Skip to content

Discounted Early Bird Registration for ACRL Roadshow and CRD Workshop Ends FRIDAY!

March 5, 2020
by
Register TODAY to take advantage of discounts and join the Pennsylvania Library Association College and Research Division for two excellent days of professional development on May 18 and 19 at Penn State Harrisburg in Middletown, PA.
ON MAY 18, we will welcome the ACRL Roadshow Engaging with the ACRL Framework to Pennsylvania. This all-day workshop is limited to 100 attendees! The Framework’s vision of information literacy education as a shared responsibility of all educators suggests both opportunities and challenges for teaching librarians, as we expand pedagogical approaches and partnerships. This workshop supports librarians in engaging more deeply with the Framework and exploring ways that it may help to enrich their individual teaching practices, as well as their local instruction programs and institutions.
ON MAY 19, join us for the annual CRD Spring Workshop. This year’s theme is Pennsylvania Academic Libraries: Powering Progress with Essential Literacies. The day-long program will include two keynote speakers on student civic engagement and libraries: Ilana Stonebraker of Indiana University, and Abby Kiesa of CIRCLE, The Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning & Engagement, at Tufts University. PA Forward Gold Star Academic libraries will share their journeys to gold, and other Pennsylvania academic library colleagues will present breakout sessions on essential literacy programming and resources.
The two-day workshop is valued at more than $175, but is available for PaLA members at an early-bird rate of just $77 and for non-members at $107 through LSTA Grant Funding. This early-bird rate expires THIS FRIDAY, March 6! 
Single-day registrations are also available for members at $47 and for non-members at $77. After March 6, all registrants must register for each day at the one-day rate.
Registration will close May 8.
Have a great program that focuses on any aspect of literacy? Submit a breakout session for the CRD Workshop!: https://pennstate.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_3eER4RjN2FcdJNb
*********************************************************
For more information, see the CRD Professional Development 2020 brochure (PDF) or ACRL Roadshow and CRD Workshop Plain Text document (DOCX).
This project is made possible, in part, by a grant from the U.S. Institute of Museum and Library Services as administered by the Pennsylvania Department of Education through the Office of Commonwealth Libraries and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Tom Wolf, Governor.
Support is also provided by the College and Research Division of the Pennsylvania Library Association, http://crdpala.org

Anticipating the Future is Human Nature, Risky and Necessary

March 4, 2020

Anticipating the future is human nature, risky and necessary. At least according to the introduction of the Horizon Report just released by EDUCAUSE, Emerging Technologies & Practices and Influential Trends, 2020. However it also acknowledges that the accuracy of predictions in past Horizon Reports are “middling” at best.

So, this year they have kept the ternary time horizon structure of past reports but adopted identifying trends which will cause departures from the past, impact the present, and help determine the future. Evidence for these trends is included. The trend categories are social, technological, economic, political and higher education.

Emerging Technologies & Practices and Influential Trends, 2020

Mind Map by EDUCAUSE based on 2020 Horizon Report

They have stood by the Horizon Report’s standard of not simply making a list of “hyped technologies for the field to debate and debunk” (4). The emerging technologies and practices they do discuss on pages 13-31 are:

  • elevation of instructional design, learning engineering and user-experience design
  • open educational resources
  • artificial intelligence/machine learning
  • cross-reality technologies
  • analytics for student success
  • adaptive learning

The report also presents scenarios on how the future may unfold in the next 10 years: growth, constraint, collapse, or transformation. Even if growth is achieved it will be “with some unrealized goals and even some setbacks” (33). Constraint would be due to “the values of efficiency and sustainability” and “escalating financial pressures as a result of shrinking enrollments and decreased funding from state and other sources” (34). Collapse would be the result of “a new ecosystem of education” (35). Transformation considers “two primary forces: the dangers posed by climate change and the advances in digital technology” (36).

Another important new component is a series of essays responding to the findings of the Report (pages 37-55). Written by Horizon Report panelists, they touch on implications for educational and global sectors, such as U.S. Community Colleges, Australian Higher Ed, “Corporate Perspective on AI/Machine Learning,” and “Campuses Most at Risk from Climate Change.” The Report includes its methodology and roster of panelists.

C&CS Academic Libraries and Autism Spectrum Disorder available for viewing

March 4, 2020
by

Yesterdays session, “Academic Libraries and Autism Spectrum Disorder” is now available on YouTube. Link will remain available for a year. Gerry and Sebastian are wonderfully informed about the topic. Slides will be available on the C&CS page, https://crdpala.org/connect-communicate/

 

Special thanks to Sara Pike for doing our closed captioning and Diane Porterfield for moderating.

We also invite those who are not PaLA members to consider joining the Pennsylvania Library Association, which helps support programs like this one. If interested in becoming a member or for more information about the CRD, contact Katie Manwiller at Katie.Manwiller@desales.edu

Thanks!

Call for Co-Editors, Pennsylvania Libraries: Research and Practice (PaLRaP) due 3/31

March 3, 2020
by
Pennsylvania Libraries: Research & Practice (PaLRaP) Seeks a Co-Editor

This is a two-year renewable-term volunteer opportunity, beginning in mid-2020.
Responsibilities
  • Work in close collaboration with a co-editor to manage all aspects of Pennsylvania Libraries: Research & Practice, producing 2 issues each year.
  • Oversee all submissions moving through the publication process from initial submission to peer review, revision, layout, and final proofreading.
  • Work closely with a volunteer editorial team including news editors, copy editors, and layout editors.
  • Recruit and communicate with peer-reviewers as needed.
  • Communicate and work with authors to provide feedback on submissions as well as strong editorial guidance as needed.
  • Prepare updates and editorials as appropriate.
  • Oversee use of Online Journal System (OJS) software platform by authors, reviewers, and editorial staff, answering questions about its functionality and recommending best practices
  • Conduct or assist with training of new editorial staff
  • Remain in close communication with the journal publisher, the University Library System, University of Pittsburgh and the journal sponsor, the College & Research Division (CRD) of the Pennsylvania Library Association (PaLA).
  • Solicit submissions for all types of articles.
 
Required Qualifications
  • Experience writing for professional publications.
  • Significant experience working in Pennsylvania libraries.
  • Current member of the Pennsylvania Library Association and the College & Research Division.
  • Excellent communication skills required. Co-Editor must be willing and able to respond to numerous email messages in a timely manner.

Preferred Qualifications

  • Editorial experience.
  • Knowledge of issues related to open access scholarly publishing.

Submit a letter of interest and a resume to Emily Mross, PaLA College & Research Division Chair, at ELM43@psu.edu by March 31.

OER Webinars from Millersville University

March 2, 2020
by

Millersville University will be hosting a series of free webinars about OER all this week.  Several webinars focus on case studies of using OER for a specific class, which should lead to useful real-world advice.  Here are some of the topics they’ll be covering.

  • BUILDING OER INITIATIVES AS PART OF THE OPENSTAX INSTITUTIONAL PARTNERSHIP PROGRAM
  • K-12 OPEN EDUCATION RESOURCES
  • CASE STUDY: BIOLOGY ADOPTION AND DESIGN
  • CASE STUDY: ART HISTORY OPEN ADOPTION
  • CASE STUDY: ENGLISH COMPOSITION ADOPTION

To see the full details and times of each webinar visit their website here: https://www.millersville.edu/cae/open-education/index1.php