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CREATED:20251106T233556Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251106T233953Z
UID:38388-1668470400-1668729599@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:2022 Fall Member Meeting
DESCRIPTION:« All Events\n \n\n	2022 Fall Member Meeting\n\n			November 15\, 2022\n	  –\n	November 17\, 2022\n	 \nThe Canadian Association of Research Libraries is pleased to invite member directors to the 2022 Fall Member Meeting. This annual gathering serves as a vital platform for the exchange of ideas\, strategic planning\, and collaborative discussions that shape the future of research libraries across Canada. \n\n	Hilton Garden Inn & Homewood Suites Ottawa Downtown\n\n361 Queen Street\n		\n		Ottawa\,\n	Ontario\n	K1R 0C7\n	Canada\n\n\n	+ Google Map \n\n					\n						\n	 \n\n\n\n					\n				Accommodation\n		\n				\n				Program Schedule\n		\n				\n				Recent Meetings\n		 \nHotel Details\n\nHilton Garden Inn & Homewood Suites Ottawa Downtown \n361 Queen Street\, Ottawa Ontario\, K1R 0C7 \nTel: 1-800-445-8667 or 613-234-6363 \nGroup code: CARLFG. \nBooking link for the group: \nwww.my-event.hilton.com/yowcdgi-carlfg-0702917f-18fa-432e-8876-1059ebeaedf5/ \nRate: $179.00 plus taxes (single or double occupancy) Additional $15.00 per person per room per night \n** RESERVATIONS MUST BE MADE NO LATER THAN OCTOBER 13\, 2022. Any reservations made after this date will be based on availability. GUESTROOMS are reserved from Saturday November 12 to Friday November 18. \n\n\nMonday\, November 14\n9:00 AM – 5:00 PMBoard Meeting – Vivian Lewis (K. McColgan)(Ballade Room/ Ballade Patio) \n3:00 PM –6:00 PMTentative: Visit to LAC – Leslie Weir \n6:00 PM –8:00 PMPresident’s Opening Reception(Monsella CD) \n\nTuesday\, November 15\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AMBreakfast (Tulip Bar) \n8:30 AM – 10:00 AMPolicy Committee Meeting – Susan Parker\, Chair(Monsella AB) \n10:00 AM – 10:15 AMBreak (Monsella Foyer) \n10:15 AM – 11:45 AMAdvancing Research Committee Meeting – Talia Chung\, Chair(Monsella AB) \n11:45 AM – 1:30 PMLunch (Tulip Bar)12:30 – guided river/Lebreton Flats walk\, including Ādisōke site (optional\, weather permitting) – Mario Gasperetti\, LAC \n1:30 PM – 2:00 PMTeaching and Learning Committee Information Session (all members encouraged to attend) – Vivian Lewis\, Facilitator(Monsella AB) \n2:00 PM – 2:15 PMBreak (Monsella Foyer) \n2:15 PM – 3:15 PMAssessment Committee Meeting – Mary-Jo Romaniuk\, Chair(Monsella AB) \n3:15 PM – 3:30 PMBreak (Monsella Foyer) \n3:30 PM – 4:30 PMStrengthening Capacity Committee Meeting – Brett Waytuck(Monsella AB) \n5:00 PMBus departure \n5:30 PM – 7:00 PMCarleton University library visit and reception \n7:00 PMBus return \n\nWednesday\, November 16\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AMBreakfast (Tulip Bar) \n8:20 AM – 9:20 AMFall General Meeting (Members only) – Vivian Lewis(Monsella) \nProgram Session 1 (Monsella) – Host: Vivian Lewis \n9:30 AM – 10:15 AMDigital Research Alliance of Canada – presentation and discussion – George Ross & Lee Wilson \n10:15 AM – 10:30 AMBreak (Monsella Foyer) \n10:30 AM – 11:15 PMDigital PreservationNext Steps for CARL – Dale Askey & Steve Marks\, Karen Nicholson\, Facilitator \n11:15 AM – 12:30 PMOpen Science Strategy – Talia Chung\, FacilitatorCARL-CRKN Joint work to date – Susan Haigh & Clare ApavooShared National Repository Infrastructure – Geoff Harder \n12:30 PM – 1:30 PMLunch (Tulip Bar) \n  \nProgram Session 2 (Monsella) \n1:30 PM – 3:00 PMExpanding the Library’s Role in Supporting Teaching and Learning: Opportunities and New Directions (Lightning Talks) – Host: Vivian Lewis \n\n\n\nAnatomy of a Teaching & Learning Review: Moving from Silos to Sustainable Networks (Virginia Pow and Kim Frail\, University of Alberta)\nCharting a Path for Enhanced Student Learning (Jo Ann. Murphy\, University of Saskatchewan)\nBuilding Student Success (Dominique Lapierre\, Université Laval)\nMeeting Scholars Where They’re At: The Library as a Strategic Partner in Fostering Computational Literacy in the Academy (May Chan\, University of Toronto)\nThe Research-Teaching Nexus at the THINC Lab (Susan Brown and Kim Martin\, University of Guelph)\nDecolonial Information Literacy and Pedagogy (Ashley Edwards\, Simon Fraser University)\nLibrary Instruction as Knowledge Justice: Sharing Western Libraries’ Decolonized Curriculum (Heather Campbell\, Western University)\n\n\n\n  \n\n3:00 PM – 3:15 PM(Monsella Foyer) Break\n3:15 PM – 4:30 PMMental wellness in the workplace – Host: Vivian Lewis\, Speaker: Benoît-Antoine Bacon\, President\, Carleton University 6:00 PM – 9:00 PMReception and CARL Award Ceremony\, and Dinner (Starling Restaurant\, ByWard Market\, 54 York St)\n  \n\nThursday\, November 17\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AMBreakfast (Monsella Foyer) \n8:00 AM – 8:45 AMHill Day Advocay 101 – Don Moors\, Josh Matthewman\, Ujwal Ganguly (TSA)(Monsella) \n9:00 AM – 1:00 PMMeetings on The Hill \n12:00 AM – 1:30 PMLunch (Monsella)Alternatively\, teams may choose to eat elsewhere at their own expense between Hill meetings. \n1:00 PM – 1:30 PMDebrief and Fall Meeting Adjournment(Monsella) \n2:00 PM – 3:30 PMBoard Meeting(Ballade Room/ Ballade Patio) \n3:00 PM –6:00 PMTentative: Visit to LAC – Leslie Weir \n\n\n\n\n2025 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 26 @ 09:00 – May 29 @ 16:00  EDT  at Inn at the Forks\, Winnipeg\, Manitoba\n\n2024 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 18\, 2024 – November 20\, 2024 at Delta Hotels Ottawa City Centre\n\n2024 Spring Member Meeting\nApril 22\, 2024 – April 25\, 2024 at Montreal\, Quebec\n\n2023 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 27\, 2023 – November 30\, 2023 at Fairmont Le Château Montebello\n\n2023 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 29\, 2023 – June 1\, 2023 at Calgary Marriott Downown Hotel\n\n\n					\n									See All Member Meetings\n					 \nHotel Details\n\nHilton Garden Inn & Homewood Suites Ottawa Downtown \n361 Queen Street\, Ottawa Ontario\, K1R 0C7 \nTel: 1-800-445-8667 or 613-234-6363 \nGroup code: CARLFG. \nBooking link for the group: \nwww.my-event.hilton.com/yowcdgi-carlfg-0702917f-18fa-432e-8876-1059ebeaedf5/ \nRate: $179.00 plus taxes (single or double occupancy) Additional $15.00 per person per room per night \n** RESERVATIONS MUST BE MADE NO LATER THAN OCTOBER 13\, 2022. Any reservations made after this date will be based on availability. GUESTROOMS are reserved from Saturday November 12 to Friday November 18. \n\n\nMonday\, November 14\n9:00 AM – 5:00 PMBoard Meeting – Vivian Lewis (K. McColgan)(Ballade Room/ Ballade Patio) \n3:00 PM –6:00 PMTentative: Visit to LAC – Leslie Weir \n6:00 PM –8:00 PMPresident’s Opening Reception(Monsella CD) \n\nTuesday\, November 15\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AMBreakfast (Tulip Bar) \n8:30 AM – 10:00 AMPolicy Committee Meeting – Susan Parker\, Chair(Monsella AB) \n10:00 AM – 10:15 AMBreak (Monsella Foyer) \n10:15 AM – 11:45 AMAdvancing Research Committee Meeting – Talia Chung\, Chair(Monsella AB) \n11:45 AM – 1:30 PMLunch (Tulip Bar)12:30 – guided river/Lebreton Flats walk\, including Ādisōke site (optional\, weather permitting) – Mario Gasperetti\, LAC \n1:30 PM – 2:00 PMTeaching and Learning Committee Information Session (all members encouraged to attend) – Vivian Lewis\, Facilitator(Monsella AB) \n2:00 PM – 2:15 PMBreak (Monsella Foyer) \n2:15 PM – 3:15 PMAssessment Committee Meeting – Mary-Jo Romaniuk\, Chair(Monsella AB) \n3:15 PM – 3:30 PMBreak (Monsella Foyer) \n3:30 PM – 4:30 PMStrengthening Capacity Committee Meeting – Brett Waytuck(Monsella AB) \n5:00 PMBus departure \n5:30 PM – 7:00 PMCarleton University library visit and reception \n7:00 PMBus return \n\nWednesday\, November 16\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AMBreakfast (Tulip Bar) \n8:20 AM – 9:20 AMFall General Meeting (Members only) – Vivian Lewis(Monsella) \nProgram Session 1 (Monsella) – Host: Vivian Lewis \n9:30 AM – 10:15 AMDigital Research Alliance of Canada – presentation and discussion – George Ross & Lee Wilson \n10:15 AM – 10:30 AMBreak (Monsella Foyer) \n10:30 AM – 11:15 PMDigital PreservationNext Steps for CARL – Dale Askey & Steve Marks\, Karen Nicholson\, Facilitator \n11:15 AM – 12:30 PMOpen Science Strategy – Talia Chung\, FacilitatorCARL-CRKN Joint work to date – Susan Haigh & Clare ApavooShared National Repository Infrastructure – Geoff Harder \n12:30 PM – 1:30 PMLunch (Tulip Bar) \n  \nProgram Session 2 (Monsella) \n1:30 PM – 3:00 PMExpanding the Library’s Role in Supporting Teaching and Learning: Opportunities and New Directions (Lightning Talks) – Host: Vivian Lewis \n\n\n\nAnatomy of a Teaching & Learning Review: Moving from Silos to Sustainable Networks (Virginia Pow and Kim Frail\, University of Alberta)\nCharting a Path for Enhanced Student Learning (Jo Ann. Murphy\, University of Saskatchewan)\nBuilding Student Success (Dominique Lapierre\, Université Laval)\nMeeting Scholars Where They’re At: The Library as a Strategic Partner in Fostering Computational Literacy in the Academy (May Chan\, University of Toronto)\nThe Research-Teaching Nexus at the THINC Lab (Susan Brown and Kim Martin\, University of Guelph)\nDecolonial Information Literacy and Pedagogy (Ashley Edwards\, Simon Fraser University)\nLibrary Instruction as Knowledge Justice: Sharing Western Libraries’ Decolonized Curriculum (Heather Campbell\, Western University)\n\n\n\n  \n\n3:00 PM – 3:15 PM(Monsella Foyer) Break\n3:15 PM – 4:30 PMMental wellness in the workplace – Host: Vivian Lewis\, Speaker: Benoît-Antoine Bacon\, President\, Carleton University 6:00 PM – 9:00 PMReception and CARL Award Ceremony\, and Dinner (Starling Restaurant\, ByWard Market\, 54 York St)\n  \n\nThursday\, November 17\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AMBreakfast (Monsella Foyer) \n8:00 AM – 8:45 AMHill Day Advocay 101 – Don Moors\, Josh Matthewman\, Ujwal Ganguly (TSA)(Monsella) \n9:00 AM – 1:00 PMMeetings on The Hill \n12:00 AM – 1:30 PMLunch (Monsella)Alternatively\, teams may choose to eat elsewhere at their own expense between Hill meetings. \n1:00 PM – 1:30 PMDebrief and Fall Meeting Adjournment(Monsella) \n2:00 PM – 3:30 PMBoard Meeting(Ballade Room/ Ballade Patio) \n3:00 PM –6:00 PMTentative: Visit to LAC – Leslie Weir \n\n\n\n\n2025 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 26 @ 09:00 – May 29 @ 16:00  EDT  at Inn at the Forks\, Winnipeg\, Manitoba\n\n2024 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 18\, 2024 – November 20\, 2024 at Delta Hotels Ottawa City Centre\n\n2024 Spring Member Meeting\nApril 22\, 2024 – April 25\, 2024 at Montreal\, Quebec\n\n2023 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 27\, 2023 – November 30\, 2023 at Fairmont Le Château Montebello\n\n2023 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 29\, 2023 – June 1\, 2023 at Calgary Marriott Downown Hotel\n\n\n					\n									See All Member Meetings
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/2022-fall-member-meeting/
LOCATION:Hilton Garden Inn & Homewood Suites Ottawa Downtown\, 361 Queen Street\, Ottawa\, Ontario\, K1R 0C7\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Member Meetings
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20220608T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20220608T133000
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20250506T161359Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250506T161359Z
UID:36918-1654689600-1654695000@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:CARL Inclusion Perspectives Webinar Series: Fourth Panel Featuring Library Colleagues with Disabilities
DESCRIPTION:Date and Time: June 8\, 2022\, 12:00 – 1:30 p.m. ET\nRegistration closed \nPlease note that this event is open to all (not just CARL institutions). \nThe Canadian Association of Research Libraries’ (CARL) Equity\, Diversity\, and Inclusion Working Group is pleased to announce the fourth in a series of planned webinars on inclusion perspectives\, which will feature a panel of library colleagues with disabilities discussing their perspectives on the state of Canadian librarianship and how we can affect change. \nThis 1.5 hour moderated panel discussion will focus on progress on EDI initiatives to date and goals to strive for in the future. This will be a collaborative future-forward conversation\, so please bring your own questions and/or proposed solutions. \nIn addition to being subject to the CARL Code of Conduct\, CARL asks all participants\, panelists and organizers to be respectful of what is being shared and in how they ask questions. \nIn the interest of accessibility\, simultaneous translation and captions will be available throughout the session. Additional accommodation requests can also be emailed to Julie Morin\, Senior Program Officer at CARL (julie.morin@carl-abrc.ca). \n \n\n					\n				> Speaker Biographies			\n		\n		\n			 \nThe moderator for this event will be Katya Pereyaslavska \nKatya is a User Experience Librarian at Western Libraries and a member of the CARL EDI Working Group. \nBrooke Hiemstra \nBrooke graduated from the University of Guelph with a Bachelor of Applied Science in Adult Development in 2015. She also completed the Applied Learning Disability Graduate Certificate at Cambrian College in 2019. Since 2018\, Brooke has worked at the University of Guelph as the Library Accessibility Services Assistant\, running the Alternate Format Textbook Service for students registered with Student Accessibility Services (SAS). Brooke has previous experience working as a tutor as well as an Exam and Educational Assistant for students with disabilities at various institutions. After being diagnosed with ADHD last year\, Brooke has been making sense of past challenges and is learning to navigate the world as a neurodiverse person. \nIrene Tencinger \nIrene is a liaison librarian at Wilfrid Laurier’s Brantford campus. Some of the programs she supports include the Social and Environmental Justice undergrad program and the MA for Social Justice and Community Engagement\, as well as the undergrad program in Human Rights and Human Diversity. \nStephen Spong \nStephen is the Director of the John and Dotsa Bitove Law Library and Copyright Officer at Western University\, where he started in 2019. Previously\, he has worked in both Canada and the United States in a variety of roles related to both copyright and law librarianship. He holds a JD from Osgoode Hall Law School and a Masters in Information from the University of Toronto. You can find him on Twitter @stephenspong.
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/carl-inclusion-perspectives-webinar-series-fourth-panel-featuring-library-colleagues-with-disabilities/
LOCATION:Online Event
CATEGORIES:Equity Diversity Inclusion
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20220606T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20220612T235959
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20250425T080444Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251015T175342Z
UID:36857-1654473600-1655078399@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:2022 Academic Librarians' Leadership Institute (ALLI)
DESCRIPTION:Date: June 6 – 12\, 2022 \nThe Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL) is pleased to announce that it is accepting nominations for participants in CARL’s inaugural Academic Librarians’ Leadership Institute (ALLI). These participants will attend a seven-day cohort style training program at Memorial University (June 6-12\, 2022) developed by the Gardiner Centre\, the engagement arm of the Faculty of Business Administration\, Memorial University\, with input from CARL directors and Associate-level academic Librarians. \nThe face-to-face program has been tailored specifically for Associate-level academic librarians\, to assist their growth so that they are well positioned to lead Canada’s university libraries into the future. This rich and engaging program will enhance critical leadership capabilities\, teach valuable new skills and help build strong networks across the country for Associate-level library leaders – all in an enjoyable and unique setting on the eastern edge of Canada. The program will help participants to enhance their leadership strengths\, develop and nurture their teams\, effectively implement strategic plans\, and navigate their libraries through change. To maximize learning and resource time effectively\, online pre-readings of course material will be provided. This allows for the majority of in-class time to be used for practice and application of the concepts presented. This will be accomplished through application exercises (“wicked problems”)\, case study analysis\, reflection\, group break outs and collaborative discussion. \nProgram components include: \n\nLeadership development sessions which include: Leading with Emotional Intelligence\, Hiring a Diverse and Inclusive Workforce\, Fundamentals of Project Management\, Understanding the Change Management Process\, Managing Difficult Conversations\, Engaging & Motivating Employees\, Conflict Management and Resolution & Foundations of Project Management for Library Leaders\nOpening Welcome Event at a local St. John’s venue\nBreakout sessions (Problem Solving and the Academic Library)\nDowntown St. John’s dinner and Irish Music evening\nAmple opportunity to enjoy scenic Signal Hill during session breaks\nOpportunities to engage/discuss issues with fellow attendees outside of daily programs\n\nRegistration is anticipated to be capped at 30 participants. Applications from all Canadian libraries are welcome. Priority will be given to applications from CARL member libraries\, but a minimum of 5 spaces will be allocated to non-CARL libraries. \nApplicants must submit a nomination package which should include the following: \n\na current CV;\na short letter of intent outlining why the participant wishes to attend\, and;\na letter of endorsement from the Library Dean/Director.\n\nNomination packages should be sent to the attention of Susan Cleyle (scleyle@mun.ca)\, on or before March 14\, 2022. \nFees: $5\,000 plus HST. Fees include all programming\, breakfasts\, lunches and breaks and a welcome cocktail reception. Participants will be responsible for travel and accommodation costs\, some evening meals\, and any non-structured social activities. \nNote that the program will be delivered in English but that supporting materials will be available in both English and French in advance of the institute. Additional ALLI program details and a schedule for the ALLI program are now available. \nFor more information: \nSusan Cleyle\nCARL Visiting Program Officer – Leadership Development Initiatives\nscleyle@mun.ca
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/2022-academic-librarians-leadership-institute-alli/
LOCATION:Memorial University of Newfoundland\, 230 Elizabeth Avenue\, St. John's\, Newfoundland\, A1C 5S7
CATEGORIES:ALLI,Workshops & Institutes
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20220425T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20220428T235959
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20251106T234818Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251106T235649Z
UID:38393-1650844800-1651190399@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:2022 Spring Member Meeting
DESCRIPTION:« All Events\n \n\n	2022 Spring Member Meeting\n\n			April 25\, 2022\n	  –\n	April 28\, 2022\n	 \nJoint ARL/CARL Meeting – April 25–28 (invitation only) \nThe Association of Research Libraries (ARL) and the Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL) Boards of Directors are pleased to invite you to attend the joint ARL/CARL Association Meeting to be held Monday–Thursday\, April 25–28\, 2022\, in Toronto\, Ontario. We are looking forward to the opportunity to bring our two associations together in person for the first time in six years. The meeting will be held at the InterContinental Toronto Centre\, located at 225 Front Street West\, Toronto\, Ontario\, M5V 2X3. \nIf you have any questions\, please contact Jaymey Butler\, ARL associate director\, Events\, jbutler@arl.org\, or Kasia Kozyra-Kocikowska\, CARL administrative officer and event coordinator\, kasia.kozyra-kocikowska@carl-abrc.ca. \n\n	InterContinental Toronto Centre\n\n225 Front Street West\n		\n		Toronto\,\n	Ontario\n	M5V 2X3\n	Canada\n\n\n	+ Google Map \n\n					\n						\n	 \n\n\n\n					\n				Accommodation\n		\n				\n				Program Schedule\n		\n				\n				COVID-19 Safety Measures\n		\n				\n				Recent Meetings\n		 \nHotel Details\nHotel: InterContinental Toronto Centre225 Front St WToronto ON M5V 2X3 \nA block of rooms has been reserved for attendees of the 2022 joint Association Meeting at a special rate. We encourage all attendees to stay at the meeting hotel to ensure ARL and CARL fulfill our contract obligations. \nThose who book within the block will be automatically entered into a drawing for two awards of a weekend stay for two\, at the Intercontinental Toronto Centre\, at a future date. \n\nRoom Rate: Can$239.00\, plus taxes (single or double occupancy)\nOnline Reservations: For the best booking experience\, we encourage you to book your hotel room online: https://book.passkey.com/go/ARL2022\nIf calling the hotel\, please reference Group: “ARL/CARL 2022 Spring Membership Conference” (to receive the negotiated room rate).\n\nThe guest-room block is reserved from Saturday\, April 23\, to Friday\, April 29\, 2022. PLEASE BOOK BEFORE WEDNESDAY\, MARCH 30\, 2022. Any reservations made after this date will be based on availability. \nReception venues: \n\nHotel: CARL meeting attendees and their guests are invited to attend the President’s Reception & Awards Ceremony onsite at the hotel on Monday\, April 25 at 6:00 p.m. EDT\nThomas Fisher Rare Book Library: All meeting attendees and their guests are invited to attend a reception at the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library on Tuesday\, April 26  at 6:30 p.m. EDT.\nCN Tower: All meeting attendees and their guests are invited to attend a reception on Wednesday\, April 27 at the CN Tower at 6:00 p.m. EDT.\n\nRSVP is required through the meeting registration form. \nThe 2022 Spring Member Meeting program schedule can be accessed via the ARL Website. \n\nCOVID-19 Safety Measures\n\nARL and CARL are taking the necessary steps to ensure the health and safety of our member representatives\, staff\, and guests\, and to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in compliance with regulations and other requirements that have been issued by the Province of Ontario\, the City of Toronto\, and public health officials. \nTo this end\, we are taking the following measures: \n\nMandatory Vaccination: Although the Province of Ontario has removed the requirement to provide proof of vaccination\, this is a private event\, and as such\, all attendees (including association employees\, member representatives\, and guests) will be required to provide proof of full vaccination (currently two doses\, or a booster\, the last of which was received at least 14 days prior to their attendance) and a photo ID in order to participate in person and to enter meeting and reception spaces. This information will be collected via a third-party service.\nAll attendees will be required to self-screen before entering the meeting premises.\nAll persons entering or remaining in the premises or in enclosed common areas are encouraged to wear a mask.\nAll individuals will be encouraged to perform hand hygiene when entering and leaving the premises.\nThe hotel (and meeting-service providers) will ensure the proper cleaning and disinfection of all audiovisual equipment and meeting spaces.\n\nThese health measures are subject to change as the pandemic continues to evolve. \n\n\n2025 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 26 @ 09:00 – May 29 @ 16:00  EDT  at Inn at the Forks\, Winnipeg\, Manitoba\n\n2024 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 18\, 2024 – November 20\, 2024 at Delta Hotels Ottawa City Centre\n\n2024 Spring Member Meeting\nApril 22\, 2024 – April 25\, 2024 at Montreal\, Quebec\n\n2023 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 27\, 2023 – November 30\, 2023 at Fairmont Le Château Montebello\n\n2023 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 29\, 2023 – June 1\, 2023 at Calgary Marriott Downown Hotel\n\n\n					\n									See All Member Meetings\n					 \nHotel Details\nHotel: InterContinental Toronto Centre225 Front St WToronto ON M5V 2X3 \nA block of rooms has been reserved for attendees of the 2022 joint Association Meeting at a special rate. We encourage all attendees to stay at the meeting hotel to ensure ARL and CARL fulfill our contract obligations. \nThose who book within the block will be automatically entered into a drawing for two awards of a weekend stay for two\, at the Intercontinental Toronto Centre\, at a future date. \n\nRoom Rate: Can$239.00\, plus taxes (single or double occupancy)\nOnline Reservations: For the best booking experience\, we encourage you to book your hotel room online: https://book.passkey.com/go/ARL2022\nIf calling the hotel\, please reference Group: “ARL/CARL 2022 Spring Membership Conference” (to receive the negotiated room rate).\n\nThe guest-room block is reserved from Saturday\, April 23\, to Friday\, April 29\, 2022. PLEASE BOOK BEFORE WEDNESDAY\, MARCH 30\, 2022. Any reservations made after this date will be based on availability. \nReception venues: \n\nHotel: CARL meeting attendees and their guests are invited to attend the President’s Reception & Awards Ceremony onsite at the hotel on Monday\, April 25 at 6:00 p.m. EDT\nThomas Fisher Rare Book Library: All meeting attendees and their guests are invited to attend a reception at the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library on Tuesday\, April 26  at 6:30 p.m. EDT.\nCN Tower: All meeting attendees and their guests are invited to attend a reception on Wednesday\, April 27 at the CN Tower at 6:00 p.m. EDT.\n\nRSVP is required through the meeting registration form. \nThe 2022 Spring Member Meeting program schedule can be accessed via the ARL Website. \n\nCOVID-19 Safety Measures\n\nARL and CARL are taking the necessary steps to ensure the health and safety of our member representatives\, staff\, and guests\, and to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in compliance with regulations and other requirements that have been issued by the Province of Ontario\, the City of Toronto\, and public health officials. \nTo this end\, we are taking the following measures: \n\nMandatory Vaccination: Although the Province of Ontario has removed the requirement to provide proof of vaccination\, this is a private event\, and as such\, all attendees (including association employees\, member representatives\, and guests) will be required to provide proof of full vaccination (currently two doses\, or a booster\, the last of which was received at least 14 days prior to their attendance) and a photo ID in order to participate in person and to enter meeting and reception spaces. This information will be collected via a third-party service.\nAll attendees will be required to self-screen before entering the meeting premises.\nAll persons entering or remaining in the premises or in enclosed common areas are encouraged to wear a mask.\nAll individuals will be encouraged to perform hand hygiene when entering and leaving the premises.\nThe hotel (and meeting-service providers) will ensure the proper cleaning and disinfection of all audiovisual equipment and meeting spaces.\n\nThese health measures are subject to change as the pandemic continues to evolve. \n\n\n2025 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 26 @ 09:00 – May 29 @ 16:00  EDT  at Inn at the Forks\, Winnipeg\, Manitoba\n\n2024 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 18\, 2024 – November 20\, 2024 at Delta Hotels Ottawa City Centre\n\n2024 Spring Member Meeting\nApril 22\, 2024 – April 25\, 2024 at Montreal\, Quebec\n\n2023 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 27\, 2023 – November 30\, 2023 at Fairmont Le Château Montebello\n\n2023 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 29\, 2023 – June 1\, 2023 at Calgary Marriott Downown Hotel\n\n\n					\n									See All Member Meetings
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/2022-spring-member-meeting/
LOCATION:InterContinental Toronto Centre\, 225 Front Street West\, Toronto\, Ontario\, M5V 2X3\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Member Meetings
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20220309T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20220309T160000
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20250415T184601Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T181709Z
UID:36701-1646838000-1646841600@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:Open Education Cross-Canada Coffee Chat (#OECCCC) in French on Recognizing OER in Tenure and Promotion
DESCRIPTION:Date: Wednesday March 9\, 2022 \nTime: 3:00 to 4:00 p.m. (EST) \nRegistration \nThe CARL Open Education Working Group invites you to the eleventh call in this series of informal gatherings for individuals involved in open education (OE) in Canada (faculty\, instructors\, librarians\, students\, instructional designers\, etc.).  \nThis month\, we are bringing the Canadian open education community together for a French discussion on the recognition of OER in tenure and promotion. We are welcoming two panelists who will share their experience and thoughts on the subject\, followed by a discussion:  \nDominique Scheffel-Dunand\, Associate Professor\, Department of French Studies at Glendon College\, York University \nMarie D. Martel\, Assistant Professor\, École de bibliothéconomie et des sciences de l’information at the Université de Montréal \nCalls in this series typically take place on the third Wednesday of most months. While this month’s discussion will be primarily in French\, bilingual moderators will be on hand to help ensure participants are able to contribute in the official language of their choice.  \nWhether you’re an OECCCC regular or new to the group\, please join us\, settle in with your beverage of choice and prepare for some coast-to-coast sharing and networking.
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/open-education-cross-canada-coffee-chat-oecccc-in-french-on-recognizing-oer-in-tenure-and-promotion/
LOCATION:Online Event
CATEGORIES:Open Education
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211124T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211124T143000
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20250506T160948Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250506T160948Z
UID:36915-1637758800-1637764200@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:CARL Inclusion Perspectives Webinar Series: Third Panel Featuring Indigenous Library Colleagues
DESCRIPTION:Date and Time: November 24\, 1:00 – 2:30 p.m. ET\nRegistration closed\nPlease note that this event is open to all (not just CARL institutions) and will be recorded and posted to the CARL YouTube account afterwards. \nThe Canadian Association of Research Libraries’ (CARL) Equity\, Diversity\, and Inclusion Working Group is pleased to announce the third in a series of planned webinars on inclusion perspectives\, which will feature a panel of Indigenous library colleagues discussing their perspectives on the state of Canadian librarianship and how we can affect change. \nThis 1.5 hour moderated panel discussion will focus on progress on EDI initiatives to date and goals to strive for in the future. This will be a collaborative future-forward conversation\, so please bring your own questions and/or proposed solutions. \nIn addition to being subject to the CARL Code of Conduct\, CARL asks all participants\, panelists and organizers to be respectful of what is being shared and in how they ask questions. \nIn the interest of accessibility\, simultaneous translation and captions will be available throughout the session. Additional accommodation requests can also be emailed to Julie Morin\, Program Officer at CARL (julie.morin@carl-abrc.ca). \n \n\n					\n				> Speaker Biographies			\n		\n		\n			 \nThe moderator for this event will be Camille Callison \nCamille brings expert knowledge and lived experience to our conversation about Indigenous Knowledges and relationship building in library\, archival and cultural memory praxis. Camille is a Tāłtān Nation member\, the University Librarian at the University of the Fraser Valley (UFV)\, and a passionate cultural activist pursuing a PhD in Anthropology at the University of Manitoba dedicated to critically examining the relationship between cultural memory institutions and the continued survival and activation of Indigenous knowledges\, languages and cultures. \nSheila Laroque \nSheila is Métis from Saskatoon\, Saskatchewan. Her Métis heritage is on her father’s side\, who grew up just outside Duck Lake\, Saskatchewan. Her mom is originally from southwestern Ontario with Irish and Scottish roots. After a 5 and a half year journey that took her to Toronto for her Masters and Edmonton for work\, Sheila came home to Saskatoon in March 2020. She now works at the University of Saskatchewan as an Indigenous Studies Librarian. \nJessie Loyer \nJessie is Cree-Métis and a member of Michel First Nation. She is a librarian at Mount Royal University in Calgary\, a guest on Blackfoot and Treaty 7 territory. Her research looks at Indigenous perspectives on information literacy\, supporting language revitalization\, and developing ongoing\, reciprocal research relationships using nêhiyaw and Michif conceptions of kinship. She’s a director in the Prairie Indigenous Relationality Network\, also called Paskwaw Wahkohtowin\, a SSHRC-funded research group that brings together prairie scholars working on relationality. \nKajola Morewood \nKajola’s birth mother is Inuit\, from Kuujjuarapik in Nunavik. Her adoptive parents are originally from Quebec City (dad) and Winnipeg (mom) and have British and Irish/Icelandic backgrounds. Kajola spent her childhood on Treaty 7 territory in Medicine Hat\, Alberta and lək̓ʷəŋən territory in Victoria\, BC. After completing her Masters at UBC\, Kajola is now an Indigenous Initiatives and Services Librarian at Okanagan College on the unceded territory of the Syilx Okanagan people. \nMikayla Redden \nMikayla is Anishinaabekwe\, born and raised in Peterborough\, Ontario. Her grandmother is from Curve Lake First Nation\, but was enfranchised during childhood\, eventually settling with a Métis community in Burleigh Falls\, Ontario. Mikayla spent her summers between Hiawatha First Nation (on the north shore of Rice Lake)\, and Stony Lake (near Lakefield\, ON) with settler relatives. After living and working in both Thunder Bay and Halifax\, Mikayla is now an Information Services and Instruction Librarian at University of Toronto.
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/carl-inclusion-perspectives-webinar-series-third-panel-featuring-indigenous-library-colleagues/
LOCATION:Online Event
CATEGORIES:Equity Diversity Inclusion
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20211115T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20211117T235959
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20251107T000509Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251107T000726Z
UID:38398-1636934400-1637193599@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:2021 Fall Member Meeting (Online)
DESCRIPTION:November 15\, 2021 – November 17\, 2021 \n\n\n\n\n\nThe Canadian Association of Research Libraries is pleased to invite member directors to the 2021 Fall Member Meeting. This annual gathering serves as a vital platform for the exchange of ideas\, strategic planning\, and collaborative discussions that shape the future of research libraries across Canada. \nProgram Schedule
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/2021-fall-member-meeting-online/
LOCATION:Online Event
CATEGORIES:Member Meetings
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20210629T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20210629T133000
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20250506T160420Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250506T160527Z
UID:36914-1624968000-1624973400@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:CARL Inclusion Perspectives Webinar Series: Second Panel Featuring Racialized Library Colleagues
DESCRIPTION:Date and Time: June 29\, 12:00 – 1:30 PM ET\nSlides \nThe Canadian Association of Research Libraries’ (CARL) Equity\, Diversity\, and Inclusion Working Group is pleased to announce the second in a series of planned webinars on inclusion perspectives\, which will feature a panel of racialized library colleagues discussing their perspectives on the state of Canadian librarianship and how we can affect change. \nThis 1.5 hour moderated panel discussion will focus on progress on equity\, diversity\, and inclusion initiatives to date and goals to strive for in the future. This will be a collaborative future-forward conversation\, so please bring your own questions and/or proposed solutions. \nIn addition to being subject to the CARL Code of Conduct\, CARL asks all participants\, panelists and organizers to be respectful of what is being shared and in how they ask questions. \nIn the interest of accessibility\, simultaneous translation and captions will be available throughout the session and supporting material will be circulated in advance in French and English. Additional accommodation requests can also be emailed to Julie Morin\, Program Officer at CARL (julie.morin@carl-abrc.ca). \nThe moderator for this event will be Maha Kumaran\, CARL Visiting Program Officer for Equity\, Diversity and Inclusion\, and Associate Librarian\, Education & Music Library\, University of Saskatchewan. \n \n\n					\n				> Speaker Biographies			\n		\n		\n			 \nLei Jin has been working for Ryerson University since 2003\, primarily as the Electronic Resources Librarian. She is also the Liaison Team Lead for the Faculty of Science\, Faculty of Engineering and Architectural Science. She is the co-founder and current president of the Canada Chapter of the Chinese American Librarians Association (CALA)\, and recently elected as a member of CALA Board of Directors. Lei earned her MLIS from Rutgers University. She is an avid runner\, and sometimes\, reluctant cook. \nAfra Bolefski holds a Master of Library and Information Science from Western University and has worked in libraries since 2003. She is an Associate Librarian at the University of Manitoba Libraries and currently leads a team of librarians in her role as Head\, Social Sciences Division. In her previous role as Acting Section Head\, she oversaw the completion of a major library renovation and the creation of an active learning classroom which was subsequently featured at conferences and in news and trade articles. Prior to taking on these leadership roles\, Afra held the appointment of Business Librarian at U of M for over five years\, supporting the research\, teaching and collection needs of an AACSB-accredited business school. She fulfilled similar roles at Wilfrid Laurier University and York University. In the work of advancing EDI\, as a member of the U of M’s Black History Month (“BHM”) Committee\, Afra has participated in planning and organizing the first ever Visionary Conversations Community Event celebrating BHM at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights in 2018. She also served as facilitator for a Manitoba Employment Equity Practitioners Association EDI forum event. In her service to the Canadian Association of Professional Academic Librarians’ (CAPAL) EDI Committee\, she worked towards establishing a Diversity and Equity bursary to assist marginalized LIS and Archives students attend the CAPAL 2020 conference. \nAfra currently serves as Chair for the Association of College and Research Libraries’ ULS Technology in University Libraries Committee and just completed her three-year term as CAPAL Board member. \nAfra is also a published author in various academic journals and books\, including a chapter in Designing Effective Library Learning Spaces in Higher Education. \nAllan Cho is the Research Commons Librarian at UBC Library.  He holds an MLIS\, MA in History\, and MET in Educational Technology.  He is a subject liaison for Archival\, Library and Information Studies and Asian  Studies. His research interests are in critical race theory in  librarianship and racialized librarians in academia.   Allan currently serves as Co-Chair for the Visible Minority Librarians Network of Canada (ViMLoC) and volunteers for a number of community organizations\, including festival director of LiterASIAN Writers Festival and Executive Director of the Asian Canadian Writers’ Workshop (ACWW) supporting writers in developing their manuscripts and publishing practices.   He has published in journals and has co-authored monographs\, including Inside the World’s Major East Asian Collections and Conversations with Leading Academic Research Library Directors International Perspectives on Library Management. \nCecilia Tellis is the Head of Design and Outreach at the University of Ottawa Library where she leads efforts to ensure that services and spaces are grounded in user-centred design principles; coordinates efforts to communicate the impacts of the library on student\, academic\, and scholarly success; and identifies opportunities and develops solutions to ensure the library is inclusive and accessible. She is a proud contributing member of ViMLoC: Visible Minority Librarians of Canada\, the co-chair of the Canadian Association of Professional Academic Librarians’ (CAPAL) Diversity and Equity Committee\, and is currently a fellow in the ARL Leadership and Career Development Program which prepares mid-career librarians from historically underrepresented racial and ethnic groups to take on leadership roles in their careers and in the profession at large. Cecilia holds a Master’s in Library and Information Studies from McGill University and a BA in French language and literature from the University of Toronto.
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/carl-inclusion-perspectives-webinar-series-second-panel-featuring-racialized-library-colleagues/
LOCATION:Online Event
CATEGORIES:Equity Diversity Inclusion
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20210517T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20210519T235959
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20251107T001145Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251107T002405Z
UID:38401-1621209600-1621468799@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:2021 Spring Member Meeting (Online)
DESCRIPTION:The CARL 2021 Spring Meeting for members will be held virtually from May 17 – 19\, 2021. \nPlease consult the program for more information. \nGuest Speakers\nLaura Bredahl is the Bibliometrics and Research Impact Librarian at the University of Waterloo. In this role she coordinates and provides institutional level leadership and support for research impact metrics. She is currently serving as a member of the ORCID-CA Governing Committee and as a deputy editor for the Bibliomagician Blog. She received the 2020 MLA Louise Darling Medal for Distinguished Achievement in Collection Development in the Health Sciences\, along with her project team\, for her leadership in the development of the Association of Vision Science Librarians Vetted List of Journals. She received her MIS from the University of Toronto in 2008. \n\nDr. Martin Paul Eve is Professor of Literature\, Technology and Publishing and the Strategic Lead for Digital Education at Birkbeck\, University of London. He is well known for his work on open access\, in particular founding and running the Open Library of Humanities. Martin is also now a member of the COPIM project\, working to make open-access monographs a reality. \n\n\nMegan Hall is director of Athabasca University Press\, Canada’s first open access scholarly publishing house\, and has just begun a two-year term as president of the Association of Canadian University Presses. \n\n\nDouglas Hildebrand has been Director and Publisher at University of Alberta Press since 2017. Before that\, he held a variety of roles at University of Toronto Press\, including Sales and Marketing Manager and Acquisitions Editor. \n\n\nGabriel Miller is the President and Chief Executive Officer of the Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences. Prior to joining the Federation\, he served in a series of senior roles with the Canadian Cancer Society\, culminating as Vice-President of Public Issues\, Policy and Cancer Information. Previously\, Miller was the Government and Media Relations Director of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities\, which represents big city mayors and municipal governments across the country. \n\n\nDr. Philippe Mongeon is a professor at the School of Information Management at Dalhousie University\, where he leads a research lab on the quantitative study of science. He is also a member of the Centre interuniversitaire de recherche sur la science et la technologie (CIRST) and President of the Canadian Association of Information Science (CAIS-ACSI). His research activities focus on the production\, dissemination and use of scholarly publications. \n\n\nRy Moran\, a member of the Red River Métis and founding director of the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation (NCTR) at the University of Manitoba\, is the inaugural Associate University Librarian – Reconciliation at the University of Victoria. Moran leads the efforts of UVic Libraries to decolonize approaches to the university’s archives and collections\, and integrate Indigenous ways of knowing and being into their work. Prior to leading the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation\, Moran served on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) as Director of Statement Gathering. With a passion for education and teaching\, Moran has taught at the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity\, was a major contributor to the Indigenous Peoples Atlas of Canada and directly assisted in the development of a national reconciliation research strategy through work with the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council. \n\n\nCarey Newman\, whose traditional name is Hayalthkin’geme\, is a multi-disciplinary Indigenous artist\, master carver\, filmmaker\, author and public speaker. Through his father he is Kwakwak’awakw from the Kukwekum\, Giiksam\, and WaWalaby’ie clans of northern Vancouver Island\, and Coast Salish from Cheam of the Sto:lo Nation along the upper Fraser Valley. Through his mother he is a Settler of English\, Irish\, and Scottish heritage. Perhaps his most influential work\, The Witness Blanket\, made of items collected from residential schools\, government buildings and churches across Canada\, deals with the subject of Truth and Reconciliation. It is now part of the collection at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights. Carey is the current Audain Professor of Contemporary Art Practice of the Pacific Northwest at the University of Victoria. \n\n\nDr. Jean-Sébastien Sauvé has been a professor at the University of Montréal’s School of Library Science since 2019. His research and mentoring activities focus on data management in museum settings\, library and archival design and architecture\, and issues facing research libraries. \n\n\nDr. Tim Wilson is the Associate Vice-President of Research Programs at the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) of Canada\, where he is responsible for overseeing the Agency’s grants and scholarships programs. Prior to coming to SSHRC\, Tim held a number of executive positions at the Government of Canada’s Treasury Board Secretariat and the Public Service Commission. In addition to his career in the Public Service\, Tim teaches English Literature at the University of Ottawa\, specializing in Renaissance Literature and Literary Theory.
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/2021-spring-member-meeting/
LOCATION:Online Event
CATEGORIES:Member Meetings
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20210428T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20210428T160000
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20250506T155833Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250506T160020Z
UID:36912-1619622000-1619625600@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:CARL Inclusion Perspectives Webinar Series: First Panel Featuring Black Librarians
DESCRIPTION:Date and Time: April 28\, 3-4 pm ET\nPlease note that this event is open to all (not just CARL institutions). \nThe Canadian Association of Research Libraries’ (CARL) Equity\, Diversity\, and Inclusion Working Group is pleased to announce the first in a series of planned webinars on inclusion perspectives\, which will feature a panel of Black librarians discussing their perspectives on the state of Canadian librarianship and how we can affect change. \nThis one hour moderated panel discussion will focus on progress on EDI initiatives to date and goals to strive for in the future. This will be a collaborative future-forward conversation\, so please bring your own questions and/or proposed solutions. \nIn addition to being subject to the CARL Code of Conduct\, CARL asks all participants\, panelists and organizers to be respectful of what is being shared and in how they ask questions. \nIn the interest of accessibility\, captions will be available throughout the session and supporting material will be circulated in advance in French and English. Additional accommodation requests can also be emailed to Julie Morin\, Program Officer at CARL (julie.morin@carl-abrc.ca). \nAlthough speakers will be presenting in English co-moderators will be on hand to ensure participants are able to contribute to the conversation in English or French. \nIf you have any questions\, please contact Julie Morin\, Program Officer at CARL (julie.morin@carl-abrc.ca). \n \n\n					\n				> Speaker Biographies			\n		\n		\n			 \nDominic Silvio \nThe moderator for this event will be Dominic Silvio\, Librarian\, Killam Memorial Library\, Dalhousie University Libraries \nMandissa Arlain \nMandissa Arlain has worked in libraries since 1996. She started as a Page and a Library Assistant at the Toronto Public Library\, and worked as a Library Technician at Seneca College\, Centennial College\, The Toronto District School Board and as of 2003\, at Ryerson University. While working as a Library Technician\, she completed an undergraduate degree from Athabasca University in Professional Arts majoring in Communication Studies and a graduate degree from the University of Toronto in Information Science. During her time at the Ryerson Library she has also served in various technician\, supervisory and librarian roles\, some of which included AV/ILL\, eReserves and Copyright\, Reference and Web Support Technician roles\, Leadhand and Circulation Supervisory roles\, and interim Systems\, Part-Time Staff Coordinator\, and Communications and Liaison librarian roles. She currently serves as a Library Technician in the cataloguing department at the Ryerson Library. \nMandissa is also involved in EDI related activities. She served as a stewart in her local union\, and as an active member of OPSEU’s Workers of Colour Caucus. She’s also served on Ryerson’s Anti-Racism Task Force\, was an active member of Ryerson’s Black Faculty and Staff Community Network\, served as a member and Chair of the Ontario Library Association’s (OLA) EDI Committee\, and currently sits on both OLA’s and CARL’s EDI Committees. She was awarded Ryerson’s Viola Desmond Staff Award in 2016\, and was also a Black Canadian Role Model Inductee in 2016. She currently provides technical support for the annual 100 ABC (Accomplished Black Women) book and gala project which features the accomplishments of notable Black Canadian women\, and has also partnered with Dr. Anne-Marie Singh on the Criminal Justice First project website\, which documents Indigenous and racialized individuals who were among the first to enter policing\, corrections\, legal practice and the judiciary in Canada. \nNorda Bell \nNorda Bell is an Associate Librarian at York University Libraries. She has worked at York for over 16 years in a number of roles. She currently holds the position of Teaching and Learning Librarian\, but Norda has also held positions as Scholarly Publishing Librarian\, Department Chair\, and Research and Instruction Librarian. \nShe is a Founding Member of the Visible Minority Librarians of Canada Network (ViMLoC)\, where she served as co-Moderator and developed the first mentorship program for visible minority librarians across Canada. She is also the founding Book Review Editor for the International Journal of Information\, Diversity\, and Inclusion (IJIDI). In this role\, she aims to have a more diverse representation of book reviewers\, from various backgrounds and geographic locations. Her research interest centers around  equity\, diversity\, and inclusion (EDI) in various aspects of libraries and librarianship. Her latest publication was a chapter in the 2020 Humanizing LIS Education and Practice (edited by Keren Dali and Nadia Caidi) about the different models of EDI professional development events for librarians. Her current research study explores the experiences of American and Canadian academic librarians at EDI professional development events and their eﬀects on participants’ attitudes\, perceptions\, and work-related practices. \nNorda is also a part-time professor in the Library and Information Technician program at Seneca College where she has taught the Searching I\, Searching II and Searching III courses. \nYemisi Dina \nYemisi Dina is the Chief Law Librarian at the Osgoode Hall Law School Library\, York University. Prior to this position\, she joined Osgoode in 2006 as Associate Librarian and Head of Public Services. She has worked in academic law libraries since 1995 in Nigeria\, The Bahamas and Canada. \nAs a law librarian\, Yemisi has participated in numerous professional development initiatives and programs. She is an active member many professional associations and has recently been elected to the position of Vice-President Two on the Executive Board of the Canadian Association of Law Libraries/ Association Canadienne des Bibliothèques de Droit. \nShe is the current Chair of the African Interest Group of the Foreign\, Comparative and International Special Interest Section of the American Association of Law Libraries. \nYemisi is involved in many EDI initiatives serving on Committees\, Boards and Working Groups to reflect institutional guidelines and policies. \nYemisi is widely published and is the author of the book Law Librarianship in Academic Libraries.
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/carl-inclusion-perspectives-webinar-series-first-panel-featuring-black-librarians/
LOCATION:Online Event
CATEGORIES:Equity Diversity Inclusion
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20210422T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20210422T140000
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20250424T203244Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250424T203244Z
UID:36812-1619096400-1619100000@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:Webinar: How Can We Successfully Collaborate to Advance National Capacity for OER in Canada?
DESCRIPTION:Date: Thursday\, April 22\, 2021 \nTime: 1:00 p.m. ET \nRegister here (all are welcome): \nFunding by provincial governments to encourage the development or use of open education resources (OER) in post-secondary education has been far from consistent across Canada\, ranging from long-standing programs of annual funding for OER production and promotion to limited short-term project funding or in a few cases\, no contributions at all. Yet it is clear that the investments made to date – not only by provincial governments but also by individual institutions or consortia – have produced important results\, demonstrated by increased adoption of OER textbooks and reduction in student expenses. (For more background\, see CARL Open Education Working Group’s 2020 Environmental Scan of Open Education Service and Support in Canada.) \nSo how can we strengthen OER adoption further\, better ensuring that all post-secondary students have opportunities to benefit from regionally relevant OER\, and that faculty and instructors who wish to incorporate open education in their teaching have the supports and incentives to allow them to do so? \nPanelists will discuss strategies and opportunities for advancing Canada’s national OER capacity\, whether through funding\, training\, infrastructure\, or advocacy. SPARC’s experience with obtaining funding commitments at the federal level and with a variety of state-level policy strategies in the US will also be presented to help inform the discussion. \nThis webinar will be recorded\, and will be offered with simultaneous interpretation in order to accommodate francophone and anglophone presenters and attendees. \nCARL wishes to acknowledge the support of SPARC in planning and delivering this webinar. \nModerator:\nBibi Wasiimah Joomun\, Executive Director\, New Brunswick Student Alliance \nPanelists:\nHailey Babb\, Open Education Project Manager\, SPARC\nCynthia Holt\, Executive Director\, Council of Atlantic University Libraries\nGabrielle Lamontagne\, Coordinator\, Collaborative Projects and Indigenization\, BC Campus\nKalin McCluskey\, Executive Director\, Canadian Alliance of Student Associations\nMichael McNally\, Associate Professor\, School of Library and Information Studies\, University of Alberta\nLucie Vincent-LeBlanc\, Executive Director\, Consortium national en développement de ressources pédagogiques en français au collégial
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/webinar-how-can-we-successfully-collaborate-to-advance-national-capacity-for-oer-in-canada/
LOCATION:Online Event
CATEGORIES:Open Education
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20201117T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20201118T235959
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20251107T001916Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251107T002601Z
UID:38405-1605571200-1605743999@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:2020 Fall Member Meeting (Online)
DESCRIPTION:On November 17th & 18th\, 2020\, CARL directors will meet virtually in place of their usual in-person general meeting. \nClick here for the program. \n\nGuest Speakers\n\n\nMatt Greenhall\, Deputy Executive Director\, RLUK \nMatt is the Deputy Executive Director of Research Libraries UK. He is the Executive lead for the Digital Shift\, Digital Scholarship\, and Copyright and Licensing strands of RLUK’s strategy\, Reshaping Scholarship 2018-2021. In this role he works closely with members of RLUK’s networks and working groups\, and has authored a number of research reports including Digital scholarship and the role of the research library (July 2019) and Covid-19 and the digital shift in action (July 2020). He leads on several of RLUK’s strategic relationships and is a passionate advocate for cross-sector collaboration across the GLAM sector\, research community\, and between wider communities of practice. \nBefore coming to RLUK\, he worked for six years at The National Archives (UK) in a number of leadership roles\, concluding as Head of Academic Engagement\, a role responsible for leading the organisation’s relationships with its academic and scholarly audiences. Prior to this\, Matt worked within Durham University’s Archives and Special Collections where he led elements of the university’s widening participation and youth engagement programmes. It was at the University of Durham where he completed a BA Hons and an M.Res in history\, and a PhD in early-modern British economic history. \n  \nMasud Khokhar\, Director of Libraries and Archives\, University of York and RLUK board member \nMasud is the Director of Library and Archives at the University of York\, where he oversees all developments for the Library and Archives\, and contributes to the overall governance of the Corporate and Information Services Directorate. A computer scientist by education\, and with libraries in his DNA\, Masud is passionate about digital leadership and innovation in the changing library and archive environments. His core interests cut across the topics of strategy development\, digital technologies\, innovation\, open research\, leadership\, staff empowerment and talent realisation. \nMasud has had a varied career with roles in the private sector and higher education\, including Bodleian Libraries\, Lancaster University and the University of York. Masud is a member of the Board of Directors of Research Libraries UK (RLUK) where he leads the Digital Scholarship and Digital Shift themes\, and is keen on introducing new models of leadership\, thinking and diversity in academic libraries.
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/2020-fall-member-meeting/
LOCATION:Online Event
CATEGORIES:Member Meetings
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20200610T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20200610T140000
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20250415T190146Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250423T202543Z
UID:36705-1591794000-1591797600@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:Community Call: French-language Open Educational Resources
DESCRIPTION:Date: Wednesday\, June 10\, 2020\nTime: 1:00 p.m. – 2:00 p.m. ET \nCARL’s Open Education Working Group invites the community of practitioners involved in creating and promoting French-language educational resources in Canada to get to know each other better (virtually\, of course!). The purpose of this call is to bring this community together and start a discussion on issues related to OER. You are all invited to come and share regional or institutional initiatives and to discover possibilities for collaboration. Please note that this community call will be held in French. \nIn addition to a large number of individuals presenting perspectives at the establishment level (hopefully)\, the following groups and activities will be represented during this call: La Fabrique REL\, eCampus Ontario and e Réseau de leaders en matière de ressources éducatives libres (REL) within Quebec’s higher education sector. \nThe call will be facilitated by Mélanie Brunet (University of Ottawa Library) and Jean-François Durnin (Bibliothèques de l’Université de Montréal).
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/community-call-french-language-open-educational-resources/
LOCATION:Online Event
CATEGORIES:Open Education
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20200525T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20200527T235959
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20251107T003039Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251107T003209Z
UID:38408-1590364800-1590623999@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:2020 Spring Member Meeting (Online)
DESCRIPTION:The Canadian Association of Research Libraries is pleased to invite member directors to the 2020 Spring Member Meeting. This annual gathering serves as a vital platform for the exchange of ideas\, strategic planning\, and collaborative discussions that shape the future of research libraries across Canada. \nProgram Schedule
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/2020-spring-member-meeting-online/
LOCATION:Online Event
CATEGORIES:Member Meetings
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200525
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200528
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20200508T182257Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250914T035530Z
UID:14838-1590364800-1590623999@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:2020 CARL Spring General Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Click here for a PDF of the full program.
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/2020-carl-spring-general-meeting/
LOCATION:Quebec
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20200521T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20200521T140000
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20250416T003522Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T181521Z
UID:36706-1590066000-1590069600@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:Free Webinar: Discoverability and Sharing Open Educational Resources
DESCRIPTION:[Update: The recording from this session is now available here. Slides are available here.] \nDate: Thursday\, May 21\, 2020 \nTime: 1:00 p.m. ET \nThe Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL)’s Open Education Working Group (OEWG) invites you to this webinar\, which follows up on our earlier Community Call on OER Findability Issues by offering practical tips on how to ensure maximum visibility for open educational resources. \nUnlike traditional publishing models\, where marketing and promotion are completed for authors\, engaging in open education activities requires some effort from practitioners in getting the word out there about their resources. This session will introduce you to workflows for making your resource discoverable\, collecting impact data\, and marketing and promotion processes to showcase the reach of your resources. \nThis session will cover: \n\nIdentifying how resource formats and accessibility impact openness\nDeveloping a plan for sharing open educational resources\nDeveloping a plan for gathering data to show impact of your open educational resource\nIdentify marketing and promotion processes for releasing your open educational resource\n\nPresenter: \nErin Fields is a librarian focusing on open education supports at the University of British Columbia. Erin is currently the Open Education Visiting Program Officer for the Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL). She is the recipient of the 2018 Award of Excellence in Open Education and the Open Education Research & Advocacy Fellowship with BCcampus. Erin was also one of the 2019 UBC Open Educational Resource Champion recipients\, a recognition from the UBC Vancouver Alma Mater Society\, the VP Academic and Provost\, and UBC Library.
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/free-webinar-discoverability-and-sharing-open-educational-resources/
LOCATION:Online Event
CATEGORIES:Open Education
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20200429T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20200429T140000
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20250416T005426Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T181436Z
UID:36709-1588165200-1588168800@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:Community Call on OER Findability Issues
DESCRIPTION:[Update: A recording from this session is available here. Slides are available here.] \nDate: Wednesday\, April 29\, 2020 \nTime: 1:00-2:00 p.m. ET \nThe Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL)’s Open Education Working Group (OEWG) invites the Canadian open education community to join us in discussing findability issues when searching for and locating OER. In conversations among OEWG members\, and during the January 2020 Open Education Leadership Essentials workshop\, this question (as well as concerns about underlying metadata and aggregation thereof by larger databases) was a topic that came up frequently. \nWhether you are a librarian\, educator\, or teaching and learning specialist\, we hope you will join us and describe your experiences and thoughts regarding the OER searching experience. \nIn addition\, if you produce or support the creation or deposit of OER into repositories\, we hope you will share your thoughts with us regarding the use of metadata standards when describing OER\, as well as the aggregation or harvesting of this metadata by search tools and databases. \nThis discussion will be led by Ali Versluis (Open Educational Resources Librarian\, University of Guelph) and Lise Brin (Program Officer\, Canadian Association of Research Libraries).
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/community-call-on-oer-findability-issues/
LOCATION:Online Event
CATEGORIES:Open Education
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20200127T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20200128T235959
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20250509T144827Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250509T144827Z
UID:36941-1580083200-1580255999@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:Open Education Leadership Essentials (OeLE)
DESCRIPTION:Open Education Leadership Essentials (OeLE) Event\nJanuary 27-28\, Toronto\, ON\nRyerson University \nCARL\, along with sponsor BCcampus\, presents the Open Education Leadership Essentials Event (OeLE)\, a two-day event designed by the CARL Open Education Working Group to provide Canadian library practitioners with the information\, skills and resources to lead open education initiatives. The event will engage participants with presentations\, community building sessions\, and hands-on activities that will provide participants with the building blocks to implement OE programs on their own campuses. This event is open to participants from any Canadian post-secondary educational institution. \nAlthough presentations will be in English\, all documentation related to the event will be available in both English and French. \nMore information and details about the schedule: see OeLE Event Programme Details (EN) (FR) \nTo prepare attendees for the OeLE\, the CARL Open Education Working Group is offering a series of webinars\, which are open to all\, regardless of whether you are attending the OeLE event. \n\n\nHow to Create Inclusive and Accessible OER (presented by Josie Gray\, Coordinator of Collection Quality on the Open Education team at BCcampus)\n\nView recording\nView slides\n\n\nSupporting Open Educational Practices from the Library (presented by Rajiv Jhangian\, Associate Vice Provost\, Open Education at Kwantlen Polytechnic University)\n\nView recording\nView slides\n\n\nIntroduction to Canadian Copyright and Open Licensing for OER (presented by Amanda Wakaruk\, Copyright Librarian\, University of Alberta)\n\nView recording\nView slides\n\n\nOpen Education Support Models: The Canadian Post-Secondary Landscape (presented by Laurie Morrison\, Head\, Liaison Services\, Brock University Library and Mélanie Brunet\, Copyright Services Librarian\, University of Ottawa)\n\nView recording\nView slides\n\n\n\n\nIf you have any questions\, please contact Erin Fields\, CARL Visiting Program Officer for Open Education (erin.fields@ubc.ca) or Lise Brin\, Program Officer at CARL (lise.brin@carl-abrc.ca). \nMore information about the CARL OEWG can be found on the CARL Open Education webpage. \n    
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/open-education-leadership-essentials-oele-2/
LOCATION:Ryerson University
CATEGORIES:Open Education
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191105T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191107T235959
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20251107T011204Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251107T011553Z
UID:38425-1572912000-1573171199@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:2019 Fall Member Meeting
DESCRIPTION:« All Events\n \n\n	2019 Fall Member Meeting\n\n			November 5\, 2019\n	  –\n	November 7\, 2019\n	 \nThe Canadian Association of Research Libraries is pleased to invite member directors to the 2019 Fall Member Meeting. This annual gathering serves as a vital platform for the exchange of ideas\, strategic planning\, and collaborative discussions that shape the future of research libraries across Canada. \n					\n				\n									2019 Fall Member Meeting Program (PDF)\n					 \n\n	Fairmont Le Château Montebello\n\n392 Notre-Dame\n		\n		Montebello\,\n	Québec\n	J0V 1L0\n	Canada\n\n\n	+ Google Map \n\n					\n			(819) 423-6341			\n	 \n\n\n\n					\n				Accommodation\n		\n				\n				Program Schedule\n		\n				\n				Transportation\n		\n				\n				Recent Meetings\n		 \nHotel Details\nFairmont Le Château Montebello \n392 Notre DameMontebelloQuebec\, J0V 1L0Tel: + 1 819 423 6341 ext. 7688Fax: + 819 423 1133https://www.fairmont.com/montebello/ \nGroup: Canadian Association of Research Libraries \nRate: $179.00 plus taxes (single or double occupancy) \nGUESTROOMS are reserved from Tuesday November 5 to Thursday November 7. PLEASE BOOK BEFORE OCTOBER 4\, 2019. Any reservations made after this date will be based on availability. \n					\n				\n									Booking Link\n					 \nTuesday\, November 5\n9:00 AM – 5:00 PMBoard Meeting (CARL Boardroom: 203-309 Cooper St Ottawa ON K2P 0G5) \n5:00 PM – 6:15 PMShuttle from Ottawa airport at 5:00 p.m. and from CARL office at 5:30 p.m. to Fairmont Le Château Montebello \n7:30 PM – 10:00 PMPresident’s Reception – Curling & Refreshments (Château Montebello: Curling Pavilion) \n\nWednesday\, November 6\n7:00 AM – 8:00 AMBreakfast (Château Montebello: Aux Chantignoles) \n8:00 AM – 10:00 AMPolicy Committee Meeting (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n10:00 AM – 10:30 AMBreak (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n10:30 AM – 12:30 PMAdvancing Research Committee Meeting (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n12:30 PM – 1:30 PMLunch (Château Montebello: Aux Chantignoles) \n1:30 PM – 3:30 PMAssessment Committee Meeting (Château Montebello: Papineau Room)Strengthening Capacity Committee Meeting (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n3:30 PM – 4:00 PMBreak (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n4:00 PM – 5:30 PMProgram Session on Organizational Structures – Members only (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n6:30 PM – 10:00 PMCARL Reception and Dinner – CARL Award (Château Montebello: Outaouais Foyer) \n\nThursday\, November 7\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AMBreakfast (Château Montebello: Aux Chantignoles) \n8:30 AM – 10:00 AMFall General Meeting – Members only (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n10:00 AM – 10:30 AMBreak (Château Montebello: Montebello Room) \n10:30 AM – 11:30 PMProgram – CARL Delegation and Indigenous Services (Château Montebello: Canada Room)  \n11:30 AM – 1:00 PMProgram – Canadian Open Scholarship Strategy (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n1:00 PM – 2:00 PMLunch [Board meets separately in PEI Room] (Château Montebello: Aux Chantignoles)  \n2:00 PM to 2:30 PMProgram – CARL Library Impact Framework (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n2:30 PM to 3:30 PMProgram – (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n\nA New Take on Competencies\nHow Will We Determine What EDI Means for CARL as an Association?\n\n4:00 PM – 6:00 PMShuttle from Fairmont Le Château Montebello to Downtown Ottawa\, approx. 6:00 PM\, then Ottawa International Airport\, approx. 6:30 PM. \nShuttle to Château Montebello (November 5)\n\nShuttle will leave Ottawa airport (YOW) at 5:00 p.m.\nShuttle will stop at CARL’s office (309 Cooper St) at 5:30 p.m.\n\nWe are hoping to arrive around 6:30 -7:00 p.m. early enough for President’s reception aka CARL Curling Bonspiel. \nShuttle to Ottawa (November 7)\n\nShuttle will leave Chateau Montebello at 4:00 p.m.\nShuttle will stop in downtown Ottawa (5 p.m.) and the Ottawa airport (5:30 p.m.)\n\nDriving Instructions\nMap & Directions \n\n\n2025 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 26 @ 09:00 – May 29 @ 16:00  EDT  at Inn at the Forks\, Winnipeg\, Manitoba\n\n2024 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 18\, 2024 – November 20\, 2024 at Delta Hotels Ottawa City Centre\n\n2024 Spring Member Meeting\nApril 22\, 2024 – April 25\, 2024 at Montreal\, Quebec\n\n2023 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 27\, 2023 – November 30\, 2023 at Fairmont Le Château Montebello\n\n2023 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 29\, 2023 – June 1\, 2023 at Calgary Marriott Downown Hotel\n\n\n					\n									See All Member Meetings\n					 \nHotel Details\nFairmont Le Château Montebello \n392 Notre DameMontebelloQuebec\, J0V 1L0Tel: + 1 819 423 6341 ext. 7688Fax: + 819 423 1133https://www.fairmont.com/montebello/ \nGroup: Canadian Association of Research Libraries \nRate: $179.00 plus taxes (single or double occupancy) \nGUESTROOMS are reserved from Tuesday November 5 to Thursday November 7. PLEASE BOOK BEFORE OCTOBER 4\, 2019. Any reservations made after this date will be based on availability. \n					\n				\n									Booking Link\n					 \nTuesday\, November 5\n9:00 AM – 5:00 PMBoard Meeting (CARL Boardroom: 203-309 Cooper St Ottawa ON K2P 0G5) \n5:00 PM – 6:15 PMShuttle from Ottawa airport at 5:00 p.m. and from CARL office at 5:30 p.m. to Fairmont Le Château Montebello \n7:30 PM – 10:00 PMPresident’s Reception – Curling & Refreshments (Château Montebello: Curling Pavilion) \n\nWednesday\, November 6\n7:00 AM – 8:00 AMBreakfast (Château Montebello: Aux Chantignoles) \n8:00 AM – 10:00 AMPolicy Committee Meeting (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n10:00 AM – 10:30 AMBreak (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n10:30 AM – 12:30 PMAdvancing Research Committee Meeting (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n12:30 PM – 1:30 PMLunch (Château Montebello: Aux Chantignoles) \n1:30 PM – 3:30 PMAssessment Committee Meeting (Château Montebello: Papineau Room)Strengthening Capacity Committee Meeting (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n3:30 PM – 4:00 PMBreak (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n4:00 PM – 5:30 PMProgram Session on Organizational Structures – Members only (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n6:30 PM – 10:00 PMCARL Reception and Dinner – CARL Award (Château Montebello: Outaouais Foyer) \n\nThursday\, November 7\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AMBreakfast (Château Montebello: Aux Chantignoles) \n8:30 AM – 10:00 AMFall General Meeting – Members only (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n10:00 AM – 10:30 AMBreak (Château Montebello: Montebello Room) \n10:30 AM – 11:30 PMProgram – CARL Delegation and Indigenous Services (Château Montebello: Canada Room)  \n11:30 AM – 1:00 PMProgram – Canadian Open Scholarship Strategy (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n1:00 PM – 2:00 PMLunch [Board meets separately in PEI Room] (Château Montebello: Aux Chantignoles)  \n2:00 PM to 2:30 PMProgram – CARL Library Impact Framework (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n2:30 PM to 3:30 PMProgram – (Château Montebello: Canada Room) \n\nA New Take on Competencies\nHow Will We Determine What EDI Means for CARL as an Association?\n\n4:00 PM – 6:00 PMShuttle from Fairmont Le Château Montebello to Downtown Ottawa\, approx. 6:00 PM\, then Ottawa International Airport\, approx. 6:30 PM. \nShuttle to Château Montebello (November 5)\n\nShuttle will leave Ottawa airport (YOW) at 5:00 p.m.\nShuttle will stop at CARL’s office (309 Cooper St) at 5:30 p.m.\n\nWe are hoping to arrive around 6:30 -7:00 p.m. early enough for President’s reception aka CARL Curling Bonspiel. \nShuttle to Ottawa (November 7)\n\nShuttle will leave Chateau Montebello at 4:00 p.m.\nShuttle will stop in downtown Ottawa (5 p.m.) and the Ottawa airport (5:30 p.m.)\n\nDriving Instructions\nMap & Directions \n\n\n2025 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 26 @ 09:00 – May 29 @ 16:00  EDT  at Inn at the Forks\, Winnipeg\, Manitoba\n\n2024 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 18\, 2024 – November 20\, 2024 at Delta Hotels Ottawa City Centre\n\n2024 Spring Member Meeting\nApril 22\, 2024 – April 25\, 2024 at Montreal\, Quebec\n\n2023 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 27\, 2023 – November 30\, 2023 at Fairmont Le Château Montebello\n\n2023 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 29\, 2023 – June 1\, 2023 at Calgary Marriott Downown Hotel\n\n\n					\n									See All Member Meetings
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/2019-fall-member-meeting/
LOCATION:Fairmont Le Château Montebello\, 392 Notre-Dame\, Montebello\, Québec\, J0V 1L0\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Member Meetings
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20191022T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20191024T235959
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20250425T072450Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251015T143901Z
UID:36836-1571702400-1571961599@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:2019 Canadian Library Assessment Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Date: October 22 – 24\, 2019  \nLocation: Windsor\, Ontario \nThe Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL) is committed to supporting and developing outcomes-based measures to assist libraries in moving beyond inputs and outputs in order to better demonstrate library impact on research\, teaching and learning. Through the delivery of assessment-related programming\, information sharing\, and support for relevant research\, CARL supports members as they use outcomes-based evidence to establish the research library’s return on investment or other measures of its value. \nIt is with this strategic initiative in mind that CARL and the University of Windsor invite you to participate in the Canadian Library Assessment Workshop (CLAW) which will take place in Windsor on October 22 – 24\, 2019. This event will be of interest to all academic and research libraries engaged in assessment. The program will be comprised of workshop style sessions with topics such as: \n\nCritical Conversations on Positionality and Power in Library Assessment\nUsing APIS and Data Science to Support Collections Work\nChoosing Your Assessment Method\nData for Impact and Improvement \nEcocycle Planning \nEthnography for Librarians\n\nParticipants will leave the workshop with tangible and practical ideas to take back to their libraries. Registration is limited. \n \n\n					\n				> CLAW Program Committee			\n		\n		\n			 \n\nSharon Murphy (Co-Chair)\, Associate University Librarian\, University of Alberta\nRuby Warren (Co-Chair)\, User Experience Librarian\, University of Manitoba\nKathryn Ball\, Director\, Assessment & Accountability\, McMaster University\nSelinda Berg\, Associate University Librarian\, University of Windsor\nLucia Costanzo\, Data Analyst\, University of Guelph\nEbony Magnus\, Head of Belzberg Library\, Simon Fraser University\nKlara Maidenberg\, Assessment Librarian\, University of Toronto\nAlison Moore\, Digital Scholarship Librarian\, Simon Fraser University\nSarah Wilkinson\, Project Officer\, CARL/Portage\n\n		\n\n		 \n\n					\n				> Full Programme			\n		\n		\n			 \n\n\n\nTuesday\, October 22\n\n\n9:00am – 12:00pm\nHow to Use APIs and Data Science to Support Your Collections Work \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n12:00pm – 1:00pm\nLunch              \n\n\n1:00pm – 4:00pm\nWhat Counts and What Can be Counted: Fundamentals of Electronic Resources Assessment \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\nWednesday\, October 23   \n\n\n8:00am–9:00am\nRegistration\n\n\n9:00am–9:30am\nWelcoming Remarks \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n9:30am–11:00am\n\nKeynote Address: Through Tensions: Critical Conversations on Positionality and Power in Library Assessment \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n11:00am–11:20am\nBreak\n\n\n11:40am–12:00pm \nTo Be In Sync or Out of Sync: Considerations for Switching from LibQual to the Insync Survey \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n12:00pm–1:00pm\nLunch\n\n\n1:00pm–2:00pm\nChoosing Your Assessment Method \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n2:00pm–2:20pm\nShould I Stay or Should I Go? Updating Journal Value Analytics to Go Beyond Cost Per Use \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n 2:20pm–2:40pm\nBreak\n\n\n 2:40pm–3:00pm\nCan UX and Assessment Work Together? \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n 3:00pm–4:00pm\nProject Outcome for Academic Libraries: Data for Impact and Improvement \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n4:00pm–4:30pm\nWrap Up \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n4:30pm–6:00pm\nTour & BBQ \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThursday\, October 24\n\n\n8:00am – 9:00am\nRegistration \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n9:00am – 10:00am\n Obtuse\, Acute\, and Right: A Workshop on the Unexpected Benefits of Teaching Triangles         \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n10:00am – 10:20am\nLightning Talks/Posters \n\nAssessing the Evening/Weekend Library UX\nMaking Space for All: Evaluation in the UTSC Library Makerspace\nNew Assessment Design with a Pedagogical Change: Information Literacy Instruction for Second-Year Chemistry Course\nPreservation Needs Assessment for Media-Bound Digital Content\nQuestioning Ask: Assessing a Collaborative Virtual Reference Service\nTaking Snapshots: The Role of Photographic Observations in Library Space Assessments\nUsing GreenGlass to Support a Book Weeding Project\n\nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n10:20am–10:40am\nPosters/Break\n\n\n10:40am–11:00am\nOnce Upon a Research Consultation: Using Consultation Statistics to tell Stories about Relationship Building\, Workload\, and Organizational Change \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n11:00am–12:00pm\n\nIt’s the Circle of Life: Introducing Ecocycle Planning \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n12:00pm–1:00pm\nLunch\n\n\n1:00pm–1:20pm \nWho’s Afraid of the W Word: Tackling a Weeding Project \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n1:20pm–1:40pm\nI Meant to Get it Back on Time!  Countering Bias\, Promoting Equity\, and Improving Customer Service through Qualitative Fine Data Analysis \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n1:40pm–2:00pm\nCounter Release 5 Reports: A Provider Perspective \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n2:00pm–2:20pm\nBreak\n\n\n 2:20pm–3:20pm\nEvaluating and Managing the Implementation of Your Strategic Plan \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n 2:40pm–3:00pm\nCan UX and Assessment Work Together? \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n 3:00pm–4:00pm\nProject Outcome for Academic Libraries: Data for Impact and Improvement \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n3:20pm–3:40pm\nWrap Up and Closing Remarks \nLeddy Library Collaboratory \n\n\n\n\n		\n\n		 \n\n					\n				> Travel Bursary Recipients’ Post-Conference Reports			\n		\n		\n			 \nn support of CARL’s commitment to workforce development and advancing equity\, diversity\, and inclusion\, the CLAW 2019 planning committee offered 2 travel awards to support the attendance of new librarians and library workers or those new to assessment work. Preference was given to individuals from traditionally underrepresented populations. Their reports can be viewed at the links below: \nJuliene McLaughlin \nTomoko Shida \n		\n\n		 \n\n					\n				> Workshop Descriptions			\n		\n		\n			 \nPreconference Workshops\nHow to Use Apis and Data Science to Support Your Collections Work – Roger Reka (University of Windsor)\nLibrarians use data in order to support the decisions that they need to make to develop their collections. Knowing where researchers publish\, who they cite\, and other similar metrics help us identify which materials to purchase and which ones not to\, and can give us a sense of what topics our researchers are studying. These data are readily available in databases that many of us subscribe to—such as the Scopus and Web of Science citation indexes—but we aren’t making good use of these resources to collect en mass these data\, and make use of them efficiently. Large global information companies\, such as Elsevier\, recognize the value of this type of information in the application of library collections development and institutional research analytics. Elsevier recently purchased Montreal-based 1Science\, which provides research analytics services for universities and libraries\, and has been further developing and promoting their SciVal analytics platform. The analytics provided in these reports rely on the same data that is sourced from the citation indexes that we subscribe to\, yet libraries often don’t have the skillset to produce these metrics on their own. Many of the databases and tools that libraries subscribe to offer APIs in order to access the data with machines\, as opposed to the graphical user interface. APIs are accessed via scripts written in programming languages\, in order to automate the work that we would traditionally do with the database interface. Learning how to access the APIs with accessible programming techniques will build the data science skills of librarians\, which can be transferred into other areas of work. \nThis workshop will start with a brief overview of a bibliometrics approach\, building off of the information presented by Vincent Larivière at previous CLAW workshops. Participants will discuss what data we should use to support our collections decisions and why\, and what it can be used for. We will discuss what data sources are available to us\, and their benefits and limitations. In a hands-on workshop led by the facilitator using Jupyter Notebooks\, participants in this workshop will be introduced to APIs and will use Python to query data through the Scopus/Web of Science API. Using the downloaded data\, participants will learn how to run descriptive statistics using the pandas module in Python\, and to generate data visualizations that can be used in library reports and collections assessments. Participants will see how they can use Python programs to integrate with library systems\, such as a link resolver\, to automate their work. The workshop will end with references to micro-courses where participants can continue to learn the fundamentals of data science and programming. Learning outcomes: \n\nRecognize different types of data sources for\, and bibliometric approaches to collections assessment\nExplain what APIs are and when to use them over graphical user interfaces\nUse Python with Jupyter Notebooks to prepare descriptive statistics of the data\nDescribe how to integrate Python with existing library systems\, such as a link resolver Q13.\n\nDue to the hands-on nature of this workshop\,  participants must bring a laptop with the Mac\, Linux\, or Windows operating system (not a tablet\, Chromebook\, etc.) that they have administrative privileges on. Participants must also pre-install the free Anaconda distribution (https://www.anaconda.com/distribution/) before the workshop. Please let Roger Reka (roger.reka@uwindsor.ca) know if you have any questions or concerns about these requirements\, or if you are unable to bring a laptop. \nWhat counts and what can be counted – Fundamentals of electronic resources assessment – Klara Maidenberg (University of Toronto) & Eva Jurczyk (University of Toronto)\nThis workshop will expose participants to best practices for making acquisition\, renewal\, and cancellation decisions involving electronic resources. \nAs electronic resources claim a growing proportion of academic libraries’ collections budgets\, librarians outside the electronic resources team are increasingly being asked to evaluate and make decisions about these resources.  The skills and approaches that are required for evaluating electronic content are different than those used with print collections\, and there is a scarcity of professional development opportunities in this area. Where expertise in assessing collections exists\, it is often limited to a small number of expert staff. The goal of this workshop is to enhance the capacity and confidence of librarians by providing practical tools and approaches that they can adopt as they engage in decision-making around electronic collections. Attendees of this workshop will develop their capacity to collect and analyze data related to their electronic resources. Participants will learn about qualitative and quantitative methods of electronic resource assessment and learn to understand the concepts and metrics that are frequently utilized to select\, manage\, and evaluate electronic resources\, including sources of evidence\, the structure of content packages and how that structure may affect collections decisions. \nParticipants will be presented with case studies and real data to assess electronic resources and will have an opportunity to apply their learning to hands-on assessment exercises. Participants will take away practical skills and tools that they can put to use in their own work environments. This workshop will be of interest to librarians engaged in collection development or assessment work. \nKeynote Address\nThrough Tensions: Critical Conversations on Positionality and Power in Library Assessment – Ebony Magnus (Simon Fraser University)\, Maggie Faber (University of Washington)\, & Jackie Belanger (University of Washington)\nIn her keynote address at the 2017 Canadian Library Assessment Workshop\, Karen Nicholson posed the question\, “how might we engage critically with quality assurance and assessment to better align them with our professional values and the academic mission of the university?” (p3). With this session\, we hope to open for consideration this question\, among others\, for attendees at CLAW 2019. In this session\, we will invite attendees to engage reflectively and critically in nuanced discussions about the nature of power\, bias\, and positionality in library assessment work. Over the last two years\, we have conducted research on critical methodologies employed in social sciences\, data studies\, and educational research\, culminating in the publication of the article “Towards a Critical Assessment Practice” in In the Library with the Lead Pipe . In this work\, we shared professional and personal experiences that led us to explore structures of power inherent in our assessment work and we posed a number of questions to readers with which we have grappled\, including: – How do our own identities\, institutional positions\, and perspectives shape our work? – What is the purpose of the assessment\, who decides what to assess\, and who benefits from the work? – Are there elements of our institutional contexts (e.g.\, an emphasis on a culture of accountability) that create tension with the values we try to bring to our work? How might a more critical approach transform these approaches to assessment? – What are the histories and contexts of the methods we choose\, and how do these shape our work? How can we take account of the histories and inequities of qualitative methods such as ethnography\, even while these methods are often posited as an antidote to an overemphasis on quantitative assessment? – What is considered “evidence” and who decides? – Are we working in ways that enable power sharing and engagement with user communities at all stages of the process\, from question formulation and data analysis\, to decision-making? These are topics and questions with which we continue to grapple and which we think warrant a deeper engagement from the library assessment community itself. \nThis session aims to expand the current discussion of assessment in order to recognize and more effectively address issues of power\, inclusion\, and equity and inequality in various aspects of our practices. We imagine that many assessment practitioners may have experienced a conflict between institutional priority\, administration expectations\, student experiences\, and methodological integrity. The presenters hope that this session will spark discussions about how assessment practitioners engage meaningfully with the potential tensions in this work. With this in mind\, we would like to propose a modified session format (60-90 min) in which we draw on the tensions we have uncovered in our own work to facilitate a dialogue with conference attendees. We will describe the sites of greatest tension in our daily work – the practices in which systemic influence has become most apparent\, yet can’t be entirely undone. We do not seek to offer packaged solutions\, but will explore ways in which librarians might begin to interrogate bias and power in our assessment activities. We recently presented a similar session at CAPAL 2019 in which we framed similar questions to an audience largely made up of librarians engaged in critical librarianship\, though we have not yet had the opportunity to engage our assessment peers in a similarly open discussion. It is our aim\, with this facilitated dialogue\, to \n\nEnable assessment practitioners to reflect on their own positionality and institutional context and the ways in which that shapes our work throughout the assessment cycle\nExamine underlying assumptions and power structures in current assessment practices\nExplore other disciplines and alternative methodologies in order to critically consider ways of engaging user communities in assessment work\n\nTo accomplish this\, we will structure the session to include sections of presented content\, drawing from our research\, coupled with guided discussion activities. Activities will include small-and large-group discussions\, and we may utilize a range of tools to facilitate sharing out – including post-it notes\, poster paper\, and shared Google documents. We found this approach led to productive and collaborative dialogue during our session at CAPAL19\, while allowing for some documentation of the topics discussed. \n1 Hour Workshops\nBeyond Metrics: Ethnography Lite for Librarians – David Michels (Dalhousie University)\nLibraries measure things – collections\, transactions\, visits\, downloads\, and likes. New tools allow us to mine and visualize that data to demonstrate the impacts of our activities. We know that good metrics are important for planning\, budgeting\, and programming. But numbers need contexts\, and data are most meaningful when connected to the stories of our clients\, the people we serve. Since we regularly interact with our clients\, we can mistakenly assume we know their stories. We just might be surprised by the stories they might tell if we actually asked. The goal of this session is to challenge and equip library staff to actively seek out those untold stories. In this interactive and hands-on session\, we will explore ethnographic field methods that librarians can use to uncover the stories behind the numbers. Following a brief introduction to ethnography as a research methodology\, we will do three things in this session: \n\nWe will explore together our ethnographic toolkit – participant observations\, focus groups\, interviews\, and writing projects\,\nWe will try out our tools with demonstrations and practice activities\,\nWe will discuss how we can empower our clients to share their library\, research\, and information stories.\n\nAs we proceed through each step there will be opportunities to learn about important books and resources that would be helpful for research planning. We will consider several examples of several good ethnographic research projects particular to libraries and information seeking. We will reflect on real life research stories from my own research\, and the successes\, failures\, and lessons I have learned along the way. Participants will be given the opportunity to talk about their own context and opportunities within a small discussion group. At the end of this session\, participants should be able to identify a potential research opportunity\, understand the toolkit available to explore that opportunity\, and feel inspired to pursue that research. \nChoosing Your Assessment Method: Emily Christofides (University of Waterloo)\nIn assessing and improving library space and services\, it can sometimes be difficult to know where to begin. While there are always many questions that could be asked\, it is difficult to know how to go about gathering data to answer them. Specifically\, how do you choose what methods to use to gather the information you need in order to move forward with decision making? This session will help you get started in planning your next assessment by describing some of the similarities and differences between common methods\, explaining how to formulate your question to fit the appropriate method (or better yet\, how to choose your method based on your question)\, and will provide an opportunity to try doing so in a supported environment. Do you: \n\nHave a tried and true method (for example\, surveys) that you are comfortable using but are not sure whether it can be applied to your current problem?\nKnow what you want to assess but are not certain how to go about it?\nHave a regular assessment that you run without really knowing what you intend to do with the information.\n\nIf any of these situations apply to you\, then you could benefit from understanding more about how to choose the best method for the question you want to answer. In this session\, the facilitator will walk you through some of the key assessment methods used in library UX work with examples of how these methods have been used in a library setting. Methods covered include surveys\, focus groups\, interviews\, usability testing\, and observational methods. You will learn what each method involves (at a high level)\, the kind of data that you can gather\, the types of questions it is suitable for answering\, and hear about the advantages and disadvantages of each. We will also explore how the questions you ask impact the kinds of decisions you can make. In a hands-on activity\, we will experiment with the match between research questions and methods to help you make better decisions when choosing an assessment method. Participants will be asked to come prepared to discuss one of their library assessment-related questions. This is a question that they are interested in answering about their users (not a research question). In small groups\, users will work through their questions including aspects such as: Who are their users in this case? What do they want to know about them? What do they hope to do with that information? How will the information gathered impact decision-making? Participants will then be matched with a specific method to explore how the method chosen either limits or enhances the kind of information that can be gathered. As a group we will then discuss ways of better matching the methods with the questions that workshop participants want to answer. The session will have both informal lecture components and a hands-on activity components\, with activity topics selected from participants’ own experience. Learning objectives include a basic understanding of the different assessment methods that are available to them\, knowledge of how the question they seek to answer is impacted by the method of choice\, and practical experience matching methods and questions in order to gather actionable insights. \nEvaluating and Managing the Implementation of Your Strategic Plan – Maurini Strub (University of Rochester) & Lauren Di Monte (University of Rochester)\nOrganizations invest a great deal of resources into developing a strategic plan for it to frequently land on a shelf\, file cabinet\, or be electronically archived. Using a case study analysis\, we will take a look at best practices for implementing and managing a strategic plan. At our institution we applied an outcomes-based assessment framework to create a required (but flexible) structure that has driven the projects that advance strategic goals. This framework is also present in project planning documents\, and used to increase buy-in by creating a shared understanding of scope and success criteria. Finally\, by establishing an assessment and communication plan for the implementation\, we keep the strategic plan at the forefront of everyone’s minds with regular reflection\, evaluation\, reflection\, and communication. In this session\, we will also address tools utilized\, challenges encountered\, and some of the ways organizational resistance presented itself during the process. Using a case study analysis\, attendees will learn how to: \n\nConstruct a structure or implementing a strategic plan\nDevelop a shared vocabulary for implementation\nManage perceptions of operational vs strategic work Identify and realign cultural mismatches\nRecognize and manage push-back\nCommunication strategies\nManage and mitigate perceptions of failure Build in accountability in an implementation plan.\n\nIt’s the Circle of Life: Introducing Ecocycle Planning – Chloe Riley (Simon Fraser University)\nThis session will introduce Ecocycle Planning as a qualitative method for collaboratively assessing a collection or portfolio of activities in order to understand the work as a whole\, and to pinpoint blockages and opportunities for renewal. Ecocycle Planning is one of a collection of facilitation techniques called Liberating Structures\, which are designed to be inclusive and to disrupt conventional or stale practices of working in groups. Liberating Structures can be employed in any situation that involves people working together\, and many of them can be used or adapted for everyday evaluation and assessment practices. In Ecocycle Planning\, a team or group works together to identify their work activities\, projects\, and initiatives\, and position them within the ecocycle (birth\, maturity\, creative destruction\, renewal). The exercise facilitates the team’s explorations of how to balance activities\, set priorities\, and identify opportunities for freeing up resources. The structure enables participation from every member of the team\, and lets group members see their own work in the context of the team as a whole. In this workshop\, participants will learn the essential design elements that make Liberating Structures successful. They will also understand how to facilitate Ecocycle Planning to assess a team’s activities and programs\, and to develop strategies for using it with their working groups\, teams\, units\, and collaborators. \nObtuse\, Acute\, and Right: A Workshop on the Unexpected Benefits of Teaching Triangles – Christopher Popovich (University of Guelph)\nProfessional development (PD) and assessment are two critical features of academic libraries which require careful consideration and often considerable resources. Combining these two elements of professional practice offers a range of benefits beyond the laudable goals of developing more effective educators and better understanding our professional practice. Teaching Triangles\, or Teaching Squares as they are more commonly described\, consists of observing the teaching of one’s peers through the lens of reflective practice. By combining PD and assessment in a self-reflective collaborative program\, librarians and library professionals have opportunities for growth through formative self-assessment in terms of greater self-awareness and thoughtfulness in both observing and teaching. There are also summative benefits for the Librarian through the Square Share where the observer formalizes and shares the process and self-assessment outcomes of the observation and self-reflection. The in-service implementation and uncritical format of the triads (or squares) offer shared experiences which promote team building and foster thoughtful engagement and pedagogical discussions throughout the semester. It is also relatively simple to implement\, inexpensive to run\, and offers economies of scale when expanding the program beyond the unit or Library. The goal of Teaching Triangle is not to assess or critically evaluate the teaching but rather to use the observation as a font of new ideas and approaches and to stimulate reflective self-assessment and growth within the observer. Teaching Triangles generally follow five steps: \n\nKick off where the participants get together in an orientation/Info session and agree about guidelines and roles;\nA scheduling session to organize the teaching and observation rota;\nA pre observation meeting to exchange course material\, outline learning outcomes\, discuss the relevant students\, faculty\, etc.\, and to reaffirm the self-reflective purpose of the observation;\nThe observation and written self-reflection\nDebrief (Square share) which explores: What did I take away as a teacher? What would I like to try? Would this approach/format work in my context? How will the experience inform my practice?\n\nThe benefits of teaching triangles are: \n\nLight and quick and inexpensive (resource wise)\nNot traditional quantitative assessment in that it is predicated on critical reflective practice and the exposure to alternate approaches and teaching styles\nIt is a trust-building exercise in an atmosphere of healthy skepticism for the neoliberal institution in which assessment can be complicit.\n\nThe unexpected benefits of teaching triangles are: \n\nCross-pollination of different fields with different student needs and different styles and levels of engagement\nLibrarians are exposed to new teaching techniques\, tips\, and tricks\nWorking out the parallels\, confluences\, and divergences in IL practice – Gaining a holistic view of teaching in the library and beyond Learning Objectives:\n\n\n\n\nBy the end of the workshop attendees will be able to identify and discuss the elements of a Teaching Triangles self-assessment program\nBy the end of the workshop attendees will be able to implement the Teaching Triangles self-assessment toolkit.\nBy the end of the workshop attendees will be able to adapt and design a Teaching Triangles self-assessment program for their institution.\n\n\n\nProject Outcome for Academic Libraries: Data for Impact and Improvement – Greg Davis (Iowa State University)\nAttendees will learn about the new Project Outcome for Academic Libraries surveys and resources. Project Outcome is a free toolkit that helps libraries measure four key learning outcomes – knowledge\, confidence\, application\, and awareness – across seven library program and service areas. The survey topics cover: Instruction\, Events/Programs\, Research\, Teaching Support\, Digital & Special Collections\, Space\, and Library Technology. The toolkit provides academic libraries of any size the means to easily measure outcomes and use that data as the basis for improvements and advocacy. This session will include opportunities for questions and discussion among participants. Optional: Prior to the workshop we recommend that participants register for Project Outcome\, review basic materials in the toolkit\, and consider a goal for outcome measurement at their library. Learning Outcomes Participants will: \n\nDiscover how Project Outcome can help academic libraries measure meaningful learning outcomes.\nLearn how to use the Project Outcome for Academic Libraries toolkit\, from administering surveys to visualizing results.\nUnderstand how other libraries have used outcome data for action.\nDiscuss how to put data to work in improving library services and advocacy.\n\nQuick Classes\nCan Ux and Assessment Work Together? – Juliene McLaughlin (University of Guelph)\nThis is the short story of how 2 UX Librarians sought help to make UX work resonate more with colleagues. We interviewed 16 UX Librarians from across North America for answers and stumbled across fascinating and wildly differing relationships between UX and Assessment. Of course\, several natural connections between UX and Assessment were highlighted\, but we also heard of many tensions that cloud the picture. First\, we will answer the question\, do UX and Assessment make sense together? Then we will share results from our interviews that describe the factors that contribute to the acceptance of Assessment and UX results\, the research methods that seem to be more trustworthy (and why is that?)\, and the interplay between UX\, Assessment and the organizational culture and structure. We will then explore practical strategies to incorporate UX methods into an assessment program. Attendees will leave the presentation with: \n\nAn understanding of how UX and Assessment fit together\nExamples of how various academic libraries have arranged UX and Assessment on the organizational chart\nPractical ways to integrate UX into an assessment program.\n\nCounter 5 Release Reports: A Provider Perspective – Sabina Pagotto (Scholars Portal)\nCollections and e-resource departments at many academic libraries rely on COUNTER usage reports to understand the value their electronic subscriptions provide to library users. Release 5 of the COUNTER Code of Practice\, which went into effect in early 2019\, represents a significant change in the standard. While the new release is an important step towards normalizing usage data between different content types\, it requires a major shift\, technologically and conceptually. Libraries and content providers alike face a steep learning curve as they adjust to new reports\, new metrics\, and new vocabulary. Scholars Portal\, the service arm of the Ontario Council of University Libraries\, provides COUNTER-certified usage reports for our locally hosted Journals platform and is working to create COUNTER reports for the recently upgraded Scholars Portal Books platform. The process of reviewing and modifying the way our usage logs are transformed into standard views has left Scholars Portal staff with a deep understanding of COUNTER title reporting. This session will explain the concepts behind the major changes in COUNTER 5\, describe the new COUNTER standard views for e-book and e-journal titles and how they differ from the previous release’s reports\, and finally demonstrate how usage log data is transformed to make these reports standardized. By the end of the session\, participants will: \n\nRecognize the concepts behind COUNTER Release 5.\nUnderstand the new metrics and report views\, and how they can be used to analyze usage data.\nGain a deeper awareness of how usage data is generated and what technical limitations are possible.\n\nEvolution of Big Deal Analysis – Jaclyn McLean (University of Saskatchewan) & Ken Ladd (University of Saskatchewan)\nWe first started our assessment of Big Deals in 2015. Since then we have updated and expanded our analysis of the data. From simple usage data and aggregate cost analysis in 2015 to detailed cost per title\, breakdown of packages by college or discipline\, and the addition of citation data from Web of Science\, our program has developed and expanded over the years. We’ve also worked on simplifying and presenting the data and the story about the data to our liaison librarians\, and this year have the “opportunity” to test our methodology with a large cancellation project\, using our collected data as the foundation. We will describe how we aggregate data from different sources\, provide tips and tricks for data management we’ve learned along the way\, share the template we use to summarize the data about each Big Deal\, and discuss the time investment required to complete these analyses. We will discuss some challenges we encountered through our analysis\, and opportunities for further assessment (e.g.\, incorporating information about APCs paid to the publisher). Our assessment project has been informed by and continues to develop based on the experiences shared by others—by sharing practical information about how we started our assessment of big deals\, we hope to help others get started\, or adopt portions of the analysis that may be useful in their own contexts. We will also discuss our assessment plan looking forward to 2020 and how we plan to change what we’re doing in light of COUNTER 5 implementation. \nI Meant to Get it Back On Time!  Countering Bias\, Promoting Equality\, and Improving Customer Service Through Qualitative Fine Data Analysis – Lisa Levesque (Ryerson University) & Kelly Kimberley (Ryerson University)\nThis workshop will describe a qualitative study undertaken at Ryerson University Library to understand why patrons incur fines. The better that we understand our patrons\, the better service we can provide\, and this workshop will describe how this study fits into the revision of the fine structure at Ryerson University Library to be more equitable and improve customer service interactions. Participants at this workshop will leave with a roadmap of how to explore fine data. They will learn about methods that reduce bias in their qualitative studies. They will learn about evidence that can be used to advocate for change to fine structures at their academic library\, and why change is necessary. This qualitative study will be completed this summer. We anticipate that the results will confirm what we already know about fines. Through experience\, we know that fines create negative customer service interactions. Enforcing them is unpleasant both for staff\, who have to bear the brunt of patrons’ negative emotion\, and patrons\, who now have an unpleasant memory associated with the library. In reviewing the literature\, we found that fines disproportionately affect those who are least able to pay them\, making them inequitable and a barrier to library use. Fines also run contrary to other library services that aim to increase access to materials. This qualitative study builds off of the Fall 2018 quantitative analysis of fine data that was conducted to determine what types of fines were being incurred and the costs associated with them. As a result of this analysis\, the decision was made to change the library fine structure in order to eliminate fines for overdue monographs free of holds or other restrictions. Running a complementary qualitative study will be instrumental in confirming this course of action. Due to the high emotions that they can cause\, fines are a controversial topic. Librarians and library staff often have misconceptions about the effectiveness of fines and the reasons that patrons incur fines. This study gives patrons a voice for why they incurred fines\, allowing library workers to overcome our assumptions. In order to reduce and keep in check our own biases\, including those derived from prior research\, we used grounded theory and critical assessment best practices when analyzing results. These included collaborative coding and the use of the constant comparative method\, both methods that mitigate bias. We also included student feedback during the analysis process in order to further privilege patron voices. These methods ensure that our study results are grounded in evidence. While bias can never be totally eliminated\, it can be controlled\, reduced\, and consciously accounted for. This study was undertaken using tools that will be available at most academic libraries. Borrowing and Lending services maintains an online Library Fines Appeals form\, and the use of this pre-existing data eliminated the need for time-consuming data collection. It was analyzed using Google Sheets and the creation of a shared Google document codebook. Analysis was undertaken using a licensed Tableau subscription\, software that is also available in a public\, free format. The use of pre-existing data and free\, commonly used tools allowed for less time spent on data collection or on learning software and more time to critically examine results. In person conversations formed an important part of the analysis process\, allowing for the development of a shared understanding of emergent results. By describing the approach taken by Ryerson University Library to explore qualitative fine data\, this workshop will cover methods to reduce bias in research and connect study results to service changes that improve customer service and reduce bias. \nOnce Upon a Research Consultation: Using Consultation Statistics to Tell Stories About relationship Building\, Workload\, and Organization Change – Amy McLay Paterson (Thompson Rivers University)\nAs the primary site of librarian-student interactions moves away from the central reference or service desk\, research consultations become a vital benchmark for showcasing relationship building and tracking organizational change. However\, many libraries track research consultations only as basic numbers and some only as a part of service desk statistics. In 2017\, Thompson Rivers University Library simplified our service desk statistics form but separated out and expanded on our research consultation tracking procedures\, adding metrics for liaison area\, referral method\, and amount of time spent (including prep time)\, among other metrics. Since that time\, the Library has used this information as a group to assess workload distribution and to track and respond to changes in our service model. As individual librarians\, we have used the information to fine tune our relationships and communications with liaison areas and to articulate our unique impact for tenure dossiers and annual reports. This simple change has led to a greater understanding about the current shape of our work but has also prompted us to contemplate bigger questions about how the nature of our work and our relationships with students is evolving. Participants in this session will: Identify and discuss factors that distinguish a research consultation from a reference interaction and explain the value of tracking consultations separately; Discuss how/if they are currently using their research consultation stats and contemplate how they would like to use them; Explore several metrics (in addition to numbers) that can be tracked in regard to research consultation and articulate the benefits of each; Recognize advantages and disadvantages of several access models for consultation numbers and identify factors that need to be considered when mediating access. \nShould I Stay or Should I Go? Updating Journal Value Analytics to Go Beyond Cost Per Use – Jason Friedman (CRKN) & Émilie Lavallée-Funston (CRKN)\nCompiled annually by the Canadian Research Knowledge Network (CRKN)\, the Journal Value Analytics (JVA) tool combines pricing\, subject\, and usage data to provide an information resource to members evaluating their participation in CRKN-licensed journal packages. What is unique to the CRKN JVA design are three features we intend to highlight in this session: the inclusion and separate identification of open access and paid content data\, the inclusion of year of publication data\, and the calculation of estimated costs per title. This quick class will share CRKN’s evolving JVA design\, focusing on key\, unique features that provide valuable insight for members. The flexible design allows members to feedback on their specific institutional needs and enable a more refined analysis in each subsequent year. While the 2019 JVA uses COUNTER 4 data\, we will also describe how we intend to use COUNTER Release 5 data in the 2020 JVA. We hope participants will take away inspiration\, tricks\, and tools for performing analysis at their own institutions or across multiple institutions. Given the scope of completing this analysis for 75 institutions annually\, we will discuss tactics used to streamline the process\, ensure reliability of data\, and validate the accuracy of analyses. In addition\, we would like to engage with workshop participants on the design of the project; answering questions on design or analysis methods\, looking ahead to COUNTER5 data\, and other elements of this project. \nTo Be In Sync Oo Out of Sync: Considerations For Switching From LibQual to The Insync Survey – Linda Bedwell (Dalhousie University) & Laura Newton Miller (Carleton University)\nTrying to figure out the needs of our users is a never-ending quest for academic libraries. In 2018-19\, two Canadian university libraries made the decision to administer the Australian Insync survey rather than LibQual. The main purpose of the Insync survey is to give students\, staff\, and faculty the opportunity to state how well they believe the Library performs in relation to what they think is important. The survey focuses on performance and importance specifically related to communication\, service delivery\, facilities & equipment\, information resources\, and overall satisfaction. The strength of Insync’s more streamlined question structure outweighed the possible disadvantages of longitudinal and benchmarking data loss. Now that Carleton and Dalhousie are well into interpreting results reports and analyzing raw data\, they are fully realizing the challenges and benefits of conducting the Insync survey. The experience of these two institutions should help to guide other institutions who are either just starting to think about conducting a survey or who are considering “making the switch” from LibQual to Insync. Learning Outcomes: \n\nAttendees will acquire knowledge of the content and structure of the Insync Library Client Survey and will be able to apply a list of pros and cons of switching to Insync from LibQual for their own institution.\nBy learning from peer experience\, they will be able to anticipate the amount of work involved with interpreting reports and analyzing raw data as well as the sorts of findings and potential follow-up actions that arise from the results.\nThese outcomes will enable attendees to make a recommendation to switch or not to switch to the Insync survey or other alternatives at their own academic libraries.\n\nWho’s Afraid of the W Word: Tackling a Weeding Project – Sarah Simpkin (University of Ottawa) & Ingrid Moisil (University of Ottawa)\nTraditionally\, academic libraries were collecting materials without giving much thought to weeding. As collections grew bigger\, less used collections were moved to compact shelving\, then storage facilities\, often off-site or sometimes shared. In contrast\, weeding in public libraries was always integrated in the collection development process. In recent years academic libraries started weeding some of their collections and dozens of articles have been published on deselection of library materials. However\, weeding is not yet considered a common task and many librarians feel reluctant to perform it or uncomfortable about opening a conversation with faculty about weeding. Drawing on the experience of the University of Ottawa Library\, this workshop will cover the different stages of the deselection project: \n\nestablishing the need\ndefining the deselection criteria\nintegrating faculty feedback\ncreating the lists\ncommunicating the project to the larger community\nwithdrawing the materials\ndisposing of the discarded materials\nevaluating the project.\n\nParticipants will: \n\nunderstand the complexity of a weeding project\nidentify a deselection need in their own library\n develop their own weeding project.\n\nPosters\nAssessing The Evening/Weekend Library Ux – Emily Christofides (University of Waterloo)\nThe University of Waterloo Library has gathered feedback on signage\, space\, furniture\, and other aspects of the library environment. But\, much of this assessment work occurs during the day and library staff wondered how well it would apply to the experience of users in the evenings and on the weekends. We wanted to learn what types of support and information needs our users had\, how well our available services were meeting their needs\, and whether there were differences in how patrons use the library in the evenings and on weekends. We gathered information through desk observation\, a focus group with staff\, and a student survey. We learned that in our libraries\, the students using the library in the evenings and on weekends were similar to those during the day. From what we observed and heard\, we concluded that areas for improvement relate to students’ experiences using the library space (e.g. desire for more study space\, better wifi\, use of elevators\, eating\, and cleanliness). Similarly\, staff issues relate to supporting use of the space (e.g. reporting a leak for repair) rather than supporting patrons in library-specific issues (though these did also occur). The staff at this time employed a problem-solving approach and found ways of helping users to the best of their abilities\, only referring them on for further support in a minority of cases. Overall\, we concluded that the evening and weekend user experience was not substantially different from the daytime experience\, and that improvement efforts should focus on use and maintenance of the space. \nMaking Space for All: Evaluation in the UTSC Library Makerspace – Elizabeth O’Brien (University of Toronto)\nMakerspaces in postsecondary education are spaces on campuses for students to find belonging\, engagement and active learning opportunities. Many public and academic libraries are investing in spaces to help support maker cultures. The University of Toronto Scarborough (UTSC) Library’s Makerspace opened in September 2016 in a renovated library space situated prominently near the library’s entrance. One goal of the space is to promote community building\, student engagement and to create a space that all students feel comfortable and welcomed to participate. However\, as much as it is the desire for the space to be used by all students we are observing patterns of male dominance in the space. This is a pattern found in makerspaces. Despite the democratizing potential of makerspaces\, there have also been criticisms that they are recreating some of the historic biases found in male-dominated workspaces. To counter the imbalance\, our Makerspace staff propose a series of workshops\, events and organizational development measures to encourage a greater number of women to embrace and use the library’s makerspace. This poster will display the work in progress of our team in developing programming opportunities to engage more females in the space. Emphasis will be on the various assessment methods we will employ to evaluate the impact of our programs and activities. Assessment activities within library makerspaces are still developing so our approach will focus on a program evaluation framework. \nNew Assessment Design With a Pedagogical Change: Information Literacy Instruction For Second-Year Chemistry Course – Shiyi Xie (Western University) & Jason Dyck (Western University)\nOur poster and lightning presentation will present the assessment design for a pedagogical change project for information literacy instruction in a second-year chemistry course. The project aims to investigate a more effective instructional structure\, including e-learning and active learning strategies\, to engage students’ learning. An online library module has been developed as an important component of a flipped classroom strategy and a platform for assessments. Here is a brief description of the course plan and the assessments. Prior to the face-to-face library session\, students will go through the library module and take a quiz that assesses their learning from the module. By analyzing the quiz results\, the librarian will identify which topics to be covered in the session. Students can also vote for the topics using the poll tool. The librarian has a list of class activities pre-designed for all the main topics\, but the session will only include those for the topics identified by the quiz and the poll results. After the library session\, students will be able to retake the quiz to assess their information literacy skills\, and the quiz is worth a small percentage of their course grade. Two sets of quizzes (A\, B) are developed at an identical difficulty level. Students who work on Quiz A prior to the library session will take Quiz B after the session\, and vice versa. A short survey will be available for students to give their feedback. The poster will include an overview of the project and the assessment pieces mentioned above. \nPreservation Needs Assessment for Media-Bound Digital Content – Jess Whyte (University of Toronto)\nMedia-bound digital content – that is\, digital holdings currently held only on media carriers such as floppy disks\, optical media\, flash drives\, USB keys\, ZIP disks\, hard disk drives (HDDs)\, and other digital media that is not easily accessible – presents multiple and unique risk factors for preservation. Before the University of Toronto Libraries could begin to mitigate those risks\, it first needed to asses \n\nThe extent of these materials within its collections\,\nTheir locations within the library system\,\nTheir local stewards\, and the\nNeeds of those stewards.\n\nThis poster describes the preservation needs assessment methodology\, its findings\, and recommendations for future iterations or application by others. \nQuestioning Ask: Assessing a Collaborative Virtual Reference Service – Sabina Pagotto (Scholars Portal) & Kathryn Barrett (University of Toronto Scarborough)\nAsk a Librarian is a collaborative chat reference service administered by the Ontario Council of University Libraries (OCUL) via their service arm Scholars Portal. In 2018\, a joint project between Scholars Portal and the University of Toronto Libraries\, the largest participating institution\, examined whether the service model\, staffing choices\, and policies of its chat reference service were associated with user dissatisfaction\, aiming to identify areas where the collaboration is successful and areas which could be improved. The research team examined transcripts\, metadata\, and exit survey results from 473 chat interactions originating from 13 universities between June and December 2016. Transcripts were coded for mismatches between the chat operator and user’s institutions\, and reveals of such a mismatch; user\, staff\, and question type; how busy the shift was; and proximity to the end of a shift or service closure. Chi-square tests and a binary logistic regression were performed to determine the relationship of variables with user dissatisfaction. The results largely reaffirm Ask a Librarian’s service model\, staffing practices\, and policies. Users are not dissatisfied with the service received from chat operators at partner institutions\, or by service provided by non-librarians\, and current policies for scheduling\, service closure\, and handling shift changes are appropriate. However\, the analysis did uncover areas of concern to investigate further: certain user types were more likely to be dissatisfied\, indicating that Ask could improve service to those user types; and users were more likely to be dissatisfied if they knew they were being served by an operator from a different institution\, indicating that Scholars Portal should review policies around disclosure. Overall\, this exercise demonstrates that institutions can trust the consortium with their local users’ needs\, and underscores the need for periodic service review to ensure continued effectiveness. \nTaking Snapshots: The Role of Photographic Observations in Library Space Assessments – Giovanna Badia (McGill University)\nHeading counting and ethnographic studies of spaces can be labour-intensive when the areas under observation are large in size. Taking photographs can speed up the data collection process\, and assist in analyzing the data by providing additional details that were not originally captured by the researcher. Reports of space assessments in the literature describe multiple data collection methods as well as present results using various charts and tables. This poster has three objectives: \n\nTo describe common best practices in the literature for using photography as a data collection method to answer questions about spaces;\nTo provide practical strategies for extracting and analyzing relevant information from the photographs taken; and\nTo summarize the types of data visualizations used in published studies that presented results captured by photography.\n\nThe findings of this poster provide direction for when and how to use photographic observations to evaluate library spaces and identify how to effectively communicate the results of this activity\, both of which will be useful to assessment practitioners. \nUsing GreenGlass to Support a Book Weeding Project – Ingrid Moisil (University of Ottawa) & Sarah Simpkin (University of Ottawa)\nThe Library of University of Ottawa embarked on a large -scale book weeding project early spring 2016. We used GreenGlass\, an online tool developed by Sustainable Collection Services and later acquired by OCLC\, that allowed librarians to analyse the book collection and prepare the deselection lists. This poster discusses how we set up GreenGlass\, the results and lessons learned.
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/2019-canadian-library-assessment-workshop/
LOCATION:Windsor\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:CLAW,Workshops & Institutes
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/NewsFeaturedImage-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20190430T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20190502T235959
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20251107T005806Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251107T010418Z
UID:38420-1556582400-1556841599@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:2019 Spring Member Meeting
DESCRIPTION:« All Events\n \n\n	2019 Spring Member Meeting\n\n			April 30\, 2019\n	  –\n	May 2\, 2019\n	 \nThe Canadian Association of Research Libraries is pleased to invite member directors to the 2019 Spring Member Meeting. This annual gathering serves as a vital platform for the exchange of ideas\, strategic planning\, and collaborative discussions that shape the future of research libraries across Canada. \n					\n				\n									2019 Spring Member Meeting Program (PDF)\n					 \n\n	The Union Club of British Columbia\n\n805 Gordon Street\n		\n		Victoria\,\n	British Columbia\n	V8W 1Z6\n	Canada\n\n\n	+ Google Map \n\n					\n						\n	 \n\n\n\n					\n				Accommodation\n		\n				\n				Program Schedule\n		\n				\n				Guest Speakers\n		\n				\n				Previous Meetings\n		 \nHotel Details\nHotel Grand Pacific463 Belleville StVictoria\, BC V8V 1X3 \nA block of rooms has been reserved for April 30\, 2019 – May 2\, 2019 at a cost of $159 CAD/night. The special room rate will be available until March 30\, 2019 or until the group block is sold-out\, whichever comes first.We suggest that you reserve as soon as possible to ensure that you can get a room. \nReservations can be made by calling (toll free): 1.800.663.7550 and quoting Canadian Association of Research Libraries or APR19CARL. \nTuesday\, April 30\n8:00 AM – 5:00 PMBoard Meeting (Union Club: McKenzie Lounge) \n6:00 PM – 8:00 PMPresident’s Reception (Swans Hotel Penthouse – 506 Pandora Ave\, Victoria\, BC V8W 1N6) \n\nWednesday\, May 1\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AMBreakfast and Registration (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n8:00 AM – 8:30 AMVPO Lightning Talks (during Breakfast) (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n\nErin Fields\, Liaison Librarian (Humanities and Social Sciences) and Flexible Learning Coordinator\, University of British Columbia; VPO for Open Education\nMaha Kumaran\, Head of the Education & Music Library\, University of Saskatchewan; VPO for Equity\, Diversity\, and Inclusion\n\n \n\n\n\n8:30 AM – 10:30 AMAdvancing Research Committee Meeting (Union Club: McKenzie Room)Strengthening Capacity Committee Meeting (Union Club: McKenzie Lounge) \n10:30 AM – 11:00 AMBreak (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n11:00 AM – 1:00 PMPolicy Committee Meeting (Union Club: McKenzie Room)Assessment Committee Meeting (Union Club: McKenzie Lounge) \n1:00 PM – 2:15 PMLunch (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n2:15 PM – 3:45 PMProgram – Strategic Plan Finalization (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n\nSusan Gibbons\, ARL President\nMerrilee Proffitt\, Senior Manager\, OCLC Research Library Partnership\nJonathan Bengtson\, University Librarian\, University of Victoria; CARL Vice-President\n\nSlides: ARL Action Plan 2019-2020 \nSlides: CARL OCLC Innovation Survey \nDraft: 2019-2022 Strategic Framework \n(Google Doc) \n3:45 PM – 4:00 PMBreak (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n4:00 PM – 5:00 PMSpring Annual General Meeting (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n6:30 PM – 10:00 PMCARL Reception and Dinner (Fireside Grill – 4509 W Saanich Rd\, Victoria\, BC V8Z 3G1) \n\nThursday\, May 2\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AMBreakfast and Registration (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n8:30 AM – 9:00 AMProgram – Portage: Repositories and Training Update (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n\nJeff Moon\, Portage Director\n\nPortage Training Resources \nPortage Progress Report: For the period of January – March\, 2019 \nSlides: Portage Continuum of Training and DRI Update \n9:00 AM – 10:00 AMProgram – Research Information Management Systems Landscape (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n\nDale Askey\, Chief Librarian\, University of Alberta\nDonna Bourne-Tyson\, University Librarian\, Dalhousie University; CARL President\nVivian Lewis\, University Librarian\, McMaster University\nBeth Sandore Namachchivaya\, University Librarian\, Waterloo University\n\nSlides: Research Information Management Systems Landscape: Introduction \n10:00 AM – 10:30 AMBreak (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n10:30 AM – 12:00 PMProgram – Open Infrastructure Investment: Status and Discussion (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n\nCatherine Steeves\, Chief Librarian\, University of Western Ontario\nMackenzie Smith\, University Librarian\, University of California Davis\nKathleen Shearer\, Research Associate\, CARL\n\nSlides: University of California and Elsevier: status of transformative publishing agreements \n12:00 PM – 12:45 PMLunch (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n1:00 PM – 1:30 PMShuttle to University of Victoria (Departing at 1:00 PM in front of Union Club) \n1:45 PM to 4:00 PMProgram – Ethics of Sensitive Information; Repatriation of Cultural Materials; Decolonizing Metadata (Update) (First People’s House\, Victoria\, BC V8P 5C2) \n\nElder Victor Underwood\nJonathan Bengtson\, University Librarian\, University of Victoria; CARL Vice-President\nLisa Goddard\, Associate University Librarian\, Digital Scholarship and Strategy\, University of Victoria\nDr. Andrea Walsh\, Associate Professor of Anthropology\, University of Victoria\nStacy Allison-Cassin\, Digital Humanities Librarian\, York University\n\nSlides: Digital Ethics and Reconciliation \nSlides: Indian Residential and Day School Art Collections and Survivor Communities  4:15 PM – 5:30 PM \nClosing Reception (Digital Scholarship Commons – McPherson Library) \n\nDr. Matt Huculak\, Digital Scholarship Librarian\, University of Victoria\n\n5:30 PM – 7:00 PMBoard Meeting (University of Victoria Library: Room 403) \n7:15 PMBoard Dinner (Marina Restaurant\, 1327 Beach Dr\, Victoria\, BC V8S 2N4) \nStacy Allison-Cassin is an Digital Pedagogy Librarian in the Student Learning and Academic Success Department at York University. She has an active interest in the intersections between people\, metadata\, and infrastructure\, with a particular focus on critical approaches to knowledge organization. Stacy has previously held positions as the W.P. Scott Chair in E-Librarianship\, Digital Humanities Librarian\, and Music Cataloguer. She is the current Vice-Chair of the Canadian Federation of Library Associations Indigenous Matters Committee where she is also co-lead on the Red Team working group on Subject Headings and Classification. A citizen of the Métis Nation of Ontario\, Stacy sits as the Indigenous Ancestry Representative on the CFLA Board of Directors and is an incoming member of the IFLA Indigenous Matters Interest Group\, a position she will hold on behalf of the Canadian Association of Professional Academic Librarians. Stacy is also an active volunteer in the Wikimedia community through which she actively organizes community initiatives focused on the GLAM sector. \nSusan Gibbons became Yale’s university librarian on July 1\, 2011\, and was named a deputy provost on January 1\, 2015.  As deputy provost for collections and scholarly communication\, Gibbons is assigned to all of Yale’s galleries\, museums\, and other holdings\, and is responsible for convening and fostering collaboration among these scholarly resources. This portfolio includes the Yale University Art Gallery\, the Yale Center for British Art\, the Peabody Museum of Natural History\, and other campus collections\, in addition to the university-wide library system and Yale University Press.  Gibbons currently serves as the President of the Association of Research Libraries. \nLisa Goddard is the Associate University Librarian for Digital Scholarship and Strategy at University of Victoria Libraries. She holds degrees from Queen’s\, McGill\, and Memorial University. Lisa’s research interests include open access publishing\, linked data\, digital preservation\, and digital humanities. She is currently the Chair of Portage’s Dataverse North Working Group and CRKN’s ORCID-CA National Advisory Committee. Lisa is a co-investigator on the Endings Project: Preserving Digital Projects for Long-Term Usability; and is a co-investigator on the project Improving African Futures Using Lessons from the Past. She is a member of the technical team for the CFI-funded Linked Infrastructure for Networked Cultural Scholarship (LINCS) project. http://orcid.org/0000-0002-4970-053X \nMerrilee Proffitt is a senior manager with OCLC. She works in OCLC Research and provides project management skills and expert support to institutions within the OCLC Research Library Partnership. \nDr. J. Matthew Huculak is Digital Scholarship Librarian at the University of Victoria Libraries. He holds a PhD in English Language & Literature and an MLIS with a concentration on archives and preservation. He is technical director and founding Managing Editor of Modernism/modernity’s Print Plus platform\, which won the Association of American Publishers 2019 PROSE Awards for “Innovation in Publishing.” His research focuses on libraries\, 20th-century English literature\, book history\, and periodicals. He has served as Editorial Assistant for the James Joyce Quarterly\, Project Director of the National Endowment for the Humanities funded Modernist Journals Project and is currently Director of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council funded Modernist Versions Project and Co-Director of BC Open Textbook-funded Open Modernisms. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2717-1112 \nMacKenzie Smith (University Librarian and Vice Provost of Digital Scholarship) is responsible for creating and leading the strategic vision of the UC Davis Library.  As vice provost of digital scholarship\, MacKenzie defines and leads major university initiatives involving information technology\, data science and informatics\, data governance\, knowledge management\, research computing and digital publishing.  MacKenzie helped launch and continues to oversee UC Davis’ Data Science Initiative\, which supports research in every discipline and coordinates with data technology and analytics units across the university. \nUniversity of California and Elsevier: Status of transformative publishing agreements \nThe University of California recently ended negotiations with Elsevier for a new license that would have made open access publishing the default for UC authored articles while containing costs for accessing paywalled articles. An update will be provided on the terms of the licence UC wanted\, the outcome of the negotiations so far\, and other transformative publishing agreements that UC has made and continues to press for with other scholarly publishers. \nDr. Andrea Walsh is a visual anthropologist who specializes in 20th-century and contemporary aboriginal art and visual culture in Canada\, as well as theoretical and methodological approaches to visual research. She is interested in collections of objects and images and how museums and galleries curate and exhibit these pieces of material culture. Her work critically reflects on and addresses discourses and actions of reconciliation and redress regarding relationships between Indigenous peoples and Canada. \n\n\n2025 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 26 @ 09:00 – May 29 @ 16:00  EDT  at Inn at the Forks\, Winnipeg\, Manitoba\n\n2024 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 18\, 2024 – November 20\, 2024 at Delta Hotels Ottawa City Centre\n\n2024 Spring Member Meeting\nApril 22\, 2024 – April 25\, 2024 at Montreal\, Quebec\n\n2023 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 27\, 2023 – November 30\, 2023 at Fairmont Le Château Montebello\n\n2023 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 29\, 2023 – June 1\, 2023 at Calgary Marriott Downown Hotel\n\n\n					\n									See All Member Meetings\n					 \nHotel Details\nHotel Grand Pacific463 Belleville StVictoria\, BC V8V 1X3 \nA block of rooms has been reserved for April 30\, 2019 – May 2\, 2019 at a cost of $159 CAD/night. The special room rate will be available until March 30\, 2019 or until the group block is sold-out\, whichever comes first.We suggest that you reserve as soon as possible to ensure that you can get a room. \nReservations can be made by calling (toll free): 1.800.663.7550 and quoting Canadian Association of Research Libraries or APR19CARL. \nTuesday\, April 30\n8:00 AM – 5:00 PMBoard Meeting (Union Club: McKenzie Lounge) \n6:00 PM – 8:00 PMPresident’s Reception (Swans Hotel Penthouse – 506 Pandora Ave\, Victoria\, BC V8W 1N6) \n\nWednesday\, May 1\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AMBreakfast and Registration (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n8:00 AM – 8:30 AMVPO Lightning Talks (during Breakfast) (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n\nErin Fields\, Liaison Librarian (Humanities and Social Sciences) and Flexible Learning Coordinator\, University of British Columbia; VPO for Open Education\nMaha Kumaran\, Head of the Education & Music Library\, University of Saskatchewan; VPO for Equity\, Diversity\, and Inclusion\n\n \n\n\n\n8:30 AM – 10:30 AMAdvancing Research Committee Meeting (Union Club: McKenzie Room)Strengthening Capacity Committee Meeting (Union Club: McKenzie Lounge) \n10:30 AM – 11:00 AMBreak (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n11:00 AM – 1:00 PMPolicy Committee Meeting (Union Club: McKenzie Room)Assessment Committee Meeting (Union Club: McKenzie Lounge) \n1:00 PM – 2:15 PMLunch (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n2:15 PM – 3:45 PMProgram – Strategic Plan Finalization (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n\nSusan Gibbons\, ARL President\nMerrilee Proffitt\, Senior Manager\, OCLC Research Library Partnership\nJonathan Bengtson\, University Librarian\, University of Victoria; CARL Vice-President\n\nSlides: ARL Action Plan 2019-2020 \nSlides: CARL OCLC Innovation Survey \nDraft: 2019-2022 Strategic Framework \n(Google Doc) \n3:45 PM – 4:00 PMBreak (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n4:00 PM – 5:00 PMSpring Annual General Meeting (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n6:30 PM – 10:00 PMCARL Reception and Dinner (Fireside Grill – 4509 W Saanich Rd\, Victoria\, BC V8Z 3G1) \n\nThursday\, May 2\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AMBreakfast and Registration (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n8:30 AM – 9:00 AMProgram – Portage: Repositories and Training Update (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n\nJeff Moon\, Portage Director\n\nPortage Training Resources \nPortage Progress Report: For the period of January – March\, 2019 \nSlides: Portage Continuum of Training and DRI Update \n9:00 AM – 10:00 AMProgram – Research Information Management Systems Landscape (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n\nDale Askey\, Chief Librarian\, University of Alberta\nDonna Bourne-Tyson\, University Librarian\, Dalhousie University; CARL President\nVivian Lewis\, University Librarian\, McMaster University\nBeth Sandore Namachchivaya\, University Librarian\, Waterloo University\n\nSlides: Research Information Management Systems Landscape: Introduction \n10:00 AM – 10:30 AMBreak (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n10:30 AM – 12:00 PMProgram – Open Infrastructure Investment: Status and Discussion (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n\nCatherine Steeves\, Chief Librarian\, University of Western Ontario\nMackenzie Smith\, University Librarian\, University of California Davis\nKathleen Shearer\, Research Associate\, CARL\n\nSlides: University of California and Elsevier: status of transformative publishing agreements \n12:00 PM – 12:45 PMLunch (Union Club: Centennial Ballroom) \n1:00 PM – 1:30 PMShuttle to University of Victoria (Departing at 1:00 PM in front of Union Club) \n1:45 PM to 4:00 PMProgram – Ethics of Sensitive Information; Repatriation of Cultural Materials; Decolonizing Metadata (Update) (First People’s House\, Victoria\, BC V8P 5C2) \n\nElder Victor Underwood\nJonathan Bengtson\, University Librarian\, University of Victoria; CARL Vice-President\nLisa Goddard\, Associate University Librarian\, Digital Scholarship and Strategy\, University of Victoria\nDr. Andrea Walsh\, Associate Professor of Anthropology\, University of Victoria\nStacy Allison-Cassin\, Digital Humanities Librarian\, York University\n\nSlides: Digital Ethics and Reconciliation \nSlides: Indian Residential and Day School Art Collections and Survivor Communities  4:15 PM – 5:30 PM \nClosing Reception (Digital Scholarship Commons – McPherson Library) \n\nDr. Matt Huculak\, Digital Scholarship Librarian\, University of Victoria\n\n5:30 PM – 7:00 PMBoard Meeting (University of Victoria Library: Room 403) \n7:15 PMBoard Dinner (Marina Restaurant\, 1327 Beach Dr\, Victoria\, BC V8S 2N4) \nStacy Allison-Cassin is an Digital Pedagogy Librarian in the Student Learning and Academic Success Department at York University. She has an active interest in the intersections between people\, metadata\, and infrastructure\, with a particular focus on critical approaches to knowledge organization. Stacy has previously held positions as the W.P. Scott Chair in E-Librarianship\, Digital Humanities Librarian\, and Music Cataloguer. She is the current Vice-Chair of the Canadian Federation of Library Associations Indigenous Matters Committee where she is also co-lead on the Red Team working group on Subject Headings and Classification. A citizen of the Métis Nation of Ontario\, Stacy sits as the Indigenous Ancestry Representative on the CFLA Board of Directors and is an incoming member of the IFLA Indigenous Matters Interest Group\, a position she will hold on behalf of the Canadian Association of Professional Academic Librarians. Stacy is also an active volunteer in the Wikimedia community through which she actively organizes community initiatives focused on the GLAM sector. \nSusan Gibbons became Yale’s university librarian on July 1\, 2011\, and was named a deputy provost on January 1\, 2015.  As deputy provost for collections and scholarly communication\, Gibbons is assigned to all of Yale’s galleries\, museums\, and other holdings\, and is responsible for convening and fostering collaboration among these scholarly resources. This portfolio includes the Yale University Art Gallery\, the Yale Center for British Art\, the Peabody Museum of Natural History\, and other campus collections\, in addition to the university-wide library system and Yale University Press.  Gibbons currently serves as the President of the Association of Research Libraries. \nLisa Goddard is the Associate University Librarian for Digital Scholarship and Strategy at University of Victoria Libraries. She holds degrees from Queen’s\, McGill\, and Memorial University. Lisa’s research interests include open access publishing\, linked data\, digital preservation\, and digital humanities. She is currently the Chair of Portage’s Dataverse North Working Group and CRKN’s ORCID-CA National Advisory Committee. Lisa is a co-investigator on the Endings Project: Preserving Digital Projects for Long-Term Usability; and is a co-investigator on the project Improving African Futures Using Lessons from the Past. She is a member of the technical team for the CFI-funded Linked Infrastructure for Networked Cultural Scholarship (LINCS) project. http://orcid.org/0000-0002-4970-053X \nMerrilee Proffitt is a senior manager with OCLC. She works in OCLC Research and provides project management skills and expert support to institutions within the OCLC Research Library Partnership. \nDr. J. Matthew Huculak is Digital Scholarship Librarian at the University of Victoria Libraries. He holds a PhD in English Language & Literature and an MLIS with a concentration on archives and preservation. He is technical director and founding Managing Editor of Modernism/modernity’s Print Plus platform\, which won the Association of American Publishers 2019 PROSE Awards for “Innovation in Publishing.” His research focuses on libraries\, 20th-century English literature\, book history\, and periodicals. He has served as Editorial Assistant for the James Joyce Quarterly\, Project Director of the National Endowment for the Humanities funded Modernist Journals Project and is currently Director of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council funded Modernist Versions Project and Co-Director of BC Open Textbook-funded Open Modernisms. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2717-1112 \nMacKenzie Smith (University Librarian and Vice Provost of Digital Scholarship) is responsible for creating and leading the strategic vision of the UC Davis Library.  As vice provost of digital scholarship\, MacKenzie defines and leads major university initiatives involving information technology\, data science and informatics\, data governance\, knowledge management\, research computing and digital publishing.  MacKenzie helped launch and continues to oversee UC Davis’ Data Science Initiative\, which supports research in every discipline and coordinates with data technology and analytics units across the university. \nUniversity of California and Elsevier: Status of transformative publishing agreements \nThe University of California recently ended negotiations with Elsevier for a new license that would have made open access publishing the default for UC authored articles while containing costs for accessing paywalled articles. An update will be provided on the terms of the licence UC wanted\, the outcome of the negotiations so far\, and other transformative publishing agreements that UC has made and continues to press for with other scholarly publishers. \nDr. Andrea Walsh is a visual anthropologist who specializes in 20th-century and contemporary aboriginal art and visual culture in Canada\, as well as theoretical and methodological approaches to visual research. She is interested in collections of objects and images and how museums and galleries curate and exhibit these pieces of material culture. Her work critically reflects on and addresses discourses and actions of reconciliation and redress regarding relationships between Indigenous peoples and Canada. \n\n\n2025 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 26 @ 09:00 – May 29 @ 16:00  EDT  at Inn at the Forks\, Winnipeg\, Manitoba\n\n2024 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 18\, 2024 – November 20\, 2024 at Delta Hotels Ottawa City Centre\n\n2024 Spring Member Meeting\nApril 22\, 2024 – April 25\, 2024 at Montreal\, Quebec\n\n2023 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 27\, 2023 – November 30\, 2023 at Fairmont Le Château Montebello\n\n2023 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 29\, 2023 – June 1\, 2023 at Calgary Marriott Downown Hotel\n\n\n					\n									See All Member Meetings
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/2019-spring-member-meeting/
LOCATION:The Union Club of British Columbia\, 805 Gordon Street\, Victoria\, British Columbia\, V8W 1Z6\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Member Meetings
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/NewsFeaturedImage-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20181109T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20181109T235959
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20240910T161852Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260318T140234Z
UID:36084-1541721600-1541807999@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:@Risk North 2: Digital Collections Summit
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the Canadian Association of Research Libraries in collaboration with the Canadian Research Knowledge Network\, Library & Archives Canada and Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec \nDate: Friday\, November 9\, 2018\nLocation: Loews Hôtel Vogue (Paris Ballroom)\, Montreal \nThis full-day open forum will focus on assessing current digital preservation readiness\, resources\, and collaborative initiatives\, with a view to identifying opportunities to strengthen our collective capacity for digital preservation in Canada. This event is meant for practitioners and administrators within academic libraries\, public libraries\, national libraries\, museums\, archives\, and any other organizations who are involved in the digital preservation of cultural and documentary heritage. \nClifford Lynch (Coalition for Networked Information) will provide the opening keynote; the results of CARL’s Digital Preservation Readiness Survey will be presented; and there will be a panel discussion among key stakeholders. \n \n\n					\n				> Agenda			\n		\n		\n			 \nThe MC for the day will be Jonathan Bengtson\, University Librarian at University of Victoria & Chair of CARL Advancing Research Committee’s Digital Preservation Working Group. \nSimultaneous interpretation will be available for all presentations throughout the day. \n8:30 – 9:00 a.m.\nCoffee and light breakfast \n9:00 – 9:15 a.m.\nWelcoming remarks \n\nMaureen Clapperton\, Directrice générale de la Bibliothèque nationale\, BAnQ\n\n9:15 – 10:15 a.m.\nKeynote – The New Challenges of Stewardship in the Digital Age \n\nClifford Lynch\, Director\, Coalition of Networked Information\n\n10:15 – 10:45 a.m.\nNetworking/health break – coffee and refreshments \n10:45 – 11:45 a.m.\nPresentation – Results of the CARL Digital Preservation Working Group’s Survey on Current State and Future Needs in Digital Preservation in Canada \n\nGrant Hurley\, Digital Preservation Librarian\, Scholars Portal (see slides; Phase 1 and Phase 2 interim reports)\n\nFollowed by table discussion then panel response: \n\nLisa Goddard\, Associate University Librarian\, Digital Scholarship & Strategy\, University of Victoria\nGeoff Harder\, Associate University Librarian\, University of Alberta\nMireille Laforce\, directrice du dépôt légal et de la conservation des collections patrimoniales\, BAnQ\n\n11:45 a.m. – 12:45 p.m.\nPanel – “At Scale” Digital Preservation in Canada – Working at the Institutional vs. Regional vs. National Level – introduced and moderated by Carole Urbain\, Steering Committee member\, National Heritage Digitization Strategy and Vice-présidente\, Association pour l’avancement des sciences et des techniques de documentation (ASTED) – (see slides describing NHDS) \n\nJohn Richan\, Digital Archivist\, Records Management & Archives\, Concordia University (see slides)\nSteve Marks\, Digital Preservation Librarian\, University of Toronto Libraries\nCorey Davis\, Digital Preservation Coordinator\, Council of Prairie and Pacific University Libraries coppul.ca/digitalpreservation (see slides)\nKate Davis\, Co-Director\, Scholars Portal\nPascale Montmartin\, Analyste d’affaires en préservation et diffusion des collections numériques\, Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec (see slides)\nFaye Lemay\, Digital Preservation Manager\, Library & Archives Canada (see slides)\n\n12:45 – 1:30 p.m.\nLunch (provided) \n1:30 – 3:00 p.m.\nLightning presentations – ‘A Sampling of Current Canadian Initiatives in Digital Preservation’  (Moderator Corey Davis) \n\nSarah Dupont (University of British Columbia) – Pragmatic Audio Preservation with Aboriginal Peoples – indigitization.ca (see slides)\nLisa Goddard (University of Victoria) – Endings: Building Sustainable Digital Humanities Projects (see slides)\nKarin MacLeod (Library & Archives Canada) – Digital Preservation Starts with Acquiring Digital Content (see slides)\nAnnie Murray (University of Calgary) – Rock Music: A Digital Preservation Gateway Drug (see slides)\nMireille Nappert (Canadian Centre for Architecture) – Preserving Software for Long-term Access to CAD Files (see slides)\nUmar Qasim (University of Alberta & Portage Preservation Expert Group) – Portage’s Federated Approach to Preserve Canadian Research Data (see slides)\nTim Walsh (Concordia University) – Bulk Reviewer: A software application for managing sensitive information in digital archives (see slides)\nJess Whyte (University of Toronto) – FloppyCapture.py – automating forensic disk imaging for accuracy\, efficiency\, and data reuse (see slides)\n\n3:00 – 3:15 p.m.\nNetworking/health break – coffee and refreshments \n3:15 – 4:00 p.m.\nTable discussion & plenary reporting (Moderator Jonathan Bengtson) \n4:00 – 4:30 p.m.\nWrap-up and closing remarks: Clifford Lynch & Jonathan Bengtson \n		\n\n		 \n\n					\n				> Presenter Biographies			\n		\n		\n			 \nJonathan Bengtson is the University Librarian of the University of Victoria\, Canada; Vice-President of CARL; and Chair of the Digital Preservation Working Group of CARL’s Advancing Research Committee. He is also the Editor-in-Chief and founder of KULA: knowledge creation\, dissemination\, and preservation studies. \nA graduate of the school of library and information sciences (EBSI) at the University of Montreal\, Maureen Clapperton was responsible for the documentation centre and document management with the provincial police force\, the Sûreté du Québec\, from 1989 to 2000. From 2000 to 2001\, she was coordinator of strategic monitoring with the Ministère de la Sécurité publique. From 2001 to 2005\, she was director of acquisitions for the heritage collection\, and since 2016 she has been director general of the provincial library and archives\, the Bibliothèque nationale at Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec (BAnQ). From May 2005 to 2016\, she was director of the Bibliothèque Myriam et  J.-Robert Ouimet at HEC Montreal. Maureen is on the board of the BTLF\, which serves the publishing industry; she is a member of the subcommittee of library directors of the BCI (Bureau de coopération interuniversitaire)\, which she chaired in 2010-2011\, and treasurer and a board member of the AIFBD (Association Internationale Francophone des bibliothécaires et Documentalistes). \nCorey Davis is the Digital Preservation Coordinator for the Council of Prairie and Pacific University Libraries (COPPUL)\, where he develops services\, infrastructure\, and organizational capacity to support long-term preservation. He has been active in academic libraries for 15 years\, most recently as Systems Librarian at the University of Victoria\, where he oversaw web archiving and digital preservation. He is active in several national preservation efforts in Canada\, including as a founding member of the Portage Preservation Expert Group\, the Canadian Association of Research Libraries’ Digital Preservation Working Group\, and the Canadian Web Archiving Coalition. \nKate Davis is Co-Director of Scholars Portal\, a shared digital library project of the Ontario Council of University Libraries (OCUL) based at the University of Toronto.  She is responsible for digital collections and digital preservation services offered by Scholars Portal to OCUL member libraries. Kate has a track record of successful IT project management\, including implementation of the Scholars Portal Books platform\, and has wide experience in managing IT project budgets and recruiting and supervising IT staff. \nSarah Dupont\, Métis\, is the Aboriginal Engagement Librarian at the University of British Columbia\, where she coordinates the Indigitization program\, among her other duties. Additionally\, she serves as the UBC iSchool First Nations Curriculum Coordinator and co-instructor of the Indigenous Information Practices course. She is the convenor of the First Nations Interest Group of the BC Library Association and Chair of the Indigenous Knowledge Standing Committee for the Council of Pacific and Prairie University Libraries. \nJean-François Gauvin (MBSI) is director of architecture and design at the BAnQ. His main area of expertise is information systems for libraries and archives\, and major digital issues. His more recent involvement has been with the institution’s digital conservation strategies\, and a major digital dissemination project funded by the Plan Culturel numérique du Québec. He lectured for more than five years at the University of Montreal. \nLisa Goddard is the Associate University Librarian for Digital Scholarship and Strategy at University of Victoria Libraries. She is currently responsible for shaping UVic’s digital preservation strategy\, and for developing infrastructure that can address faculty needs for curation support. Lisa believes that digital preservation is the most pressing challenge facing our profession\, and that solutions will require sustained\, large scale collaboration. Her other research interests include linked data\, open access publishing\, and digital humanities. http://orcid.org/0000-0002-4970-053X. \nGeoff Harder is Associate University Librarian at the University of Alberta where he feels lucky to work with some great colleagues helping to keep the bits alive. His involvement with regional\, national and international DP initiatives includes service as a Board Director for CLOCKSS\, membership on CRKN’s national journal TDR working group\, membership on the NHDS Steering Committee\, and facilitating U of A partnerships with organizations such as Hathitrust\, Internet Archive\, and several LOCKSS-based networks. He is a member of CARL’s Digital Preservation Working Group\, Portage’s Advisory Committee\, and a co-chair of the Open Repositories Working Group. Two kids\, two kittens\, and a two-librarian household complete his profile. \nGrant Hurley is the Digital Preservation Librarian at Scholars Portal\, the information technology service provider for Ontario Council of University Libraries. He oversees the maintenance of the Scholars Portal Trustworthy Digital Repository and the development of digital preservation services\, infrastructure\, and learning opportunities for OCUL members. Grant currently serves as lead of the survey subgroup for the CARL Digital Preservation Working Group and on committees for the Archives Association of Ontario and the Association of Canadian Archivists. \nMireille Laforce is Director of Legal Deposit and Preservation of Heritage Collections at the Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec (BAnQ). She has been with BAnQ since 2004 and previously worked in the Quebec law library sector. In addition to a Master of Library and Information Science\, she holds university degrees in history\, archives and law. \nAs Manager of the Digital Preservation section for about five years\, Faye Lemay leads the development of a comprehensive digital preservation program at Library and Archives Canada. Faye was instrumental in development and deployment of the Strategy for a Digital Preservation Program at LAC in 2017. She oversees the long-term preservation of the LAC Digital Archive: the repository of digital heritage at LAC’s Preservation Centre. \nClifford Lynch has led the Coalition for Networked Information (CNI) since 1997. CNI\, jointly sponsored by the Association of Research Libraries and EDUCAUSE\, includes about 200 member organizations concerned with the intelligent uses of information technology and networked information to enhance scholarship and intellectual life. CNI’s wide-ranging agenda includes work in digital preservation\, data intensive scholarship\, teaching\, learning and technology\, and infrastructure and standards development. Prior to joining CNI\, Lynch spent 18 years at the University of California Office of the President\, the last 10 as Director of Library Automation. Lynch\, who holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of California\, Berkeley\, is an adjunct professor at Berkeley’s School of Information. He is both a past president and recipient of the Award of Merit of the American Society for Information Science\, and a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science\, the Association for Computing Machinery\, and the National Information Standards Organization. He served as co-chair of the National Academies Board on Research Data and Information from 2011-2016; he is active on numerous advisory boards and visiting committees. His work has been recognized by the American Library Association’s Lippincott Award\, the EDUCAUSE Leadership Award in Public Policy and Practice\, and the American Society for Engineering Education’s Homer Bernhardt Award. \nKarin MacLeod is currently the Manager\, Published Acquisitions\, at Library and Archives Canada.  Karin has held this position since joining LAC in 2015 and is primarily responsible with overseeing and raising awareness of the Legal Deposit Program\, acquisition of digital theses and a variety of outreach activities with Canadian publishers and music producers. Karin holds a masters degree in Library and Information Science from the University of Western Ontario. \nSteve Marks is the digital preservation librarian at the University of Toronto. His day-to-day job is to ensure that the library has the planning and technical infrastructure in place to safely preserve the university’s digital stuff – including licensed resources\, archival and special collections\, data\, and whatever else we decide we want to keep. His main research interests are design of information systems\, preservation planning and policy\, futzing around with obsolete media types\, and the preservation of video games. \nPascale Montmartin is a business analyst at the Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec (BAnQ). Holder of a Master’s degree in Library and Information Science\, she coordinated the implementation of BAnQ’s digital collections management system from 2006 to 2013. Since 2014\, she has been a key contributor to the development of a portal for public distribution of BAnQ collections: numerique.banq.qc.ca. She is simultaneously participating in the implementation of policies and procedures as well as the development of a sustainable digital document management platform. \nAnnie Murray is Associate University Librarian for Archives and Special Collections at the University of Calgary\, where she oversees The Canadian Architectural Archives\, Special Collections\, and the University of Calgary Archives. She is a longtime co-applicant in the Spokenweb project to develop web-based interfaces for the exploration of digitized literary audio recordings. She is currently overseeing the preservation of the EMI Music Canada Archive\, with support from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. \nMireille Nappert has a master’s in information sciences\, and is an archivist assigned to the processing of digital archives acquired following the “Archaeology of the Digital” exhibitions (2013-2015) at the Canadian Centre for Architecture. Her previous assignments have mainly involved document management\, particularly in digital formats\, for the Charbonneau Commission inquiry intro construction contracts (Commission d’enquête sur l’octroi et la gestion des contrats publics dans l’industrie de la construction) and for Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. \nDr. Umar Qasim holds a PhD in Information Systems. He has over 20 years of experience in the field of information technology. Since 2012 he has been working as the Digital Preservation Officer at the University of Alberta Libraries with responsibility for its digital preservation program. He is also involved in many collaborative initiatives and shares his expertise with the professional community of practice at large. He is the current chair of Portage’s Preservation Expert Group. \nJohn Richan is a Digital Archivist at the Records Management and Archives department at Concordia University and MLIS graduate from the McGill University School of Information Studies (‘14). Current professional projects include building digital preservation workflows and leveraging open-source tools from digital object transfer through to Archival Information Package (AIP) creation. \nCarole Urbain is currently Senior Director\, Academic Affairs at McGill University Library. Her career has been marked by numerous projects at the National Library of Quebec\, the University of Montreal\, and then the McGill University. As a member of the National Heritage Digitization Strategy Steering Committee for two years\, she has collaborated on a study to develop best practices for infrastructure to ensure the preservation of digitized material. \nTim Walsh is the Digital Preservation Librarian at Concordia University Library. Prior to joining Concordia\, Tim was a Summer Fellow at the Harvard Library Innovation Lab as well as the Canadian Centre for Architecture’s first Digital Archivist. He is the developer of several digital preservation utilities including Brunnhilde\, a reporting and characterization tool for digital archives\, and METSFlask\, a web application for human-friendly exploration of Archivematica METS files. \nJess Whyte is the Digital Asset Librarian at the University of Toronto\, where she previously held the position of Digital Preservation Intake Coordinator and obtained her MI. Jess co-authored Building OpenSocial Apps\, one of the first books on developing for social networks\, and is a member of the Software Preservation Network’s Legal Working Group\, OCUL’s Digital Curation Community\, and the EaaSI (or Emulation-as-a-Service Infrastructure) Advisory Committee. \n		\n\n		 \n\n					\n				> Recordings			\n		\n		\n			 \nPlease note that all the @Risk North 2 : Digital Collections presentations were recorded\, and are available for viewing at CARL’s YouTube page: \nhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCK59-sdDLfQgUUoAuiOVQeQ \nStart times for each session are listed in the notes below the video. \n		\n\n		 \n\n					\n				> Presentation Abstracts			\n		\n		\n			 \nKeynote:\nClifford Lynch\, PhD (Director\, Coalition of Networked Information)\nThe New Challenges of Stewardship in the Digital Age\nThis talk will look broadly at the profound challenges of managing and preserving not only the scholarly record (which is in a very real sense the easiest part of the problem) but also the much broader\, more diverse\, and more dynamic cultural record that will serve as essential evidence to support scholarship both today and into the future. \nMorning Presentation:\nGrant Hurley\, Digital Preservation Librarian\, Scholars Portal\nResults of the CARL Digital Preservation Working Group’s Survey on Current State and Future Needs in Digital Preservation in Canada\nThis presentation will provide a summary of the results of the 2017-18 CARL Digital Preservation Working Group’s survey of digital preservation capacity and needs among Canadian memory institutions. The survey received 51 responses from academic libraries\, government-operated libraries\, archives and museums\, and community-focused organizations and non-profits. The results provide an up-to-date picture of digital preservation activities and ongoing needs in Canada that are intended to inform the development of strategies\, policies\, expertise and resource allocation. The presentation will be followed by a table discussion and panel response in reaction to the survey results.\nMorning Panel:\n“At Scale” Digital Preservation in Canada – Working at the Institutional vs. Regional vs. National Level\nThis session will surface the advantages\, challenges\, and opportunities that a variety of organizations/institutions have experienced in working “at-scale” on issues of digital preservation. John Richan will speak to Concordia University Archives and Records Management Department’s relatively nascent digital preservation program while Steve Marks will describe the University of Toronto Libraries’ well-established digital preservation efforts\, and efforts to rethink their approach. Corey Davis (COPPUL) and Kate Davis (Scholars Portal) will present about their regional consortial efforts\, while Jean-François Gauvin (BAnQ) and Faye Lemay (LAC) will describe challenges and opportunities at the national scale. The panel will engage in a discussion in which cases activities are best situated at the national (or even international) and regional level vs. more local approaches. \nLightning Talks:\nSarah Dupont (Aboriginal Engagement Librarian\, University of British Columbia Library)\nPragmatic Audio Preservation with Aboriginal Peoples (indigitization.ca)\nDuring the twentieth century\, academics conducting research on Aboriginal peoples generated audio recordings of important cultural traditions\, customs\, practices\, and other information. Given the cultural importance of these data\, individuals in Aboriginal nations\, communities\, and organizations stored the analogue audio recordings that were returned to them or found. Many have recently become aware of the fragility of the physical format and the urgent need to preserve them digitally. Post-digitization efforts with these recordings\, such as language translation\, content analysis\, and further research is often required and undertaken for these pieces to contribute to their broader cultural revitalization efforts. \nIndigitization is a grant program coordinated through the University of British Columbia Library with the objective of building capacity in cultural heritage media management. It identifies equipment and procedures to achieve preservation standards for the digitization of audio cassettes. Because there is limited funding for this work\, achieving the highest standards is difficult in most situations. Challenges that are unique to Aboriginal settings regarding the preserving of digital files will be discussed\, along with key strategies to overcome limitations. \nLisa Goddard (Associate University Librarian\, Digital Scholarship and Strategy\, University of Victoria Libraries)\nEndings: Building Sustainable Digital Humanities Projects (project website)\nSuccessful models for bringing Digital Humanities projects to closure are rare\, and models for truly sustainable preservation are nonexistent. The Endings Project is a SSHRC-funded collaboration between faculty members\, librarians\, and programmers at the University of Victoria. We aim to develop practical strategies for concluding and preserving scholarly digital projects\, and for maintaining long-term usability across a range of disciplines and DH methodologies. The Endings Project team has interviewed more than twenty-five project leads to better understand the factors that put even major\, well-known DH projects at risk of oblivion. With a focus on five in-depth case studies\, the project is developing tools and documentation to transform finished projects into static websites that can easily be archived in ways that preserve access\, and are scalable for university libraries and other preservation partners. In this lightning talk\, co-investigator\, Lisa Goddard\, will give an overview of our findings to date\, and will highlight key opportunities for library intervention and partnership. \nKarin MacLeod (Manager\, Published Acquisitions\, Library and Archives Canada)\nDigital Preservation Starts with Acquiring Digital Content\nDigital collections present information sharing opportunities and preservation challenges\, both of which begin with actually having the precious digital content.  This speaks to the need for library acquisition teams to evolve collecting practices to ensure digital content is acquired and assembled into robust collections. \nThis lightning talk will focus on 3 recent digital acquisition initiatives the Published Heritage Branch at LAC has embarked on with the goal of enhancing its acquisition of digital content. \nWhile Legal Deposit regulations were expanded in 2007 to include digital publications\, limitations in LAC’s technical infrastructure prevented us from systematically acquiring this content.  Until now…with testing of a new Digital Asset Management System underway and an exciting suite of new ingest tools on the horizon we are preparing for change.  Some recent activities this talk will elaborate on are: \n\nDigital News Ingest Pilot – a modest initiative in which LAC worked with 3 newspaper publishers to explore digital news formats\, content coverage and ingest options. Insights regarding selection criteria\, content volume and staff capacity were gleaned and results are informing development of a new Newspaper Strategy.\nE-Theses – failure of legacy harvesting tools has prompted LAC to examine its collection of e-theses\, explore new acquisition processes and address known preservation challenges.\nTargeted outreach with creators of digital content – creators of digital music and e-books have suggested several new and innovative acquisition partnerships for LAC to explore.\n\nMost significantly\, the necessity for Acquisition teams to work in close collaboration with our Preservation colleagues has never been more apparent. To become acquainted with preservation requirements and embed these considerations in acquisition work flows clearly benefits both the development of LAC’s digital collections and ensures their discoverability\, both now and far into the future. \nAnnie Murray (Associate University Librarian for Archives and Special Collections\, University of Calgary)\nRock Music: A Digital Preservation Gateway Drug\nRock and pop music are ubiquitous\, but the audiovisual recordings that house music present a preservation challenge for memory institutions. I will show how the acquisition of the EMI Music Canada Archive is a gateway to the development of comprehensive digital preservation planning in Libraries and Cultural Resources at the University of Calgary. \nThe EMI archive consists of more than 5\,500 boxes of materials\, including more than 40\,000 audiovisual recordings\, some of which are at great risk of degradation. With the support of The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation\, the migration of these recordings is underway. What of the resulting digital assets? How will they be managed and preserved? The EMI project has spurred reflection and analysis of the library’s overall capacity to store\, manage\, preserve\, and provide access to a variety of digital assets. \nI will highlight the components of our emerging capacity to preserve this collection\, and all of our digital assets. I will describe the library’s development and planning related to staff expertise\, equipment\, network infrastructure\, storage\, and the implementation of a digital asset management system. Lastly\, I will highlight the preservation challenges and opportunities presented by this large and complex archive. \nMireille Nappert (Digital Processing Archivist\, Canadian Centre for Architecture)\nPreserving Software for Long-term Access to CAD Files\nThe Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA) has been collecting digital materials for over 1O years now. In the past few years\, it has established workflows to process and preserve these digital objects\, which can range from a simple Word document to a Rhino or form*Z model. Most CAD formats are traditionally proprietary and there is no automated way to update file formats to current available software. Acquiring and preserving software\, through donations and partnerships is vital in order to provide access to the original files on the long term. The talk will overview the need to preserve software for access to complex digital objects; mention the type of work involved in order to retain the software and reuse it to access files; and indicate software preservation initiatives from other organization (YALE\, Software Preservation Network\, etc.) \nUmar Qasim\, PhD (Digital Preservation Officer\, University of Alberta and Chair of Portage’s Preservation Expert Group)\nPortage’s Federated Approach to Preserve Canadian Research Data\nLaunched in 2015 by the Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL)\, Portage Network is working to meet the data management and archiving needs of Canadian researchers. Portage is in a process of establishing an Open Archival Information System (OAIS) type archive that provides a platform to deposit\, find\, share and preserve research data. Portage works within the library community to coordinate expertise\, services\, and technology and planning to setup this archive in collaboration with several other key stakeholders. \nThe Portage’s Preservation Expert Group (PEG) is working to identify the challenges that need to be addressed by Portage and other stakeholders in order to develop and improve RDM capacity and infrastructure across the country\, especially as it relates to the long-term preservation of research data. PEG members have recently authored a position paper which provides a framework within which digital preservation can be defined\, discussed and achieved in the Canadian context. It also provides a set of guiding principles that reflect the values and commitments of organizations and communities already involved in this work. \nTim Walsh (Digital Preservation Librarian\, Concordia University)\nBulk Reviewer: A Software Application for Managing Sensitive Information in Digital Archives\nBulk Reviewer is a software application designed to help librarians\, archivists\, and other digital preservation practitioners to identify\, review\, and remove files containing sensitive information in digital archives. Bulk Reviewer scans directories and disk images for personally identifying information (PII) and other sensitive information using bulk_extractor\, a best-in-class open source digital forensics tool\, and presents results in a review dashboard\, enabling easier detection and dismissal of false positives. It provides the ability to generate CSV reports about inputs as well as the ability to export files from directories and disk images\, separating problematic files from those that are free of sensitive information. \nThis project was started while the author was a 2018 Summer Fellow at the Library Innovation Lab at Harvard University. It is built using Django\, Django Rest Framework\, Celery\, Django Channels\, and Vue.js.  It is currently under active development as a research project at Concordia University Library\, and is still in the exploratory/prototype phase. Topics to explore in the lightning talk include work done on the application so far as well as anticipated future development\, including customization of existing open-source tools to better support the needs of Canadian institutions and data. \nJess Whyte  (Digital Asset Librarian\, University of Toronto)\nAutomating Forensic Disk Imaging for Accuracy\, Efficiency\, and Data Reuse\nThe University of Toronto Libraries (UTL) is currently migrating content off at-risk digital media in its collections. One media format\, floppy disks\, poses a particular challenge in its heterogeneity and the skill level required to extract data in a manner that is sound. We needed a way to image these disks that reduced those barriers\, was error-proof for student employees\, and scalable. \nWe found that traditional GUI tools for imaging floppy disks were quite slow\, required entering the same information in multiple locations\, and introduced too many opportunities for error or inconsistency. \nThe solution\, a script and workstation setup\, has reduced our input errors\, reuses existing metadata in the UTL system\, produces consistent output\, and speeds up our processes. Instead of being able to image 5-6 disks/hr\, we can now image 10-12 disks/hr\, and our quality control and verification processes are improved. \nThis lightning talk will cover the challenge presented\, an overview of the script\, and a quick demo of the process.
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/risk-north-2-digital-collections-summit/
LOCATION:Loews Hôtel Vogue\, 1425 Rue de la Montagne\, Montreal\, Quebec\, H3G 1Z3\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Digital Preservation,RiskNorth
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20181106T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20181109T235959
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20251107T004821Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251107T005152Z
UID:38415-1541462400-1541807999@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:2018 Fall Member Meeting
DESCRIPTION:« All Events\n \n\n	2018 Fall Member Meeting\n\n			November 6\, 2018\n	  –\n	November 9\, 2018\n	 \nThe Canadian Association of Research Libraries is pleased to invite member directors to the 2018 Fall Member Meeting. This annual gathering serves as a vital platform for the exchange of ideas\, strategic planning\, and collaborative discussions that shape the future of research libraries across Canada. \n					\n				\n									2018 Fall Member Meeting Program (PDF)\n					 \n\n	Hôtel Le Crystal\n\n1100 de la Montagne\n		\n		Montreal\,\n	Quebec\n	H3G 0A1\n	Canada\n\n\n	+ Google Map \n\n					\n						\n	 \n\n\n\n					\n				Accommodation\n		\n				\n				Program Schedule\n		\n				\n				Recent Meetings\n		 \nHotel Details\nHôtel Le Crystal1100 de la MontagneMontréal\, Québec\, H3G 0A1 \nA block of rooms has been reserved for November 5-7\, 2018 at a cost of $199 CAD/night.   The special room rate will be available until October 9\, 2018 or until the group block is sold-out\, whichever comes first. \nWe suggest that you reserve as soon as possible to ensure that you can get a room. \n					\n				\n									Booking Link\n					 \nTuesday\, November 6\n8:00 AM – 5:00 PMBoard Meeting (Drummond) \n6:30 PM – 8:30 PMPresident’s Reception (Lounge Bishop) \n\nWednesday\, November 7\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AMBreakfast and Registration (Espace Ste Catherine) \n8:30 AM – 10:30 AMAdvancing Research Committee Meeting (René-Lévesque B)Assessment Committee Meeting (René-Lévesque A) \n10:30 AM – 11:00 AMBreak (Lounge Bishop) \n11:00 AM – 1:00 PMPolicy Committee Meeting (René-Lévesque B)Strengthening Capacity Committee Meeting (René-Lévesque A) \n1:00 PM – 2:00 PMLunch (Espace Ste Catherine) \n2:00 PM – 3:00 PMPortage Briefing (Crescent)Presenters: \n\nJeff Moon\, Portage Director\nSusan Haigh\, CARL Executive Director\nDonna Bourne-Tyson\, Dalhousie University Librarian and CARL President\n\nPortage Progress Report for the period of July – September 2018 \nSlides: Portage Update: Key Accomplishments & Outlook for 2019 \n3:00 PM – 4:00 PMAdvancing Research Session: OER: Positioning Libraries (Crescent)Presenters: \n\nLise Brin\, Program Officer\, CARL\nDianne Cmor\, Associate University Librarian\, Teaching & Learning\, Concordia University\nJoy Kirchner\, Dean of Libraries\, York University\nAnn Ludbrook\, Copyright and Scholarly Engagement Librarian\, Ryerson University\n\nSee Draft “Plan for Building Capacity for OER in Canadian libraries” \nSlides: OER: Positioning Libraries \n4:00 PM – 4:15 PMBreak (Lounge Bishop) \n4:15 PM – 5:15 PMFall Annual General Meeting (Crescent) \n6:30 PM – 10:00 PMCARL Reception and Dinner (Pointe-à-Callière\, 350 Place Royale\, Old Montréal) \n\nThursday\, November 8\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AMBreakfast and Registration (Espace Ste Catherine) \n8:30 AM – 10:15 PMStrategic Planning (2019-2022) (Crescent)Presenters \n\nDonna Bourne-Tyson\, Dalhousie University Librarian and CARL President\nJonathan Bengtson\, University of Victoria University Librarian and Chair of Strategic Planning\nKeynote Address: Catherine Murray-Rust\, Dean of Libraries\, Georgia Tech\n\nSee \nCARL Strategic Planning // Planification stratégique de l’ABRC \nSynthesis of Strategic Plans Related to Research Libraries \nSlides: Catherine Murray-Rust Keynote Address \nSlides: Strategic Planning \n10:15 AM – 10:45 AMBREAK (Lounge Bishop) \n10:45 AM – 12:00 PMStrategic Planning (2019-2022) (Crescent) \n12:00 PM – 1:00 PMLUNCH (Espace Ste Catherine) \n1:00 PM – 1:45 PMAssessment (Statistics Program) (Crescent)Presenter: \n\nWayne Jones\, University Librarian\, Carleton University\n\nReport and Recommendations on the Statistical Survey of Canadian Academic and Research Libraries \nSlides: Statistics\, No Damned Lies … But Some Inconsistencies \n1:45 PM to 2:15 PMPolicy (Copyright and Litigation Debrief) (Crescent)Presenters: \n\nMartha Whitehead\, Queen’s University Librarian and Chair of CARL’s Policy Committee\nSusan Haigh\, CARL Executive Director\nMark Swartz\, Copyright Manager at Queen’s and CARL Visiting Program Officer\n\nSlides: Policy Matters \n2:15 PM – 2:30 PMBREAK (Lounge Bishop) \n2:30 PM – 4:15 PMCapacity (Core Competencies; Diversity) (Crescent)Presenters: \n\nVivian Lewis\, McMaster University Librarian\, and Chair of the Strengthening Capacity Committee.\nKathleen DeLong\, University of Alberta Associate University Librarian\, and Chair of CARL’s Core Competencies Working Group\nMark A. Puente\, Director of Diversity and Leadership Programs\, Association of Research Libraries\nGwen Bird\, Simon Fraser University Librarian and member of CARL’s Strengthening Capacity Committee\n\nSee: \nSlides: Contemporary Approaches to Leading the Liberated (Academic) Library \nReport on Member Responses from the Session on Strengthening Indigenous Representation and Reconciliation \nResults from Survey on Internship Programs to Increase Indigenous Representation in our Workforce \n4:30 PM – 5:30 PMBoard Meeting (Drummond) \n\n\n2025 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 26 @ 09:00 – May 29 @ 16:00  EDT  at Inn at the Forks\, Winnipeg\, Manitoba\n\n2024 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 18\, 2024 – November 20\, 2024 at Delta Hotels Ottawa City Centre\n\n2024 Spring Member Meeting\nApril 22\, 2024 – April 25\, 2024 at Montreal\, Quebec\n\n2023 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 27\, 2023 – November 30\, 2023 at Fairmont Le Château Montebello\n\n2023 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 29\, 2023 – June 1\, 2023 at Calgary Marriott Downown Hotel\n\n\n					\n									See All Member Meetings\n					 \nHotel Details\nHôtel Le Crystal1100 de la MontagneMontréal\, Québec\, H3G 0A1 \nA block of rooms has been reserved for November 5-7\, 2018 at a cost of $199 CAD/night.   The special room rate will be available until October 9\, 2018 or until the group block is sold-out\, whichever comes first. \nWe suggest that you reserve as soon as possible to ensure that you can get a room. \n					\n				\n									Booking Link\n					 \nTuesday\, November 6\n8:00 AM – 5:00 PMBoard Meeting (Drummond) \n6:30 PM – 8:30 PMPresident’s Reception (Lounge Bishop) \n\nWednesday\, November 7\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AMBreakfast and Registration (Espace Ste Catherine) \n8:30 AM – 10:30 AMAdvancing Research Committee Meeting (René-Lévesque B)Assessment Committee Meeting (René-Lévesque A) \n10:30 AM – 11:00 AMBreak (Lounge Bishop) \n11:00 AM – 1:00 PMPolicy Committee Meeting (René-Lévesque B)Strengthening Capacity Committee Meeting (René-Lévesque A) \n1:00 PM – 2:00 PMLunch (Espace Ste Catherine) \n2:00 PM – 3:00 PMPortage Briefing (Crescent)Presenters: \n\nJeff Moon\, Portage Director\nSusan Haigh\, CARL Executive Director\nDonna Bourne-Tyson\, Dalhousie University Librarian and CARL President\n\nPortage Progress Report for the period of July – September 2018 \nSlides: Portage Update: Key Accomplishments & Outlook for 2019 \n3:00 PM – 4:00 PMAdvancing Research Session: OER: Positioning Libraries (Crescent)Presenters: \n\nLise Brin\, Program Officer\, CARL\nDianne Cmor\, Associate University Librarian\, Teaching & Learning\, Concordia University\nJoy Kirchner\, Dean of Libraries\, York University\nAnn Ludbrook\, Copyright and Scholarly Engagement Librarian\, Ryerson University\n\nSee Draft “Plan for Building Capacity for OER in Canadian libraries” \nSlides: OER: Positioning Libraries \n4:00 PM – 4:15 PMBreak (Lounge Bishop) \n4:15 PM – 5:15 PMFall Annual General Meeting (Crescent) \n6:30 PM – 10:00 PMCARL Reception and Dinner (Pointe-à-Callière\, 350 Place Royale\, Old Montréal) \n\nThursday\, November 8\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AMBreakfast and Registration (Espace Ste Catherine) \n8:30 AM – 10:15 PMStrategic Planning (2019-2022) (Crescent)Presenters \n\nDonna Bourne-Tyson\, Dalhousie University Librarian and CARL President\nJonathan Bengtson\, University of Victoria University Librarian and Chair of Strategic Planning\nKeynote Address: Catherine Murray-Rust\, Dean of Libraries\, Georgia Tech\n\nSee \nCARL Strategic Planning // Planification stratégique de l’ABRC \nSynthesis of Strategic Plans Related to Research Libraries \nSlides: Catherine Murray-Rust Keynote Address \nSlides: Strategic Planning \n10:15 AM – 10:45 AMBREAK (Lounge Bishop) \n10:45 AM – 12:00 PMStrategic Planning (2019-2022) (Crescent) \n12:00 PM – 1:00 PMLUNCH (Espace Ste Catherine) \n1:00 PM – 1:45 PMAssessment (Statistics Program) (Crescent)Presenter: \n\nWayne Jones\, University Librarian\, Carleton University\n\nReport and Recommendations on the Statistical Survey of Canadian Academic and Research Libraries \nSlides: Statistics\, No Damned Lies … But Some Inconsistencies \n1:45 PM to 2:15 PMPolicy (Copyright and Litigation Debrief) (Crescent)Presenters: \n\nMartha Whitehead\, Queen’s University Librarian and Chair of CARL’s Policy Committee\nSusan Haigh\, CARL Executive Director\nMark Swartz\, Copyright Manager at Queen’s and CARL Visiting Program Officer\n\nSlides: Policy Matters \n2:15 PM – 2:30 PMBREAK (Lounge Bishop) \n2:30 PM – 4:15 PMCapacity (Core Competencies; Diversity) (Crescent)Presenters: \n\nVivian Lewis\, McMaster University Librarian\, and Chair of the Strengthening Capacity Committee.\nKathleen DeLong\, University of Alberta Associate University Librarian\, and Chair of CARL’s Core Competencies Working Group\nMark A. Puente\, Director of Diversity and Leadership Programs\, Association of Research Libraries\nGwen Bird\, Simon Fraser University Librarian and member of CARL’s Strengthening Capacity Committee\n\nSee: \nSlides: Contemporary Approaches to Leading the Liberated (Academic) Library \nReport on Member Responses from the Session on Strengthening Indigenous Representation and Reconciliation \nResults from Survey on Internship Programs to Increase Indigenous Representation in our Workforce \n4:30 PM – 5:30 PMBoard Meeting (Drummond) \n\n\n2025 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 26 @ 09:00 – May 29 @ 16:00  EDT  at Inn at the Forks\, Winnipeg\, Manitoba\n\n2024 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 18\, 2024 – November 20\, 2024 at Delta Hotels Ottawa City Centre\n\n2024 Spring Member Meeting\nApril 22\, 2024 – April 25\, 2024 at Montreal\, Quebec\n\n2023 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 27\, 2023 – November 30\, 2023 at Fairmont Le Château Montebello\n\n2023 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 29\, 2023 – June 1\, 2023 at Calgary Marriott Downown Hotel\n\n\n					\n									See All Member Meetings
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/2018-fall-member-meeting/
LOCATION:Hôtel Le Crystal\, 1100 de la Montagne\, Montreal\, Quebec\, H3G 0A1\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Member Meetings
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20180618T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20180621T235959
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20250425T074618Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251015T145845Z
UID:36847-1529280000-1529625599@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:2018 Librarians’ Research Institute
DESCRIPTION:Date: June 18 – 21\, 2018 \nLocation: Montreal\, Quebec.  \nPeer Mentors:\n\nSelinda Berg (Interim Associate University Librarian – University of Windsor\, and 2018 LRI Program Co-Chair);\nTony Horava (Associate University Librarian\, Collections – University of Ottawa\, and 2018 LRI Program Co-Chair);\nCara Bradley (Research & Scholarship Librarian – University of Regina);\nKarine Fournier (Head\, Reference Services – University of Ottawa);\nSean Luyk (Digital Initiatives Projects Librarian – University of Alberta);\nMichelle Lake (Associate Librarian\, Government Publications\, Political Science and First Peoples Studies – Concordia University).\n\nApplication Process\nCall for Nominations: 2018 Librarians’ Research Institute Participants \nWe are now accepting nominations for participants for the 2018 Librarians’ Research Institute. These participants will attend a four-day Institute at Concordia University (June 18-21\, 2018)\, which will be geared toward taking current research skills to the next level\, building upon current research interests\, and making connections with other researching academic librarians\, from across Canada. Participants should possess the following: \n\nSome experience in research beyond the MLIS degree\, such as producing a conference presentation\, an article\, or a research grant.\nA foundational knowledge of research methodologies and skills\, such as proposal writing\, literature reviews\, developing research questions\, using different research methodologies\, analyzing data\, assessing ethical issues\, etc.\nAn eagerness and openness to develop one’s own skills\, share ideas with others\, provide feedback and support to others’ research endeavours.\nAn interest in taking the energy and enthusiasm for research gained at the institute back to their home institution.\n\nThe Institute will include activities such as plenary sessions; panel discussions with Peer Mentors; small group discussions; small group and individual activities; individual reflection and assessment; consultations with Peer Mentors\, individual writing time; peer workshops; and final presentations of work completed during the Institute. Upon completion of the Institute\, participants will leave with the following: \n\nA positive outlook on the possibilities for research and a recognition of the habits of mind that enable good research practices.\nA broader understanding of librarian research processes and an awareness of the research being undertaken by librarians at Canadian libraries.\nConnections with other academic librarians working on scholarly research projects at libraries across Canada.\n\nPlease note that this is the first bilingual edition of the LRI. Although presentations will be in English\, participants will be divided into breakout groups based on their primary language\, one-on-one consultations with peer mentors will be offered in both languages\, all LRI materials have been translated\, and French-Speaking Peer Mentors will be available to translate questions and responses. \nNomination and Application Process \nRegistration is limited to 30 participants. Applications from all Canadian libraries are welcome\, however\, priority will be given to CARL member libraries.\nRegistrants / participants must submit a nomination package which will include the following: \n\na current CV;\na short description of why the participant wishes to attend;\na brief outline of the research project/research question the participant is exploring\, and;\na letter of endorsement from the Library Dean/Director.\n\nNomination packages should be sent to the attention of Julie Morin (julie.morin@carl-abrc.ca)\, on or before March 30\, 2018. \nParticipants will be announced and follow-up information about the Institute will be sent in the spring. Prior to attending the Institute\, participants will be asked to submit a short overview of their research background\, and their current research interests. \nFees\nCARL members: $650\nNon-members: $850 \nFees include all workshop materials\, breakfast\, lunch\, and breaks for the duration of the workshop. Travel\, accommodation\, and other expenses are the responsibility of the participant. \nFor more information\, contact: \nJulie Morin\nProject Officer\, CARL\njulie.morin@carl-abrc.ca\n613.482.9344 x 107
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/2018-librarians-research-institute/
LOCATION:Montreal\, Quebec\, Montreal\, Quebec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:LRI,Workshops & Institutes
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20180430T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20180501T235959
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20251107T003406Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251107T004148Z
UID:38410-1525046400-1525219199@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:2018 Spring Member Meeting
DESCRIPTION:« All Events\n \n\n	2018 Spring Member Meeting\n\n			April 30\, 2018\n	  –\n	May 1\, 2018\n	 \nThe Canadian Association of Research Libraries is pleased to invite member directors to the 2018 Spring Member Meeting. This annual gathering serves as a vital platform for the exchange of ideas\, strategic planning\, and collaborative discussions that shape the future of research libraries across Canada. \n					\n									2018 Spring Member Meeting Agenda (PDF)\n					 \n\n	DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel and Conference Centre\n\n1975 Broad Street\n		\n		Regina\,\n	Saskatchewan\n	S4P 1Y1\n	Canada\n\n\n	+ Google Map \n\n					\n						\n	 \n\n\n\n					\n				Accommodation\n		\n				\n				Program Overview\n		\n				\n				Recent Meetings\n		 \nHotel Details\nDoubleTree by Hilton Hotel and Conference Centre \n1975 Broad Street \nRegina\, SK S4P 1Y1 \nA block of rooms has been reserved for April 29\, 2018 – May 4\, 2018 at a cost of $129 CAD/night.   The special room rate will be available until April 7\, 2018 or until the group block is sold-out\, whichever comes first. \nWe suggest that you reserve as soon as possible to ensure that you can get a room. Booking link: http://doubletree.hilton.com/en/dt/groups/personalized/Y/YQRCCDT-LIB-20180429/index.jhtml?WT.mc_id=POG \nFor phone reservations\, guests can reach the Reservations Department at 306-525-6767 and quote the booking code LIB.  Also you can call 1-800-667-8162 and refer to the booking link SLA to book their rooms via the central reservations system. \nProgram Overview\nSunday\, April 29\, 2018 – Board Meeting (Board members only) \nMonday\, April 30\, 2018 – CARL Committee Meetings\, Annual General Meeting\, CARL Reception & Dinner \nTuesday\, May 1\, 2018 – CARL Program Sessions; CFLA Reception \nWednesday\, May 2\, 2018- CFLA-FCAB National Forum \nThursday May 3 & Friday May 4\, 2018 – SLA Conference \nThe Canadian Federation of Library Associations (CFLA) will be convening its first National Forum with the conference theme\, Libraries! Convergence Under Living Skies\, encouraging libraries of all types from across Canada to work together to identify commonalities\, share experiences\, build on success and plan together for our shared future. The Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL)\,  in conjunction with CFLA-FCAB\, encourage you to attend. Each director is welcome to invite any staff to attend this forum on May 2\, 2018. The cost of registration is $225: https://saskla.wufoo.eu/forms/pxt6t6m0pc9zpu/ \nFor more information: http://cfla-fcab.ca/en/meetings/national-forum-2018/ \nFor those wishing to attend the Saskatchewan Library Association (SLA) Annual Conference\, there is a discounted rate of $325 for the CFLA Forum & SLA Conference. Registration will be open soon. For more information: https://saskla.ca/programs/2018-conference \n\n\n2025 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 26 @ 09:00 – May 29 @ 16:00  EDT  at Inn at the Forks\, Winnipeg\, Manitoba\n\n2024 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 18\, 2024 – November 20\, 2024 at Delta Hotels Ottawa City Centre\n\n2024 Spring Member Meeting\nApril 22\, 2024 – April 25\, 2024 at Montreal\, Quebec\n\n2023 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 27\, 2023 – November 30\, 2023 at Fairmont Le Château Montebello\n\n2023 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 29\, 2023 – June 1\, 2023 at Calgary Marriott Downown Hotel\n\n\n					\n									See All Member Meetings\n					 \nHotel Details\nDoubleTree by Hilton Hotel and Conference Centre \n1975 Broad Street \nRegina\, SK S4P 1Y1 \nA block of rooms has been reserved for April 29\, 2018 – May 4\, 2018 at a cost of $129 CAD/night.   The special room rate will be available until April 7\, 2018 or until the group block is sold-out\, whichever comes first. \nWe suggest that you reserve as soon as possible to ensure that you can get a room. Booking link: http://doubletree.hilton.com/en/dt/groups/personalized/Y/YQRCCDT-LIB-20180429/index.jhtml?WT.mc_id=POG \nFor phone reservations\, guests can reach the Reservations Department at 306-525-6767 and quote the booking code LIB.  Also you can call 1-800-667-8162 and refer to the booking link SLA to book their rooms via the central reservations system. \nProgram Overview\nSunday\, April 29\, 2018 – Board Meeting (Board members only) \nMonday\, April 30\, 2018 – CARL Committee Meetings\, Annual General Meeting\, CARL Reception & Dinner \nTuesday\, May 1\, 2018 – CARL Program Sessions; CFLA Reception \nWednesday\, May 2\, 2018- CFLA-FCAB National Forum \nThursday May 3 & Friday May 4\, 2018 – SLA Conference \nThe Canadian Federation of Library Associations (CFLA) will be convening its first National Forum with the conference theme\, Libraries! Convergence Under Living Skies\, encouraging libraries of all types from across Canada to work together to identify commonalities\, share experiences\, build on success and plan together for our shared future. The Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL)\,  in conjunction with CFLA-FCAB\, encourage you to attend. Each director is welcome to invite any staff to attend this forum on May 2\, 2018. The cost of registration is $225: https://saskla.wufoo.eu/forms/pxt6t6m0pc9zpu/ \nFor more information: http://cfla-fcab.ca/en/meetings/national-forum-2018/ \nFor those wishing to attend the Saskatchewan Library Association (SLA) Annual Conference\, there is a discounted rate of $325 for the CFLA Forum & SLA Conference. Registration will be open soon. For more information: https://saskla.ca/programs/2018-conference \n\n\n2025 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 26 @ 09:00 – May 29 @ 16:00  EDT  at Inn at the Forks\, Winnipeg\, Manitoba\n\n2024 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 18\, 2024 – November 20\, 2024 at Delta Hotels Ottawa City Centre\n\n2024 Spring Member Meeting\nApril 22\, 2024 – April 25\, 2024 at Montreal\, Quebec\n\n2023 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 27\, 2023 – November 30\, 2023 at Fairmont Le Château Montebello\n\n2023 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 29\, 2023 – June 1\, 2023 at Calgary Marriott Downown Hotel\n\n\n					\n									See All Member Meetings
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/2018-spring-member-meeting/
LOCATION:DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel and Conference Centre\, 1975 Broad Street\, Regina\, Saskatchewan\, S4P 1Y1\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Member Meetings
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20171110T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20171110T160000
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20250408T211744Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260318T140233Z
UID:36681-1510300800-1510329600@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:@Risk North
DESCRIPTION:    \n     \n@Risk North (Collections en péril)\nLeveraging shared resources & expertise to preserve print research collections \nDate: November 10\, 2017  \nTime: 8:30 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.  \nLibrary & Archives Canada\n395 Wellington Street\, Ottawa\, Ontario K1A 0N4 \nThere will be presentations in both French and English. Simultaneous translation will be provided. \nRegistration: $125 (waived for presenters and CARL or CRL library directors — or their designate) \nAs libraries witness increasing demand for online resources and dwindling circulation of print holdings\, and at the same time confront budget and space pressures\, it can be challenging to remain committed to sustaining academic libraries’ print collections. Cooperative approaches to acquiring\, storing\, and managing the reduction of print collections are gaining traction as libraries seek to share the expense and responsibility with others. With the creation of such programs come new questions: What are libraries’ responsibilities towards safeguarding our domestic imprint\, and towards the global research content we have been collecting for decades? What is a reasonable framework for defining how many and which copies are retained? What shared print models are proving most effective? \n@Risk North\, inspired by the Center for Research Libraries’ 2016 original @Risk meeting held in Chicago in April 2016\, will give attendees an opportunity to discuss at a strategic level the state of shared print preservation programs in Canada and beyond\, in a setting that is meant to push these conversations forward and identify clear next steps. Speakers will describe and assess notable shared repositories in the US and elsewhere\, the status of existing Canadian shared repository initiatives\, and the possibilities emerging for a robust and rational shared print infrastructure in Canada. \nWe welcome attendees from both CARL and non-CARL institutions for this event\, which is intended for library directors as well as those with responsibility for print collections in their institutions. \nOrganizing Committee / Comité organisateur :\nGwen Bird (Simon Fraser University)\nLise Brin and Susan Haigh (CARL)\nMonica Fuijkschot and Alison Bullock (Library & Archives Canada)\nSteve Marks and Caitlin Tillman (University of Toronto)\nBernard F. Reilly (Center for Research Libraries) \n \n\n					\n				> Agenda			\n		\n		\n			 \n8:30 – 9:00 a.m.\nCoffee \n9:00 – 9:15 a.m.\nWelcoming remarks \n\nDonna Bourne-Tyson\, University Librarian\, Dalhousie University and CARL President\nGuy Berthiaume\, Librarian and Archivist of Canada\, Library and Archives Canada\n\n9:15 – 10:15 a.m.\nKeynote – ‘Approaching the Long-Term Preservation of Print Documentation: A Current Overview of International Models\, Challenges and Opportunities’ \n\nConstance Malpas\, Research Scientist\, OCLC\n\n10:15 – 10:45 a.m.\nNetworking/health break – coffee and refreshments \n10:45 – 11:15 a.m.\nPresentation — ‘@Risk and National Coordinated Efforts in Print Preservation in the United States’ \n\nBernard F. Reilly\, President\, Center for Research Libraries\n\n11:15 – 12:00 p.m.\nNational Heritage Collections: Perspectives on Mandated Collecting \n\nMonica Fuijkschot (LAC)\nMaureen Clapperton (BAnQ)\n\n12:00 – 12:30 p.m.\nTable discussions on models presented thus far \n12:30 – 1:30 p.m.\nLunch (provided) \n1:30 – 2:30 p.m.\nPanel: ‘Current Canadian Initiatives in Collective Print Preservation’ \n\nScott Gillies\, TUG Libraries\nDoug Brigham\, COPPUL Shared Print Archive Network (SPAN) Coordinator\nCaitlin Tillman & Steve Marks\, Keep@Downsview\nAlan Darnell\, OCUL/Scholars Portal (Scholars Portal Books)\n\n2:30 – 3:20 p.m.\nRecap of issues and questions raised and group discussion. \nParticipants will be asked to reflect on a number of questions\, and identify priorities and strategies towards next steps. \nCoffee and refreshments available during discussion \n\nModerator: Gwen Bird (University Librarian / Dean of Libraries\, Simon Fraser University)\n\n3:20 -3:45 p.m.\nGroup reporting and discussion of next-steps \n\nModerator: Gwen Bird\n\n3:45 – 4:00 p.m.\nWrap-up and closing remarks \n\nDonna Bourne-Tyson\n\n		\n\n		 \n\n					\n				> Accommodation			\n		\n		\n			 \nVenue: \nNovember 10\, 2017 (8:30 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.)\nLibrary & Archives Canada\n395 Wellington Street\, Ottawa\, Ontario K1A 0N4 \nAccommodation Recommendations: \n\nDelta Hotels Ottawa City Centre\n101 Lyon Street North Ottawa K1R 5T9\nAlbert at Bay Suite Hotel\n435 Albert Street\, Ottawa\, Ontario K1R 7X4\nRadisson Hotel Ottawa Parliament Hill\n402 Queen St\, Ottawa\, Ontario K1R 5A7\nAlt Hotel Ottawa\n185 Slater St\, Ottawa\, Ontario K1P 0E8\nOttawa Marriott Hotel\n100 Kent Street Ottawa K1P 5R7\nSheraton Ottawa Hotel\n150 Albert Street\, Ottawa\, ON\, K1P 5G2\n\n		\n\n		 \n\n					\n				> Summary Report			\n		\n		\n			 \nA summary report of this event is now available: \nEN: Summary Report: @Risk North (Collections en péril) (PDF) \nFR: Rapport sommaire : @Risk North (Collections en péril) (PDF) \n		\n\n		 \n\n					\n				> Recordings and Presentation Slides			\n		\n		\n			 \nSlides for all presentations are available below. Recordings (audio with slides) will be posted once they are available. \nConstance Malpas — Approaching the Long-Term Preservation of Print Documentation: A Current Overview of International Models\, Challenges and Opportunities \n\nSlides (PDF)\nRecording (mp4) – Please note that the first three minutes of the presentation are in French while the rest is in English.\n\nBernard F. Reilly — @Risk and National Coordinated Efforts in Print Preservation in the United States \nMonica Fuijkschot —  State of the Ark: LAC initiatives supporting print preservation \nMaureen Clapperton — National heritage collections: the case of BAnQ \nScott Gillies — TUG Libraries Last Copy: Collections\, Joint Storage & Preservation \nDoug Brigham — COPPUL Shared Print Archive (SPAN) \nCaitlin Tillman & Steve Marks — Keep@Downsview: Western\, McMaster\, Toronto\, Queen’s\, uOttawa \nAlan Darnell —  eBooks Preservation at Scholars Portal \n		\n\n		 \n \n 
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/risk-north/
LOCATION:Library & Archives Canada\, 395 Wellington Street\, Ottawa\, Ontario\, K1A 0N4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:RiskNorth
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20171107T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20171109T235959
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20251105T205137Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251105T210030Z
UID:38371-1510012800-1510271999@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:2017 Fall Member Meeting
DESCRIPTION:« All Events\n \n\n	2017 Fall Member Meeting\n\n			November 7\, 2017\n	  –\n	November 9\, 2017\n	 \nThe Canadian Association of Research Libraries is pleased to invite member directors to the 2017 Fall Member Meeting. This annual gathering serves as a vital platform for the exchange of ideas\, strategic planning\, and collaborative discussions that shape the future of research libraries across Canada. \n\n	Ottawa Marriott Hotel\n\n100 Kent Street\n		\n		Ottawa\,\n	Ontario\n	K1P 5R7\n	Canada\n\n\n	+ Google Map \n\n					\n						\n	 \n\n\n\n					\n				Accommodation\n		\n				\n				Program Schedule\n		\n				\n				Session Slides and Speaking Notes\n		\n				\n				Guest Speakers\n		\n				\n				Recent Meetings\n		 \nHotel Details\nOttawa Marriott Hotel100 Kent Street\,Ottawa\, ON K1P 5R7Website \nBooking link for group: https://aws.passkey.com/e/49107119 \nGroup: Canadian Association of Research Libraries \nRate: $225.00 plus taxes (single or double occupancy) \nGUESTROOMS are block-booked for our group from Monday November 6 to Friday November 10. PLEASE BOOK BEFORE OCTOBER 6\, 2017. Any reservations made after this date will be based on availability. \nProgram Schedule\n\n\n\nTuesday Nov. 7\n\n\n8:00 AM – 9:00 AM\nBreakfast (Albion Salon – Lower Level)\n\n\n9:00 AM – 5:00 PM\nBoard Meeting (Albion Salon – Lower Level)\n\n\n6:00 PM – 8:00 PM\nPresident’s Reception (Sussex Salon – 27th Floor)\n\n\nWednesday Nov. 8\n\n\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AM\nBreakfast & Registration (Sussex Salon – 27th Floor)\n\n\n\n8:30 AM – 10:30 AM \n\n\nPolicy Committee Meeting (Rideau Salon) \n\n\n\n8:30 AM – 10:30 AM\nStrengthening Capacity Committee Meeting (York Salon)\n\n\n10:30 AM – 10:45 AM\nBreak\n\n\n10:45 AM – 12:45 PM\nAdvancing Research Committee Meeting (Rideau Salon)\n\n\n10:45 AM – 12:45 PM\nAssessment Committee Meeting (York Salon)\n\n\n12:45 PM – 1:45 PM\nLunch (Sussex Salon – 27th Floor)\n\n\n1:45 PM – 2:45 PM\n\nLCDRI\, and Research Data / Portage Session (Laurier Salon) \nSession Chair: Donna Bourne-TysonSpeakers: Robbin Tourangeau\, LCDRI Executive Director; Jeffrey Moon\, Portage Director; Pam Bjornson\, Consultant\, Management by Design.This session will feature a high-level introduction to the research data management landscape in Canada\, followed by an update on Portage\, a summary of key findings and recommendations from the Portage evaluation\, and a Q&A period. \n\n\n\n2:45 PM – 3:00 PM\nBreak\n\n\n3:00 PM – 4:00 PM\nCopyright Update and Advocacy Session (Laurier Salon)This session is designed to prepare participants who are taking part in the November 9th Half-Day on the Hill. A representative of the CARL Policy Committee will give a brief update on the Copyright Act Review and any other relevant copyright news\, while Don Moors and Josh Matthewman of Temple Scott Associates (TSA) will share tips for making the most of your meetings with MPs and policy makers and ensuring the experience is stress-free and fun.\n\n\n4:00 PM – 5:00 PM\nFall General Meeting (Laurier Salon)\n\n\n6:30 PM – 10:00 PM\nCARL Reception and Dinner (Salt\, 345 Preston St\, Ottawa\, ON K1S 1V6)\n\n\n \n \n\n\nThursday Nov. 9\n\n\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AM\nBreakfast & Registration (Laurier Salon)\n\n\n9:00 AM – 9:30 AM\nHalf-Day on the Hill (Meetings on Parliament Hill)\n\n\n10:00 AM – 10:30 AM\nSpeaker at Ottawa Marriot: David Lametti (Laurier Salon)\n\n\n11:00 AM – 2:00 PM\nHalf-Day on the Hill (Meetings on Parliament Hill) / Lunch\n\n\n2:00 PM – 3:00 PM\nStrengthening Indigenous Representation and Reconciliation; and Core Competencies Session (Laurier Salon)Facilitated by Susan Cleyle and Kathleen DeLong.Following a brief update from the Core Competencies Working Group\, this session on TRC recommendations will feature an open discussion on what is being done at the institutional level and table discussions on what CARL could do at the national level.\n\n\n3:00 PM – 3:15 PM\nBreak\n\n\n3:15 PM – 4:45 PM\n‘Coalition–publi.ca’ / SPARC Open Education Leadership Program (Laurier Salon)The first part of this session will focus on the involvement of stakeholders such as CARL in the emerging Coalition publi-ca governance structure. Speakers: Tanja Niemann\, Executive Director of Érudit\, and Brian Owen\, Managing Director for PKP and Associate University Librarian for Processing and Systems at SFU Library.In the second part of this session\, Joy Kirchner and Nicole Allen\, Director of Open Education at SPARC (joining us via Skype)\, will give an introduction to the new SPARC Open Education Leadership Program\, and engage CARL members in a discussion of related efforts that CARL could undertake in order to improve the capacity for OER support within CARL libraries.\n\n\n4:45 PM – 5:30 PM\nBoard meeting (Albion Salon – Lower Level)\n\n\n\nSession Slides and Speaking Notes\nKeynote Speech Transcript – David Lametti \nLCDRI – Robbin Tourangeau \nPortage Formative Assessment – Pam Bjornson \nPortage Progress Report – Jeff Moon \nCoalition-Publi.ca – Tanja Niemann and Brian Owen \nSPARC Open Education Leadership Program – Nicole Allen\, Hope Power\, Stephanie Quail \n\n\n\n\nNicole AllenNicole Allen is the Director of Open Education for SPARC. In this role she leads SPARC’s work to advance openness in education\, with a dual focus on public policy and engaging the library community to advance this issue on campus. Nicole is an internationally recognized expert and leading voice in the movement for Open Education. Drawing on her perspective as both a Millennial and as a professional with more than a decade of experience in this field\, she has been widely cited in the media and has given hundreds of talks and trainings in more than a dozen countries on open education\, open policy\, and grassroots advocacy.\n\n\n\nPam Bjornson\, Consultant\, Management by DesignPam Bjornson established Management by Design in 2017\, to provide consulting and facilitation in the areas of change management\, program assessment and innovative solutions. Prior to this Pam was employed for 15 years at the National Research Council of Canada (NRC)\, most recently as Vice President (Acting) of Business and Professional Services and as Executive Vice President. Responsibilities included Knowledge Management\, Communications\, Business Services\, Program and Project Services\, and Government and International Relations.\n\n\n\nDavid LamettiDavid Lametti became Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Innovation\, Science and Economic Development in January 2017. Mr. Lametti was a Full Professor in the Faculty of Law at McGill University specializing in property\, intellectual property as well as private and comparative law. He was also a member of McGill University’s Quebec Research Centre of Private and Comparative Law and a co-founder and member of the McGill Centre for Intellectual Property Policy. He served as the Associate Dean (Academic) of the Faculty of Law\, McGill University\, from 2008 to 2011. Multilingual\, Mr. Lametti has taught at the university level in French\, English and Italian.\n\n\n\nJoshua MatthewmanJoshua Matthewman is a Senior Consultant with TSA’s strategic government relations team in Ottawa. He provides government relations counsel\, legislative monitoring\, and event management services to a diverse set of clients.Prior to joining TSA\, Joshua worked as a Policy Analyst for the Conference of Defence Associations Institute. A strong background in research and advocacy enables Joshua to approach his clients’ goals with a clear understanding of how public-sector engagement on policy issues can lead to legislative and regulatory changes. Joshua has been active with several Liberal Party and municipal political campaigns\, in roles from policy correspondence to communications.\n\n\n\nJeffrey Moon\, Portage DirectorJeffrey Moon succeeded Chuck Humphrey as Portage Director after thirty years of service at Queen’s University Library. As Data Librarian and Academic Director of the Queen’s Research Data Centre\, Jeffrey focused on the development of RDM services in partnership with stakeholders across the library and the university. For the past two years\, Jeffrey has chaired the Portage Data Management Planning Expert Group\, which developed and launched the successful DMP Assistant tool and related Portage Data Stewardship Template. He currently serves on the Canadian Research Data Centre Network (CRDCN) Academic Council\, and on the Data Liberation Initiative (DLI) External Advisory Committee.\n\n\n\nDon MoorsDon Moors leads the TSA’s Ottawa office and government relations practice. With more than fifteen years experience as a senior government relations practitioner\, Don provides TSA’s clients with an in-depth understanding of the Government of Canada\, its policy and legislative procedures\, and how to influence them. Educated as a lawyer\, Don combines policy depth with legal training and political experience to help clients work through complex regulatory and policy issues.Prior to practicing government relations Don worked as a Senior Aide to the Secretary of State for Finance. Don holds a Bachelor of Laws Degree from Queen’s University as well as a Masters of Arts in Economics.\n\n\n\nTanja NiemannTanja Niemann is Executive Director of the Érudit Consortium. Tanja holds a communication degree from the University of Leipzig in Germany\, where she specialized in Book Studies and Publishing. With more than 10 years of experience in academic publishing and research dissemination\, she has supported many journals in their transition to digital publishing and Open Access. She developed essential strategic partnerships for Érudit and the publishers represented in order to increase visibility of Canadian research outputs worldwide.\n\n\n\nBrian OwenBrian Owen is the Associate Dean of Libraries and Special Collections at the Simon Fraser University Library in Burnaby\, British Columbia. He is also the Managing Director for the Public Knowledge Project (PKP) which is responsible for the development and support of Open Journal Systems (OJS) an open source software publishing platform actively used by almost 10\,000 scholarly journals in 2016. He is an Associate with SFU’s Canadian Institute for Studies in Publishing and SFU’s Master of Publishing Program.\n\n\n \nHope PowerHope Power is the Teaching & Learning Librarian at Simon Fraser University. In this role\, she coordinates library support for open education initiatives on campus including the SFU Open Educational Resources (OER) grant program jointly administered by the Library and Teaching & Learning Centre. She is a member of the BC Open Education Librarians (BCOEL) steering committee as well as a pilot fellow in SPARC’s Open Education Leadership Program for librarians.\n\n\n\nRobbin TourangeauRobbin is the Founding Executive Director of the Leadership Council for Digital Research Infrastructure. She has worked in the field of public policy and advocacy for the last 20 years\, providing strategic advice and leading the development of a number of important initiatives and programmes both inside and outside government. Prior to joining the Council\, Robbin was the Senior Director of Strategic Initiatives at the Council of Ontario Universities (COU). She has also held executive positions within the federal government and at Imagine Canada\, and served as a senior policy advisor in the Office of the Right Honourable Jean Chretien. In her spare time\, Robbin is a board member of Children’s Mental Health Ontario and the Youth Services Bureau of Ottawa.\n\n\n \nStephanie QuailStephanie Quail is a Business Librarian at York University. During her time at York\, she has focused on making library resources and services more discoverable for students and faculty. Some of her work in this area includes developing the Business Research at York Toolkit\, an online learning support that scaffolds students through the business research process. She is currently completing the SPARC Open Education Leadership Fellow program and hopes to play a leadership role in developing an institutional vision for open educational resources at York.\n\n\n\n\n\n2025 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 26 @ 09:00 – May 29 @ 16:00  EDT  at Inn at the Forks\, Winnipeg\, Manitoba\n\n2024 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 18\, 2024 – November 20\, 2024 at Delta Hotels Ottawa City Centre\n\n2024 Spring Member Meeting\nApril 22\, 2024 – April 25\, 2024 at Montreal\, Quebec\n\n2023 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 27\, 2023 – November 30\, 2023 at Fairmont Le Château Montebello\n\n2023 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 29\, 2023 – June 1\, 2023 at Calgary Marriott Downown Hotel\n\n\n					\n									See All Member Meetings\n					 \nHotel Details\nOttawa Marriott Hotel100 Kent Street\,Ottawa\, ON K1P 5R7Website \nBooking link for group: https://aws.passkey.com/e/49107119 \nGroup: Canadian Association of Research Libraries \nRate: $225.00 plus taxes (single or double occupancy) \nGUESTROOMS are block-booked for our group from Monday November 6 to Friday November 10. PLEASE BOOK BEFORE OCTOBER 6\, 2017. Any reservations made after this date will be based on availability. \nProgram Schedule\n\n\n\nTuesday Nov. 7\n\n\n8:00 AM – 9:00 AM\nBreakfast (Albion Salon – Lower Level)\n\n\n9:00 AM – 5:00 PM\nBoard Meeting (Albion Salon – Lower Level)\n\n\n6:00 PM – 8:00 PM\nPresident’s Reception (Sussex Salon – 27th Floor)\n\n\nWednesday Nov. 8\n\n\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AM\nBreakfast & Registration (Sussex Salon – 27th Floor)\n\n\n\n8:30 AM – 10:30 AM \n\n\nPolicy Committee Meeting (Rideau Salon) \n\n\n\n8:30 AM – 10:30 AM\nStrengthening Capacity Committee Meeting (York Salon)\n\n\n10:30 AM – 10:45 AM\nBreak\n\n\n10:45 AM – 12:45 PM\nAdvancing Research Committee Meeting (Rideau Salon)\n\n\n10:45 AM – 12:45 PM\nAssessment Committee Meeting (York Salon)\n\n\n12:45 PM – 1:45 PM\nLunch (Sussex Salon – 27th Floor)\n\n\n1:45 PM – 2:45 PM\n\nLCDRI\, and Research Data / Portage Session (Laurier Salon) \nSession Chair: Donna Bourne-TysonSpeakers: Robbin Tourangeau\, LCDRI Executive Director; Jeffrey Moon\, Portage Director; Pam Bjornson\, Consultant\, Management by Design.This session will feature a high-level introduction to the research data management landscape in Canada\, followed by an update on Portage\, a summary of key findings and recommendations from the Portage evaluation\, and a Q&A period. \n\n\n\n2:45 PM – 3:00 PM\nBreak\n\n\n3:00 PM – 4:00 PM\nCopyright Update and Advocacy Session (Laurier Salon)This session is designed to prepare participants who are taking part in the November 9th Half-Day on the Hill. A representative of the CARL Policy Committee will give a brief update on the Copyright Act Review and any other relevant copyright news\, while Don Moors and Josh Matthewman of Temple Scott Associates (TSA) will share tips for making the most of your meetings with MPs and policy makers and ensuring the experience is stress-free and fun.\n\n\n4:00 PM – 5:00 PM\nFall General Meeting (Laurier Salon)\n\n\n6:30 PM – 10:00 PM\nCARL Reception and Dinner (Salt\, 345 Preston St\, Ottawa\, ON K1S 1V6)\n\n\n \n \n\n\nThursday Nov. 9\n\n\n7:30 AM – 8:30 AM\nBreakfast & Registration (Laurier Salon)\n\n\n9:00 AM – 9:30 AM\nHalf-Day on the Hill (Meetings on Parliament Hill)\n\n\n10:00 AM – 10:30 AM\nSpeaker at Ottawa Marriot: David Lametti (Laurier Salon)\n\n\n11:00 AM – 2:00 PM\nHalf-Day on the Hill (Meetings on Parliament Hill) / Lunch\n\n\n2:00 PM – 3:00 PM\nStrengthening Indigenous Representation and Reconciliation; and Core Competencies Session (Laurier Salon)Facilitated by Susan Cleyle and Kathleen DeLong.Following a brief update from the Core Competencies Working Group\, this session on TRC recommendations will feature an open discussion on what is being done at the institutional level and table discussions on what CARL could do at the national level.\n\n\n3:00 PM – 3:15 PM\nBreak\n\n\n3:15 PM – 4:45 PM\n‘Coalition–publi.ca’ / SPARC Open Education Leadership Program (Laurier Salon)The first part of this session will focus on the involvement of stakeholders such as CARL in the emerging Coalition publi-ca governance structure. Speakers: Tanja Niemann\, Executive Director of Érudit\, and Brian Owen\, Managing Director for PKP and Associate University Librarian for Processing and Systems at SFU Library.In the second part of this session\, Joy Kirchner and Nicole Allen\, Director of Open Education at SPARC (joining us via Skype)\, will give an introduction to the new SPARC Open Education Leadership Program\, and engage CARL members in a discussion of related efforts that CARL could undertake in order to improve the capacity for OER support within CARL libraries.\n\n\n4:45 PM – 5:30 PM\nBoard meeting (Albion Salon – Lower Level)\n\n\n\nSession Slides and Speaking Notes\nKeynote Speech Transcript – David Lametti \nLCDRI – Robbin Tourangeau \nPortage Formative Assessment – Pam Bjornson \nPortage Progress Report – Jeff Moon \nCoalition-Publi.ca – Tanja Niemann and Brian Owen \nSPARC Open Education Leadership Program – Nicole Allen\, Hope Power\, Stephanie Quail \n\n\n\n\nNicole AllenNicole Allen is the Director of Open Education for SPARC. In this role she leads SPARC’s work to advance openness in education\, with a dual focus on public policy and engaging the library community to advance this issue on campus. Nicole is an internationally recognized expert and leading voice in the movement for Open Education. Drawing on her perspective as both a Millennial and as a professional with more than a decade of experience in this field\, she has been widely cited in the media and has given hundreds of talks and trainings in more than a dozen countries on open education\, open policy\, and grassroots advocacy.\n\n\n\nPam Bjornson\, Consultant\, Management by DesignPam Bjornson established Management by Design in 2017\, to provide consulting and facilitation in the areas of change management\, program assessment and innovative solutions. Prior to this Pam was employed for 15 years at the National Research Council of Canada (NRC)\, most recently as Vice President (Acting) of Business and Professional Services and as Executive Vice President. Responsibilities included Knowledge Management\, Communications\, Business Services\, Program and Project Services\, and Government and International Relations.\n\n\n\nDavid LamettiDavid Lametti became Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Innovation\, Science and Economic Development in January 2017. Mr. Lametti was a Full Professor in the Faculty of Law at McGill University specializing in property\, intellectual property as well as private and comparative law. He was also a member of McGill University’s Quebec Research Centre of Private and Comparative Law and a co-founder and member of the McGill Centre for Intellectual Property Policy. He served as the Associate Dean (Academic) of the Faculty of Law\, McGill University\, from 2008 to 2011. Multilingual\, Mr. Lametti has taught at the university level in French\, English and Italian.\n\n\n\nJoshua MatthewmanJoshua Matthewman is a Senior Consultant with TSA’s strategic government relations team in Ottawa. He provides government relations counsel\, legislative monitoring\, and event management services to a diverse set of clients.Prior to joining TSA\, Joshua worked as a Policy Analyst for the Conference of Defence Associations Institute. A strong background in research and advocacy enables Joshua to approach his clients’ goals with a clear understanding of how public-sector engagement on policy issues can lead to legislative and regulatory changes. Joshua has been active with several Liberal Party and municipal political campaigns\, in roles from policy correspondence to communications.\n\n\n\nJeffrey Moon\, Portage DirectorJeffrey Moon succeeded Chuck Humphrey as Portage Director after thirty years of service at Queen’s University Library. As Data Librarian and Academic Director of the Queen’s Research Data Centre\, Jeffrey focused on the development of RDM services in partnership with stakeholders across the library and the university. For the past two years\, Jeffrey has chaired the Portage Data Management Planning Expert Group\, which developed and launched the successful DMP Assistant tool and related Portage Data Stewardship Template. He currently serves on the Canadian Research Data Centre Network (CRDCN) Academic Council\, and on the Data Liberation Initiative (DLI) External Advisory Committee.\n\n\n\nDon MoorsDon Moors leads the TSA’s Ottawa office and government relations practice. With more than fifteen years experience as a senior government relations practitioner\, Don provides TSA’s clients with an in-depth understanding of the Government of Canada\, its policy and legislative procedures\, and how to influence them. Educated as a lawyer\, Don combines policy depth with legal training and political experience to help clients work through complex regulatory and policy issues.Prior to practicing government relations Don worked as a Senior Aide to the Secretary of State for Finance. Don holds a Bachelor of Laws Degree from Queen’s University as well as a Masters of Arts in Economics.\n\n\n\nTanja NiemannTanja Niemann is Executive Director of the Érudit Consortium. Tanja holds a communication degree from the University of Leipzig in Germany\, where she specialized in Book Studies and Publishing. With more than 10 years of experience in academic publishing and research dissemination\, she has supported many journals in their transition to digital publishing and Open Access. She developed essential strategic partnerships for Érudit and the publishers represented in order to increase visibility of Canadian research outputs worldwide.\n\n\n\nBrian OwenBrian Owen is the Associate Dean of Libraries and Special Collections at the Simon Fraser University Library in Burnaby\, British Columbia. He is also the Managing Director for the Public Knowledge Project (PKP) which is responsible for the development and support of Open Journal Systems (OJS) an open source software publishing platform actively used by almost 10\,000 scholarly journals in 2016. He is an Associate with SFU’s Canadian Institute for Studies in Publishing and SFU’s Master of Publishing Program.\n\n\n \nHope PowerHope Power is the Teaching & Learning Librarian at Simon Fraser University. In this role\, she coordinates library support for open education initiatives on campus including the SFU Open Educational Resources (OER) grant program jointly administered by the Library and Teaching & Learning Centre. She is a member of the BC Open Education Librarians (BCOEL) steering committee as well as a pilot fellow in SPARC’s Open Education Leadership Program for librarians.\n\n\n\nRobbin TourangeauRobbin is the Founding Executive Director of the Leadership Council for Digital Research Infrastructure. She has worked in the field of public policy and advocacy for the last 20 years\, providing strategic advice and leading the development of a number of important initiatives and programmes both inside and outside government. Prior to joining the Council\, Robbin was the Senior Director of Strategic Initiatives at the Council of Ontario Universities (COU). She has also held executive positions within the federal government and at Imagine Canada\, and served as a senior policy advisor in the Office of the Right Honourable Jean Chretien. In her spare time\, Robbin is a board member of Children’s Mental Health Ontario and the Youth Services Bureau of Ottawa.\n\n\n \nStephanie QuailStephanie Quail is a Business Librarian at York University. During her time at York\, she has focused on making library resources and services more discoverable for students and faculty. Some of her work in this area includes developing the Business Research at York Toolkit\, an online learning support that scaffolds students through the business research process. She is currently completing the SPARC Open Education Leadership Fellow program and hopes to play a leadership role in developing an institutional vision for open educational resources at York.\n\n\n\n\n\n2025 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 26 @ 09:00 – May 29 @ 16:00  EDT  at Inn at the Forks\, Winnipeg\, Manitoba\n\n2024 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 18\, 2024 – November 20\, 2024 at Delta Hotels Ottawa City Centre\n\n2024 Spring Member Meeting\nApril 22\, 2024 – April 25\, 2024 at Montreal\, Quebec\n\n2023 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 27\, 2023 – November 30\, 2023 at Fairmont Le Château Montebello\n\n2023 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 29\, 2023 – June 1\, 2023 at Calgary Marriott Downown Hotel\n\n\n					\n									See All Member Meetings
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/2017-fall-member-meeting/
LOCATION:Ottawa Marriott Hotel\, 100 Kent Street\, Ottawa\, Ontario\, K1P 5R7\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Member Meetings
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/NewsFeaturedImage-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20171026T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20171027T235959
DTSTAMP:20260426T004020
CREATED:20250425T072743Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251015T143900Z
UID:36838-1508976000-1509148799@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:2017 Canadian Library Assessment Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Date: October 26 – 27\, 2017\nLocation: Victoria\, British Columbia \nThe Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL) is committed to supporting and developing outcomes-based measures to assist libraries in moving beyond inputs and outputs in order to better demonstrate library impact on research\, teaching and learning. Through the delivery of assessment-related programming\, information sharing\, and support for relevant research\, CARL supports members as they use outcomes-based evidence to establish the research library’s return on investment or other measures of its value. \nIt is with this strategic initiative in mind that CARL and the University of Victoria Libraries invite you to participate in the Canadian Library Assessment Workshop (CLAW) which will take place in Victoria on October 26 & 27\, 2017. This event will be of interest to all academic and research libraries engaged in assessment. The program will be comprised of workshop style sessions with topics such as: \n\nQualitative assessment techniques\nMetrics for institutional repositories\nOrganizational assessment\nMaking use of institutional assessment\n\nParticipants will leave the workshop with tangible and practical ideas to take back to their libraries. Registration is limited. \n \n\n					\n				> CLAW Program Committee			\n		\n		\n			 \n\nSharon Murphy (Co-Chair)\, Associate University Librarian\, University of Alberta\nRuby Warren (Co-Chair)\, User Experience Librarian\, University of Manitoba\nKathryn Ball\, Director\, Assessment & Accountability\, McMaster University\nShailoo Bedi\, Director\, Academic Commons & Strategic Assessment\, University of Victoria\nRobin Bergart\, User Experience Librarian\, University of Guelph\nJeremy Buhler\, Assessment Librarian\, University of British Columbia\nShahira Khair\, Program & Training Officer\, Canadian Association of Research Libraries\nKatherine McColgan\, Manager\, Administration & Programs\, Canadian Association of Research Libraries\nDana Thomas\, Evaluation and Assessment Librarian\, Ryerson University\nConsultant: Mary-Jo Romaniuk\, University Librarian\, University of Manitoba		\n\n		\n\n\n					\n				> At A Glance			\n		\n		\n			 \n\n\n\nWednesday\, October 25\n\n\n9:00 – 10:30\nMultiple Choice: An Evaluation of Mixed Methods\nApproaches to Library Assessment\n\n\n10:30am–10:45\nBreak\n\n\n10:45 – 12:00\nMultiple Choice (continues)\n\n\n12:00 – 13:00\nLunch\n\n\n13:00 – 14:30\nMultiple Choice (continues)\n\n\n14:30 – 14:45\nBreak\n\n\n14:45 – 16:00\nMultiple Choice (continues)\n\n\n\n\n\n\nWednesday\, October 26\n\n\n8:00 – 9:00\nBreakfast\n\n\n9:00 – 9:10\nWelcome Remarks\n\n\n9:10 – 10:30\nKeynote Address: \nAssessment and the Corporate Academic Library:\nNegotiating a Path Between Compliance and Critical\nEngagement\n\n\n10:30 – 11:00\nBreak\n\n\n11:00 – 12:30\nBeyond Numbers: Powerful Assessment Strategies in a\nLibrary Learning CommonsStatistics Demystified: Understanding When and Why to\nUse Statistics in Assessment Work\n\n\n12:30 – 13:30\nLunch\n\n\n13:30 – 15:00\nPoster Session and Lightning Talks\n\n\n15:00 – 16:30\nUsing Service Blueprinting as a Tool for Service\nAssessment\n\n\n15:00 – 16:00\nNo Brainer? Avoiding Evidence-Based Error Making in\ne-Resources Assessment\n\n\n16:30 – 17:30\nTour of University of Victoria Libraries (optional)\n\n\n17:30 – 19:00\nReception\n\n\n\n\n\n\nWednesday\, October 27\n\n\n8:00 – 9:00\nBreakfast\n\n\n9:00 – 10:30\nAnalyze This! Coding Qualitative Data \nPurposeful Data Visualization With Tableau\n\n\n10:30 – 11:00\nBreak\n\n\n11:00 – 12:30\nPurposeful Data Visualization With Tableau (continues) \nAnalyze This! Coding Qualitative Data (continues)\n\n\n12:30 – 13:30\nLunch\n\n\n13:30 – 15:00\nLunch\n\n\n13:30 – 15:00\nPoster Session and Lightning Talks\n\n\n15:00 – 16:30\nObserve\, Reflect\, Learn! Developing a Peer Teaching\nObservation Program in your LibraryTracking Academic Library Geospatial Interactions With\nPatrons and the Public and Their Subsequent Publications\n\n\n15:00 – 16:00\nNo Brainer? Avoiding Evidence-Based Error Making in\ne-Resources Assessment\n\n\n15:00 – 15:30\nBreak\n\n\n15:30 – 17:00\nUsing Design Thinking to Assess Space \nCollection Development in the Digital Age\n\n\n17:00 – 17:30\nClosing Remarks\n\n\n\n		\n\n		 \n\n					\n				> Full Programme			\n		\n		\n			 \n\n\n\nWednesday\, October 25\n\n\n9:00 – 10:30\n\nMultiple Choice: An Evaluation of Mixed Methods\nApproaches to Library Assessment\nJoin workshop facilitator Dr. Colleen Cook (Dean of Libraries\,\nMcGill University) for a full-day workshop on how to evaluate\nand implement mixed methods techniques in library assessment\nprojects. Using the investigation of library social media presence\nas a model research topic\, workshop participants will devise\nresearch questions and examine the methods\, tools and data\nrequired to conduct their investigation using a mixed methods\napproach. The workshop will provide a theoretical introduction\nto mixed methods research\, practical instruction on the use of\nkey assessment methods and a critical examination of their\napplication. \nColleen Cook – McGill University \nHaro\, Cadboro Commons \n\n\n\n10:30am–10:45\nBreak\n\n\n10:45 – 12:00\nMultiple Choice (continues) \nHaro\, Cadboro Commons \n\n\n\n12:00 – 13:00\nLunch\n\n\n13:00 – 14:30\nMultiple Choice (continues) \nHaro\, Cadboro Commons \n\n\n\n14:30 – 14:45\nBreak\n\n\n14:45 – 16:00\nMultiple Choice (continues) \nHaro\, Cadboro Commons \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nWednesday\, October 26\n\n\n8:00 – 9:00\nBreakfast \nArbutus/Queenswood\, Cadboro Commons \n\n\n\n9:00 – 9:10\nWelcome Remarks \nArbutus/Queenswood\, Cadboro Commons \n\n\n\n9:10 – 10:30\nKeynote Address: \nAssessment and the Corporate Academic Library:\nNegotiating a Path Between Compliance and Critical\nEngagement\nWe find ourselves at an important\, and conflicted moment in\nacademic libraries\, “stuck” between an ethos of compliance—a\nneed to demonstrate our value to stakeholders through\nprocesses of accountability and audit—and one of critical\nengagement—a desire to situate such practices within broader\nsocio-political and economic contexts as a means to critique\,\ndestabilize\, and change them. It is no accident that these two\ncontradictory ethos co-exist—one gives rise to the other\n(Drabinski\, 2017). The issue that remains however\, is how to\nnegotiate a path between them. Some of the questions I’d like\nus to grapple with during this interactive keynote include: What\nlogics underlie the focus on assessment and user experience?\nTo what extent does our current focus on measuring inputs\,\noutputs\, and outcomes and creating memorable user\nexperiences normalize corporate values in higher education?\nHow might we engage critically with these practices to better\nalign them with our professional values and the academic\nmission of the university? \nBiography: Karen Nicholson is Manager\, Information Literacy\,\nat the University of Guelph\, a faculty member with the ACRL’s\nInformation Literacy Immersion programs\, and a Ph.D.\nCandidate (LIS) at Western. Her research focuses on\ninformation literacy\, neoliberalism\, and higher education\, and\nshe is co-editor (with Maura Seale) of The Politics of Theory in\nthe Practice of Critical Librarianship (Library Juice Press\,\nforthcoming). https://works.bepress.com/karen_nicholson \nKaren Nicholson – University of Guelph \nArbutus/Queenswood\, Cadboro Commons \n\n\n\n10:30 – 11:00\nBreak\n\n\n11:00 – 12:30\nBeyond Numbers: Powerful Assessment Strategies in a\nLibrary Learning Commons\nUsing examples from UBC’s library-based Learning Commons\,\nthis workshop focuses on assessment of front line services and\nlearning support programs\, and on organizing and\ncommunicating data. Participants will develop a framework for\nassessing their own learning support programs and learn how\nthe model could apply to other library activities.Jeremiah Carag\, Julie Mitchell\, Nick Thornton – University of British ColumbiaArbutus/Queenswood\, Cadboro CommonsStatistics Demystified: Understanding When and Why to\nUse Statistics in Assessment Work\nStatistics can be essential to appropriately describe and\ninterpret data\, but it’s not always easy to know when and how to\nuse them. This workshop is an opportunity to discuss and learn\nwhen and why statistics should be used and what statistics can\ntell you. \nLise Doucette – Western University \nArbutus/Queenswood\, Cadboro Commons \n\n\n\n12:30 – 13:30\nLunch \nArbutus/Queenswood\, Cadboro Commons \n\n\n\n13:30 – 15:00\nPoster Session and Lightning Talks\nSee Appendix A for complete list \nArbutus/Queenswood\, Cadboro Commons \n\n\n\n15:00 – 16:30\nUsing Service Blueprinting as a Tool for Service\nAssessment\nService Design is a way to understand\, develop\, and assess\nservices from a user perspective. This workshop will provide a\nhands-on introduction to the service blueprinting framework\, a\ntool used to identify service gaps and pain points in order to\nimprove services by addressing the root issues. \nKyla Everall\, Lisa Gayhart – University of Toronto \nArbutus/Queenswood\, Cadboro Commons \n\n\n\n15:00 – 16:00\nNo Brainer? Avoiding Evidence-Based Error Making in\ne-Resources Assessment\nThings are not always what they seem! Walking participants\nthrough various indicators of value used to assess electronic\nresources\, this workshop emphasizes some notable limitations\nof these sources and suggests best practices for ensuring\naccurate interpretation of quantitative and qualitative indicators. \nKlara Maidenberg – University of Toronto \nDana Thomas – Ryerson University \nHaro\, Cadboro Commons \n\n\n\n16:30 – 17:30\nTour of University of Victoria Libraries (optional)\n\n\n17:30 – 19:00\nReception\nSponsored by The University of Victoria Libraries \nUniversity Club \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nWednesday\, October 27\n\n\n8:00 – 9:00\nBreakfast \nArbutus/Queenswood\, Cadboro Commons \n\n\n\n9:00 – 10:30\nAnalyze This! Coding Qualitative Data\nAre you drowning with heaps and heaps of qualitative data? Are\nyou suffering from paralysis of analysis? Determining where to\nbegin when coding qualitative data can be a daunting task. This\nworkshop will provide hands-on experience with coding various\nforms of qualitative data including transcription texts\,\nphotographic images\, and other visual artifacts. \nShailoo Bedi – University of Victoria \nRuby Warren – University of Manitoba \nArbutus/Queenswood\, Cadboro Commons \nPurposeful Data Visualization With Tableau\nThis workshop will provide a practical introduction to creating\nvisualizations with Tableau. Using standard library data sets\nparticipants will learn to create interactive visualizations and\ndashboards while considering the importance of purposeful\ncommunication of data.\n**Participants must bring their own laptops with Tableau Public\ninstalled (free from https://public.tableau.com/s/download). \nJeremy Buhler – University of British Columbia \nEbony Magnus – Southern Alberta Institute of Technology \nHaro\, Cadboro Commons \n\n\n\n10:30 – 11:00\nBreak\n\n\n11:00 – 12:30\nPurposeful Data Visualization With Tableau (continues) \nArbutus/Queenswood\, Cadboro Commons \nAnalyze This! Coding Qualitative Data (continues) \nHaro\, Cadboro Commons \nArbutus/Queenswood\, Cadboro Commons \n\n\n\n12:30 – 13:30\nLunch \nArbutus/Queenswood\, Cadboro Commons \n\n\n\n13:30 – 15:00\nObserve\, Reflect\, Learn! Developing a Peer Teaching\nObservation Program in your Library\nThis workshop is ideal for those who want to develop or\nreinvigorate peer teaching observation programs. Participants\nwill learn to develop procedures for peer teaching observations\,\nto create a rubric that identifies the qualities of excellent\nteaching\, and to assess the efficacy of a peer teaching\nobservation program. \nZoe Fisher – University of Colorado\, Denver \nArbutus/Queenswood\, Cadboro Commons \nTracking Academic Library Geospatial Interactions With\nPatrons and the Public and Their Subsequent Publications\nMuch is written about providing GIS services in libraries\, but\nlittle on their assessment and evaluation over time. This\nworkshop will focus on organizing and recording interactions\nwith patrons in order to assess services and validate the\neffectiveness of providing GIS services in an academic library.\n**Participants must bring their own laptops with Microsoft Excel\ninstalled. \nDaniel Brendle-Moczuk – University of Victoria \nHaro\, Cadboro Commons \n\n\n\n15:00 – 15:30\nBreak\n\n\n15:30 – 17:00\nUsing Design Thinking to Assess Space\nDesign thinking helps us design the library around users rather\nthan bending users to fit the library. This workshop will explore\nhow academic libraries can use design thinking to market\nservices\, reconfigure spaces and optimize student and faculty\nengagement. \nRhiannon Jones – University of Calgary \nArbutus/Queenswood\, Cadboro Commons \nCollection Development in the Digital Age\nWith the advent of the digital age\, collection development\nshifted from individual journal selection to purchasing journal\nbundles\, in which publishers provided access to their entire\ncollection. This came at a price: over the period of 1986 to 2011\,\nsubscription costs increased fourfold in North American\nuniversity libraries. This has left several libraries unable to afford\nthese so-called “big deals”\, who have reverted to individual\njournal subscriptions. This workshop will present a methodology\ndeveloped at the Université de Montréal to assess journal\nusage\, based on downloads\, citations\, and survey data.\n**This workshop is being instructed remotely via\nvideoconference. \nVincent Larivière – Université de Montréal \nRoom B017\, Clearihue “B” Building \n\n\n\n17:00 – 17:30\nClosing Remarks \nArbutus/Queenswood \n\n\n\n\n		\n\n		 \n\n					\n				> Workshop Descriptions			\n		\n		\n			 \nPre-CLAW Workshop (Wednesday\, October 25 2017)\nMultiple Choice: An Evaluation of Mixed Methods Approaches to Library Assessment\nColleen Cook – McGill University \nJoin workshop facilitator Dr. Colleen Cook (Dean of Libraries\, McGill University) for a full-day workshop on how to evaluate and implement mixed methods techniques in library assessment projects. Using the investigation of library social media presence as a model research topic\, workshop participants will devise research questions and examine the methods\, tools and data required to conduct their investigation using a mixed methods approach. The workshop will provide a theoretical introduction to mixed methods research\, practical instruction on the use of key assessment methods and a critical examination of their application. Registration is limited to 30 participants. \n  \nCLAW Workshops (Thursday\, October 26 to Friday\, October 27).\nKeynote address: \nAssessment and the Corporate Academic Library: Negotiating a Path Between Compliance and Critical Engagement\nKaren Nicholson – University of Guelph\n\n\nWe find ourselves at an important\, and conflicted moment in academic libraries\, “stuck” between an ethos of compliance—a need to demonstrate our value to stakeholders through processes of accountability and audit—and one of critical engagement—a desire to situate such practices within broader socio-political and economic contexts as a means to critique\, destabilize\, and change them. It is no accident that these two contradictory ethos co-exist—one gives rise to the other (Drabinski\, 2017). The issue that remains however\, is how to negotiate a path between them. Some of the questions I’d like us to grapple with during this interactive keynote include: What logics underlie the focus on assessment and user experience? To what extent does our current focus on measuring inputs\, outputs\, and outcomes and creating memorable user experiences normalize corporate values in higher education? How might we engage critically with these practices to better align them with our professional values and the academic mission of the university? \nBiography \nKaren Nicholson is Manager\, Information Literacy\, at the University of Guelph\, a faculty member with the ACRL’s Information Literacy Immersion programs\, and a Ph.D. Candidate (LIS) at Western. Her research focuses on information literacy\, neoliberalism\, and higher education\, and she is co-editor (with Maura Seale) of The Politics of Theory in the Practice of Critical Librarianship (Library Juice Press\, forthcoming). https://works.bepress.com/karen_nicholson \n  \nHalf-day workshops \nAnalyze This! Coding Qualitative Data\nShailoo Bedi – University of Victoria\nRuby Warren – University of Manitoba \nAre you drowning with heaps and heaps of qualitative data? Are you suffering from paralysis of analysis? Determining where to begin when coding qualitative data can be a daunting task. This workshop will provide hands-on experience with coding various forms of qualitative data including transcription texts\, photographic images\, and other visual artifacts. \nPurposeful Data Visualization With Tableau\nEbony Magnus – Southern Alberta Institute of Technology\nJeremy Buhler – University of British Columbia \nThis workshop will provide a practical introduction to creating visualizations with Tableau. Using standard library data sets participants will learn to create interactive visualizations and dashboards while considering the importance of purposeful communication of data. \n  \n1.5-hour workshops \nBeyond Numbers: Powerful Assessment Strategies in a Library Learning Commons (Worksheet)\nJulie Mitchell\, Nick Thornton\, Jeremiah Carag – University of British Columbia \nUsing examples from UBC’s library-based Learning Commons\, this workshop focuses on assessment of front line services and learning support programs\, and on organizing and communicating data. Participants will develop a framework for assessing their own learning support programs and learn how the model could apply to other library activities. \nObserve\, Reflect\, Learn! Developing a Peer Teaching Observation Program in your Library\nZoe Fisher – University of Colorado\, Denver \nThis workshop is ideal for those who want to develop or reinvigorate peer teaching observation programs. Participants will learn to develop procedures for peer teaching observations\, to create a rubric that identifies the qualities of excellent teaching\, and to assess the efficacy of a peer teaching observation program. \nUsing Design Thinking to Assess Space in a Library\nRhiannon Jones – University of Calgary \nDesign thinking helps us design the library around users rather than bending users to fit the library. This workshop will explore how academic libraries can use design thinking to market services\, reconfigure spaces and optimize student and faculty engagement. \nStatistics Demystified: Understanding When and Why to Use Statistics in Assessment Work (Worksheet)\nLise Doucette – Western University \nStatistics can be essential to appropriately describe and interpret data\, but it’s not always easy to know when and how to use them. This workshop is an opportunity to discuss and learn when and why statistics should be used and what statistics can tell you. \nBeyond Numbers: Tracking Academic Library Geospatial Interactions With Patrons and the Public and Their Subsequent Publications\nDaniel Brendle-Moczuk – University of Victoria \nMuch is written about providing GIS services in libraries\, but little on their assessment and evaluation over time. This workshop will focus on organizing and recording interactions with patrons in order to assess services and validate the effectiveness of providing GIS services in an academic library. \nUsing Service Blueprinting as a Tool for Service Assessment (Worksheet)\nKyla Everall\, Lisa Gayhart – University of Toronto \nService Design is a way to understand\, develop\, and assess services from a user perspective. This workshop will provide a hands-on introduction to the service blueprinting framework\, a tool used to identify service gaps and pain points in order to improve services by addressing the root issues. \nNo Brainer? Avoiding Evidence-Based Error Making in e-Resources Assessment\nKlara Maidenberg – University of Toronto\nDana Thomas – Ryerson University \nThings are not always what they seem! Walking participants through various indicators of value used to assess electronic resources\, this workshop emphasizes some notable limitations of these sources and suggests best practices for ensuring accurate interpretation of quantitative and qualitative indicators. \nCollection Development in the Digital Age\nVincent Larivière – Université de Montréal \nWith the advent of the digital age\, collection development shifted from individual journal selection to purchasing journal bundles\, in which publishers provided access to their entire collection. This came at a price: over the period of 1986 to 2011\, subscription costs increased fourfold in North American university libraries. This has left several libraries unable to afford these so-called “big deals”\, who have reverted to individual journal subscriptions. This workshop will present a methodology developed at the Université de Montréal to assess journal usage\, based on downloads\, citations\, and survey data. \n  \n\nCLAW Posters (Thursday\, October 26).\nAssessing​ ​business​ ​presentations​ ​using​ ​the​ ​ACRL​ ​framework\nKimberly Fama\, University of British Columbia \nChange​ ​is​ ​the​ ​only​ ​constant:​ ​Evaluating​ ​SFU​ ​Library’s​ ​Liaison​ ​Librarian​ ​Program\nAlison Moore\, Jenna Thomson\, and Julie Jones\, Simon Fraser University \nCreating​ ​an​ ​electronic​ ​resources​ ​valuation​ ​report​ ​for​ ​senior​ ​administrators​ ​at​ ​University​ ​of​ ​Windsor\nPascal Calarco\, University of Windsor \nFinding​ ​our​ ​equilibrium​ ​-​ ​Balancing​ ​the​ ​21st​ ​century​ ​library​ ​with​ ​enduring​ ​conceptions​ ​of​ ​library​ ​space\n(available to view for CLAW 2017 participants upon request)\nDiane Granfield and Dana Thomas\, Ryerson University \nGiving​ ​a​ ​Kahoot​ ​about​ ​assessment​ ​in​ ​the​ ​classroom\nJanice Kung and Jessica Thorlakson\, University of Alberta \nIt’s​ ​”AAAL”​ ​how​ ​you​ ​look​ ​at​ ​it:​ ​A​ ​longitudinal​ ​assessment​ ​of​ ​Alberta​ ​Association​ ​of​ ​Academic​ ​Libraries’​ ​data\nEbony Magnus\, Southern Alberta Institute of Technology \nMapping​ ​Information​ ​Literacy​ ​and​ ​Library​ ​Space​ ​Usage​ ​Using​ ​Interview​ ​to​ ​the​ ​Double\nKathleen Reed\, Cameron Hoffman-McGaw\, and Meg Ecclestone\, Vancouver Island University \nMISO​ ​-​ ​Is​ ​it​ ​for​ ​you?\nValerie Gibbons\, Lakehead University \nUncovering​ ​the​ ​evidence:​ ​Faculty​ ​perceptions​ ​of​ ​distance​ ​library​ ​services\nCarol Gordon and Jessica Mussell\, University of Victoria
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/2017-canadian-library-assessment-workshop/
LOCATION:Victoria\, British Columbia\, Canada
CATEGORIES:CLAW,Workshops & Institutes
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20170612T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20170615T235959
DTSTAMP:20260426T004021
CREATED:20250425T074820Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251015T145842Z
UID:36849-1497225600-1497571199@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:2017 Librarians' Research Institute
DESCRIPTION:Date: June 12 – 15\, 2017 \nLocation: London\, Ontario \nProgram Chair and Peer Mentor: Kristin Hoffmann (Associate Librarian\, Western University) \nPeer Mentors:\n\nSelinda Berg\, Head of Information Services\, University of Windsor\nTony Horava\, Associate University Librarian (Collections)\, University of Ottawa\nKevin Manuel\, Data Librarian\, Ryserson University\nSarah Polkinghorne\, Public Services Librarian\, University of Alberta\n\nApplication Process\n\nCall for Nominations: 2017 Librarians’ Research Institute Participants\nExtended deadline: January 16\, 2017 \nThe Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL) is pleased to announce the 2017 Librarians’ Research Institute (LRI) will be hosted by Western University (June 12 – 15\, 2017). The Institute’s focus is to forge relationships with other librarian-researchers\, which is essential to developing and promoting Canadian librarians’ research activities and to creating a research infrastructure within Canadian libraries. \nCall for Participants\nWe are now accepting nominations for participants for the 2017 Librarians’ Research Institute. These participants will attend a four-day Institute at Western University. This Institute will be geared toward taking current research skills to the next level\, building upon current research interests\, and making connections with other researching academic librarians\, from across Canada. Participants should possess the following: \n\nSome experience in research beyond the MLIS degree\, such as producing a conference presentation\, an article or a research grant.\nA foundational knowledge of research methodologies and skills\, such as proposal writing\, literature reviews\, developing research questions\, using different research methodologies\, analyzing data\, assessing ethical issues\, etc.\nAn eagerness and openness to develop one’s own skills\, share ideas with others\, provide feedback and support to others’ research endeavours.\nAn interest in taking the energy and enthusiasm for research gained at the institute back to their home institution.\n\nThe Institute will take place over four days\, and will include activities such as plenary sessions; panel discussions with Peer Mentors; small group discussions; small group and individual activities; individual reflection and assessment; consultations with Peer Mentors\, individual writing time; peer workshops; and final presentations of work completed during the Institute. Upon completion of the Institute\, participants will leave with the following: \n\nA positive outlook on the possibilities for research and a recognition of the habits of mind that enable good research practices.\nA broader understanding of librarian research processes and an awareness of the research being undertaken by librarians at Canadian libraries.\nConnections with other academic librarians working on scholarly research projects at libraries across Canada.\n\nNomination and Application Process\nRegistration is limited to 30 participants. Applications from all Canadian libraries are welcome\, however\, priority will be given to CARL member libraries. \nRegistrants / participants must submit a nomination package which will include the following: \n\na current CV\na short description of why the participant wishes to attend\na brief outline of the research project/research question the participant is exploring\, and;\na letter of endorsement from the Library Dean/Director.\n\nNomination packages should be sent to the attention of Katherine McColgan (lri@carl-abrc.ca)\, on or before December 31\, 2016. \nParticipants will be announced and follow-up information about the Institute will be sent in early spring. Prior to attending the Institute\, participants will be asked to submit a short overview of their research background\, and their current research interests. \nFees\nCARL members: $650\nNon-members: $850 \nFees include all workshop materials\, breakfast\, lunch\, and breaks for the duration of the workshop. Travel\, accommodation and other expenses are the responsibility of the participant.
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/2017-librarians-research-institute/
LOCATION:London\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:LRI,Workshops & Institutes
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20170516T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20170518T235959
DTSTAMP:20260426T004021
CREATED:20251105T203949Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251105T204346Z
UID:38366-1494892800-1495151999@www.carl-abrc.ca
SUMMARY:2017 Spring Member Meeting
DESCRIPTION:« All Events\n \n\n	2017 Spring Member Meeting\n\n			May 16\, 2017\n	  –\n	May 18\, 2017\n	 \nThe Canadian Association of Research Libraries is pleased to invite member directors to the 2017 Spring Member Meeting. This annual gathering serves as a vital platform for the exchange of ideas\, strategic planning\, and collaborative discussions that shape the future of research libraries across Canada. \n\n	Homewood Suites by Hilton\n\n40 Bay Street South\n		\n		Hamilton\,\n	Ontario\n	Canada\n\n\n	+ Google Map \n\n					\n						\n	 \n\n\n\n					\n				Accommodation\n		\n				\n				Program Schedule\n		\n				\n				Recent Meetings\n		 \nHotel Details\nHomewood Suites by Hilton Hamilton40 Bay St SouthHamilton\, Ontario L8P 0B3p: 905-667-1200website \nThe cutoff date for reserving a room at the CARL rate of $149.00 CAD per night is April 15\, 2017. Reservations made after that date will be on a space-available basis. \nYou may book your reservations by visiting :Online reservationsor calling 905.667.1200 and referencing the group code “AGM”. \nTuesday May 16\, 2017\n8:00 am – 10:00 am (Corktown)IARLA Meeting \n9:30 am – 10:00 am (Kirkendall)Board Coffee and snacks \n10:00 am – 5:00 pm (Kirkendall)Board of Directors’ Meeting \n6:30 pm – 8:30 pm (Hamilton Hall W & C)President’s Reception (CARL members and guests) \nWednesday May 17\, 2017\n7:30 am – 8:30 am (Hamilton Hall C)Breakfast – with ‘cone of silence’ table discussions on selected management topics of strategic importance to directors \n8:30 am – 10:30 am Advancing Research Committee (Stinson Boardroom)Strengthening Capacity Committee (Beasley) \n10:30 am – 10:45 am Break \n10:45 am – 12:45 pmPolicy Committee (Beasley)Assessment Committee (Stinson Boardroom) \n12:45 pm – 1:45 pm Lunch \n1:45 pm – 3:45 pm (Westdale)Hot Topics: CARL committee lightning consultations \n3:45 pm – 4:00 pm Break \n4:00 pm – 5:00 pm (Westdale)Annual General Meeting \n6:30 pm – 7:30 pm (Art Gallery of Hamilton)Cocktail reception hosted by Vivian Lewis\, University Librarian\, McMaster University\, and Paul Takala\, CEO & Chief Librarian\, Hamilton Public Library \n7:30 pm – (Art Gallery of Hamilton)Joint CARL/CULC Dinner \nThursday May 18\, 2017\n7:30 am – 9:30 am (Hamilton Public Library – Central Library)Continental breakfast available (optional) \n8:30 am – 9:15 amTour – Hamilton Public Library (optional) \n9:30 am – 10:30 am (Hamilton Room – 5th Floor HPL) \nWelcome remarks – CARL President Martha Whitehead and CULC Chair Paul Takala \nGLAMming It Up: Advancing the Ottawa Declaration through cross-sectoral collaboration \n\nGuy Berthiaume\, Librarian and Archivist of Canada – The Ottawa Declaration and its next steps (ppt)\nJonathan Bengtson\, University Librarian\, University of Victoria – Doing More with More in Greater Victoria (ppt)\nVickery Bowles\, City Librarian\, Toronto Public Library – Collaboration\, Innovation and Inclusion: Building Smart Cities (ppt)\n\nSession Chair: Dr. Guy Berthiaume\, Librarian and Archivist of Canada \n10:30 am – 11:00 am Break \n11:00 am – 12:15 pm (Hamilton Room and Boardroom – 5th Floor HPL) \nSimultaneous program \nOption A:Creating Inclusive Libraries: Diversity and Inclusion in the Workplace \n\nCole Gately\, Community Activist and Facilitator\n\nThe presentation will be followed by table discussions. \nSession co-chairs: Caitlin Fralick\, Manager\, Program Development\, Hamilton Public Library and Gwen Bird\, Dean of Library Services\, Simon Fraser University \nOption B:Opportunities with Linked Open Data \n\nDr. Kenning Arlitsch\, Dean of the Library\, Montana State University – Improving the Visibility of Libraries and their Collections: Linked Data and Semantic Web Identities\nCaitlin Tillman\, Associate Chief Librarian for Collections and Materials Management\, University of Toronto Libraries – Update on Linked Data Canada Initiative\nTina Thomas\, Executive Director\, Strategy and Innovation\, Edmonton Public Library – Update on Library.Link Network\n\nThe presentations will be followed by a participative session to enable mention of other initiatives\, questions and discussion. \nSession chair: Rebecca Graham\, Chief Librarian and Chief Information Officer\, University of Guelph \n12:15 pm – 12:30 pm (Hamilton Room – 5th Floor HPL) \nInternational Collaboration Opportunities – \n\nIFLA Global Visioning – Vickery Bowles\, City Librarian\, Toronto Public Library\, and Susan Haigh\, Executive Director\, CARL\nCCUNESCO’s proposed Dialogues on Reconciliation – Sebastien Goupil\, Secretary-General\, Canadian Commission for UNESCO (pdf)\n\nClosing remarks – CARL President Martha Whitehead and CULC Chair Paul Takala \n12:30 pm – 1:30 pmJoint members lunch (Hamilton Room – HPL 5th Floor)Board of Directors’ Meeting (working lunch) (Boardroom – HPL 5th Floor) \n2:00 pm – 3:00 pmMcMaster University Library tour (optional)Waterdown Public Library tour (optional) \n3:30 pm – 4:30 pmMcMaster University Library tour (optional)Waterdown Public Library tour (optional) \n\n\n2025 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 26 @ 09:00 – May 29 @ 16:00  EDT  at Inn at the Forks\, Winnipeg\, Manitoba\n\n2024 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 18\, 2024 – November 20\, 2024 at Delta Hotels Ottawa City Centre\n\n2024 Spring Member Meeting\nApril 22\, 2024 – April 25\, 2024 at Montreal\, Quebec\n\n2023 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 27\, 2023 – November 30\, 2023 at Fairmont Le Château Montebello\n\n2023 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 29\, 2023 – June 1\, 2023 at Calgary Marriott Downown Hotel\n\n\n					\n									See All Member Meetings\n					 \nHotel Details\nHomewood Suites by Hilton Hamilton40 Bay St SouthHamilton\, Ontario L8P 0B3p: 905-667-1200website \nThe cutoff date for reserving a room at the CARL rate of $149.00 CAD per night is April 15\, 2017. Reservations made after that date will be on a space-available basis. \nYou may book your reservations by visiting :Online reservationsor calling 905.667.1200 and referencing the group code “AGM”. \nTuesday May 16\, 2017\n8:00 am – 10:00 am (Corktown)IARLA Meeting \n9:30 am – 10:00 am (Kirkendall)Board Coffee and snacks \n10:00 am – 5:00 pm (Kirkendall)Board of Directors’ Meeting \n6:30 pm – 8:30 pm (Hamilton Hall W & C)President’s Reception (CARL members and guests) \nWednesday May 17\, 2017\n7:30 am – 8:30 am (Hamilton Hall C)Breakfast – with ‘cone of silence’ table discussions on selected management topics of strategic importance to directors \n8:30 am – 10:30 am Advancing Research Committee (Stinson Boardroom)Strengthening Capacity Committee (Beasley) \n10:30 am – 10:45 am Break \n10:45 am – 12:45 pmPolicy Committee (Beasley)Assessment Committee (Stinson Boardroom) \n12:45 pm – 1:45 pm Lunch \n1:45 pm – 3:45 pm (Westdale)Hot Topics: CARL committee lightning consultations \n3:45 pm – 4:00 pm Break \n4:00 pm – 5:00 pm (Westdale)Annual General Meeting \n6:30 pm – 7:30 pm (Art Gallery of Hamilton)Cocktail reception hosted by Vivian Lewis\, University Librarian\, McMaster University\, and Paul Takala\, CEO & Chief Librarian\, Hamilton Public Library \n7:30 pm – (Art Gallery of Hamilton)Joint CARL/CULC Dinner \nThursday May 18\, 2017\n7:30 am – 9:30 am (Hamilton Public Library – Central Library)Continental breakfast available (optional) \n8:30 am – 9:15 amTour – Hamilton Public Library (optional) \n9:30 am – 10:30 am (Hamilton Room – 5th Floor HPL) \nWelcome remarks – CARL President Martha Whitehead and CULC Chair Paul Takala \nGLAMming It Up: Advancing the Ottawa Declaration through cross-sectoral collaboration \n\nGuy Berthiaume\, Librarian and Archivist of Canada – The Ottawa Declaration and its next steps (ppt)\nJonathan Bengtson\, University Librarian\, University of Victoria – Doing More with More in Greater Victoria (ppt)\nVickery Bowles\, City Librarian\, Toronto Public Library – Collaboration\, Innovation and Inclusion: Building Smart Cities (ppt)\n\nSession Chair: Dr. Guy Berthiaume\, Librarian and Archivist of Canada \n10:30 am – 11:00 am Break \n11:00 am – 12:15 pm (Hamilton Room and Boardroom – 5th Floor HPL) \nSimultaneous program \nOption A:Creating Inclusive Libraries: Diversity and Inclusion in the Workplace \n\nCole Gately\, Community Activist and Facilitator\n\nThe presentation will be followed by table discussions. \nSession co-chairs: Caitlin Fralick\, Manager\, Program Development\, Hamilton Public Library and Gwen Bird\, Dean of Library Services\, Simon Fraser University \nOption B:Opportunities with Linked Open Data \n\nDr. Kenning Arlitsch\, Dean of the Library\, Montana State University – Improving the Visibility of Libraries and their Collections: Linked Data and Semantic Web Identities\nCaitlin Tillman\, Associate Chief Librarian for Collections and Materials Management\, University of Toronto Libraries – Update on Linked Data Canada Initiative\nTina Thomas\, Executive Director\, Strategy and Innovation\, Edmonton Public Library – Update on Library.Link Network\n\nThe presentations will be followed by a participative session to enable mention of other initiatives\, questions and discussion. \nSession chair: Rebecca Graham\, Chief Librarian and Chief Information Officer\, University of Guelph \n12:15 pm – 12:30 pm (Hamilton Room – 5th Floor HPL) \nInternational Collaboration Opportunities – \n\nIFLA Global Visioning – Vickery Bowles\, City Librarian\, Toronto Public Library\, and Susan Haigh\, Executive Director\, CARL\nCCUNESCO’s proposed Dialogues on Reconciliation – Sebastien Goupil\, Secretary-General\, Canadian Commission for UNESCO (pdf)\n\nClosing remarks – CARL President Martha Whitehead and CULC Chair Paul Takala \n12:30 pm – 1:30 pmJoint members lunch (Hamilton Room – HPL 5th Floor)Board of Directors’ Meeting (working lunch) (Boardroom – HPL 5th Floor) \n2:00 pm – 3:00 pmMcMaster University Library tour (optional)Waterdown Public Library tour (optional) \n3:30 pm – 4:30 pmMcMaster University Library tour (optional)Waterdown Public Library tour (optional) \n\n\n2025 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 26 @ 09:00 – May 29 @ 16:00  EDT  at Inn at the Forks\, Winnipeg\, Manitoba\n\n2024 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 18\, 2024 – November 20\, 2024 at Delta Hotels Ottawa City Centre\n\n2024 Spring Member Meeting\nApril 22\, 2024 – April 25\, 2024 at Montreal\, Quebec\n\n2023 Fall Member Meeting\nNovember 27\, 2023 – November 30\, 2023 at Fairmont Le Château Montebello\n\n2023 Spring Member Meeting\nMay 29\, 2023 – June 1\, 2023 at Calgary Marriott Downown Hotel\n\n\n					\n									See All Member Meetings
URL:https://www.carl-abrc.ca/event/2017-spring-member-meeting/
LOCATION:Homewood Suites by Hilton\, 40 Bay Street South\, Hamilton\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Member Meetings
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END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR