Library Faculty/Staff Scholarship and Research
Permanent URI for this collectionhttp://hdl.handle.net/1903/11
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Item Kids in the Library: Enacting Joy in the Academic Workplace Through the Creation of a Family Study Space(IGI Global, 2020) Gammons, Rachel; Corlett-Rivera, Kelsey; Kletscher, KarinaWhile children’s services are traditionally associated with public libraries, the increase in students with dependent children means that academic libraries are increasingly being called to provide family-friendly spaces. Using the University of Maryland Libraries as a case study, the authors detail the process of developing, implementing, and overseeing family-friendly services, including a family study room and activity kits for children. They argue there is value in welcoming families into the academy and projects, such as a family study room, worthy not only for the contributions they make to the community but also for the opportunity to enact joy in our daily practice as academic librarians.Item Helping Parents in a Pinch: An Academic Library Becomes More Family-Friendly(American Libraries, 2020-03) Gammons, Rachel; Corlett-Rivera, KelseyChildren are present in many types of libraries—not just the public variety. The expense and difficulties of arranging childcare mean that even academic library patrons often need to bring young ones along when studying or browsing the stacks. Now, through the creation of a family study space and other amenities, the University of Maryland Libraries has made it easier for parents, caregivers, and children to visit.Item Virtual Peer Mentoring Programs: Building Global Professional Connections Through the International Librarians Network(ACRL, 2019) Corlett-Rivera, Kelsey; Kangas, PirjoThis chapter focuses on the International Librarians Network (ILN) peer-mentoring program and the opportunities it provided to build a global professional network. The chapter will be of interest to librarians who are interested in expanding their network internationally while developing as professionals through a well-run, informal, virtual peer-mentoring program. We will present a case study of our experience as ILN program participants in spring 2016. Our aim is to explore the effectiveness of the ILN program, in part to determine how long-distance peer-mentoring programs like these can help build international connections between libraries and librarians and contribute to our professional development.Item Final Report,Task Force on McKeldin Library Research Commons, University of Maryland Libraries(2013-07) Corlett-Rivera, Kelsey; Dickey Davis, Barbara; Díaz, Zaida; Ippoliti, Cynthia; Otis, Lara; Patterson, Karen; Tchangalova, Nedelina; Luckert, Yelena; White, GaryHigher education institutions are undergoing a fundamental transformation in their role in our society, economic structure, and value system. The University of Maryland (UMD) Libraries find themselves in the midst of this constantly changing environment where new technologies, new pedagogies, new publishing models, and new environments evolve every day. Librarians are being challenged to undertake new roles in order to support the research activities of their user population and to foster research and teaching initiatives across the university. With these trends in mind, the Research Commons Task Force was charged to research and plan for implementing new services and creating new research spaces. To accomplish this task, the Research Commons Task Force consulted the literature and conducted an extensive environmental scan by interviewing those involved in the creation of research commons at other universities, meeting with internal partners, and surveying graduate students and faculty at the University of Maryland. The resulted Final Report is a comprehensive document, which addresses UMD research needs, assessment, staffing, spaces, and technology concerns. It intends to serve as a guide for developing and implementing this model at the UMD Libraries and provides a robust yet flexible framework for the future.Item Subject librarian as coauthor: A case study with recommendations(Taylor and Francis, 2017) Corlett-Rivera, KelseyIt can be challenging for subject librarians to participate in or lead Digital Humanities projects. This article presents a case study of a cataloging and digitization project that led to the creation of a Digital History website, both led by a subject librarian. Recommendations, such as leveraging your librarian skills and targeting graduate students, will be useful for other subject librarians who are looking for ways to become involved in the Digital Humanities.Item Intervening in French: A Colony in Crisis, the Digital Humanities, and the French Classroom(sx archipelagos, 2017-09) Dize, Nathan H.; Corlett-Rivera, Kelsey; Broughton, Abby R.; de Gail, Brittany MThis essay explores the use of *A Colony in Crisis: The Saint-Domingue Grain Crisis of 1789* in the French literature classroom and how it helps address gaps in digital humanities and French language pedagogy while interrogating the colonial positionality of the French Revolution’s digital archive. In 2015, the Newberry Library received a Digitizing Hidden Special Collections and Archives grant from the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) to digitize 30,000 French language pamphlets, a portion of which pertains to the period before, during, and after the French Revolution. As the digital archive of the French Revolution rapidly grows, the need to draw attention to the broader context of revolution in the French Empire–particularly in the Caribbean–has become even more urgent. One of the most effective ways of addressing the marginalization of the Caribbean in colonial archives is through pedagogical interventions and course design. While digital humanities pedagogy has become somewhat normalized in the anglophone literature classroom, the French language classroom has been slow to adapt to the use of digital tools and pedagogy beyond the introductory language course.Item E-Book Perceptions and Use in STEM and Non-STEM Disciplines: A Comparative Follow-Up Study(The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2016-01) Carroll, Alexander J.; Corlett-Rivera, Kelsey; Hackman, Timothy; Zou, JinwangThis article describes the results of a survey that gathered data on perceptions and use of e-books from undergraduate students, graduate students, faculty, and staff. The investigators analyzed the results based on user affiliate status and subject discipline and compared the results with the findings of a similar, smaller-scale study conducted in 2012. The study concludes with a discussion of the major findings and their implications for academic libraries and publishers, as well as areas for further inquiry.Item Champagne Information Literacy Workshops on a Beer Budget(The Innovative Library Classroom 2015, 2015-03-12) Corlett-Rivera, Kelsey; Carroll, Alexander J.; Macri, LindaThe University of Maryland Libraries offer drop-in information literacy workshops, which historically have been poorly attended. Previous efforts to increase attendance have focused on marketing, but a lack of time and funding for large-scale advertising hampered those efforts. One creative approach was a partnership between the UMD Libraries and the Graduate School Writing Center to offer Research and Writing Bootcamps, to leverage their respective audiences. Based on those experiences and the needs students expressed during research and writing consultations, this collaboration expanded to include a workshop on researching and writing literature reviews. Despite not launching a formal marketing campaign for that workshop, or conducting a lengthy needs assessment, twenty-four hours after opening registration, we had 165 students registered for two workshops in a 35 seat instruction room. This talk will suggest affordable ways to identify high priority topics to develop information literacy workshops that teach what students want to learn.Item Ebook Use and Attitudes in the Humanities, Social Sciences, and Education(Johns Hopkins University Press, 2014-04) Corlett-Rivera, Kelsey; Hackman, TimothyA survey of more than 1,300 faculty, graduate students, and undergraduate students in the humanities and social sciences at the University of Maryland generated a wealth of data on use and opinions of e-books among those users. While the initial purpose of the survey was to gather data that would aid humanities and social sciences librarians in making collection development decisions for their academic departments, the data will also be useful to all academic librarians who make decisions about e-books for their institutions.Item Evidence for Development and Enhancement of a Popular Reading Collection in an Academic Library(Evidence Based Library and Information Practice, 2014-12-16) Hackman, Timothy; Corlett-Rivera, Kelsey; Larson, ElizabethDescribes the development of a collection of popular books and audiobooks at the University of Maryland Libraries.