Thursday, December 19, 2024

Call for Proposals - 2025 ALA IRRT Pre-Conference, Philadelphia, June 27, 2025 - Connecting and Fostering Community Through Library Initiatives Around The World

 Call for Proposals - 2025 ALA IRRT Pre-Conference, Philadelphia, June 27, 2025 - Connecting and Fostering Community Through Library Initiatives Around The World


The International Relations Round Table (IRRT) Pre-Conference Committee of the American Library Association (ALA) invites proposals for its 2025 ALA Annual Pre-Conference Session. This half-day event will focus on how libraries connect and foster community through innovative and impactful initiatives.


We are particularly interested in presentations that showcase:

  • Successful international library programs that have strengthened community ties and created lasting impact.
  • Collaborative projects where libraries partner with international or local organizations, schools, and governments to tackle shared challenges and foster global            cooperation.
  • Innovative approaches to community engagement, including digital initiatives, outreach programs, and events that encourage participation and inclusion.
  • Best practices in addressing community needs through library services, focusing on strategies, tips, and approaches that have been successful.

The session will be held in a roundtable format. Selected presenters will have 30-45 minutes to share their work and facilitate engaging discussions and meaningful exchanges of ideas with attendees in follow-up discussions.


Important Dates:

●        Proposal Deadline: February 15, 2025

●        Notification of Acceptance: March 14, 2025


Please submit your proposals, no longer than 250 words, via this link by 11:59 PM EST (UTC-5) on Saturday, February 15, 2025. Proposals will be evaluated by Pre-Conference  committee members based on the following criteria: quality of the proposalrelevance to the themecontribution to global representationtransferability of ideas, and uniqueness.



For more information, please contact the committee chairs:

 Lynn CHUA - Lynn_CHUA@nlb.gov.sg 

Andrea MALONE - armalone@uh.edu 

Andrea Malone and Lynn CHUA

Co-Chairs

IRRT International Librarians' Pre-Conference Committee

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

CFP: (Library 2.0 Mini-Conference) "AI and Libraries: Literacy, Ethics, and Responsible Use - Virtual March 13th, 2025

 OVERVIEW:

Our first Library 2.025 mini-conference (and our third mini-conference on AI and Libraries), "AI and Libraries: Literacy, Ethics, and Responsible Use," will be held online (and for free) on Thursday, March 13th, 2025, from 12:00 - 3:00 pm US-Pacific Time.

We invite librarians, educators, technologists, and thought leaders to explore the critical role that libraries can play in addressing both the opportunities and ethical challenges of AI. From encouraging digital literacy and ethical awareness to guiding the responsible use of AI, libraries are potentially at the forefront showing how emerging AI technologies can be used equitably and responsibly in their communities.

We will explore actionable insights to help navigate the complex ethical questions relating to AI and the unique role of libraries and librarians in addressing them. We will discuss practical strategies for integrating AI tools into library and education settings using ethical best practices while empowering users with the knowledge and skills needed to thrive in an AI-driven world. And we’ll focus on how libraries can not only adapt to this rapidly changing landscape but can also act as catalysts for knowledge diffusion, shaping a more informed, and innovative future for all of our users.

Our special conference chair is Chad Mairn, an Information Services Librarian, Assistant Professor, and founder of the Innovation Lab at St. Petersburg College.

We look forward to gathering online with you for this event!

REGISTRATION:

This is a free event, being held live online and also recorded.

REGISTER HERE
to attend live and/or to receive the recording links afterward.
Please also join the Library 2.0 community to be kept updated on this and future events. 

Everyone is invited to participate in our Library 2.0 conference events, which are designed to foster collaboration and knowledge sharing among information professionals worldwide. Each three-hour event consists of a keynote panel, 10-15 crowd-sourced thirty-minute presentations, and a closing keynote. 

Participants are encouraged to use #library2025 and #aiandlibraries on their social media posts about the event.

CONFERENCE CHAIR:


Chad Mairn

Professor and founder of the Innovation Lab at St. Petersburg College
OPENING KEYNOTE PANEL & SPECIAL ORGANIZER

Chad Mairn is a Professor, and founder of the Innovation Lab at St. Petersburg College. While an undergraduate studying Humanities at the University of South Florida (USF), Chad was awarded a Library of Congress Fellowship helping archive personal papers and other items in the Leonard Bernstein Collection. During his Library and Information Science graduate work, also at USF, Chad became a technology liaison between the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Florida public libraries. Chad is also a faculty member in the School of Information at San José State University. Here is a link to Chad's SJSU faculty page.

CALL FOR PROPOSALS:

Proposals for 30-minute concurrent presentations are now being accepted. Proposals will be evaluated and accepted in the order received. The link to submit proposals is HERE.

We encourage conference session submissions that: 

  • Provide a foundational understanding of literacy, ethics, and the responsible use of AI in libraries and beyond.
  • Apply strategies to foster AI literacy among library staff, patrons, and students, empowering them to critically assess and effectively use a variety of AI tools.
  • Communicate ethical issues surrounding AI, including privacy, bias, and transparency, and understand the libraries' role in addressing these challenges.
  • Share ways for libraries to serve as hubs for public discourse on AI, facilitating inclusive and informed community conversations, while maximizing the benefits of AI for their community.
  • Demonstrate how to build partnerships with educators, thought leaders, technologists, and community organizations to address literacy, ethics, and responsible use issues in your community.
  • Provide examples of how to create and advocate for policies that guide ethical and equitable AI use in libraries and other educational settings.
  • Promote the unique opportunity libraries have right now to lead in our AI-driven world by fostering critical thinking, ethical awareness, and equitable access to technology.

To see the currently submitted proposals, you can go here.

SPONSORS:

The School of Information at San José State University is the founding conference sponsor. Please register as a member of the Library 2.0 network to be kept informed of future events. Recordings from previous years are available under the Archives tab at Library 2.0 and at the Library 2.0 YouTube channel.

CFP: Third Annual Teaching & Learning with AI Conference (Orlando, Florida - May 2025)

The University of Central Florida Libraries' is pleased to announce the third annual Teaching & Learning with AI conference, which features a Library Track, to be held May 28-30, 2025, in Orlando, Florida. The call for proposals is now open and we invite academic librarians and library workers to submit a proposal to the Library Track.

Call for Proposals

Participants from academic libraries are encouraged to submit proposals. Individual and team proposals are equally welcome. The conference is in-person only and the Library Track has two formats:

  • 25-minute interactive presentations for sharing examples of library implementations or practices related to AI in academic libraries, or that challenge participants to discuss deeper, not-easily-answered questions about AI in libraries 
  • Poster sessions can be on any topic related to AI in Libraries and may be digital or print

Example topics for the Library Track 

  • AI-assisted content and metadata creation 
  • Ethical considerations related to AI and its use in libraries 
  • Library and institutional policies around the use of AI 
  • Professional development and support in learning AI in libraries 
  • AI literacy and critical thinking with AI 
  • Prompt engineering in libraries 
  • Intellectual property issues related to incorporating licensed content into AI and text and data mining projects
  • Incorporating AI into library applications and processes 
  • Using AI with open access and open educational resources 
  • AI and digital scholarship, research support, and instruction services 
Note: Because this is primarily a sharing conference, priority will be given to proposals that have clear ideas for takeaways that participants can use in their own libraries. 

The deadline to submit a proposal is 11:59 p.m. on Friday, January 17, 2025. Acceptance decisions will be sent in mid-February.

Further details, including registration costs, hotels, and opportunities to sponsor can be found at https://digitallearning.ucf.edu/teachwithai/. Questions may be sent to teachwithai@ucf.edu. 

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

CFP: 23rd Annual Illinois Information Literacy Summit: Reshaping Information Literacy for an Uncertain Future: Sustainability, Adaptability, and Resilience (Glen Ellyn, Illinois - May 2nd, 2025)

Call for Proposals

The College of DuPage Library and the DePaul University Library are pleased to announce the call for proposals for the 23rd Annual Illinois Information Literacy Summit!  The Summit will be held in person on Friday, May 2, 2025 at the College of DuPage in Glen Ellyn, IL.  

This year, we're exploring the theme: Reshaping Information Literacy for an Uncertain Future: Sustainability, Adaptability, and Resilience

We're excited to kick off the discussion with a keynote by Rachel Fundator, Clinical Assistant Professor at the Purdue University Libraries and School of Information Studies and the Associate Director for the Institute for Information Literacy at Purdue. 

We're also considering proposals for breakout sessions, roundtable discussions, and lightning talks related to the Summit theme. We'd like to hear about how librarians are adapting their teaching practices with an eye towards the future. Are we building sustainable and relevant information literacy programs that can keep pace with a rapidly changing information landscape in an increasingly uncertain world? 

In particular, we're seeking proposals that speak to the following topics: 

  • Technology & Power: How do we incorporate digital and algorithmic literacies into our information literacy programs? How can we prepare our students to navigate a rapidly changing technological landscape characterized by an uneven distribution of power and resources? What are the ethical implications of new technologies and how do we engage students with ethical questions in our instruction? 
  • Epistemic Justice: How do we design information literacy programs grounded in respect for different forms of knowledge and the pursuit of social justice? How can we incorporate and value student voice in our pedagogy and ensure inclusive classrooms and curricula for an evolving student population? 

  • Civic Engagement: What does a problem-based approach to information literacy look like? How can information literacy initiatives prepare students to engage with pressing social issues, in their academic work and beyond? How can we expand the conversation to include important stakeholders beyond our institutions, including our local communities? 

  • Mis/disinformation: How do we tackle pressing issues of mis/disinformation and propaganda? How do we collaborate with teaching faculty and others in our communities to facilitate critical media literacies? 

We're considering proposals in the following formats: 

  • Breakout sessions or panels: These sessions will be 50 minutes long and consist of a presentation from the front of the room. We encourage presenters to incorporate audience interaction or hands-on demonstrations when possible. Panel discussions should include a maximum of three (3) presenters.  

  • Roundtable discussions: These sessions are 50 minutes long and consist of a brief presentation from the facilitator to set the stage, followed by small or large group discussion among attendees. If you'd like to propose a roundtable discussion, please include a brief (5-7 item) bibliography of publications related to your chosen topic and several discussion questions (3-5 questions).

  • Lightning talksThese are short 5-7 minute presentations which serve as an optimal format for presenting work-in-progress, sharing successes (and things that didn't work out as expected), or introducing attendees to a teaching tool, lesson plan or learning activity, or critical framework.  

The Summit is a regional conference that draws attendance from university, community college, and school librarians from Illinois and neighboring states. Sessions typically have 20-40 participants. 

The submission should include a 200-400 word description of your presentation and a brief explanation of what attendees should expect to take away from the session. Proposals for roundtable discussions should include a brief (5-7 item) bibliography of related publications and 3-5 proposed discussion questions.  

The deadline for proposals is February 1st, 2025

We'll also ask for a short (approximately 50-100 word) abstract of your session to include in the conference program. If you have questions or would like to discuss your idea for a proposal, feel free to reach out to the planning committee at infolitsummit@gmail.com

For more information about the Summit, visit https://www.infolitsummit.org/ 

Monday, December 16, 2024

CFP: Ticker: The Academic Business Librarianship Review - #BusinessLibrarianship

Hello!


Ticker: The Academic Business Librarianship Review is seeking articles for Volume 10, Issue 1, to be published in July of 2025, and Volume 10, Issue 2, to be published in January 2026. This is a great opportunity for librarians interested in doing research in any and all areas related to business librarianship. We are an open access journal committed to promoting the widest possible discussion of original and translational research, evidence-based pieces, case studies, and more.


Journal URL: https://journals.publishing.umich.edu/ticker/


If you’re interested in sharing your insights and ideas in a non-peer-reviewed format, we publish editorials in a number of areas including:


  • Teaching and Learning

  • Tips

  • Business Libraries by Design

  • International Outlook 

  • Conference Reports; and, 

  • Opinions & Thought Pieces


We especially encourage submissions from early career librarians and those interested in supporting a fully open access publication! Editorial submissions for the July 2025 issue are due January 10, 2025. (Editorial submissions for the January 2026 issue will be due July 11, 2025.)


We also publish peer-reviewed research in our Feature Articles section! Recent research articles featured in our journal have included:

  • Nicolosi, G. & Reiter, L., (2024) “The presence of popular business titles in ABLD collections”, Ticker: The Academic Business Librarianship Review 9(1). doi: https://doi.org/10.3998/ticker.6328 

  • Hartman-Caverly, S., (2022) “ ‘The Da Vinci Code for IP Research’: Case Study of a Course-Integrated Educational Escape Room for Entrepreneurship Education”, Ticker: The Academic Business Librarianship Review 7(1): 2. doi: https://doi.org/10.3998/ticker.2931 

  • Hosoi, M., (2021) “Free Lunch? Vendor Offers during COVID-19”, Ticker: The Academic Business Librarianship Review 6(1). doi: https://doi.org/10.3998/ticker.1377


Peer-review article submissions for the January 2026 issue are due May 09, 2025. 


For more information about each section and their requirements, please visit our journal's website:

https://journals.publishing.umich.edu/ticker/site/about/


Please reach out to Ash Faulkner, Editor in Chief with any questions at faulkner.172@osu.edu


Best,


Ash Faulkner, Editor in Chief

Kelly LaVoice, Managing Editor

 

CFP: Michigan Academic Library Association (MiALA) 2025 Annual Conference: Driving Excellence: Navigating the Challenges & Opportunities (Flint, Michigan - May 18-20, 2025)

CFP URL: https://miala.org/2025accallforbreakoutproposals.php

Michigan Academic Library Association (MiALA) 2025 Annual Conference: Call for Presentation Proposals

Driving Excellence: Navigating the Challenges & Opportunities

“Driving Excellence: Navigating the Challenges & Opportunities” allows us to explore new pathways into the future as we are guided by the wisdom, openness, and tenacity of our profession to provide the best outcomes for library users. New opportunities and technologies can challenge our beliefs about academic integrity and impact a variety of library collections and services. Has your library staff taken a new strategic approach, designed an innovative service, developed a new policy, or begun a new area of professional development that you would like to share? If so, we invite you to share your challenges, successes, and solutions with your academic library colleagues as we guide academic libraries down the road of innovation and into the future.

MiALA invites you and your colleagues to submit presentation proposals for the 10th annual conference to be held in-person, May 18-20, 2025 at the University of Michigan-Flint, Flint, MI. Participation from librarians, library staff, LIS students, and administrators from all types of academic libraries is encouraged. MiALA membership is not required to submit a proposal. We welcome proposals on topics covering any aspect of academic libraries. 

We are seeking the following presentation formats: 

  • Presentations, panels, or moderated discussion sessions (45 min.) - Individual or group presentations, panel sessions, and moderated discussion sessions are all welcome. Each of these sessions will be 45 minutes, including a Q&A.
  • Interactive workshops (105 min.) - An opportunity to teach and explore current and emerging topics in a collaborative atmosphere. Workshops encourage a hands-on experience that may combine active learning, collaboration, and discussion. 
  • Lightning Talks (10 min.) - A short individual presentation addressing a specific topic or project. Lightning talks provide attendees the opportunity to hear about a range of innovative ideas from a broad and varied group of colleagues in a short amount of time. Lightning talks will be grouped into sessions that may or may not be themed. Lightning talk sessions will be 45 minutes, including a Q&A.

Along with presenter(s) information, program proposals must include title, presentation format, presentation description (up to 300 words), short abstract (up to 75 words), and learning objective(s). Proposals will be evaluated on relevance to the conference theme, impact on academic libraries and higher education, originality, creativity, and clarity. For workshops, include plans for interactivity and audience engagement in the session description.

If you have a topic you’d like to explore and are looking for collaborators, consider adding your session idea to the Breakout Session Collaboration spreadsheet. This spreadsheet is not monitored by MiALA or the Program Committee and is not part of the official submission process.

Please submit your breakout session proposal using the application form by January 10, 2025. The primary contact listed on each proposal will receive a message indicating receipt of the proposal when it is submitted and decisions on proposals will be communicated to the primary contact in late January or early February.

Questions about proposals can be sent to werdeljc@udmercy.edu.

Questions about the conference in general can be sent to conference@miala.org.

Thursday, December 12, 2024

CFP: Empirical Studies in Libraries Summit - Virtual Meeting March 26, 2025

Are you engaged in empirical research?

Are you looking for an easy-to-attend, affordable way to share your research with the library and information science community?
Look no further -- consider submitting an abstract of your research to ESiLS 2025! (And there's opportunity for a post-conference publication in EBLIP!)

Call for Proposals: Empirical Studies in Libraries Summit
Submit your proposal here! LINK: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSchUd_lxLCJ_I_XTHZ3MwdXtgC56XuqNWMTuKNdtdPs_3OJ_A/viewform

We are pleased to announce the upcoming Empirical Studies in Libraries Summit (ESiLS ) https://www.esils.org/, a forum dedicated to showcasing and discussing the latest research and findings happening in and about libraries. This summit aims to bring together scholars, practitioners, and students who are engaged in empirical studies that advance our understanding of library practices, user behaviors, the impact of libraries on their communities, and more!

We invite proposals for presentations, workshops, panel discussions, and posters that address, but are not limited to, the following topics:

  •  Innovative methodologies in library research
  •  User experience and satisfaction studies
  •  Data-driven decision-making in library services
  •  Impact assessment of library programs and services
  •  Information-seeking and user behavior studies
  •  Collaboration between libraries and community organizations
  •  The role of libraries in promoting digital or information literacy
  •  Case studies highlighting successful empirical research in libraries

Proposal Guidelines:
  1. Submission Format: Proposals should be submitted by January 3rd, 2025. Proposals require: Title, Author(s), Abstract and Session Format.
  2. Review Process: All submissions will undergo a blind peer review process by the organizers of the conference. Proposals will be evaluated based on their originality, relevance to the summit theme, methodological rigor, and potential impact on the library community. Session proposals that do not include empirical data collection will not be accepted. Session proposals that are not accepted may be asked to convert their session to an asynchronous poster.
  3. Notification of Acceptance: Authors will be notified of the acceptance of their proposals by January 20, 2025.
**Note: Presenters at ESiLS will have an opportunity to publish papers based on their work in the journal Evidence Based Library & Information Practice (EBLIP) for the journal's December 2025 issue. EBLIP is a peer-reviewed, open-access journal. Submissions will be due June 1, 2025, and may fall into one of the following categories: research article, review article, commentary, or a "using evidence in practice" article. Submission of a manuscript does not guarantee that it will be accepted for publication.

We encourage researchers as well as practitioners in academic, public, special, and all other libraries to submit proposals. Doctoral students are especially encouraged to apply. To further our commitment to inclusivity, proposers will have the option to disclose whether or not they are members of marginalized communities during the submission process. We aim to amplify the voices of those from these communities and strongly encourage their participation in submitting proposals.

Questions about the Empirical Studies in Libraries Summit may be sent to the organizers at info@esils.org. Additional information is available on our website at https://www.esils.org.

We'd like to thank our sponsors for this conference:

  *   University at Buffalo's Information Science Department
  *   Evidence-Based Library and Information Practice (EBLIP)

Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Apply now to join the ACRLog blog team - deadline 12/22/24

Apply now to join the ACRLog blog team - deadline 12/22

 
Interested in writing for ACRLog? We’re looking for a few new bloggers to join our team!

We aim to have a group of bloggers who represent diverse perspectives on and career stages in academic librarianship. We are especially seeking librarians interested in writing about technical services, scholarly communication, technology, and related areas and/or those working at small colleges, community colleges, or private institutions, to balance the strengths of our other bloggers.

Members of the ACRLog blog team write on any issue or idea that impacts academic librarianship, from current news items to workflow and procedural topics to upcoming changes in the profession and more.

ACRLog blog team members typically publish individual posts every 6-8 weeks and sometimes collaborate with other blog team members on co-authored posts. Blog team members also contribute to the work of blog promotion and management (e.g., participate in 2-4 blog team meetings every year, participate in a rotation to share administrative responsibilities). 

If you’re interested in joining the ACRLog blog team, please complete our application formApplications are due by the end of the day on Sunday, December 22. 

Proposals will be evaluated by members of the ACRLog blog team. We seek applicants with:
  • Clear and compelling writing style
  • Ability to make connections between day-to-day work and bigger conversations around theory, practice, criticism, LIS education, and other issues
  • Diversity of experience and perspective including, for example:
    • Academic institution (for example, community colleges, small colleges)
    • Job responsibilities within academic libraries (for example, cataloging, scholarly communications, etc.)
    • Time in the field (for example, early career, mid career, etc.)
    • Race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, ability
Please send any questions to Jen Jarson at jmj12@psu.edu

We’re looking forward to hearing from you!

Tuesday, December 03, 2024

Call for Chapters: Libraries and the Futures of the Humanities - Rowman & Littlefield Book

The editors of a book project, Libraries and the Futures of the Humanities, call for chapter proposals for a volume that Rowman & Littlefield has invited us to submit, focused on how libraries can play a role in reimagining the humanities during a time of crisis and opportunity.

We invite proposals for chapters in five sections, focusing primarily on academic libraries and archives:
  1. Framing the Question: discussions on the history and concept of the humanities in relation to libraries
  2. Across the Disciplines: examples of programs and practices that support cross-disciplinary teaching and scholarship (for example, humanities in STEM, business, and medical disciplines)
  3. Beyond the University: initiatives that connect humanistic learning, research, and creativity to communities outside the university, from the local to the global
  4. Civic Learning: approaches that apply humanistic knowledge and skills to empower learners to participate in creative democratic change
  5. Machines and Meaning: projects that make use of AI, digital humanities, or maker technologies to open up innovative directions and possibilities in the humanities
The deadline for chapter proposals is Saturday, February 1, 2025.

For full details about this volume, contact information for the editors and to access the submission form please visit: Libraries and the Futures of the Humanities

Questions? Please contact Mark Dahlquist at dahlqumj@miamioh.edu

CFP: 2025 AASLH Annual Conference (Cincinnati, Ohio) September 10-13, 2025

CFP URL: https://aaslh.org/annualconference/2025-annual-conference/

Session Proposals Due December 13

Review the information below, which will be required when you submit your session proposal.


Requirements

Each session must have an organizer responsible for finding session presenters and coordinating logistics. All organizers must be affiliated with an institutional member or be an AASLH individual member. Topics for sessions should fit at least one of the categories listed below. Proposals must be submitted through AASLH’s online submission system, which will be available soon. For more information, contact Bethany Hawkins at hawkins@aaslh.org or by phone at 615-320-3203.

Presenter Information: AASLH requires that the Session Chair serve as the session organizer responsible for logistics, requests for materials and equipment, communication with participants and AASLH staff, and leading the session itself. Session chairs must be affiliated with an institutional member or hold an individual membership in AASLH. To involve as many people as possible in the meeting, no one can chair more than one session or participate in more than two. The committee also strongly discourages sessions where all presenters are from the same site. It is also suggested that you include an end-user as part of your session. If you need assistance finding presenters that bring diversity in institution, geography, perspectives, or race, please contact the AASLH staff or the 2025 Program Chair, Aaron Noble, at aaron.noble@nysed.gov. Note: You will need to create a username and password for the Cadmium Education Harvester site, which will be available soon. This is separate from your membership login at aaslh.org. 

Session Title: Be creative and memorable. 

What will your session DO and how does it connect to the theme “The American Experiment”? Describe in three to five sentences what you want to accomplish in your session (i.e. teach a new skill, inspire different thinking, help people learn from your mistakes, etc.) and how it connects to the conference theme. 

Session Description (50 words or less): If your session is accepted, this will be used in the Annual Conference program. Make your description vivid and compelling. Please do not use bullet points. 

Abstract (250 words or less): Describe the goals of your session, specifically describing its content and expected outcomes for attendees. Highlight the central issues the proposal addresses, why they are significant to the work of state and local history, and how the content supports the theme. Be as clear and concise as possible. 

What are the takeaways for attendees in your session? (150 words or less) List up to three. These should be concrete ideas that can be put in bullet points. 

How would you tag your session? (Choose two max. These may be used to create program tracks for the meeting.) 

Nuts and Bolts (how to)
250th Anniversary
Collections/Exhibitions (which includes librarians and archivists)
Education/Interpretation (includes public programming)
Emerging Professionals
Operations (finance, fundraising, marketing, administration, HR)
Small Museums
Emerging Research 

What is the format for your session (check one)? We encourage you to choose the most engaging format appropriate for your topic. Please read definitions before selecting.  

Definitions for Formats: 

  • Charette (120 minutes) – A charette is collaborative session in which a group comes together to draft a solution to a particular problem or expand on an idea. This session should be designed as a working session that creates an output. The organizer decides the topic, but the participants supply most of the discussion. This session requires a strong facilitator. 
  • Conversation Provocation (75 minutes) – Audience members engage in discussion/debate. One facilitator poses a predetermined question and encourages attendees to participate. The facilitator manages the discussion as a guide on the side, not a sage on the stage.   
  • Experiential (75 minutes, onsite only) – Do a program – don’t just talk about it. Immerse your colleagues in a playful (or dark) experience exploring your topic. Attendees should spend time doing something, not just talking.  
  • Idea Studio (75 minutes) – Informed and inspired by a prompt or topic area, attendees work together interactively to develop new ideas and creative solutions for their sites, in their communities, or in the field at large. 
  • Lightning Round (75 minutes) – A strong moderator puts together a session around a particular theme. Then, they recruit speakers who can teach something specific to the audience in ten minutes or less. An ideal Lightning Round session would have 10 minutes for introduction, 50 minutes for five presentations, and 15 minutes for Q&A. An example of this session type could be what are five things you have learned over your career that you wish you knew when you started? 
  • Nuts and Bolts (75 minutes) – This session type focuses on a particular skill that is needed in the history profession. For example, it could be creating a collections management plan, developing a mission-driven budgeting process, or creating an education program for autistic children. It should be specific enough that attendees leave with a practical skill, but flexible enough that any size museum can adapt it for their needs. It is not designed to be a “show and tell,” but a “show and how to.” 
  • Roundtable (75 minutes) – One chair and up to three panelists examine complex historical or professional issues in discussion before an audience. These should go beyond “show and tell” presentations and instead be information-rich, emphasize practical takeaways, and include discussion of the complexity of the issues. Panelists should provide contrasting perspectives, represent a diversity of identities, and draw from varied institutions (in budget, mission, location, etc.). Ample time must be allowed for audience discussion.   
  • Workshops (full- or half-day sessions on Wednesday or Saturday) – These long-form, in-depth sessions are designed to teach special skills in a small group setting and may occur on or off-site. Proposals should detail the specific skills the workshop will teach as well as the methods and techniques instructors will use. Workshops should include takeaway resource materials (handouts, samples, reading lists, tools/props, etc.). Workshops may have up to four instructors. Participants in workshop sessions pay fees which contribute to the conference budget and presenters and panelists all contribute their presentations in-kind.

Session Chair and Presenter Contact Information, including “Describe what this speaker brings to the session (125 words or less):” 


Monday, December 02, 2024

CFP: Biographies Area of the 2025 Popular Culture Association Conference (PCA) Conference--Deadline Extension: 12/13/2024

CFP: Biographies Area of the 2025 Popular Culture Association Conference (PCA) Conference--Deadline Extension: 12/13/2024

The Biographies Area of the Popular Culture Association (PCA)  is  soliciting papers for the 2025 conference that examine the connections between biography and popular  culture. Papers and full panel presentations regarding any aspect of popular culture and biography are encouraged. Potential topics might include:

  • Biography and entertainment, art, music, theater
  • Biography and film
  • Biography and criminal justice
  • Television programs about biography
  • Biography and urban legends
  • Biography and folklore
  • Biography and literature
  • Scholarly Biography
  • Controversial Biography
  • Psychoanalysis and Biography
  • Historical Biography
  • Political Biography
  • Autobiography

The conference will be held April 16-19, 2025 at the New Orleans Marriott, 555 Canal Street. Sessions are scheduled in 1½ hour slots, typically with four papers or speakers per standard session.  Presentations should not exceed 20 minutes. 

Below are some recent titles of presentations in the Biographies Area panels:

  • Sex, Drugs, and Rock-n-Roll: Celebrity Biography through the Lens of Autopsy
  • Will Rogers: American Folk Hero or Elitist Fraud
  • Manufacturing “Soupy Sales:” Biographical Insights in the Emergence of a Comic Entertainer

Please see this link for details and guidelines on submitting to the conference:
https://pcaaca.org/general/custom.asp?page=submissionguidelines

If interested in submitting for the conference, please provide the title and abstract of your presentation.  

Deadline for Paper Proposals: December 13, 2024.

If you have questions, please feel free to contact Biographies Chair:
Susie Skarl
Associate Professor/Urban Affairs Librarian
susie.skarl@unlv.edu
702-895-2141

Wednesday, November 27, 2024

CFP: Library Trends (Journal) Data Literacy: Navigating the Shift from Hype to Reality

CFP: Library Trends (Journal) Data Literacy: Navigating the Shift from Hype to Reality

Since 2012, libraries have evolved their efforts to support data literacy—a means to empower their patrons to confidently identify, collect, evaluate, analyze, interpret, present, and protect data(sets) they encounter—following Christine L. Borgman's observation of the data deluge, an unprecedented influx of research data being produced.

After more than a decade of work, where do libraries stand on data literacy post-"Big Data" hype? And where is it headed? Librarians in instructional roles—such as information literacy instructors and data librarians—initially approached data literacy through a statistical lens, aligning with core information literacy principles of finding, evaluating, and using information. Today, they also explore intersections with other evolving literacies like algorithmic literacy and data visualization literacy. Some adopt a critical data literacy mindset, recognizing that quantitative data is socially constructed, drawing on QuantCrit as well as data feminism principles from Catherine D'Ignazio and Lauren F. Klein. They also examine the distinctions between teaching data science and research data management (RDM). Additionally, libraries implement data literacy services differently based on their organizational structure and external influences, such as priorities set by higher education at-large.

This issue of Library Trends will explore current research and practice in data literacy in order to understand the field's evolution and future directions. The journal welcomes articles on both the theoretical and practical aspects of data literacy in libraries. Potential topics include (but are not limited to):

  • Data literacy’s relationship to other literacies (i.e., AI and algorithmic literacy, information literacy, media literacy)
  • Critical aspects of data literacy such as data justice and feminism
  • Data literacy competencies across different library types and/or audiences
  • Pedagogical approaches for data literacy instruction
  • Data literacy initiatives in various types of libraries, including academic, public, and special libraries
  • Data literacy in community engagement projects
  • Trends/insights in data literacy concerning micro-credentialing and digital badging managed by libraries
  • Data literacy in relation to the “Collections as Data” movement

Prospective authors are invited to submit an abstract outlining their proposed article by Monday, December 16, 2024. Decisions about the abstracts will be communicated by Wednesday, January 8, 2025, and authors of successful submissions are invited to write their full articles during spring 2025. Final articles should be 4,000-10,000 words (not including bibliographic references). The issue will use a distributed peer review process in which article authors review two manuscripts by other contributors. As part of submitting an article proposal, authors will be asked to commit to participation in this process as both an author and a reviewer.  

Important Dates

  • December 16, 2024 – Article proposals due
  • January 8, 2025 – Author notifications
  • May 7, 2025 – Article manuscripts due
  • May 20, 2025 – Peer Reviews assigned
  • June 20, 2025 – Peer Reviews due
  • August 1, 2025 – Article revisions due

Inquiries about the planned issue and ideas for articles should be directed to Ben Chiewphasa, Guest Editor (bbc2129@columbia.edu). Proposals for articles should be submitted via an online proposal form. Proposals are due December 16, 2024.

Citation Style: For proposals, authors may use any citation style. For manuscripts, authors should use the Chicago Manual of Style’s author-date format.

CFP: Library Trends (Journal): Compelling Tensions in Library and Information Science

CFP: Library Trends: Compelling Tensions in Library and Information Science

Thomas Kuhn described the essential tension in scientific discovery as the conflict between tradition and innovation, which led to the development of his theory of scientific revolutions. According to Kuhn, a scientific paradigm is dominated by a particular way of thinking until a sufficient number of anomalies to that way of thinking emerges and the paradigm can no longer be supported. At that point, innovation is demanded to account for the anomalies and a new paradigm is constructed; the result is a scientific revolution. 

The field of library and information science (LIS) has compelling tensions similar to those explored by Kuhn in the fields of science. Many of these tensions have been a part of the discipline and profession for a long time, and others have emerged in the digital age with the explosion of information and the ways to access, manipulate, and share that information.

This issue of Library Trends seeks to reveal and explore compelling tensions within LIS. The volume welcomes both analyses of theories that contribute to or dispel those tensions and explorations of how those tensions inform practice in libraries, archives, and other cultural heritage institutions. Articles can address tensions such as:  

  • Access versus privacy
  • The Right to Remember versus the Right to be Forgotten
  • Evidence versus spectacle
  • Connotative meanings and denotative meanings
  • Linked data and data management
  • Cultural sensitivity and cultural control
  • Epistemicide and cultural preservation
  • Intellectual freedom and social good/responsibility 
  • Neutrality versus activism 
  • AI & algorithms versus human-mediated services

Article Length: 4,000 – 10,000 words (target 7,000 words)

Prospective authors are invited to submit an abstract outlining their proposed article by January 3, 2025. Decisions about the abstracts will be communicated by February 7, 2025. Authors of successful submissions will be invited write their full articles, which will be due June 1, 2025. Final articles should be 4,000 – 10,000 words (not including bibliographic references). All articles will be peer reviewed by two reviewers – one internal to the issue and one external to the issue. As part of the submission process, authors will be asked to commit to participation in this process as both an author and a reviewer of one manuscript.

Important dates:

  • January 3, 2025 – Article proposals due
  • February 7, 2025 – Author notifications
  • June 1, 2025 – Article manuscripts due
  • July 15, 2025 – Peer reviews due
  • September 15, 2025 – Revised manuscripts due

Inquiries about the planned issue and ideas for articles should be directed to Katherine Wisser, Guest Editor of Library Trends (wisser@simmons.edu). Proposals for articles should be submitted via an online proposal form. Proposals are due January 3, 2025.

Citation style: For proposals, authors may use any citation style. For manuscripts, authors should use the Chicago Manual of Style, 18th edition, author-date format.