Archive for January, 2009
Purgatorio
I have a dilemma. It is one that puts me in direct conflict with myself, and is remotely related to my post from November about where to draw the line when helping patrons. We received a new printer/copier for student use back in October. It has a document server that allows students to select the [...]
Posted: 14 January, 2009 in First Year Academic Librarian Experience, Public Services, Technology Issues.
Comments: 17
Hard Times For Higher Education
Every week it seems, the recession brings more bad news for American colleges. As endowments decline, even prestigious private institutions have announced unprecedented hiring freezes. Public colleges and universities are girding for cuts in state support. The California State University system, the nation’s largest, has already warned it may need to reduce enrollment by 10,000 [...]
Posted: 13 January, 2009 in Higher Education.
Tags: economic_crisis, Higher Education
Comments: 6
Proselytizing for twitter
Recently I find myself quite absorbed by twitter, and with the zeal of a new convert I’m now going to add to the enthusiastic clamor surrounding it. I’m sure for many readers here I’m preaching to the choir. However if, like me a month ago, you don’t fully understand what twitter is, I recommend an [...]
Posted: 8 January, 2009 in First Year Academic Librarian Experience, Technology Issues.
Tags: twitter
Comments: 12
Still Waiting For Those Old Librarians To Retire
Editor’s Note: A frequent source of grousing among those newer-to-the-profession academic librarians is that the “impending shortage of librarians” they heard so much about is just a myth. The shortage, no doubt, is predicated on the expectations that many senior members of the profession would soon be retiring. Someone who has closely studied employment and [...]
Posted: 5 January, 2009 in library careers.
Tags: retirement
Comments: 44
Lies, Damned Lies and Pedagogy
Anne-Marie Deitering has a great post over at Infofetishist about the historical-hoax-as-pedagogy story that popped up in December. A professor at George Mason taught a course on historical hoaxes and had students create a hoax and spread it virally using social networking. It was so successful it fooled a lot of historians and got written [...]
Posted: 3 January, 2009 in Uncategorized.
Comments: 5
