The 2014 PA Forward Information Literacy Summit Committee is pleased to announce that registration for our July 23, 2014 Summit—Building Bridges: Extending the Conversation—is now open at
http://www.palibraries.org/events/event_details.asp?id=443960#
The event will be held in Paterno Library, Penn State, State College, PA and our two key note presentations are:Library Model Curriculum for PA Schools: Cornerstone Tasks for Assessment, presented by Eileen Kern (Past President, PA School Library Association) and Allison Mackley (Librarian, Hershey High School) andACRL’s Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education: Implications for Practice, presented by Ellysa Stern Cahoy (Vice-Chair, Chair Elect, ACRL Instruction Section) and Donna Witek (The University of Scranton, member of the ACRL Information Literacy Standards Committee).
If you would like to book a room at the Nittany Lion Inn, we have secured a discount rate but reservations must be made by June 27, 2014. More information about the program, the hotel discount code, and parking at Penn State are available on the reservation website under Program Description & Details and Parking Information.
This project is made possible by a grant from the U.S. Institute of Museum and Library Services as administered by the Pennsylvania Department of Education and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Tom Corbett Governor, through the College and Research Division (http://crdpala.org) of PaLA. Show your appreciation by becoming a member of PaLA! And if you are a member – thank you!
Presentation Materials from the Spring Program
Thank you to all the presenters at the spring program “Open and Shut: The Case for OA in Libraries”. Links to presentation materials are listed below. We will be adding material as we receive it so check back if a presentation is currently not available.
“Open Access: Where Are We Now and How Did We Get Here?” with Tom Reinsfelder & John Barnett
“The Library as Publisher” with Timothy Deliyannides & Lauren Collister
“If you build it, they will come (if you invite them thoughtfully): Institutional Repositories in Academic Libraries” with Eric Jeitner & Janelle Wertzberger
- http://cupola.gettysburg.edu/librarypubs/31/
- https://crdpala.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/ericjeitner.pptx
- https://crdpala.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/ericjeitner1.xlsx
“Paving the Way for Open Access” with George Aulisio
CRD Spring Program- this FRIDAY!
CRD’s Spring Program “Open and Shut: The Case for OA in Libraries” will take place on Arcadia University’s campus this Friday, May 30th. Registration and Breakfast starts at 10:00. The conference begins at 10:30 and lasts until 3pm.
Arcadia Campus Map :http://www.arcadia.edu/admissions/default.aspx?id=1565
Room Change: We will now be meeting in building 15, Brubaker Hall (not building 14 as originally stated). There will be signs and students to guide attendees to the new meeting location. The room is Brubaker 101.
You can park in any of the designated visitor lots on campus.
If you have questions please e-mail Larissa Gordon (gordonl@arcadia.edu) or call at 215-572-2136.
Join us for the next Connect & Communicate Series Discussion
“Digital Learning Objects & Materials: What’s Our Role?”
When: Friday, June 6th 11:00AM-12:00PM
Where: Adobe Connect
Click for more details.
Please register here: http://goo.gl/BKQzo7 (registration is free)
Information about connecting will be emailed to you a few days before the discussion.
Join fellow PA academic librarians for an informal discussion of our role in finding and using digital learning objects and materials for our patrons.
CRD SPRING PROGRAM
Open and Shut: The Case for OA in Libraries
* REGISTRATION is now open for the spring program!
* Download the BROCHURE and find full details below.
Expanded Session Descriptions and Presenter Bios
“Benefits and Implementation of Open Access Policies” with Sue Kriegsman
Open-access (OA) literature is defined by Peter Suber as “digital, online, free of charge, and free of most copyright and licensing restrictions.”
Sue will describe Harvard University’s experience with open access, making scholarly information freely available to all, and the benefits to faculty. She will discuss the elements of an open access policy, the critical step of engaging stakeholders, and implementation options. There will be time for discussion after the presentation.
Sue Kriegsman is the Program Manager for the Harvard Library Office for Scholarly Communication. She identifies and implements ways for Harvard to open, share, and preserve scholarship. Sue has worked at Harvard since 2001 on a variety of digital initiatives such as the Harvard-Google book digitization project as the Project Manager. She also manages the Harvard Library Lab that is an internal grant program to create lightweight, open, and scalable projects bringing innovation to the Library. Prior to Harvard, she was the Project Manager for the Colorado Digitization Project.
“Open Access: Where Are We Now and How Did We Get Here?” with Tom Reinsfelder & John Barnett
Open access to scholarship has been gaining momentum for well over a decade. As academic librarians, we have an opportunity to educate others about open access publishing and advocate for the best interests of our libraries, our institutions, and our researchers. The presenters will describe past situations and actions that have led to current conditions and practices, highlighting recent developments in open access publishing, policy, and legislation. Whether new to the idea of open access or if one has been following the movement for many years, it is critical to keep up with the frequent and often dramatic developments. Participants will learn more about open access, past and present, and will gain knowledge and resources to better support faculty and students at their institutions.
John Barnett is the Scholarly Communications Librarian at the University of Pittsburgh. He is currently Co-Editor of Pennsylvania Libraries: Research & Practice, a peer-reviewed, Open Access journal, sponsored by the College and Research Division of the Pennsylvania Library Association. He earned his MLIS from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
Tom Reinsfelder is the Reference & Instruction Librarian at Penn State Mont Alto. He is the Co-Founder and Co-Editor of Pennsylvania Libraries: Research & Practice, a peer-reviewed, Open Access journal, sponsored by the College and Research Division of the Pennsylvania Library Association. He earned his MSLS from Clarion University, and his PhD from Indiana University of PA. His dissertation research explored aspects of open access to scholarly research.
“The Library as Publisher” with Timothy Deliyannides & Lauren Collister
Academic libraries are increasingly investing in new efforts to support their research and teaching faculty in the activities they care about most. Learn why becoming a publisher can help meet the most fundamental needs of your research community and at the same time can help transform today’s inflationary cost model for serials. Using the 35 peer-reviewed journals published by the University Library System, University of Pittsburgh as a case study, we will explore not only why to become a publisher but exactly how to achieve it, step by step, including careful selection of publishing partners, choosing the right platform for manuscript submission and editorial workflow management, one-time processes to launch a new journal, conducting peer reviews, maintaining academic quality, and measuring impact. We will close with a review of tools, services, and communities of support to nurture the new library publishing venture.
Lauren B. Collister, Ph.D., is the Electronic Publications Associate for the Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing, responsible for the day-to-day operations of the 35 e-journals published by the University Library System at the University of Pittsburgh as well as the 45 e-journals hosted by Scholarly Exchange. She works daily with editors and journal managers to navigate the publishing world, including software training, workflow consultation, and technical and editorial support. Lauren comes from an academic research and teaching background, receiving her Ph.D. in Linguistics from the University of Pittsburgh in 2013, and is the author of several journal articles, book chapters, and conference publications. As part of her academic life, she has been on the author, reviewer, and editor side of the journal publishing process. She is an open access and electronic freedom advocate. You can find her on Twitter at @parnopaeus.
Timothy S. Deliyannides, MSIS. As Director of the Office of Scholarly Communication and Publishing and Head of Information Technology, Tim Deliyannides is responsible for the extensive electronic publishing initiatives of the University Library System at the University of Pittsburgh. With over 25 years’ experience in library information technology, Tim has spent the last decade working with academic units and scholarly associations to promote Open Access to research and to help transform models of scholarly publishing. Tim oversees a number of author self-archiving repositories for research materials including 35 peer reviewed journals and six subject-based repositories, as well as conference proceedings, electronic theses and dissertations, pre-print publications, and other ‘grey literature’ such as white papers and technical reports. He is the current Chair of the Advisory Committee for the Public Knowledge Project (PKP), the world’s leading developer of open source journal publishing software.
“Paving the way for Open Access” with George Aulisio
In this presentation, the speaker will discuss the trials and tribulations of starting an Open Access policy at a small liberal arts college. The speaker will share his outreach experiences, responses from campus governing bodies, results of an on campus survey that tested faculty awareness and understanding of Open Access, and the next steps for Open Access on his campus.
George Aulisio is Assistant Professor, Public Services librarian, and Outreach Coordinator for The University of Scranton’s Weinberg Memorial Library. He has a Philosophy B.A. from Bloomsburg University, a Library and Information Science M.S. from Drexel University, a Philosophy and Metaphysics M.L.A. from the University of Pennsylvania, and he will be entering the Philosophy PhD program at Temple University in Fall 2014. His library research interests revolve around Copyright, Open Access, Professional Ethics, and Sustainability.
“If you build it, they will come (if you invite them thoughtfully): Institutional Repositories in Academic Libraries” with Eric Jeitner & Janelle Wertzberger
The road to a successful institutional repository is a long and involved one – so where would an interested library begin? What are some important initial considerations? What options exist for repository platforms? Eric Jeitner will discuss some of those considerations, as well as the methodology used to decide on the staging for Arcadia University’s ScholarWorks repository.
After picking a platform, decisions must be made about what work belongs in your IR, and why? How can librarians build campus awareness about open access? Who should be promoting your IR? Janelle Wertzberger will talk about the education and outreach efforts that contributed to early and broad participation by faculty and student authors at Gettysburg College. Less than two years after Gettysburg College launched its institutional repository, The Cupola contains over 1,100 items.
Janelle Wertzberger is the Director of Reference & Instruction and has worked in information literacy instruction and reference since 1997. Her professional interests also include open access scholarship. She manages Gettysburg College’s institutional repository, The Cupola: Scholarship at Gettysburg College. In addition to working in partnership with students and faculty, she regularly designs and implements public programs designed to support curricular inquiry, encourage critical thinking, and enliven the imagination.
Eric Jeitner works as the User Experience Librarian at the Richard Stockton College of New Jersey. He is interested in the roles that libraries can play in open access, emerging technology, usability, and social justice.
Be sure to REGISTER before May 23!


