Thursday, April 26

ERB-avore

Dear Diary,

I have written my first ever Committee Charge. Yay! I am the Chair of the Electronic Resources Blog (ERB) Committee. We are at the stage in the process where we are evaluating the overall effectiveness of the Drupal Software. We are deciding if it is the best method to meet our goals. I have written the rough draft for the content and located corresponding images.
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I also received a copy of the Library's Access Newsletter featuring my photo and the article about me as an ALA Emerging Leader.

Saturday, April 21

24/7

Dear Diary,

I've been swamped as of late and have not had the time nor energy to update my blog. I am feverishly working on my Electronic Resources Blog, the content and terms for the links and playing in my newly created Drupal Sandbox. But hopefully we will be able to launch what we have within a week or two.

In preparation for my Outreach Librarian duties, I have created my very first ad, for the Spectrum Scholars 10th Anniversary booklet, that was approved and sent off to production within a 24-hour turn around. One of the new people I will be working closely with, suggested I slow down, since the deadline was not soon. Ha! She will learn that in my mind the deadline is always near. I like to think I am completion oriented. Yes, that is the nicest way to say I have Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD).
I am working on the poster session for my Emerging Leaders team to present at ALA Annual and I am also preparing for a presentation, Leslie and I are doing for our library's May Institute. The topic is Marketing which should be very fun. And of course there is my WPIT (Web Presence Improvement Team) Committee work.
Additionally, I have been conducting lots of card sorting usability tests which are time consuming. One day this week, I did usability testing in the morning, then went to a faculty meeting and was getting computer upgraded and there was an honest-to-goodness line outside of my door, at least 3 or 4 people were waiting to get in to talk to me. When the last one left they asked if I wanted me door closed? Yes, please or I would not have gotten any work done other than meetings. So I returned from a faculty meeting. I had literally 30 minutes free on my Corporate Time Calendar so while at the faculty meeting one of my teams requested I squeeze them into that 30 minute open time slot. Done. We left the faculty meeting 5 minutes early so I had 5 whole minutes to try to get some work done, and int hat 5 minutes my phone rang with another of my teams asking for that free 30 minutes. Ha! Ha! I told them it was already snatched up so they were kind enough to wait until my final meeting ended which was technically the end of the work day but they waited and we were also able to meet. When the staff person was upgrading my computer she said "When I looked at your calendar and saw you were booked solid every day, I thought it was a mistake...but now I see." She has agreed to vouch for me as she witnessed the line outside my door and the simultaneous phone conversations. It is all about Multi-tasking. I laugh when I think back to comments made to me by patrons, that "They wish they got paid to just sit down and read all day!" I wish I did too!

24/8


This sums it up nicely!

Friday, April 20

Welcome Boiler Makers

Dear Diary,

I had quite an exciting day today. Leslie, my co-resident invited the Library Residents from Purdue to campus for a network opportunity. It was really great. They said they learned a lot from all of the librarians who offered advise and we shared our common experiences as Residents. It was a beautiful day outside and we spent a lot of time in the restaurant which is always a crowd pleaser.
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I left the lunch to attend a forum provided by G. David Moss whose speaker described an almost indescribable existence wherein she said there are roughly a million people in a square mile and there is no sanitation and this leads to what t is known as Flying Toilets. There is an interesting article on flying toilets available by clicking on that term.

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But then I returned in time to spend the rest of their time here with the residents. I briefly attended a lecture on God, the Government and the Ghetto. I met a fellow NEW Outreach Librarians from Purdue and I am looking forward to starting what I will call the Outreach Librarian Association (O.L.A.) Yay! We are both the first ones in these roles and have similar target audiences and similar ideas of community outreach we are interested in. I told her I'd been trying to find Hoosiers doing Prison Outreach and she was interested. I told her so far I've only talked to one who is at the Indiana State University, Dr. Laura Bates.

In Wabash Valley Correctional Institution in Indiana. The "Shakespeare in the SHU" (Security Housing Unit) program was highlighted in an MSNBC Investigates report on the prison that aired last year and repeats regularly. Dr. Laura Bates founded a program whose purpose is to have a segregated population there "come to terms with their crimes" by reading, discussing, and rewriting Shakespeare. At the time of the documentary, the prisoners were working on Macbeth, which one inmate describes as exhibiting "parallels that correlate with urban life." These segregated prisoners rewrite the play, and then observe and comment as another group of prisoners enact the revisioned text. It seemed an intriguing approach.MSNBC Investigates"Lockup: Inside Wabash"Narrator: John Seigenthaler

Under the guidance of Laura Bates, assistant professor of English at Indiana State University, inmates from the Wabash Valley Correctional Facility at Carlisle will perform scenes from the Shakespearian tragedy "Macbeth," time-honored tale of the politically ambitious title character and his strong-willed wife and co-conspirator, Lady Macbeth.


The program is designed to improve vocabulary and reading skills, improve self-esteem, increase awareness of emotional health, and increase respect for others and a growing awareness of the benefits of honesty in communication. Along with Bates, Diane Kondrat of Interaction Theater, a non-profit organization that develops interactive theater programs for at-risk youth and adults, has been working with the inmates as facilitator for the dramatic portion of the play.
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So, now I need to develop my outreach ideas but since technically I don't start that position until July 1st, I need to focus on my current work load which is far from waning. I love Notre Dame! I learn so much being here. Speaking of which, I need to get back to work.

Friday, April 13

From My Sister & Nephews














Not Bad For FRIDAY the 13th
:-)

Monday, April 9

Love This Poster

I am NOT tense.
Just terribly,
terribly alert!



Sunday, April 8

Egyptian Blogger Arrested

Egypt arrests another blog critic

Police in Cairo have detained a blogger whose posts have been critical of the Egyptian government.

Rami Siyam, who blogs under the name of Ayyoub, was detained along with three friends after leaving the house of a fellow blogger late at night.

No reasons have been given for Mr Siyam's detention. The other friends were released after being questioned.

Human rights groups have accused Egypt of eroding freedom of speech by arresting several bloggers recently.

BBC Arab Affairs analyst Magdi Abdelhadi says blogging in Egypt is closely associated with political activism in a culture where democratic freedoms are severely restricted.

In recent weeks, bloggers have been exposing what they say was the sexual harassment of women at night in downtown Cairo in full view of police who did not intervene.

Mr Siyam's host on Saturday night, Muhammad Sharqawi, was detained for several weeks earlier this year.

The most recently detained blogger, Abdel Kareem Nabil, was detained in Alexandria on 6 November and was charged with disrupting public order, inciting religious hatred and defaming the president.

Amnesty International says Mr Amer appeared to have been detained for expressing critical views about Islam and Egypt's al-Azhar religious authorities.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/6164798.stm

Wednesday, April 4

I Have Arrived!


Dear Diary,

I accepted a job at Notre Dame!!!

It is a newly created Outreach/Marketing position in order to keep both Residents.
YAY! I am so glad to get off of that Job Hunting Roller Coaster Ride!
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*Bonus: I got 2 articles Published today as well:

Pirate-Teacher.
Click here to access the Journal of Academic Librarianship, v.33, no.2, March 2007.

&

“Games for Teaching Information Literacy Skills.
Click here to access it at Library Philosophy and Practice v.9, no. 2, April 2007

Friday, March 30

Ready for My Close Up



Dear Diary,

Today was the best way to spend a Friday. I attended a demonstration of teaching innovation and tools in the new Jordan Science Building and ran into my former co-star from the RefWorks commercial who was one of the presenters for the new WebCT Concourse. There were snacks and it is great weather out so that was nice.

Then I returned in time for my Photo Shoot for an upcoming article in our library newsletter, Access about my participation in the Emerging Leader program. It was in the library concourse during lunch time so I got a lot of co-worker attention. I wonder if they think this is really how I spend all of my time. Either shooting commercials or article photos. Ha! Ha!

Now I'm off to a retirement party filled with the most beautiful daffodils and more treats.

I really should stop eating so many snacks...
if I am going to continue being
America's Next Top Library Model.

Thursday, March 29

Gutenberg offers 'In your home' support

Introducing the book -- Gutenberg offers 'In your home' support

Technical Service Help Desk for the first books. Too Funny!

Once and For All

Dear Diary,

I usually try to view all situations in a positive light. To that end, I have been trying to convince my mentors of the merits of my latest "IDEA." I am sure it is a direct result of my exhaustion, but I am also trying to make the numerous interviews I'm conducting more EFFICIENT. So I propose instead of doing 3 phone interviews each day, perhaps I can create a webcast of a sort of Audition Tape. I am applying for similar library positions with similar requirements. I only apply to those that I feel I am qualified for. And as hard as this may be to hear, libraries are not that dis-similar. Neither are their interview questions. Unfortunately, the do differ greatly in the topics I have been required to present on during my campus interviews. It figures.

But I digress. Like I was saying, I can create a recording to be viewed at the interviewers' leisure. No longer would we have to coordinate schedules for 4 or 5 people for a phone conference call. Instead, I can answer some of the basics that they all ask:

1) What interested me in their position/ university?
2) What makes me qualified?
3) What is my approach/philosophy to instruction/reference?
4) Do I have good communication skills?
5) Am I innovative/creative?
6) Am I a team player, but am I also able to work independently?

Now imagine a body answering those same or slight variations of those same questions over and over and over and over, in the span of about a month. Not just on weekdays, or during work hours but continuing on weekends and evenings.

Now I ask you would it not save all parties involved considerable time to have those questions pre-recorded and they can view it and then if they have more questions or wish to continue they could contact each other after that time saving measure?

Just think of it, the possibilities are endless. I could don my pirate costume and do a demo. I could use this as an example of my innovative ideas and creative ability. My managers don't think it will fly. But oh well...

Tech Support for Gutenberg Era

Dear Diary,

A brilliant man whom I admire immensely sent me this and for some reason it reminds me of him. Ha!

Technical Service / Help desk for the 1st book

http://www.boreme.com/boreme/funny-2007/introducing-the-book-p1.php

Wednesday, March 28

Notre Dame Interview

Dear Diary,

I finished my 3 days of interviews at Notre Dame this week. I think it went really well, we should know within a few weeks hopefully. It is a strange situation, not only being an internal candidate, but having the only other candidate be my co-resident. This is pretty awkward for most of our co-workers who have explicitly stated that we are both great but just extremely opposite from each other, whatever that means? But at least, this is a win-win because at least the tradition will continue of the residents having the option to stay.

I worked incredibly hard on my presentation. And thank God, it went off without a hitch! No technology snafus or mishaps. I half expected the audience to begin tossing Rose Petals over my head, at the end of my presentation. But of course, I ALWAYS expect my audience to toss rose petals in fact I expect perfect strangers to do that when I walk pass, as well. I have been at times concerned that I have an over-inflated self ego. Ha! Ha!

I have gotten really great feedback about my presentation. I got some helpful questions afterwards that actually helped me convey a more definitive explanation of my example of class activities. I actually pulled up my Pirate Teacher class slides and went through them and heard a lot of "Ohs and Ahs." I don't think until that moment that I realized the potential for people to misconstrue my instruction sessions with little more than glorified play time. So when they realized the level of detail and content that is involved in my class, I think that strengthened my overall presentation. One of my co-instructors for my Pirate Teacher class was in attendance and he vouched for me, but I had not appreciated that the majority of the others only see me walking around in a Pirate Costume with a screaming sword...so they would have no way of knowing that I cover the same if not more content as all other instructors. So that worked out.

Some people were unable to attend my presentation, so I vowed to go to anyone's office who did not attend and RE-DO my entire presentation in their office. And so I did just that. I think people believed I was kidding and that was an idle threat. They know better now. Ha! Ha! And while I am not usually a supporter of FORCIBLE INSTRUCTION...sometimes it cannot be avoided. I can't imagine why people think I am slightly insane. Ha!
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But seriously, I was thinking about that car insurance commercial wherein the speaker gives someone some bad news but adds, "The good news is that I just saved up to 15% on my car insurance!" Well, I think even though I have been somewhat, just a wee bit stressed out with juggling work projects and interviews...the good news is that I just saved 50% on my THERAPY bill!"

I love Notre Dame for a whole host of reasons, not the least of which is the people who I work with. I have been blessed to have the most absolutely incredible mentors here. They not only challenge me professionally but they are always always there for me personally. And it is more than just a couple so it is a really wonderful support network. In addition to my work and interview and of course my publishing responsibilities, I have been steeped in personal and family crises. they never fail to keep my encouraged and always listen and give me a genuine smile and a big ole hug when needed. Aaawww Shucks!! I told them I can't imagine being somewhere else and not having them all within a few feet of my office. But we will see how this whole thing plays out.

Monday, March 26

I'm Back

Dear Diary,

I'm back. YAY!!

I've been off conducting
back-to-back campus interviews.

I'm utterly exhausted from:
traveling and interviewing
and doing presentations.


All interviews required I do very specific and very different presentation topics.

Naturally, all of the cities I visited shared the same weather as Notre Dame. Ha!

Did I mention that I still have a full time job? Oh well. It is just truly refreshing to be back home and have a few days before I fly out again for the next round of campus interviews in the first and second weeks of April.

I've been able to refine my selection criteria and have begun declining campus invitations which is pretty scary since I do not have an official offer. But "Leap of Faith" right?

Okay, time to catch up on my work.
Tah Tah For Now.

Saturday, March 10

I'm on Vacation...

Up, Up & Away!

Dear Diary,

My Upward Bound Presentations went very well, especially since the first one was plagued by technical difficulties. My original big closing was derailed since I could not get sound on the computer which defeated the purpose. But I have suffered enough Technical Deaths to know how to be Reborn with a low-tech contingent plan.

So I had to rely on my quick thinking and so I piggybacked off of the wonderful keynote speaker points and ended with a powerful motivational poem by Les Brown called "Live Your Dreams." The keynote speaker was Attorney Cleo Washington.

One facilitator form Purdue said I need to make a recording of my presentation because it was so dynamic and I have an amazing personal story to share. So I invited him to follow me around with a video camera and we can make my life into a Reality TV show. Students asked me "How do I keep myself so motivated?" And I told them it is a daily struggle. I strive for balance because I tend to be an extremist, so I may watch Flavor of Love or some other "Mindless Entertainment Production." (Mindless Entertainment is actually the name of the company).

But for every hour I spend not using my mind, I double that amount of time spend doing something mentally challenging.

The keynote speaker spoke about Plato's Cave Analogy and tunnel limited vision. He also talked about the "Road Less Traveled" by Robert Frost.

My evaluations were very good and the audience reaction was overwhelmingly positive. I am on such a high. There is no comparable feeling than that of "Giving Back" to future generations. YAY!

This was just the boost I needed to get me over the hump for the intense few weeks that start in 18 hours.

Thursday, March 8

Como Se Dice?


Dear Diary,

I just learned that a co-worker was awarded a research leave to study the Catalan language publishing industry.
I sure need someone to help translate Catalan, b/c when I visited Ibiza and Barcelona I noticed signs everywhere in graffiti that read:

"No volem autopista"

I was so saddened that the poor citizens were not allowed to have Autopsies.

Until my friend explained that "Autopista" means "Expressway." Doh!

But my friend got her new nickname on that same trip, My Banana!
Of course she later explained to me that they were calling her "Mi Hermana" which we all know means, Sister. But I decided I like Banana more. So there! Ha!

Wednesday, March 7

Refworks Commercial ... FEVER

Dear Diary,

I am proud to report that a few people have expressed interest in using our Citation Cop Commercial.

Even the company RefWorks may showcase it as a marketing tool idea for other customers. I have gotten a few flattering comments directly on YouTube.

In fact we are in talks right now with a librarian in another country who wants to use it in their library.

Aww Shucks!

Wabash Correctional Facility Book Donation Project

Dear Diary,

I am personally interested in doing an outreach project to correctional facilities. I don't have the time now, but I can donate, in the mean time:

The Black Cultural Center library at Purdue University accepts books for donation to the Wabash Correctional Facility.

The project is a collaborative effort between the Wabash Correctional Facility and the Black Cultural Center in response to inmates’ desire to have access to material relating to the Black experience.

In addition, the Center makes its collection available to the facility via Interlibrary Loan and donates withdrawn items from its collection to the facility.

You may send donations to the : Black Cultural Center library, Purdue University, 1100 3rd, Lafayette, IN, 47906.

Clearly state that the donation is for the Wabash Correctional Facility to avoid confusion as possible donation to the Black Cultural Center library.

Trio Day Presentation this Saturday

Dear Diary,

I am still preparing for my presentation at Trio Day. I'm almost done, I've printed all 100 handouts and have rehearsed my presentation. Just adding some finishing touches. Below is an announcement that was on Notre Dame's Homepage today:

Upward Bound to host area students for Trio Day conference



The Upward Bound program at the University of Notre Dame will host students and parents from the local community on campus March 10 (Saturday) for a conference titled “Trio Scholars Embracing the Future.” In celebration of national Trio Day, which honors first-generation and low-income students who have successfully achieved a higher education, the leadership workshop will feature a keynote address by former state Sen. Cleo Washington.

High school and college students, including participants in Notre Dame’s Upward Bound program along with students from Purdue University Calumet, Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne, Indiana State University, Vincennes University, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, the Robinson Community Learning Center and the 21st Century Scholars program, will attend with their parents.

Representatives from the offices of U.S. Rep. Joseph Donnelly of the 2nd District of Indiana, South Bend Mayor Steve Luecke, and Notre Dame President Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C., will be present at the conference.

In addition to the address by Washington, a Notre Dame Upward Bound alumnus, activities will include a college fair, an awards luncheon and workshop sessions designed to help students and their parents embrace college life and their future. All events will take place on campus at McKenna Hall, with the college fair beginning the day at 8:30 a.m. Registration information and a detailed itinerary are available on the Web

A federally funded Trio initiative for enhancing postsecondary educational opportunities for economically disadvantaged young people, Notre Dame Upward Bound has been serving students from the South Bend Community School Corporation since 1966. Other Trio programs at Notre Dame include Educational Talent Search and the Ronald McNair Post-Baccalaureate Program.