Rachel accepted into ALA’s Emerging Leaders Program November 7, 2006
Posted by Rachel in In The News, LITA.1 comment so far
If you haven’t heard, I have been selected to participate in the American Library Association’s Emerging Leaders Program for 2007! An initiative of ALA President Leslie Burger, the Emerging Leaders Program is designed to help develop the next generation of library leaders and to strategically incorporate the needs of these future leaders in the library profession. There was a competitive application process, and only 100 young or new librarians across the country were accepted into the program. I am also the only person from the entire state of Tennessee who made it!
Another member of LITA, Michelle Boule, is also in the program. In fact, she was sponsored by LITA and will work closely with LITA President and President-Elect to help guide and develop their strategic plan. She started the LITA Blog and LITA Wiki and is active in the organization already in developing other web services. Michelle is also a Reference Librarian at the University of Houston, and I look forward to meeting her in person and working with her and the other 98 Emerging Leaders.
The Emerging Leaders Program will kick off with a day-long session during the 2007 ALA Midwinter Conference in Seattle. Afterward, it will grow and develop online for six months, culminating at the 2007 Annual Conference in Washington, D. C.. I will then put my leadership skills to use by accepting a two year term of service on an ALA or chapter committee, task force, working group, or project team.
I am very excited about this great opportunity, and I am eager to learn more about ALA, network with other dedicated librarians across the country, and help shape this profession that I am so passionate about.
2006 LITA National Forum in Nashville October 30, 2006
Posted by Rachel in Conferences, LITA.2 comments
On October 26-29, 2006, I attended the 2006 LITA National Forum in Nashville, TN. The theme was NetVille in Nashville: Web services as library services. It was a wonderful conference this year! Dale Poulter in LITS here at Vanderbilt was the Chair of the Forum Planning Committee, and I think he and the rest of that committee did a great job! (Even the food was awesome!)
I went to a preconference on Developing Best Project Management Practices for IT Projects and you can read my summary and comments from Day 1 and Day 2 on the LITA blog. After the preconference, I attended a variety of sessions and heard lots of great speakers! Below are the sessions I attended.
General Sessions (with links going to summaries on LITA blog)
Save America’s Treasures: Preservation of Rare Acetate and Vinyl Recording Transcriptions
Alan Stoker, Recorded Sound and Moving Image Curator, and Steve Maer, Recorded Sound Archivist, Country Music Hall of Fame
Libraries and Public Interest Entertainment
Thom Gillespie, Indiana University
Web 2.0 and the Library 2.0 in Our Future
Stephen Abram, VP Innovation, SirsiDynix
Concurrent Sessions (with links going to summaries on LITA blog)
Adding Bells and Whistles to the Web: The Blog and the Pod
Improving Library Services with Ajax and RSS
Archiving & Preserving the Web
Multimedia Tutorials for Remote Users
Low Threshold Strategies for Libraries to Support “Other” Types of Digital Publishing
Also on Saturday evening, I walked with a bunch of LITA bloggers to the Flying Saucer for some dinner and liquid refreshments. They took pictures and blogged it, naturally.
Overall, the conference left me energized and eager to get back to work and play with the new technologies I was introduced to, and to implement some of the strategies and project management tools I learned.
Next year, the LITA National Forum will be in Colorado! Woo hoo!
Friday Tech Update #6 November 5, 2004
Posted by Rachel in Brown Bags & Webcasts, Computers, Conferences, LITA, TTSC Meetings, VUprint, WML Website.add a comment
Go get a cup of coffee and put your feet up. This is a long one.
- Rachel had a wonderful time at the Library and Information Technology Association (LITA) National Forum back on October 8, 9, and 10th in St. Louis. Dale Poulter, Rick and Suellen Stringer-Hye also attended the Forum. She learned a lot more about various technologies and received insight on how to utilize these new and upcoming technologies within a library setting.
- One topic that Rachel is flirting with is the possibility of creating the Walker Staffweb entirely within a wiki. What is a wiki? A wiki is “a piece of server software that allows users to freely create and edit Web page content using any Web browser.” In other words, a wiki will let you edit the webpage while you are viewing it in Internet Explorer – no code necessary. Hence, anyone would be able to update it, anytime, anywhere. Pretty cool, huh?
- Rachel will be getting more involved with LITA in the future as well. In 2006, the LITA National Forum will come to Nashville , and Dale Poulter will be the man in charge. But she hope s to help out.
- Two new 21” Dell monitors have arrived. One is in Rachel’s office for web development and the other is currently in Laura’s office and will be used with the new scanner for document delivery purposes.
- What’s that? A new scanner? Yes, an HP ScanJet 8250 scanner has been ordered, and arrived this afternoon. It will temporarily go in Laura’s office. Once it is set up, we will begin experimenting with Ariel. Rachel is talking with Deb about getting Ariel training.
- The new hard drive for the computer that will be going upstairs has arrived and is ready for Danny to install. We need to decide on what type of furniture the computer will be sitting upstairs, and where it should go. Connectivity is an issue that will impact location.
- Public workstation #4 is ready for Danny to have its image ghosted onto the other public workstations. Then Deep Freeze will be installed and all the computers can be maintained by Rachel’s computer in her office. There will be a background that says Welcome to the Walker Management Library and it will have the Owen logo, too.
- A new “team” has been established with the Walker Library! It’s the Tech Team, and will consist of: Rachel Vacek, Danny Sulkin, Marie Swearingen, and Rahn Huber.
- Q: Will there be tons more meetings? A: No. More than likely, this team will meet once a month or less, depending on projects, reports to staff, and implementations.
- Q: What will this team do? A: What Rachel envisions is that this group will look at the big picture: How has technology influenced the library and the services that we provide? Where are we now technologically? Where should we be? How are other libraries using technology effectively? How do we get to where we think we should be? Etc.
- Q: Will there be sub-groups? A: From this team, there will be several other small sub-teams that will actually accomplish the goals. Rachel thinks that this group (maybe plus a few other people) will be able to give a lot of valuable input into the strategic planning process.
- The resource guides are still being updated on the current website. Thanks to all who helped!
- From the Technology Support Coordinators Meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 12, Rachel wants to support that she volunteered to be a part of the “Workstation Application Software Categorizing Task Force.” What is this? VU Internal Audit recommended that LITS do an audit of library software. This audit was done automatically to all the computers connected to the Heard network, and there were over 1,000 different products found. The Walker Library was not included in this audit. This task force will separate the software into 3 categories:
- Supported software (e.g.- Sirsi, Microsoft Office, Adobe Acrobat Reader, etc.)
- Allowable unsupported software (e.g.- iTunes, Google toolbar, Bible Study software, WS_FTP, etc.)
- Disallowed and unsupported software (e.g.- Bit torrent, kazaa, weatherbug, etc..
- You may be wondering why Rachel is involved with this since the audit didn’t include the Walker Library. She thinks that being more aware of what people are using, and what is legal and or dangerous software to have might be helpful in problem solving in her own library, and this is also one way to keep current on software. Anyway, the results of this task force’s work will be presented to the Tech Support and Tech Training Coordinators, and then LITS will submit a final list to LMC for approval, along with recommendation on how to manage future software audits. Rachel hopes to figure out a way to get Walker involved in future audits, too.
- From the Technology Training Coordinators Meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 26, Rachel wants to report that within the next month, there will be a training session on accessibility and how to best modify the accessibility settings within Windows XP. Someone from the Opportunity Development Center (ODC) might be willing to do a session on this (we are in the process of asking), but it may resort to Rachel and Julie Loder doing a training session on this for the Heard Library System instead.
- Rachel attended a live webcast on Usability on Thursday, Oct. 28. The blurb: “As libraries and organizations strive to improve their websites to better serve their users, they are finding usability testing to be a valuable part of the redesign process. By focusing on a user-centered design, web developers can learn what works, what doesn’t and what their users want. While the results are sometimes surprising, usability testing is a key ingredient in designing a web site that meets the needs of its users.” Overall, Rachel found it helpful and a refresher on methods she has used in the past. She plans on implementing some of the testing methods discussed for the new site as it comes a little further along.
- There was a Spiders meeting on Friday, Oct. 29. This is the groups of web designers across campus who meet monthly to discuss various implementations of technology and to share, learn, and network. They discussed the upcoming changes to the Vanderbilt homepage. If interested, you can read the notes.
- From the Diebold Printing Demonstration Meeting that Rachel, Marie, and Flo attended on Thursday, Nov. 4: As you know, Vanderbilt is moving toward Pay-for-Print. Diebold is just one of the vendors that VU is considering. Here are the options with Diebold:
- Option 1: CS Print Client, where software is installed on each individual computer and it communicates with the printer server. This option is Windows only. You deal with pop-ups and can use your username/id to authenticate. Authentication is configurable and can be IP based. There is no card swipe or terminal/release station. Money and amount of money remaining is shown to the user via a pop-up window.
- Option 2: Network Release Station, where the user hits print, puts in a name, and then when standing near the printer, must swipe a card, select his/her print job, and then print it. Money and amount of money remaining is shown to the user on this “release” screen. This option is available on Macs, PCs, and Unix/Linux machines. If the user has multiple print jobs, he/she would have to swipe multiple times (no batch printing)
- Both of these options are configurable (mostly). Students and faculty can have ## free prints before they get charged for printing if this is what people want. Settings are based per print server and not library or computer lab. So for example, if all the printers for Owen are on ONE print server, then all the printers in Owen would have to have the same settings.
- Both Option 1 and Option 2 are supposed to be able to work simultaneously, if so desired. If just Option 1 was installed, Mac users couldn’t print at all (unless you had a printer set up just for Mac users, and they’d be printing for free.)
- There are 6 different authentication options, but username/password is most popular, and it would probably be Owen ID, but this would be a problem for guests and non-Owen Vandy people. Printing is a first come, first serve and could result in lines when using the card swipe. Students may or may not have access to printer queue.Can designate by print server who pays how much for printing (e.g.- Owen vs. Law)
- Administrator can override a job if necessary, but both options seem limited in what can be done if someone prints someone else’s stuff, or if a refund is needed.
- Cost: You pay for a license on one print server, and you can install it on as many print servers as you want, but you also pay per client.
- We aren’t sure when the next presentation is. I’m sure Bill Hook will let us know.
- New website – content needed. As it is now November, please remember to continue working on your areas of responsibility for the new website.
- If you are creating fresh content (stuff that isn’t on the current site), please get it to me by Friday, November 19th.
- If you would like a form (to gather or request info of some sort), please write, type, or draw what you have in mind by Friday, November 19th.
- If you think you were supposed to do something, but have misplaced your info or it’s still a bit foggy on what you needed to do, please let me know as soon as possible, and I would be HAPPY to talk with you.
Have a good weekend, everyone! Thanks for your attention and time!
Friday Tech Update #5 October 8, 2004
Posted by Rachel in Computers, Conferences, LITA, Microsoft PowerPoint, Printers.add a comment
- The training session, Giving Presentations & Using Microsoft PowerPoint Effectively, Part 2, is this week. For those who missed it, Rachel put handouts in your mailboxes. Also, check out the little site she put together for the workshop. At the bottom of the page are links to the PowerPoint presentation (Part 1), pdfs of the handouts, and an online survey. If you went (Amia and Leslie), please remember to fill it out. Part 2 will be also linked here, and additional websites for more advanced features of PowerPoint will be added before the Thursday session (10-11 am in Owen Room 204). Peabody librarians have been invited as well.
- Check out this page in progress and give feedback to either Deb and or Rachel.
- As soon as Rachel gets a breather (and some sleep), she’ll get back to working on getting DeepFreeze working on the public workstations later this week.
- Kilimanjaro is still acting funky on occasion. Danny has had to reboot the printer server on several occasions in the past month, and we don’t exactly know what is wrong. Follow the suggestions on the technology flowchart, and if all else fails (and Rachel is not around), feel free to contact Danny, but be sure to let Rachel know (via email or in person) that you did. Be sure to look at the back of the flowchart for directions on what to do on weeknights and weekends.
- Rachel went to a conference this past weekend in St. Louis. It was the LITA (Library & Information Technology Association) National Forum. There were lots of great sessions, and wonderful speakers. She drove up there with Dale Poulter, and both Suellen and Rick Stringer-Hye were there. Not only did she get to network with other librarian geeks, she got to know some of her colleagues better. It was a wonderful experience, and she is full of ideas for the WML website and Staffweb as well as ideas for collaborations with the other libraries. Very cool stuff.
Have a good weekend, everyone! Thanks for your attention and time!