2018 CTLC Conference
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Item 2018 CTLC Conference Program(2018)Item Batteries not included? Enhancing customer service(8/10/2018) Christenson, TroyEvery person is special but many times we simply answer the question or take action to solve the problem. Frequently there is more we can do with the people we touch that makes them want to come back to you or your organization. The objective of this presentation is to provide some suggestions on how you can provide that special touch to your daily job and make people feel special by taking customer service to the next level.Item Becoming a One Service Desk(8/10/2018) Ravenell, AlmaMuntz Library had endeavored to become a one service station for a number of years. This is an idea that the Executive Director had desired for some time. When the opportunity arose, the idea began to take shape. The Library took advantage of it, and began the One Service Point initiative. This poster represents the start, the transition, and the final product.Item Benefits of weeding your collection(8/10/2018) Livingston, PrestonItem But I'm Boooooorrrrrred!: Decoding the Tween brain at your Library(8/10/2018) Mai, ResaRemember being a tween? That curiosity, excitement, and often fearful awkwardness, about growing up? In this session we'll explore the middle school years with a look at tween brain development, and hear from some tweens themselves, via recorded interviews about preadolescent awkwardness. We will combine the findings with successful programming plans proven to reach, engage and serve tweens. The highly interactive discussion will include volunteer opportunities, programming and readers advisory ideas, with plenty of time to exchange your ideas, experiences, and challenges for serving tweens.Item I “art” libraries: Exhibiting 101(8/10/2018) Ross, Bethany; O'Pella, SarahArt is essential for expressing a community’s cultural identity and promoting the growth of ideas. Libraries can leverage local resources to provide patrons with access to quality art experiences and services. Embrace your art community by scaling exhibits based on budget, grant opportunities, community need, and audience interest. Plano Public Library began hosting local art exhibits in 2016 and expanded exhibit space to all 5 libraries by 2017 driven by demand in the community. Learn how to create community driven art exhibits, create policy and expectations, and connect with your local art community.Item The Impact of Library Instruction on Undergraduate Success: A four-year study(8/10/2018) Hargis, Carol; Rowe, Jennifer; Leuzinger, JulieThis presentation tracks library instruction impact on undergraduate English students by using anonymized student information, including grades and semester GPAs, to find a correlation between library instruction classes and student success. This was a four year study of English Writing II students who participated in library instruction classes. All of these students card swiped at the beginning of their instruction classes giving us the student information we needed to analyze their semester GPAs. We compared the student's GPAs who attend a library instruction class to other students who did not attend a library instruction class. After gathering and analyzing the information we found a positive correlation with library instruction and student success.Item Making a Case for Makerspaces(8/10/2018) Edge, NancyLibraries strive to create and foster a collaborative learning environment for various types of learners. To fulfill this mission, libraries need to include a space that engages users and gives them opportunities to use technologies that they would not normally have access to. This need is further emphasized by the advancements in technology in local and international communities, universities, and workplaces. A solution to this growing problem is the implementation of a makerspace. A makerspace is not set to one single definition but in the simplest terms, it is a space where people have the opportunity to explore, invent, and learn. There are several skills that can be introduced and honed through a makerspace, including but not limited to: the collaboration and fostering of unique ideas and relationships, to become well acquainted with the intricacies of concept and design, to utilize critical thinking skills and ingenuity to solve problems, and to recognize what it takes for a concept to go from a draft to a finished product, all while catering to different learning styles and needs while bridging the STEM and humanities fields. Most importantly, this will allow library patrons to change from consumers to creators while utilizing both the physical and virtual world. This alone will provide them with a skill set that is highly sought by those in the professional and academic world(s), ensuring that they will be an asset to our local communities and beyond.Item Making HerStory OurStory-Building a Wikipedia program from the ground up(8/10/2018) Dodd, SamanthaIn an effort to provide increased access to Special Collections and open access library materials, staff at UT Arlington libraries designed a program to utilize Wikipedia’s reach and resources. The program began with outreach to faculty during Open Access week in fall 2017. A former Wikimedian-in-residence walked attendees through reflections on his 11 Years as a Wikipedian. Following his presentation, a panel of faculty from across the metroplex discussed using Wikipedia based assignments in the classroom, and how these projects affected student learning. Library staff participated in a compacted version of the Wikipedia + Libraries Better Together program to understand the complexities and logistics of editing the world’s encyclopedia. The Wikipedia program culminated in the first edit-a-thon on campus during Women’s History Month in 2018. Partnering with the Women’s and Gender studies department, HerStory offered students, staff and guest the opportunity to contribute content to overlooked and marginalized groups on Wikipedia. With over 61 editors contributing to HerStory, the edit-a-thon shattered expectations. As the number of editors is growing on campus, the number of citations to library resources added on Wikipedia is increasing. Wikipedia offers libraries a way to serve 21st-century information needs. It is how we can improve access to knowledge, teach digital literacy, and a way to empower our communities.Item The OA2020 Expression of Interest(8/10/2018) Hawkins, KevinThe OA2020 Expression of Interest OA2020 is an international initiative that supports institutions committed to the large-scale shift toward open access to the scholarly journal literature. Institutions that sign the Expression of Interest commit to making a good faith effort to devise and implement practical strategies and actions for transitioning their funding for subscribing to journals to supporting open access. This lightning talk with provide an overview of the overall initiative and related resources to help guide decision-making on how to redirect library funding and will explain how to participate.Item Organizing Campus-Wide Graduate Student Workshops Using Digital Badges(8/10/2018) Baeza, VictorAcademic libraries exist in large part to support users and their learning experience at the university. The spectrum of how to do this has widened to include new types of services and resources. The challenge then is to promote the library’s resources to their target audience. A growing trend at universities is to use micro-credentialing (digital badges) to capture the “soft skills” students gain outside of the classroom through various training and workshop opportunities. Libraries can use this trend as an opportunity to become the campus leader in micro-credentialing, using the system to promote their programming as well as to coordinate campus-wide workshop programming. Oklahoma State University Libraries has used digital badges to become the program administrators for the Graduate College, serving as the central organizer of information on campus training activities for graduate students. The Library now organizes workshops offered to graduate students by the Library, Career Services, the Writing Center, the High Performance Computing Center, University Wellness, and the Institute for Teaching and Learning Excellence. The library has also become the location where the majority of the workshops are held, solidifying the library as the hub of graduate workshops. With the success of the program, the Graduate College has turned to the library to support other training activities using the infrastructure developed to support the digital badges. So the Library is providing the new service of organizing workshops for users, just as it organizes other sources of information and learning, while facilitating distribution, awareness and access.Item Preparing for the Main Event: Creating a culture of customer service(8/10/2018) Pittman, ShedrickCustomer Service is more than just being nice. It is a teachable skill as important, if not more, than technical skills in our service-oriented industry. In 2017, NCTC Libraries--Gainesville Campus participated in a 6-month long customer service-building project employing many of the concepts detailed in “The Customer Service Revolution” by John DiJulius. This project laid the foundations for cre- ating a “culture of service” within the front-line staff. This staff-driven process produced a vision statement, a promise to our customers, customer service standards, and a customer service training manual for new hires and old hands. Walk through the process and be inspired to create your own culture of service within your library!Item Pronunciator: A powerful tool for language learning(8/10/2018) Katzenstein, LisaPronunciator is a phenomenal tool for learning any language. I will be focusing in on how a foreign language student can learn Spanish, one of 87 languages taught on Pronunciator. For this pre¬sentation English will be the interface language and Spanish will be the target language. Pronunciator offers a main Spanish course with five different levels of difficulty, and Learning Guides, which are 8 week long highly structured courses of different language levels for 5 days a week, 1-2 sessions per day. Live 30 minute free conversation classes are offered on weekdays, but one must be the first of 5 people to sign up 5 minutes before the class begins online. The main Spanish course offers drills with phonetic spellings of each word, along with the opportunity to record oneself and be graded by Pronunciator for accuracy in pronunciation. The drills also give the student practice in vocabulary, listening comprehension, reading, and writing. The student then can go to the quiz section and be tested on all of these language skills. Movies, poetry and popular music are offered as well. Teachers can also customize Pronunci¬ator for their students. Participants should bring their laptops or tablets. Headsets are helpful, but not mandatory. One month access to Pronunciator will be provided.Item Reference is Dead: A Peer Research Assistant Program(8/10/2018) Smith, AndrewThe classic reference interaction with patrons is all but a thing of the past. At our institution, the reference desk itself disappeared altogether five years ago, with reference shifting to an on-call model. This ghosting of the reference desk and its affiliated service was ushered in by a sudden influx of new furniture and technology brought in to “dress up” the library’s drab first floor, but was likewise buoyed by dwindling reference statistics and overburdened staff. Due to various factors (librarians’ lack of visibility, perceived indifference from students and faculty, the so-called “information literate” millennial generation), reference statistics sunk to an all-time low over the subsequent years. Thus, we decided two things: 1) bring back the reference desk, and 2) staff it (primarily) with student workers. Hearing of similar services being introduced at fellow Oberlin Group college libraries and beyond, we moved forward with piloting a program where we hired and trained a small staff of work-study eligible student workers to serve as the first point of contact in the reference interaction while staffing the reference desk. The rationale for this, in part, was data supporting the notion of “librarian fear” or “library anxiety,” coinciding with our belief that students are more likely to seek help or advice from other students—their peers—than they are from a librarian. This session will articulate our experience introducing this service – from the impact on our statistics, to the best practices, pitfalls, and lessons learned that we incorporated for the coming academic year.Item Things I didn't learn in Library School(8/10/2018) Cox, KayleenOnline learning opens educational opportunities for working adults and this presentation aims to open a discussion for ways to improve curriculum and opportunities for students. Online library programs provide an alternative for adult learners when on-campus coursework is not a viable option. However, the digital nature of the degree has its drawbacks, especially for those students with little or no library work experience. This presentation discusses some of these challenges while comparing the online learning experience with a traditional face-to-face program. These difficulties include perceived job preparedness and connection with faculty, classmates, and the university.Item Using PaperCut to Improve Print Services at a College Library(2018) Lawson, CherylFinding a solution for handling print services is a common quest in librar- ies today. Libraries need the ability to print from anywhere, coupled by the ability for patrons to release and pay for their print jobs using cash or credit cards. In 2017, the Dallas Community College District, which includes Richland College Library, selected PaperCut to manage its print services for patrons. Enhancing cash and credit card transactions played a major role in the implementation of Papercut. However, stress-testing at multiple release points and copiers was also important, too. Both the expected and unexpected bene- fits of Papercut’s web -based online system are to be discussed with outcomes for its future.Item Vendor Relations: Evolving ethos and etiquette(8/10/2018) Sammonds Crawford, LaurelAs vendors consolidate and the electronic resources market matures, products are increasing in complexity and vendors are marketing ev¬er-changing acquisition models. To safeguard the financial health of our institutions and the utility of our collections, librarians must adapt to changes in the library market and vendor behavior. The University of North Texas Libraries has embarked on a multi-year effort to improve our ability to do this, by proactively preventing problems and by re¬sponding effectively to new situations as they arise. Our session will explore practical techniques and everyday actions that help librarians successfully meet these challenges. We will explore librarians’ attitudes toward vendor activities, including how our tolerance for adverse behaviors and our reactions affect our ability to prevent and solve problems. And we’ll look at how librarians’ responses and behaviors are changing as traditional approaches become less effective. We will also examine four important aspects of vendor-librarian relations. First, how librarians should examine and adjust their mindset upon entering a business relationship. Second, evaluation of products and services as an important step that both heavily influences and is influenced by the vendor relationship. Third, negotiating pricing and features and how it is essential to maintain control over the library’s finances and the patrons’ ability to access important materials. Lastly, we will discuss the concept of setting boundaries and how personal steadfastness can create successful vendor relationships.Item What is in the BOX? Building excitement with the unknown(8/10/2018) Mai, ResaIn the My-story BOX! Building excitement with the unknown Using consistency, and a little mystery I will show you how to create and build excitement from one Storytime to the next. I will share best practices designed to encourage patrons, not matter how small to come in the door focused on you, your theme and your storytime.Item What’s Up, Doc? Free U.S. Government Health and Medical Resources(8/10/2018) Shank, Paige; Morland, MarnaPaige Shank and Marna Morland, members of the Cross Timbers Government Information Affinity Group, demonstrate free U.S. Government databases and websites on the topics of health and medicine. From statistics to images, come and see the variety of resources available!