Guest Post, Part 2: Are Archives Graduate Programs Adequately Preparing Students for Publishing, Researching, and Writing in the Profession?

Thank you to Joshua Zimmerman, lecturer at San Jose State University’s iSchool, for this fantastic post. His in-depth perspective is in 2 posts and I encourage everyone to read it thoroughly. Josh has great strategies to help emerging professionals prepare for and contribute to the intellectual discourse of archival scholarship. (Read Part 1)

Cultural Competency

As of 2015, the MARA program has adopted a new core competency (J) which aims to “[i]dentify ways in which archivists and records managers can contribute to the cultural, economic, educational, and social well-being of our global communities.” While my course isn’t tied to this competency officially, I’ve been trying to develop ways to incorporate this core competency in order to broaden the scope of the course (2). I have a discussion based around the students’ analysis of how the Afrobarometer visualizes research data. In addition to adding additional international voices in the form of articles and readings, I’m also working on a lecture for next year on the topic of researching across cultures and the challenges and ethical dilemmas that accompany it. In it, I mention issues of ownership, trust, risks, and critical self-examination. Even if students, for example, never publish a scholarly journal about Chinese recordkeeping or never conduct fieldwork in Haiti, these items speak directly to the well-being of their own communities and it helps to prepare students to work with communities and people who may be very different than themselves. Whether or not I actually apply to have this competency assigned to my course, I nevertheless want to make this an integral part of its content.

 

Themes

In addition to all the methods, designs, purposes, and data collection tools detailed in the textbook and accompanying readings, I’ve tried to interject some more theoretical issues around doing research such as the topic of objectivity vs. neutrality, in particular the Greene, Ramirez, and Jimerson debate. I have also have a lecture section devoted to failure in the research process. Though I haven’t found a way to integrate it into the assignments, though I do ask students in the last discussion section to detail a failure that they’ve had in the class (3). I share my failures in the course development as well as research process. As a rule, I try to integrate 1 or 2 new elements into the course each year. These are definitely good candidates for failure! I also focused on research paradigms and ask students to isolate one to explore in a discussion (4). This provides some handy vocabulary that students can incorporate into their work. It also gives them some experience in larger theoretical frameworks of academia, many of which are new to students.

 

Statistics

Even before I started teaching in the MARA program, I was impressed with the job prospects data that they collected and made available to prospective students. They seem to be one of few archives programs that collect and publish this type of data. This year, I’ve started to keep a better track and be more mindful of statistics and demographics in the course. For instance, in my course bibliography, I have a nearly equal distribution of male and female authors (33 to 32). Of those, 8 are authors outside the United States, clearly a statistic that I need to work on. This is information that I make available to students.

 

Also, last year, 8 students wrote on archival topics, while 4 wrote on records management topics. One wrote about a topic that blended both. This year, there are 9 students wrote on archives topics while 4 wrote on records management. This lets me get an understanding of the career trajectory of the students, something that the Student Opinion of Test Effectiveness (SOTE) evaluations nor the post-graduation employment survey specifically address. I plan on creating a separate section for statistics that incorporates other aspects of the course, namely grades.

 

Ideas for Next Year

Some ideas for next year are to create a class style guide, similar to style guides / submission guidelines encountered when submitting to journals. This will approximate what those who do go onto submit articles, reviews, etc. will encounter. Unable to let the idea of usability of student’s work go, I might align the final proposal more with the application for ARMA International Education Foundation’s Research Project Proposal Form, due to its wide scope of both archives and records management.

 

Conclusion

Overall, teaching this class has been a rewarding experience and I’ve learned that I have more experience than I thought I had. As an archivist who graduated from the history camp of archives education, I think MARA 285 provides a broad overview of the many possible approaches and research designs. This, I think, is the classes’ strength. While students might not rush out and conduct ethnographic fieldwork in a records center or design a participatory action research methodology for setting up a community archives, they’ve at least been exposed to some of these interesting ideas and designs. I think that I’ve done a good job at preparing students for a career in writing and publishing, or at the very least, reading and critically analyzing professional literature.

 

Now, return to the questions that I raised in the introduction. I’ve given you an overview of the structure, themes, and problems of the course, so here’s your chance to chime in on your experience learning about our professional writing, researching, and publishing culture. What was missing in your own education? What’s missing in today’s students? What’s missing in my course? Even if you don’t feel like sharing them below, I’m always looking for feedback, sources, and ideas to incorporate into the class. If you have any comments or suggestions, please send them my way.

 

Sources

 

(1) Couture, C. and Ducharme, D. (2005). Research in archival science: A status report. Archivaria 59, 63-64. Reprinted in Gilliland, A. and McKemmish, S. (2004). Building an infrastructure for archival research. Archival Science. 4. 149-197.

 

(2) Currently, my course is the only one which addresses Core Competency I, which is intended for students to “Understand research design and research methods and possess the analytical, written, and oral communication skills to synthesize and disseminate research findings.”

 

(3) Salo, D. (2014). LIS 644: Digital trends, tools, and debates. [Syllabus]. Accessed from http://files.dsalo.info/644syllsum2014.pdf 

 

(4) Babbie, E. R. (2013). The practice of social research. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Cengage Learning. In this reading, Babbie talks about: Social Darwinism, Positivism, Postmodernism, conflict, Symbolic Interactionism, Ethnomethodology, Structural Functionalism, Feminism, and Critical Race Theory among others.

Guest Post, Part 1: Are Archives Graduate Programs Adequately Preparing Students for Publishing, Researching, and Writing in the Profession?

Thank you to Joshua Zimmerman, lecturer at San Jose State University’s iSchool, for this fantastic post. His in-depth perspective is in 2 posts and I encourage everyone to read it thoroughly. Josh has great strategies to help emerging professionals prepare for and contribute to the intellectual discourse of archival scholarship. (Read Part 2)

________

Are archives graduate program adequately preparing students for the profession? As an adjunct lecturer in the Masters of Archives and Records Administration (MARA) online master’s degree program in San José State University’s iSchool, this is a question that I’m constantly asking myself as I hear from students and other professionals. For readers of this blog, perhaps a more relevant but related question would be: are archives graduate programs adequately preparing students for publishing, researching, and writing in the profession? As the one responsible for teaching MARA 285 Research Methods in Records Management and Archival Science, I’m extremely concerned with this question. I thought that readers might be interested in how our research and publishing culture is being taught in one small corner of the profession.

As you read this, I want you to think back to how you were introduced to the norms of researching and publishing in our profession? Were these skills taught in your graduate program, did you already have them, or did you have to pick them up later? Finally, what do you wish you would have learned about writing, researching, and publishing in the archives profession as a graduate student? Keep the answers to these questions in mind as you read below. I’d love to know how MARA 285 stacks up to your experiences, good or bad.

Assignments and Assignment Format

The overall structure and framework of MARA 285 is one that I inherited from a colleague, Jason Kaltenbacher who is also an adjunct professor in the MARA program. While my lectures significantly differ from his, I’ve kept the assignments and overall structure basically the same. Other research courses in the iSchool (and in other MLIS programs), I have found, employ a similar assignment format. I ask students to complete an annotated bibliography, topic proposal, literature review, and final proposal. These assignments build on each other and help students complete the steps in putting together both a formal proposal and the framework of a major research project. Since the internet survey has become the preferred data gathering tool of the profession, I also ask them to complete a group survey project where they develop a short internet survey, cover letter, and rationale statement for each question. 

Social Science Focus

When I first took this course on and looked at the assignments and overall structure, I felt that I wanted to radically change the end project to a publishable article. This would be immediately usable to students as they could submit it to journals and present it elsewhere at conferences or on professional or personal blogs. Within the last couple years, my alma mater (Western Washington University) changed their MA thesis requirement to a much smaller publishable article which, I think, seeks to address this aim. Yet, after using the old proposal assignment structure that I inherited for two years, I’ve completely changed my tune.

I discovered just how important it was to snap students out of what I call the “term paper mentality,” an assignment format that most students are particularly used to and, as I’ve discovered, often revert to if given the chance. This course structure offers students the chance to approach a topic systematically, more like a project than a paper. Instead of writing a term paper and trying to wrap up all the loose ends up by the end of the semester, the objective is only to build the structure in order to execute it after the course concludes. This means, that they design the research, but they stop short of sending out the survey, conducting the field work, or digging into records in an archives. I feel that this format ties in better with the assigned textbook chapters that break down different aspects or approaches to research. It also forces students to step back and formalize what they are doing and more importantly, how they plan on doing it. They are asked to put together a research schedule and justify why they are qualified to conduct this research as part of the final proposal.

Challenges, Problems, and Issues

One problem that I encountered during the first year concerned appropriate topic choices. Other courses in the MARA program such as Enterprise Content Management and Digital Preservation or Management of Records and Archival Institutions have clearly defined topic limits. These are built into the course. For instance, you probably can’t write a term paper on medieval recordkeeping for the Enterprise Content Management and Digital Preservation class.

MARA 285, however, is wide almost wide open as far as potential research topics go. That medieval recordkeeping topic is fair game in MARA 285. While there are endless opportunities for topics, there are nevertheless some limitations. I ask that students choose a topic related to the archives, RIM, or library science fields. I encourage students to bring in their interests and give it a records twist. For instance, last year, one military historian in the class designed a project around military recordkeeping. Though the course is taught from a social science perspective, I want students to specifically engage the professional literature of archives and RIM. This year, in addition to some clarifying language and a preemptory blog post on the MARA program website, I’ve added the typology of archives research topics by Couture and Ducharme (1). This typology spells out all the flavors of research conducted in the archives profession (and by extension, RIM). This seemed to have helped students frame their research within the profession.

Another problem that occurred this year was students’ lack of confidence in their professional experience. Unfortunately, due to scheduling, some students take this class as a first year student and in their first semester. To those working in the profession, this might not be a big issue, but for someone who is brand new to the profession, this course might be a bit daunting because it asks students to choose a topic in the profession and develop it over the course of the semester. As mentioned above, I provide guidance on choosing topics in the lecture, but especially for the literature review which asks students to isolate the major literature on their particular topic, this has been stressful or at least it has been related to me as such. This is sometimes daunting for seasoned archivists, let alone first year students. 

Incorporating Perspectives

In addition to the assignments and readings mentioned above, I’ve added a video series called Research in the Wild. In it, the class gets to hear about the research and writing process from other archivists and records managers. I launched it late in the course in 2015 with a few videos, mostly 5-10 minutes. This year, I have a video for nearly each module and hopefully a lot more for next year. Video submissions have addressed specific project-related research challenges as well as more broadly, research agendas, theses, the editing process, differences in publishing in and out of school, and Fulbright Scholarship research among others. In my own archival program, I enjoyed hearing from guest lecturers and talking with archivists and RMs on field trips and it’s these experiences that I’ve tried to recreate. I felt a bit uncomfortable asking archivists and records managers to do free work for me, so I decided to donate to SAA’s Mosaic Scholarship on behalf of those who submit videos. If you’d like to submit a video for next year or know someone who might, please let me know (zimmerj6@gmail.com). From some early feedback from students this year, I’ve learned that the writing process might be more important than I initially thought. So as a result, I’ll be seeking archivists and RIMs who want to talk about this aspect of the profession.

New Issue: Archivaria

Archivaria 82 (Fall 2016)

(full content for subscribers, abstracts available)

Articles

The Spectre in the Archive: Truth, Reconciliation, and Indigenous Archival Memory
J.J. Ghaddar

Catalogues and the Collecting and Ordering of Knowledge (I): ca. 1550–1750
Heather MacNeil

Media and the Messengers: Writings on Digital Archiving in Canada from the 1960s to the 1980s
Greg Bak

Linked Data for Archives
Jinfang Niu

Risky Business? Issues in Licensing Copies of Archival Holdings
Jean Dryden

Counterpoint

From Missionaries to Managers: Making the Case for a Canadian Documentary Heritage Commission
Richard Valpy

Book Reviews

DAVID VINCENT, Privacy: A Short History
Carolyn Heald

LUCIANA DURANTI and PATRICIA C. FRANKS, eds., Encyclopedia of Archival Science
Juan Ilerbaig

MARGARET CROCKETT, The No-Nonsense Guide to Archives and Recordkeeping
Jamie Serran

RACHEL WEXELBAUM, ed., Queers Online: LGBT Digital Practices in Libraries, Archives, and Museums
Al Stanton-Hagan

LINDA M. MORRA, Unarrested Archives: Case Studies in Twentieth-Century Canadian Women’s Authorship
Jennifer Toews

Exhibition Reviews

Hiding in Plain Sight: Discovering the Métis Nation in the Collection of Library and Archives Canada. LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES CANADA
Philip Dombowsky

MashUp: The Birth of Modern Culture. VANCOUVER ART GALLERY
Laura Millar

“Why are we saving All these artist publications + Other Galleries stuffs?” The Emergence of Artist-Run Culture in Halifax. DALHOUSIE ART GALLERY
Rebecca Young

Obituary

Jean Tener, 1931–2016

Archivaria Awards

Archivaria Awards 2016

 

Be a Part of My Book!

Be part of the Society of American Archivists’ new and forthcoming Archival Fundamentals Series! Cheryl Oestreicher, who is authoring the Providing Reference and Access Services in Archives and Manuscripts book, seeks real-world examples and photos that represent the wide variety of institutions, staffing levels, policies, and procedures that exist throughout the profession. Contributions need not be formally written as standalone pieces, as they will be integrated throughout the book itself. Send an e-mail, a couple of paragraphs, or a few sentences about a practice or experience that you found especially useful. Personal photos, website links, social media blurbs, and other online references are welcome. Copies of internal policies and procedures are helpful, and nothing will be published without your explicit permission. Contributions also can be anonymized upon request. Depending upon the amount of and types of suggestions, some may not be included in the final book.

Simply send an email to: ccoest@gmail.com with the subject line “Reference and Access Book Contribution.” Thank you for helping us to produce a better book!

The following is a list of potential contributions:

  • reading room photos
  • access policies
  • loan policies
  • accessibility of facilities/ADA compliance
  • virtual reading room
  • copyright, registration, reproduction, publishing, etc. forms
  • ethical decisions about access
  • dealing with difficult patrons
  • unusual patron types and experiences
  • unusual disciplines/research projects
  • how do institutional staff use/request records, what materials are they looking for and why
  • reference manuals
  • when archivists do research (beyond standard reference interactions)
  • reference training documents/procedures
  • copying/reproduction policies
  • internal metrics, tracking statistics
  • assessment of reference interactions; post-visit surveys
  • how do you staff reference services: rotation, designated reference desk, subject/curatorial specialists, etc.
  • marketing and outreach strategies (not examples of individual activities, but overall strategies)

CFP: The Reading Room: A Journal of Special Collections

The Reading Room: A Journal of Special Collections is now accepting manuscript submissions for its Fall 2017 issue (volume 3, issue 1). The submission deadline for manuscripts is June 5, 2017.

The Reading Room is a scholarly, open-access journal committed to providing current research and relevant discussion of practices in a special collections library setting. The Reading Room seeks submissions from practitioners and students involved with special collections in museums, historical societies, corporate environments, public libraries and academic libraries. Topics may include exhibits, outreach, digital collections, mentorship, donor relations, teaching, reference, technical and metadata skills, social media, “Lone Arrangers”, management and digital humanities.

Narrative features, research articles, and case studies are welcome. The journal features single-blind, peer-reviewed research articles and case studies related to all aspects of current special collections work.

The editors strongly encourage queries from authors regarding potential articles for The Reading Room. Please email thereadingroomjournal@gmail.com before submitting your manuscript.

For more information, please see our website: http://readingroom.lib.buffalo.edu/readingroom/

Molly D. Poremski
Digital Collections Librarian
221 Lockwood Memorial Library
University at Buffalo, State University of New York
Buffalo, NY 14260
(716) 645-7750
poremski@buffalo.edu

Call for Nominations: Mander Jones Awards

Mander Jones Awards – Publications, Australian Society of Archivists

An Award for Professional Writing

In 1996 the Society introduced this award for publications in the field of archives and recordkeeping. This award honours Phyllis Mander Jones who, amongst other contributions to the profession, authored Manuscripts in the British Isles relating to Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific, in 1972. Miss Mander Jones was also the first Corresponding Secretary of the Archives Section of the Library Association of Australia (the section eventually handed over its records and activities to the Australian Society of Archivists, at the foundation of the Society in 1975) and she co-edited the first issue of the Society’s journal Archives and Manuscripts.

Conditions of Entry

  • Any person or institution may nominate
  • A publication is defined as printed or electronic material intended for distribution
  • Entries must have been published in the previous calendar year
  • A copy of the work or instructions on accessing the work must be submitted with the nomination form along with a short statement in support of the nomination.
  • Where feasible, it is recommended that nominators secure the consent of the nominee/s and provide their contact details.

Nominating for an Award

Nominations are called for in the Society’s e-newsletter early each year, please find the nomination form below. The Awards are announced at the ASA’s national conference.

Categories

There are eight categories for which you can apply. Please see the categories page to view the descriptions for each and their respective criteria.

Past Recipients

Refer to our recipients page to view the winners of each category along with their award winning publication reference, dating back to 1996.

CFP: Special Issue on Digital Collection Metadata & Internet Discovery – Journal of Web Librarianship

The Journal of Web Librarianship is planning a special issue on Internet discovery on digital collections entitled: Digital Collection Metadata & Internet Discovery

Digital Collection Metadata & Internet Discovery

Many digital repositories and digital collections have been created in recent decades in academic and research libraries. As digital items are put into digital repositories, associated metadata records need to be effective for external indexing by search engines in order to be discovered. Current literature includes some discussion pertaining to digital resources discovery, metadata evaluation, search engine indexing, and search engine optimization strategies. However, due to the distinct options of digital repository software, the complexity of metadata schemas, the variety of formats of digital items, and the ambiguity of search engine indexing strategies, researchers have not come to an agreement about which metadata schema is the best to use, because the choice varies based on the format of the particular digital file, the repository system being used, and the search engine being queried. This journal issue aims to explore these approaches and offer insights into the current literature debating digital collection metadata and its discoverability on the Internet.

Subject Coverage

This special issue offers a platform for researchers to discuss topics relevant to the potential combination of best strategies regarding metadata, digital repositories, digital formats, search engine indexing, and Internet discovery. Subject coverage includes but is not limited to Digital Collection Metadata Evaluation, Digital Repository Systems Evaluation, Digital Collection Development, Indexing Evaluation of Digital Formats, Search Engine Indexing, Search Engine Algorithm Evaluation, and Internet Discovery on Digital Repositories.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following:

  1. Original Research
  • Evaluation of metadata of digital collections
  • Evaluation of digital repository system pertaining to facilitating content discoverability
  • Evaluation of search engine indexing on metadata or digital file formats
  • Evaluation of search engine algorithm and/or search engine optimization
  1. Case Studies
  • Best strategies for facilitating Internet discovery of digital collections
  • Best practices for developing and promoting digital collections on the Internet
  • Workflows for optimizing digital collection and metadata development

Important dates

  • Full paper submission at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/JWebLib: March 30, 2017
  • Notification of decision: June 30, 2017
  • Revised submission: July 31, 2017
  • Final acceptance notification: August 31, 2017
  • Final version of paper: September 30, 2017
  • Publication: December, 2017

Guest Editors

Le Yang
Digital Initiatives Librarian
Texas Tech University
yanglegd@yahoo.com

Joy M. Perrin
Digital Resources Librarian
Texas Tech University
joy.m.perrin@ttu.edu

The Journal of Web Librarianship is an international, peer-reviewed journal focused on all aspects of librarianship as practiced on the World Wide Web, including both existing and emerging roles and activities of information professionals. The journal strives to find a balance between original, scholarly research, and practical communications on relevant topics in web librarianship.  Web services and systems librarians are encouraged to contribute, as are librarians working in public services, technical services, special collections, archives, and administration.

For more information on this special issue, see the Call for Papers website.

New Issue: SLIS Connecting

Volume 5, Issue 2 (2016) Fall/Winter 2016

Columns

SLIS Director’s Update
USM School of Library and Information Science

Spotlights: Faculty, Alum, and Course
Stacy Creel

From the GAs: Congratulations, Publications, Presentations
USM School of Library and Information Science

Student Associations: News and Events
USM School of Library and Information Science

50th Annual Fay B. Kaigler Children’s Book Festival
Karen Rowell

Core Values: Intellectual Freedom and Privacy in Public Libraries
Stephanie A. Evans

Articles

‘The willing women are standing waiting now’: British Women, the Second World War, and the Women’s Library at the London School of Economics and Political Science
Erin Doerner

An Historical Analysis of the Fay B. Kaigler Children’s Book Festival
Leah Rials

A Survey and Content Analysis of Army Manuals Held by the National World War II Museum Archives
Amanda Fallis

Call for Essays: We Can Do I.T. : Women in Library Information Technology

Sometimes there is a blurry line between libraries and archives. I purposely avoid too many library-focused calls and publications, but I also believe that there is more opportunity to share archives stories within the library world. As archives become more technology-focused, this is a unique chance to share such experiences.

Call for Essays: We Can Do I.T. : Women in Library Information Technology

Working Title: We Can Do I.T. : Women in Library Information Technology
Editors: Jenny Brandon, Sharon Ladenson, Kelly Sattler
Submission Deadline: March 27, 2017
Publisher: Library Juice Press

Description of book:
What roles are women playing in information technology (I.T.) in libraries? What are rewards that women experience, as well as challenges they face in library I.T.? What are future visions for women in library I.T.?

This edited collection will provide a voice for people to share insights into the culture, challenges, and rewards of being a woman working in library I.T.  We are soliciting personal narratives from anyone who works in a library about what it is like to be a woman, or working with women, in library I.T. We also seek essays on visions for the future of women within library I.T. and how such visions could be achieved. This collection should be useful not only for those pursuing a career in library I.T., but also for library managers seeking to facilitate a more inclusive environment for the future. Through publishing a collection of personal narratives, we also seek to bring experiences of women in library I.T. from the margins to the center.
For the purposes of this collection, we consider library I.T. to include responsibilities in computer networks, hardware, and software support; computer programming (e.g. coding in python, php, java…); web development (e.g. admins, coders, front/back end developers,…); and/or the management of such areas.

Possible topics include but are not limited to the following:

*   How you started in library I.T.
*   Stories related to being a woman in library I.T.
*   Experiences of acceptance or resistance within the library I.T. community
*   Tips and advice for other women seeking a career in library I.T.
*   Changes in your career path because of entering library I.T.
*   Changes you’d like to see happen within the library I.T. culture
*   Advice for library management on how to improve library I.T. culture
*   A vision for the future about/for women in library I.T.

Timeline:
Submission deadline: March 27, 2017
Notification/Feedback regarding submission: May 12, 2017
Editing and revision: June – July 2017
Final manuscript due to publisher: September 2017

Submissions:
This volume will contain commentary, stories, and essays (from 140 characters to 1,500 words).
If your submission is tentatively accepted, we may request modifications.
Material cannot be previously published.
To submit your essay, please fill out this Google form: https://goo.gl/forms/6oE82aFe7atFlP6j1

For questions, email womenlibit@googlegroups.com

About the Editors:
Jenny Brandon earned a BA in interdisciplinary humanities at Michigan State University, and an MLIS from Wayne State University.  She is a self-taught web designer/front end developer, and is currently employed in Web Services at Michigan State University.  She is also a reference librarian.

Sharon Ladenson is Gender and Communication Studies Librarian at Michigan State University.  Her writing on feminist pedagogy and critical information literacy is included in works such as Critical Library Instruction: Theories and Methods (from Library Juice Press) and the Critical Library Pedagogy Handbook (from the Association of College and Research Libraries). She is an active member of the Women and Gender Studies Section (WGSS) of the Association of College and Research Libraries, and has presented with WGSS colleagues at the National Women’s Studies Association Annual Conference.

Kelly Sattler has a degree in computer engineering and spent 12 years in corporate I.T. before earning her MLIS degree from University of Illinois-Urbana/Champaign. Currently, she is the Head of Web Services at Michigan State University Libraries. She is an active member in LITA.

CFP: Libraries and Nonprofits: Collaboration for the Public Good

This call focuses more on libraries and does not mention archives, but I believe many of you out there have applicable experiences. The recent Archival Outlook article “Radical Partnerships” is an example. Let’s get those archival partnerships out there!

CFP: Libraries and Nonprofits: Collaboration for the Public Good

About the Book

Libraries and Nonprofits: Collaboration for the Public Good (Library Juice Press) will consider the range of partnerships entered into by all types of libraries and nonprofits and will provide resources and best practices for nurturing these collaborations. We are seeking domestic and international case studies which highlight successful (or problematic) collaborations between libraries and nonprofit organizations for inclusion in the book. Case studies may address the following themes relating to nonprofit organizations and library collaborations including (but not limited to):

* civic engagement
* public health
* social safety nets/social work
* arts and culture
* education/literacy
* environment/sustainability/food justice
* LGBTQIA
* anti-racism
* disability rights
* legal aid/human rights
* housing/planning

Examples range from collaborations with financial literacy organizations to provide free or low-cost tax preparation; legal aid organizations to provide civic education and human rights workshops; literacy organizations to provide storytime programs, ESL or tutoring services; or museums to provide exhibitions, pop-up galleries, or STEAM programming.

How to Participate

Authors are invited to submit a case study proposal as an email attachment in Word or PDF to librariesandnonprofits@gmail.com on or before Monday, February 20, 2017. The case study proposal should be 300-500 words (Chicago Style) clearly explaining the intent and details of the proposed case study as it relates to the topics listed above. Proposed case studies should be based on unpublished work, unique to this publication and not submitted or intended to be simultaneously submitted elsewhere.

Authors will be notified by Monday, March 27, 2017 about the status of their proposals and sent case study guidelines. Completed case studies are expected to be between 2,000-4,000 words, although shorter or longer case studies are negotiable. Full case studies are expected to be submitted by Monday, June 26, 2017.

Proposals should include

* Author name(s), institutional or organizational affiliation, job title/role
* Brief author(s) bio
* Proposed case study title
* A summary of the proposed case study (300-500 words)

About the authors

Tatiana Bryant, Special Collections Librarian, University of Oregon Libraries

Jonathan O. Cain, Librarian for Data Initiatives and Public Policy, Planning and Management, University of Oregon Libraries