Blog of the Pacific Northwest Chapter of the SLA

Monday, November 1, 2010

Rise of the Knowledge Librarian, Nov 12 (virtual session)

"A traditional corporate librarian must make three major shifts in roles begin the transition to a knowledge librarian."

Do you know what these three shifts are all about? Join us for an afternoon session on November 12 to find out more.

Rise of the Knowledge Librarian: A Look at Knowledge Sharing Strategies & Roles

Based on their KMWorld article, "The future of the future: the rise of the knowledge librarian" in 2009, Art Murray and Ken Wheaton look at knowledge sharing roles and opportunities.

Art Murray, Applied Sciences Inc. & Chief Fellow, George Washington University Institute for Knowledge & Innovation, & Co-Founder, The Enterprise of the Future Program

Ken Wheaton, Web Services Librarian, Alaska State Court Law Library

Date: Nov 12, 2010
Time: 12 PM – 1 PM (Pacific)
Connect: (link to be posted)
Cost: Free
Preregistration is not required.




Saturday, September 25, 2010

Pacific Northewest Chapter/Medical Library Association (PNC/MLA) October 9-12, 2010

Registration for the 2010 Pacific Northwest Chapter/Medical Library Association (PNC/MLA), October 9-12, 2010, goes up $50 next Friday, September 25. Sign up now (http://depts.washington.edu/pncmla/pncmla2010/) to enjoy early registration rates and ensure a place in one of the many continuing education workshops!
More information on continuing education sessions at http://depts.washington.edu/pncmla/pncmla2010/ce.shtml and below. Registration numbers for CE classes will be assessed on Sept. 17th. If minimum numbers are not met, some of these classes may have to be canceled. Sign up now!

More information on the entire program at http://depts.washington.edu/pncmla/pncmla2010/program.shtml .

Continuing Education Sessions: PNC/MLA 2010 Saturday, October 9, 2010 12:30pm - 4:30pm Creating Effective Presentations
Instructor: Anna Johnson ~~ Mt Hood Community College
Cost: $70 | $90 non-PNC member
Many librarians facilitate trainings and teach classes, but few of us are formally trained to deliver information effectively in front of an audience. Feeling under-skilled as a public speaker can make librarians dread giving a talk, and feeling pressure to teach everything important in a single session can make us bombard students with too much information. Participants in this lively, hands-on class will learn how to go beyond slide software to better engage and educate an audience both during a library instruction session and after the session ends. The first half of the class will focus on public speaking skills and audience engagement strategies, with an emphasis on the structure and timing of spoken presentations. Participants will be encouraged (but not compelled) to practice these new techniques in front of the group. After a short break, the class will resume with a crash course in document design principles and processes for creating content-rich instructional materials. Participants will be seated at individual computers and will be given time to practice these document design principles by editing a template file provided by the facilitator. Upon completing this class, participants will be prepared to improve their library instruction sessions by always developing their presentations in two parts: an engaging in-class lesson and a well-designed, web-accessible document for students to learn from later.

Saturday, October 9, 2010
1:00pm - 5:00pm
Managing Information Overload
Instructor: William Jones ~~ University of Washington
Cost: $70 | $90 non-PNC member
Information scattered and disorganized can overwhelm. The same information organized can be a thing of utility and even beauty. How then do we manage "information overload"? We ignore or eliminate information at our peril. Better is an approach that seeks to organize our information and our interactions with this information in accordance with the roles we mean to fulfill in our lives and the goals we wish to achieve. This is the point of personal information management or PIM. In this course, you will learn about PIM and how it can be applied in your life. The course will include a hands-on segment during which you will identify and refine a personal unifying taxonomy (PUT). Your PUT provides a basis for "placing" and organizing the information you need to lead the live the life you want to live.
Bio: William Jones is a Research Associate Professor in the Information School at the University of Washington where he manages the Keeping Found Things Found group (kftf.ischool.washington.edu<http://kftf.ischool.washington.edu/>). He has published in the areas of personal information management (PIM), human-computer interaction, information retrieval and cognitive psychology. Prof. Jones wrote the book "Keeping Found Things Found: The Study and Practice of Personal Information Management" and also edited the book "Personal Information Management" (with co-editor Jaime Teevan). Prof. Jones received his doctorate from Carnegie-Mellon University for research into human memory.

Sunday, October 10, 2010
8:00am - 5:00pm
Online Consumer Health and Consumer-Driven Healthcare Lisa Gualtieri ~~ Tufts School of Medicine
Cost: $140 | $160 non-PNC member
How are people using the Internet to support their health information needs? What are their objectives, triggers? How does their level of health literacy affect what they get out of it and their degree of success? What is the role of physicians and nurses? There's a growing chasm between healthcare professionals and consumers concerning the large role of the Internet in consumers' use of the healthcare system and their decision making about their healthcare. What can librarians do to help consumers obtain and manage the information they need for their healthcare? And how can librarians help bridge the chasm between healthcare professionals and e-Patients? What are the methodologies used & skills required to design a health web site for consumers, based on a consumer-driven process?

Sunday, October 10, 2010
8:00am - 11:00am
Third-Party PubMed Tools
Instructor: Alison Aldrich ~~ NN/LM PNR
Cost: $60 | $80 non-PNC member
The freely available PubMed API (application programming interface) makes it possible for programmers from outside of the National Library of Medicine to develop alternatives to PubMed.gov<http://pubmed.gov/> for searching NLM's vast database of biomedical journal literature citations. This three-hour workshop will introduce several popular and free third-party PubMed tools, comparing and contrasting them with the PubMed.gov<http://pubmed.gov/> interface. Through case studies, group exercises and hands-on practice, participants will become familiar with the strengths and limitations of search tools such as HubMed, PubGet, Novoseek, and Quertle. This workshop is intended for intermediate and advanced PubMed searchers.
Objectives: Participants will be able to
*

Use and teach others about the latest updates to PubMed.gov<http://pubmed.gov/>
*       Name and develop appropriate search strategies for at least three third-party PubMed tools
*       Identify situations in which searching with a third-party tool would be beneficial
*       Stay current with new developments related to third-party PubMed tools

Sunday, October 10, 2010
12:30pm - 2:30pm
Services for Mobile Users: Introduction
Instructors: Kim Griggs (web page), Laurie Bridges (web page) and Hannah Rempel (web page) ~~ Oregon State University
Cost: $35 | $55 non-PNC member
In this presentation the Oregon State University MobileLib team will discuss why OSU Libraries chose to spend time and resources developing a mobile site. The team will review the current status of mobile statistics and demographics information, take a look at examples of mobile sites, compare options for mobile catalogs, discuss what is currently hot in mobile library sites, and cover best practices for creating your own user-friendly mobile library site. This presentation is intended for librarians just beginning the process of mobilizing their Web site and will provide you with the tools to make a strong argument to your library management about the importance of having a mobile Web site.

Sunday, October 10, 2010
3:00pm - 5:00pm
Services for Mobile Users: Coding
Instructors: Kim Griggs (web page), Laurie Bridges (web page) and Hannah Rempel (web page) ~~ Oregon State University
Cost: $35 | $55 non-PNC member
In this class Oregon State University Libraries' programmer will cover the basics of building standards-compliant web sites for mobile devices. Expand your skills by learning about mobile markup languages and design recommendations, mobile testing and usability issues, content adaptation tips and tools, and best practices for mobile web development. This practical course includes information on developing a mobile strategy, code examples and audience participation. For web developers or programmers familiar with XHTML, CSS, and JavaScript.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

InfoCamp Seattle 2010

InfoCamp Seattle 2010
Saturday October 2 - Sunday October 3, 2010 at Seattle University http://seattle.infocamp.org

InfoCamp is an unconference for the information community. It features an egalitarian, community-driven format in which the agenda is created during the event -- so anyone can sign up to lead a session!

Join us at InfoCamp Seattle 2010 for an exciting weekend of talking & learning about:
- user experience
- information architecture
- user-centered design
- interaction design
- library & information science
- online search
- information management
- informatics
- anything relating to the intersection of information, people and/or technology

A keynote from an invited speaker will kick off each day before we leap into multiple tracks of participant-led sessions & discussions.
We'll provide lunch, coffee, and snacks to keep the energy up!

Contact: seattle@infocamp.org or http://seattle.infocamp.org

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Ken Wheaton @ SLA


~~
Monday, June 14, 2010
Knowledge Sharing Strategies and Roles
Art Murray, Ken Wheaton
Cosponsored by: KM (primary), LMD, News
~~
Ken Wheaton and Art Murray presented a case study of a corporate librarian’s journey of transforming himself and an industrial age organization from a knowledge-hoarding organization into a knowledge-sharing enterprise.

They retraced the steps taken, lessons learned and how the role of the corporate librarian changed from managing periodicals and subscriptions to proactively brokering critical knowledge across different segments of the enterprise.

They looked at the importance of business process modeling, how goals and objectives brought clarity and focus regarding what knowledge was essential, and avoided wasting effort on trying to capture non-essential knowledge. They describe the tools used, including data management and visualization, white boarding and collaborative decision making.

[Check out that cake! Ken's colleagues gave him a sweet knowledge management-infused farewell.]

Submitted by Ken Wheaton

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

SLA 2010 Report-Out

On June 30, several PNW members who attended SLA (virtually and in person) were treated to bite-sized discussions of several interesting sessions. Here are some of the sessions we talked about:

 
Joint Chapter/Division meeting (see write-up)
All members meeting  

  • Academic, Education and Science & Technology divisions roundtable (see write-up by Jessica Moskowitz)
  • “Knowledge Sharing Strategies and Roles” – Art Murray and Ken Wheaton
  • “Medical Devices: Finding Information about Them” -- Marjorie Greer [see slides] Marlene Bobka, Patrick Clapp [see slides], Sandra Baker
  • “Non-Traditional Roles for Information Professionals in Biomedical Research” –Emily Glenn and Betsy Rolland
  • “Collection Intelligence” -- Mary Lane, Mat Willmott & Hilary Davis
  • “The Science of Hot Sauce” -- Ben Villalón
  • “Knowledge Continuity and Opportunities: the Future of Knowledge Managers” -- Patrick Lambe
  • “Brand You and Web 2.0” – Mary Ellen Bates 
  • “Negotiating Up: Achieving Your Goals with Internal Clients” – Mary Ellen Bates
  • “Emerging Technologies – Real-Time Search” – Mary Ellen Bates
  • “Ask the Competitive Intelligence Experts Panel” – Steve Arnold
  • “Competitive Intelligence Transitions for LIS Professionals” – Ellen Naylor & Jan Herring
  • “Nuts and Bolts of Contract Management” – Bill Noorlander, Carol Ginsburg, Craig Wingrove
  • Contributed Papers: winners
  • “60 Sites in 60 Minutes”[see slides]
  • Diversity Breakfast presentation on White Privilege
Thank to everyone in the chapter who shared their experiences of the 2010 meeting!

Monday, June 28, 2010

Chapter Cabinet and Joint Chapter/Division Cabinet meeting notes

Chapter Cabinet and Joint Chapter/Division Cabinet meeting notes
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
SLA 2010 Annual Conference, New Orleans, LA

Chapter Cabinet meeting
Announcements
  • Ruth Wolfish, Chapter Cabinet Chair reported on the Mid Year Survey, which was sent to all SLA Chapters during mid-May; of the 56 chapters, 27 (48%) responded. Chapter Cabinet Report
  • Toni Carbo, co-chair of the Information Ethics Advisory Council reported on the Guidelines drafted. Information Ethics Advisory Council Report
    James King provided an update on the work done on the Chapters’ map, which will indicate which states belong to the chapters.
    Tips to chapter leadership: outreach to student groups; make it advantageous for people to join SLA; pass leadership messages onto members.
  • Information will be available soon on software that will be available for the chapters to use. Technical support will be provided 24/7 with increased server space at a reasonable price.
    All are encouraged to attend the monthly webinars. Vendor/Unit relations webinar to be held July 29th.
  • As the first SLA Chapter to be formed, the Boston Chapter will celebrate its centennial in October.

First Five Years Advisory Council report (Gayle Gossen)
· All early career members (up to 5 years of experience) may join.
· Connect with First Five Years members on their SLA page and Facebook

Treasurer’s report (Dan Trefethen)
· SLA staff is still operating at a reduction (from pre-2009 levels) of about 30%.
· All chains of sponsorship are down.
· Short-term cash flow issues during 2009-2010 were managed by taking a loan.
· A more complete report was given at the annual membership meeting.

Membership report (Paula Diaz)
· Many kinds of membership reports are available to chapter and division membership chairs; custom reports can be run as requested. Membership chairs should see www.sla.org/ulas
· A new membership wiki is available on the SLA site
· Meeting attendees asked about the availability of general demographic reports, who we are/how to leverage that info, how to use membership data to present a compelling professional “home” for current and new members


    Joint Division and Chapter Cabinet meeting
    Division Cabinet chair-elect and Chapter Cabinet chair-elect candidate Q & A (moderated by Cindy Romaine)
    Series of three questions posed, each with a 3-minute time limit
    1. How did they come to the profession?
    2. As members take more advantage of e-tools, distance learning etc, what should SLA focus on? 3. Change is ever present. What should SLA let go of in order to respond to change?
    · Candidates for are Division Cabinet chair-elect: Scott Brown and Richard Huffine
    · Candidates for Chapter Cabinet chair-elect: James Manasco and Ulla de Stricker
    · Election will open on Sept 8, 2010

    Other announcements:

    SLA Leadership Summit will be Jan 19-22 in Washington DC
    SLA 2011 Annual Conference will be June 12-15 in Philadelphia


    Adjourned at 7:25Pm

    Submitted by Vicki Valleroy and Emily Glenn

    Wednesday, April 7, 2010

    A Book Review by Paul T. Jackson

    A Book Review by Paul T. Jackson, Trescott Research, Enumclaw, WA 98022
    Moville, Peter and Callender, Jeffery, Search Patterns, Sabastopol, CA: O’Reilly, 2010. 180p. with index.

    ----
    Peter Morville’s earlier book Ambient Findability explored most of the problems we encounter in searching for information and gave illustrations of some of the things scientists and information or knowledge managers were working on to help. [see my review here: http://units.sla.org/chapter/cpnw/interface/2006/spring/news.html ] It was an exciting book to read back in 2005.

    With that background, I felt I just had to see this new Morville book, Search Patterns. It is really an overview of the field of Internet search engines, written with designers of search engine sites in mind who design the pages and the programs that help information specialists and searchers find things or information, particularly those things that would appear on the Internet that could be found if the right way or search mechanism were found that indeed found what we needed. It would probably make a good course outline for beginner search designers and faculty teaching search strategies and search literacy.