Submitted by Carrie Macfarlane
We won’t be offering LISterine workshops for the remainder of the summer, but don’t let that prevent you from freshening your professional perspective. Stay Fresh! Here’s how…
Posts Tagged ‘Links’Middlebury College featured in Fortune magazineApril 10th, 2009 by Doreen BernierMiddlebury College is featured in the April 27 issue of Fortune magazine in an article that appeared today online titled “Hard times on campus: Even elite colleges can’t escape the impact of the economic slump. Here’s how one New England school is working to stay on top in the face of a smaller endowment, needier students, and the bursting of the higher-ed bubble.”
The article includes several photographs and quotes from President Liebowitz, Vice President for Administration and Treasurer Patrick Norton, Senior Director of Student Financial Services Kim Downs and Dean of Admissions Bob Clagett.
Interesting use of videoMarch 16th, 2009 by Sheldon SaxSubmitted by Shel Sax Dartmouth College has developed a short video to teach first year students about their library resources. The video is avaiable on youtube in the Dartmouth channel. You can access it at: The Podcast Army is in TrainingFebruary 20th, 2009 by Bob Cole
Submitted by Bob Cole, MIIS The Teaching & Learning Collaborative in coordination with the Digital Media Commons at the Monterey Institute is training an army of podcasters. The one unit, fifteen hour workshop titled Digital Media for Change meets Friday afternoons from 2-4pm. Participants are exploring new communication skills with digital media with a particular focus on affecting change. We’re reading and discussing the workshop text by Garr Reynolds, PresentationZen, and we have gathered online on a homegrown social network hosted by Ning: http://dm4change.ning.com. Participants will be helping the Institute build our capacity to capture campus events, speakers, and other stories that distinguish our community and reflect our mission. We’re building an army of graduate students, staff, and faculty to help us! And yes, we like cupcakes. As the workshop coordinator I am using this as an opportunity to experiment with alternative course management tools and blogging. We welcome any and all who might be interested in what we are up to, so please feel free to join us on our Ning, or grab the RSS feed for the Dm4change blog that is being piped into the main page for workshop updates and thoughts from yours truly. Criterion Collection Online Film FestivalFebruary 13th, 2009 by Patricia HornbeckSubmitted by Patty Hornbeck Each month, the Criterion Collection curates a free online film festival on The Auteurs. January’s theme is Killer Movies: some great stuff, including Divorce Italian Style, Vengeance is Mine, and Deep Crimson. NITLE Liaisons’ Update – January 20, 2009January 26th, 2009 by Doreen BernierThis update describes NITLE events and other opportunities now available to participating institutions and their faculties and staffs, including five targeted programming packages to help campuses advance specific institutional goals as well as several newly scheduled conferences, online series, and workshops. Deadlines for involvement in the opportunities listed in today’s update range from January 23 – July 31, 2009. Table of Contents == Participating in the NITLE Network == 1. Targeted Programming for Campuses 2. Just-in-Time Program Units: Price Lowered == Professional Development Events == 1. Major conferences, fall 2009 2. Information Services Camp: four additional workshops available 3. Special Topics: online event series 4. New Workshop-To-Go Topic: Grassroots Video 5. Three new Workshops To Go scheduled == Community-based Collaboration == 1. Building Stronger Collaborative Relationships Across NITLE Institutions: An IT and Library Staff Collaboration Retreat == News and Announcements == 1. New Network participant 2. New market posted in the NITLE Prediction Markets == Publications of Interest == 1. Prediction Markets for Emerging Technology – An Interview with NITLE’s Bryan Alexander == Deadlines == 1. Events ===== Update ===== == Participating in the NITLE Network == If you have any questions about participating in the NITLE Network, please contact us at any time by sending a note to participate@nitle.org. 1. Targeted Programming for Campuses In the current economic climate, colleges and universities are pushing themselves to do more with less and to use their resources more strategically than ever to advance their missions. By focusing on specific institutional goals, your campus can leverage its participation with NITLE to make gains in efficiency, promote the effective use of digital technology on campus, and create opportunities for networking, collaboration, and cost-sharing. To take advantage of these targeted programming packages, please send an e-mail message with the name of the package to participate@nitle.org. * Leverage the NITLE Network: Connect your campus with others in the Network for collaboration and shared problem-solving (9 program units/10 program-unit value) * Advance Your Institution (Instructional Technology Solutions): Build the expertise, effectiveness, and capacity of your instructional technology unit (13 program units/15 program-unit value) * Advance Your Institution (Information Services Solutions): Keep pace with evolving user needs and expectations while containing costs (13 program units/15 program-unit value) * Develop Your Mission Sustainably: Support campus innovators or promote specific initiatives with less impact on your institution’s budget and the environment (two options at 13 or 25 program units/15 or 28 program-unit value) * Promote Digital Teaching across Campus: Invest in pedagogical innovation that uses digital technology to engage current and prospective students and helps them learn (two options at 54 or 58 program units/61 or 65 program-unit value) Find out more at http://www.nitle.org/www/site/advancing_institutional_goals. 2. Just-in-Time Program Units: Price Lowered In response to the current economic situation, NITLE has reduced the price of program units purchased “just in time” to $100 per program unit from the previous $125 price. Guidelines on purchasing and using program units to access NITLE events are available at http://www.nitle.org/www/site/purchasing_program_units. Questions about program units may be sent to participate@nitle.org. == == Professional Development Events == A full list of NITLE events lives at http://www.nitle.org/www/events. Register participants online from the event web page, or send an e-mail to participate@nitle.org with the event title and registrant’s name, job title, and e-mail address. 1. Major conferences, fall 2009 * Virtual Conference for Instructional Technologists In a rapidly changing technological environment with a dizzying array of available solutions, instructional technologists who are connected to a strong professional network that understands their particular challenges are better placed to support faculty and drive pedagogical innovation forward. This virtual conference for those who provide direct support and assistance to faculty members offers these “front-line” staff members an opportunity to connect with peers, develop approaches to shared problems, and cultivate robust and supportive professional relationships. Date: August 19, 2009, 11:30 AM – 6:00 PM Eastern. Location: Delivered online, primarily via multipoint interactive videoconferencing (MIV). Registration Deadline: Friday, July 17, 2009. Price: 3 program units. Webpage: http://www.nitle.org/www/events/923-instructional-technologists-a-virtual-conference. * Geospatial Technologies in the Liberal Arts In the spirit of doing more with less, geospatial practitioners in the NITLE Network have expressed strong interest in a professional forum for mutual assistance, training, and communication. This event will provide participants an opportunity to find out about the variety of practices for GIS support and administration that are being developed and followed by colleagues at peer institutions. Participants will share best practices for GIS administration and use, consider the complementary role of modern web-mapping applications and server-based technologies for map and data delivery, and contribute to the development of an on-going community of support for geospatial technologies within the NITLE Network. Dates: September 25 – 27, 2009. Location: Skidmore College (Saratoga Springs, NY). Registration Deadline: Friday, July 31, 2009. Price: 7 program units. Webpage: http://www.nitle.org/www/events/920-geospatial-technologies-in-the-liberal-arts. * A fall 2009 conference on teaching and learning centers will be announced in February. Please stay tuned! — 2. Information Services Camp: four additional workshops available NITLE thanks these NITLE Technology Fellows for their help in planning the Information Services Camp: James Gehrt (Mount Holyoke College), Eric Luhrs (Lafayette College), Jin Guo (Washington College), Mary Glackin (Mount Holyoke College), and Bob Puffer (Luther College). To see the bios for each contributing Technology Fellow, please visit or subscribe to the Camp blog at http://campnis.blog.nitle.org/. The Information Services Camp blog provides a one-stop shop for all Camp-related information, including updates on surveys, calls for proposals, and other pertinent program information. New workshops include: * Leveraging Multimedia Production Resources for Maximum Result When it comes to managing and delivering multimedia production services and/or support, frugal creativity is the order of the day. This half-day workshop will explore newer methods, tools, and best practices for creating or revitalizing an environment for multimedia development and support, emphasizing quicker, easier software solutions, maximizing physical resource return, and exploring student staffing philosophies. Date: Tuesday, June 2, 2009 (half-day morning session). Location: Smith College (Northampton, MA). Registration Deadline: Monday, April 13, 2009. Price: 2 program units. Webpage: http://www.nitle.org/www/events/922-information-services-camp. * Project and Change Management for Information Services Technology operations on campuses are growing: more servers, more services, more inter-dependence of technologies. But in the current economic environment campuses must focus on how to do more with what they have. Participants in this workshop will be introduced to the fundamental elements of project management and how they relate to resource-scheduling and planning so that they can manage campus projects effectively and efficiently. Date: Wednesday, June 3, 2009 (full-day session). Location: Smith College (Northampton, MA). Registration Deadline: Monday, April 13, 2009. Price: 4 program units. Webpage: http://www.nitle.org/www/events/932-information-services-camp-3. * Delivering Online Services to Mobile Devices As devices like the iPhone, Blackberry, and handsets based on Android grow in sophistication and market share, providers’ assumptions about how users will access online services need to change. At the same time, institutions must make careful choices about where, when, and how to focus their efforts to deliver applications to mobile devices. This workshop will provide a context for making wise choices about mobile computing projects, and will equip participants to educate their local campus on the uses, potential, and context of these rapidly maturing technologies. * Date: Wednesday, June 3, 2009 (full-day session). Location: Smith College (Northampton, MA). Registration Deadline: Monday, April 13, 2009. Price: 4 program units. Webpage: http://www.nitle.org/www/events/931-information-services-camp-2. * Metadata for Digital Collections Institutions are increasingly creating, archiving, and publishing digital documents and information. Understanding the standards and best practices for digital-collections metadata is critical to developing systems and processes for managing these growing archives. This hands-on workshop will provide participants from both library and information technology backgrounds with an understanding of metadata for digital collections, including skills for creating descriptive metadata, information for mapping metadata and for metadata transformation, and skills used to manage metadata in digital collections. Date: Thursday, June 4, 2009 (half-day morning session). Location: Smith College (Northampton, MA). Registration Deadline: Monday, April 13, 2009. Price: 2 program units. Webpage: http://www.nitle.org/www/events/936-information-services-camp-4. — 3. Special Topics: online event series With NITLE’s Special Topics program series, participants can connect and learn with colleagues across the Network directly from their campus offices and engage around specific areas of shared interest. These events are delivered online via multipoint interactive videoconferencing (MIV). An overview of available series live at http://www.nitle.org/www/site/special_topics_series_overview. Series that are new or have new instances as of this update include: * Special Topics in Information Services This series helps information services leaders and staff members make wise investments in enterprise systems and projects. These sessions for spring 2009 will focus on email and calendaring and on digital repositories. If you have questions about the series, or if you would like to propose topics for future instances, please contact Eric Jansson at eric.jansson@nitle.org. – Google Apps for Education. Friday, February 20 & 27, 2009. – Digital Repository Strategy. Thursday, March 26, and April 2 & 9, 2009. – Manakin, The DSpace Interface Toolkit. Wednesday, April 8, 2009. * Special Topics: Update on Emerging Technologies Three opportunities to consider the latest developments in the digital world and their impact on liberal education. Bryan Alexander, NITLE Director of Research, will provide an environmental scan of the past month, sketching out developments from across the digital world, and present use cases and applicable examples. Resources will be shared, and discussion interwoven throughout the session. If you have questions about this series or would like to contribute your observations about developments in the environment, please contact Nancy Millichap at nancy.millichap@nitle.org. — Wednesday, March 4, 2009. 1 program unit. — Wednesday, April 8, 2009. 1 program unit. — Wednesday, May 6, 2009. 1 program unit. * Special Topics in Spatial Analysis and Mapping In response to participant interest, this series has been extended through April 2009, with instances scheduled monthly. If you have questions about this series or would like to propose a GIS-related topic for presentation, please contact Sean Connin at sean.connin@nitle.org. – Creating Cartograms: Making Geographic Areas Speak Volumes. Thursday, February 26, 2009. – Visualizing the Solid Earth Using Virtual Globes Such As Google Earth. Tuesday, March 17, 2009. – Creating a Digital Footprint In Google Earth: The “AUGE” Experience. Tuesday, April 21, 2009. * Special Topics for Instructional Technologists and Their Colleagues In March, this continuing series will feature Janet Simons, Instructional Technologist, Hamilton College, and Tamra Hjermstad, Instructional Technology Consultant, Mt. Holyoke College, who will lead a discussion about the ways in which they are working with faculty members to help them integrate digital video in the curriculum. Those who wish to propose topics for this series should contact Nancy Millichap at nancy.millichap@nitle.org. — Digital Video in the Curriculum. Friday March 6, 2009. * Special Topics: Teaching Tools for the Global Age In addition to the two listed below, six more events in this series are under development and will take place from May – November 2009. Events will address a critical challenge for higher education: to graduate students able to cope in a world that is at once increasingly globalized and increasingly fragmented. If you have questions about this series or would like to propose a topic for presentation, please contact Michael Toler at michael.toler@nitle.org. — Technology and Less-Commonly Taught Languages. Thursday, March 19, 2009. — Virtual Voyages: Using Technology to Convey a Sense of Place. Thursday, April 9, 2009. — 4. New Workshop-To-Go Topic: Grassroots Video Between YouTube and cell phone cameras, digital video has gone through a populist revolution. It’s now easier to make, share, and remix videos on a shoestring budget, and campuses are finding many uses for digital video, such as ethnographic research, student-generated video projects, campus tours, and research presentations. This hands-on workshop will examine the entire process of video production from shooting to sharing. Participants will learn about the array of inexpensive video devices for video capture, editing, publication, and sharing. Participants will leave with the ability to create, edit, and post their own video. Full description: http://www.nitle.org/www/wtgs/48-grassroots-video. To request a Workshop To Go, please consult our Workshop To Go catalog (http://www.nitle.org/www/wtgs), and our guidelines for hosting Workshops To Go (http://www.nitle.org/www/site/hosting_workshops_to_go), which include details on hosting options and associated fees. (Note that eight workshop topics are available for online delivery: see http://www.nitle.org/www/site/hosting_workshops_to_go#pilot.) Questions? Please contact Rebecca Davis at rebecca.davis@nitle.org, who will be happy to discuss your options with you and help you select the workshops and hosting options most appropriate to your institution’s needs. — 5. Three new Workshops To Go scheduled * Teaching with Learning Management Systems: Moodle. For faculty members and instructional technologists from Birmingham-Southern College and other participating institutions who are interested in developing learning-centered strategies–anchored in and integrated with their own pedagogical practices–for using the Moodle learning management system. — February 20, March 4, March 20, 2009. Event takes place over three hour-long, online sessions. * Visual Literacy: Using Images for Teaching and Learning. For faculty, technologists, and librarians from Millsaps College and other participating institutions who are interested in learning how to find digital images in Flickr and other collections and in considering copyright issues associated with reusing such images. — Wednesday, May 6, 2009 * Multimedia Narrative: Communicating with Stories. For faculty, technologists, and librarians from Lewis and Clark College who are interested in effective writing for multimedia, video-based narratives. — Monday, May 18 – Tuesday, May 19, 2009 == == Community-based Collaboration == 1. Building Stronger Collaborative Relationships Across NITLE Institutions: An IT and Library Staff Collaboration Retreat This retreat will take place April 24 – 26, 2009 (5:00 p.m., Friday – 12:00 p.m., Sunday). Location: Centre College (Danville, KY). For Instructional Technologists, HelpDesk Support Personnel, Network and Security Staff, and Librarians who support the academic and technology environment for faculty interested in participating in NITLE programs and projects. Participants will meet their counterparts at other liberal arts institutions, share best practices in setting up and supporting technology, and learn more about NITLE initiatives and how each campus team can better plan for and support faculty interested in participating in NITLE programming. Sessions will be led by peers at fellow institutions with an emphasis on hands-on, practical advice about project design and implementation with limited resources. The retreat will have four tracks of peer-led sessions (instructional, helpdesk, network, and library) but will also provide campus teams opportunities to plan projects together. Detailed agenda to be available in March online at http://nitle.centre.edu but will include sessions on collaborative communication tools, copyright, network storage and virtualization, helpdesk assessment and metrics, software deployment, digital asset management, digital repositories, and classroom/lab/space design. Guidelines for Participation: Travel, lodging, food, and program expenses are covered by NITLE’s Southern Advisory Council Instructional Innovation Fund supporting this retreat. To sign up for the retreat, please fill out the form at http://nitle.centre.edu. Preference will be given to NITLE participating institutions in the Southern Region with remaining spots filled on a first-come, first-serve basis. Please indicate on the form if you are interested in sharing at or willing to lead any of the sessions. Retreat Coordinator’s Contact Information: Keeta Martin Holmes, Director of the Center for Teaching and Learning, Centre College, 600 W Walnut St, Danville, KY 40422; keeta.martin@centre.edu; 859-238-6294 == == News and Announcements == 1. New Network participant Please join NITLE in welcoming Converse College (Spartanburg, SC | http://www.converse.edu/) to the NITLE Network. To see a complete list of institutions currently participating with NITLE, please visit http://www.nitle.org/www/institutions. If you have questions about participation in the NITLE Network, please send a note to participate@nitle.org. 2. New market posted in the NITLE Prediction Markets “Google will close one more service by 1 April 2009.” Trading on this market is open. To have your say, sign up to trade at http://markets.nitle.org. The NITLE Prediction Markets (in beta) provide a collaborative, distributed, game-like tool for exploring and reflecting on emerging technologies for higher education. Questions? Please contact Grace Pang at grace.pang@nitle.org. == == Publications of Interest == 1. Prediction Markets for Emerging Technology – An Interview with NITLE’s Bryan Alexander Gerry Bayne, Host of EDUCAUSE Now, interviewed NITLE’s Bryan Alexander about the NITLE Prediction Markets at 2008 Fall Task Force Meeting of the Coalition for Networked Information (CNI). Listen to the podcast here: http://connect.educause.edu/blog/gbayne/cnipodcastpredictionmarke/47954. == == Deadlines == 1. Events This list represents professional development events with registration deadlines within approximately four weeks. A full list of events (sortable by registration deadline) is available at http://www.nitle.org/www/events. Online registration is available, or contact participate@nitle.org. * Grassroots Video. Deadline past: limited seats may be available. Program Date & Time: January 28, 2009, 4:00 PM – 5:00 PM Eastern. Delivered online via MIV. 1 program unit. http://www.nitle.org/www/events/855-special-topics-in-digital-teaching-7. * Language and Culture: Finding, Assessing, and Exploiting Online and Media Resources for Language Teaching. Registration deadline: January 23, 2009. Program Dates: March 13 – 15, 2009 (6:00 PM, Friday – 12:00 PM, Sunday, Central). Grinnell College, Grinnell, IA. 7 program units. http://www.nitle.org/www/events/827-language-and-culture. * Tablet PCs In and Outside the Classroom: What Difference Do They Make? Registration deadline: January 23, 2009. Program Date & Time: February 6, 2009, 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM. Eastern. Delivered online via MIV. 1 program unit. http://www.nitle.org/www/events/852-special-topics-for-instructional-technologists-7. * Web-Mapping. Registration deadline: January 30, 2009. Program Date: March 3, 2009, 9:00 AM – 4:30 PM. Eastern. Kenyon College, Gambier, OH. 4 program units. http://www.nitle.org/www/events/909-web-mapping-7. * Instructional Technology Leaders Conference. Registration deadline: January 30, 2009. Program Date: March 27 – 29, 2009 (5:00 PM, Friday – 12:00 PM, Sunday, Eastern). Ursinus College, Collegeville, PA. 7 program units. http://www.nitle.org/www/events/826-instructional-technology-leaders-conference-3. * NITLE Summit. Registration deadline: January 30, 2009. Program Date: March 29 – 30, 2009 (2:00 PM, Sunday – 5:00 PM, Monday, Eastern). Philadelphia, PA. 5 program units. http://www.nitle.org/www/events/871-nitle-summit-2. * Call for Proposals, Mapping for Sustainability (April 23 – 25, 2009, University of Redlands, Redlands, CA). Proposal submission deadline: January 30, 2009. Call for proposals: http://tinyurl.com/map-for-sustain-cfp. Submit proposals electronically: http://tinyurl.com/MapSustainCFP. Conference registration deadline: February 27, 2009. Event web page: http://www.nitle.org/www/events/824. Contact: Sean Connin, sean.connin@nitle.org. * Special Topics in Digital Teaching. Registration deadline: February 13, 2009. Program Date & Time: February 25, 2009, 4:00 PM – 5:00 PM. Eastern. Delivered online via MIV. 1 program unit. http://www.nitle.org/www/events/856-special-topics-in-digital-teaching-8. * Digital Video in the Curriculum. Registration deadline: February 20, 2009. Program Date & Time: March 6, 2009, 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM. Eastern. Delivered online via MIV. 1 program unit. http://www.nitle.org/www/events/853-special-topics-for-instructional-technologists-8 Three LIS Coworkers Going to DCJanuary 19th, 2009 by Doreen BernierSubmitted by Shawn O’Neil Margey Mastik-Quinn, Shel Sax and myself are heading down to Witness/participate the 2009 Inauguration. Margey is heading down with her husband and I am heading down with my daughters and some friends. I and some other community members around the New York/Vermont area were asked by WPTZ channel 5 to blog this event. Here is the blog, if you are interested in following our exploits, take a look. http://wptzinaugurationblog.wordpress.com/
Web 2.0 Services for Smaller, Underfunded LibrariesDecember 12th, 2008 by Michael LynchA Powerpoint presentation from the LibrarianInBlack. A Twitter-based crowdsourcing experimentDecember 12th, 2008 by Michael LynchBryan Alexander has an interesting post on the NITLE blog, Liberal Education Today. Highlight of the Fall NEMLA conferenceOctober 31st, 2008 by Doreen BernierSubmitted by Joy Pile On Friday Oct. 17, I attended the Fall conference of NEMLA (New England Chapter of the Music Library Association) which was held at Bennington College. Among the sessions given, was one that focused on a couple of projects the library helped to sponsor as part of a class. The most innovative of the two projects was one which resulted in the creation of a Lib2.0 book recommendation site – not unlike the one Mary Backus demonstrated in the brown bag session – with physical objects designed to highlight a book in the stacks. For more information, and photos of this very creative project go to <http://bookmarks.bennington.edu>. Durable Digital ObjectsOctober 21st, 2008 by Michael LynchDurable Digital Objects Rather Than Digital Preservation Abstract: Long-term digital preservation is not the best available objective. Instead, what information Beautiful Old LibrariesOctober 17th, 2008 by Patricia HornbeckSubmitted by Patty Horbeck Curious Expeditions has gathered together photos of the world’s most impressive old libraries. One-stop shoppingOctober 17th, 2008 by Joseph AntonioliSubmitted by Joe Antonioli Information Technology at Tufts University has created an integrated suite of Web 2.0 technologies, communication tools for “for teaching, learning, research, and co-curricular activities.” This is a great example of access, support and marketing all in on space. The site gives the user a gateway to each technology. It also includes help documentation, examples and links to suggested uses. For instance, on the wiki page-
Why Can’t Librarians and IT Departments Just Get Along?October 14th, 2008 by Michael LynchSubmitted by Mike Lynch Another interesting post, with audio, from Wired Campus. The latest edition of Tech Therapy covers the differences and similarities between library and IT staff, and discusses why these two groups can’t get along. Terry Reese’s Readex reportOctober 13th, 2008 by Michael LynchSubmitted by Mike Lynch Terry Reese visited us recently (thanks to Joe Toth) on his way to the 6th annual Readex Digital Institute. He has just posted a nice summary of the event. How to ChaChaOctober 10th, 2008 by Michael LynchSubmitted by Mike Lynch Here’s a recent article from Seven Days, written by someone who answers ChaCha questions. For those who missed it, ChaCha was one of the tech tidbits mentioned by Mike Roy at Thursday’s lunch. NITLE Mailing Lists: NITLE-ITOctober 6th, 2008 by Michael RoyFor those of you who might not be familiar with NITLE’s many mailing lists to foster communication around shared interests within the NITLE network, I thought it might be useful to share a link to a page where they describe the lists and how to join them. That page is at: http://www.nitle.org/index.php/nitle/the_network/peer_networks_and_communities Of particular interest to some might be the NITLE-IT list, which of late has had some very interesting exchanges. Cataloging Policy and Original Cataloging TeamOctober 6th, 2008 by Doreen BernierSubmitted by Cynthia Watters Cynthia Watters returned at the end of August from a summer travelling the western U.S. in a small camper/van. She had a wonderful time and now is readjusting to the normal working environment. Japanese Collection These materials are headed for the Japanese Collection and will increase it by about 50%. The Japanese Collection is currently classed according to an old system devised by a Harvard librarian in 1943. It is both outdated (try classing something on computers…), complex, indexless, and non-standard, but it’s what the original collection came with when we acquired it from the Japanese summer school. Now seems the time to bite the bullet and reclass the collection in the LC classification used in the rest of the library. It’s a big project, but the new books can be classed in LC in much less time than in the current system. As Cynthia began the project, she realized that it was an opportunity to add Japanese characters to our older records. New records routinely include Japanese characters, but, until a few years ago, they were not imported into MIDCAT from the OCLC database. Since one way of determining LC call numbers is to search the record on OCLC, we can overlay our record with the OCLC record with Japanese characters. In this way a project continues to grow in scope, but it should provide a great addition to our Japanese collection and its use. Theater Orchestra scores IT Index from AmherstSeptember 26th, 2008 by Michael Roysubmitted by Mike Roy Peter Schilling, head of IT at Amherst, published an interesting index of IT factoids at Academic Commons (a site that I help to run) which the Chronicle picked up on. Look for a similar Midd-centric index coming soon to our magazine. Are the changes Amherst notices also happening here? “I’m Nuts With A Web Site”: Grass Roots Phenomenon Remains To Be SeenSeptember 26th, 2008 by Michael Royfrom Marcy Smith Internet-based student written college guides are the Wikipedia-like resource for the prospective student on the proverbial college hunt. While the new site Unigo does not offer a radical or even new view of Middlebury, it will be an interesting site to watch develop in terms of how this particular use of technology may impact our Admissions processes, if it catches on with college seekers. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/21/magazine/21unigo-t.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&hp http://www.unigo.com/Colleges/UnigoReview/Default.aspx?CollegeId=112 |