerin Library is pleased to introduce its newest faculty member, Cailean Cooney.
 
What is your academic and library background?
 
I received my Master of Library and Information Science from Pratt Institute in 2009 with a concentration in metadata/cataloging and management of special collections. I began my career in academic libraries at New York University (NYU) cataloging books in the main collection, Fales Library and Special Collections, and the Stephen Chan Library of Fine Arts of the Institute of Fine Arts. I also worked in NYU’s global processing unit where I was responsible for training and managing college student workers, performing acquisitions functions, and cataloging e-books, CDs, DVDs, and print books for the Abu Dhabi campus.
 
What made you want to become a librarian? Was there any event or person that influenced you?
 
As an undergraduate, I did a semester-long internship at the New York Historical Society. There, I organized and re-housed the photographic archives of the McKim, Mead and White architectural firm. I knew instantly that I had found a home in this environment. As my undergraduate studies progressed, I held internships at other museums. Each project required the application of metadata standards in order to promote access to various special collections. By the time I finished college, I was keen on pursuing a Masters in the field.
 
What will you be doing at City Tech Library?
 
This summer, I’m splitting my time between Technical Services and Circulation. Both work with CUNY’s Integrated Library System, Aleph. I have a lot of experience working in Aleph’s cataloging and acquisitions modules, though I’m a newcomer to the circulation module. For those who are not familiar with an integrated library systems, Aleph is not only the back end of our library’s online catalog, it’s a powerful tool for recording metadata about library resources from the point at which they are ordered, received, cataloged, and labeled by technical services, to the time they are filed in the stacks or requested by a patron.  I’m working with Prof. Nancy Gonzalez and members of the circulation department to learn the ins and outs of City Tech’s circulation policies and procedures to prepare for the Spring semester, when I will be stepping in as the Coordinator of Circulation Service while Prof. Gonzalez takes sabbatical.
I am also coordinating a project with library faculty to identify and de-accession outdated and underutilized materials in order to create more student work space on the Library’s fourth floor.
 
What were your first impressions of life at City Tech? Were there any surprises?
 
I’m really pleased by the collegial and collaborative nature of the library faculty and am looking forward to meeting faculty members in other departments. I was surprised to learn just how labyrinthine the City Tech campus is. Did you know that the Atrium building has no third floor?
 
What are your goals for the next few years as a librarian?
I will be pursuing my second Masters, in Liberal Studies, at the Graduate Center. I start this fall in the digital humanities track. Among many things, I’m interested in the impact of digital platforms on cultural knowledge, specifically relating to the disproportionate amount of digital environments that promote cultural associations as opposed to cultural differences. I’d like to inquire how the structure of cultural platforms influences the terms of cultural production.
Do you have a favorite subject of study or a favorite author (or both)?
I was drawn to librarianship because I’m always interested in learning something new. While conversing with other librarians, it occurs to me that a great many of us are generalists, and I’d have to class myself as one, too. But I’ve always loved the history of art and architecture. People’s passions often come alive when they are able to create memories around their interests. I love to travel and experiencing the art and architecture of another place is a big part of what makes travel so exhilarating to me.
 
What book (or other source) would you recommend to others from City Tech Library’s collection, and why?
 
I’m really enthusiastic about our subject guides! They are succinct, easily navigable web pages designed to direct students to a broad scope of resources among different disciplines. Often, it can be difficult to find a springboard when tasked with research because there is so much information to sift through. I find the subject guides especially practical because they steer the student toward developing a research plan, and provide a welcome jumping off point.
What do you like to do outside of work?
I like to be surrounded by as much green as possible in my free time. I frequent the Brooklyn Botanic Garden on a weekly basis and have most recently taken advantage of the CUNY summer schedule to make trips to New England during the extended weekends. As much as I love being in the great outdoors, I am also a huge visual consumer of New York’s cityscape; I try to look up and around me constantly. It’s the best way for me to relax!
 

Professor Bronwen Densmore discusses her trip to Palestine over the summer as part of the program “Librarians and Archivists to Palestine.”

  Who organized your trip?
“Librarians and Archivists to Palestine” was organized by a group of librarians who were interested in exploring ways that librarians in the West might be able to connect and collaborate with Palestinian librarians in the West Bank and Israel (Gaza is a little more difficult to access right now).
Nablus library
Tell us about some of the most interesting libraries that you visited.
Over the course of the trip we visited dozens of different libraries, archives, and information projects. In East Jerusalem, we met with keepers of family archives and saw beautiful hand-written Qurans, books of poetry, and family records. We met with public librarians who serve Palestinian and Bedouin communities inside Israel, as well as with public librarians in Nablus and al-Bireh. We visited the Lajee Center in Adia Refugee Camp and the Yafa Cultural Center at Balata Refugee Camp to hear about their own library collections and youth education programs, and (of course) we toured academic libraries at Birzeit University and Al-Quds University.
 
prayerbook
What are some of the biggest challenges facing Palestinian libraries, librarians, and their patrons?
The libraries we worked with faced all kinds of challenges we don’t see in the United States. Access to books in Arabic is limited due to restrictions placed on what kinds of things may be shipped into Israel and Palestine (Arabic-language texts can be hard to get). Librarians’ limited ability to travel across borders (and impeded mobility within the West Bank and Israel) makes professional development and networking between libraries difficult. That said, Palestinian librarians in Israel and the West Bank are also doing a lot of the same work that librarians everywhere do: they work to connect their users to the best information possible, are thinking critically and creatively about ways to deliver library services, and are working to ensure a vibrant future for the profession.
beans
What would you like to go back and see/do again?
I would love to go back. I’m very interested in open technology and grassroots mapping, and I was able to meet with a few organizations that are doing social geography scholarship and outreach: Zochrot in Tel Aviv and Grassroots Jerusalem are both organizations approaching the topic from different directions. On a purely personal note, there were places I’d love to have the chance to explore a little more: Nablus Old City was great (and I would love another chance to eat kunafa (a local delicacy) again. Ramallah, where we were based at the beginning and end of our trip was a bustling, international city with a lot more going on than I had time to see. I also felt like I was just starting to get the hang of transportation in and around the West Bank (the shared taxis system is great). In the meantime, I am trying to learn how to cook some of the amazing food that I had while I was there and learn at least a few words of Arabic.

July is National Ice Cream Month!

Back in 1984, President Ronald Reagan declared the month of July as National Ice Cream Month. He had also named the third Sunday in July to be National Ice Cream Day. (This year, it falls on Sunday, July 15.) In the proclamation he signed on July 9, 1984, he wrote: “I call upon the people of the United States to observe these events with appropriate ceremonies and activities.” Presumably, he had meant for Americans to go out and eat ice cream… but because we’re a library, we’ll celebrate by highlighting several books on the topic!
Books/eBooks
Ice Cream: A Global History Of Sugar and Snow: A History of Ice Cream Making The Ice Cream Maker: An Inspiring Tale About Making Quality the Key Ingredient in Everything You Do
Periodicals

Websites

…Of course, you’re free to celebrate in the traditional way: by indulging in some ice cream! Just please refrain from bringing the frozen dessert into the library (…unless you’re treating the librarians!).
If you’re having difficulties accessing the periodicals or e-books, check out the library’s instructions on accessing electronic resources from home. If you’re still having trouble, don’t hesitate to ask a librarian!
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