C&RL News April 2010 182

N e w s  f r o m  t h e  F i e l dDavid Free

University of Arkansas Student Worker 
Award
The University of Arkansas (UA)-Little Rock’s 
Ottenheimer Library Development Board has 
presented its newly created Student Worker 
Award to Sanjita Parjuli (Circulation) and Sa-
mantha Youngs (Government Documents). 
The presentation ceremony took place at 
Magnolia Hill, a countryside retreat and 
historic home 
in the heart of 
Little Rock.

The Develop-
ment Board was 
formed in 2008 
to communicate 
and promote the 
library’s mission. 
The Board is or-
ganized under 
the UALR Foun-
dation, Inc., an 
affiliate of the 
University of Ar-
kansas Founda-
tion. The Student 
Worker Award,  
the Board’s first 
project, allows 
the library to of-
fer work experience for UA students with an 
interest in library and information science and 
pay them a salary higher than the going rate 
for student workers. The award winners, Par-
juli and Youngs, were cited as being excep-
tional students in the classroom and flexible, 
dependable, and productive library workers.

2010 Scholarly Communication 101 
Road Show hosts
The ACRL Scholarly Communications Com-
mittee has selected five sites from 40 appli-
cations to host the Scholarly Communication 
101: Starting with the Basics workshop this 
spring and summer. Recognizing that schol-
arly communication issues are central to 
the work of all academic librarians and all 
types of institutions, ACRL is underwriting 
the costs of delivering this proven content 
by sending expert presenters on the road.

The institutions selected to host the 2010 
road shows are Florida State University in 
Tallahassee; Lehigh Valley Association of 
Independent Colleges in Bethlehem, Pennsyl-
vania; Bryan College in Dayton, Tennessee; 
Kansas State University in Manhattan; and 
Texas Tech University in Lubbock.

Led by two expert presenters, this struc-
tured interactive overview of the scholarly 

communication 
system supports 
individual or in-
stitutional stra-
tegic planning 
and action.  The 
workshop focus-
es on new meth-
ods of scholarly 
publishing and 
communication, 
open access and 
openness as a 
principle, copy-
right and intel-
lectual property, 
a n d  e c o n o m -
ics, providing a 
foundational un-
derstanding for 
attendees.

Host sites are partnering with other insti-
tutions in their area to extend the reach to 
as diverse an audience as possible. The 40 
applications came from 23 states, Puerto Rico 
and Canada, representing more than 80 col-
leges and universities, 16 consortia and their 
members, and nine ACRL Chapters. 

Learn more about ACRL’s scholarly 
communication initiatives at www.ala.org 
/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/issues/scholcomm 
/scholarlycommunication.cfm.

Winter Sports in the Northwest
The University of Washington (UW) Libraries 
Special Collections and Digital Initiatives has 
partnered with Flickr to present a collection 
of images from the libraries on the theme 
of “Winter Sports in the Northwest” through 
the Flickr Commons program.  Images from 
the libraries collections will be added to 

Two students win the University of Arkansas-Little Rock’s first 
Student Worker Award, (from left): Samantha Youngs (award 
winner), Chancellor of the University Joel Anderson, Provost 
and Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs David Belcher, and 
Sanjita Parjuli (award winner).

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April 2010 183 C&RL News

the Flickr commons pool 
the second Wednesday of 
each month. To view the 
UW collection, visit www.
f l i c k r. c o m / p h o t o s / u w 
_digital_images/.

Participating institutions 
in the Flickr Commons 
program include New York 
Public Library, Smithsonian 
Institution, U.S. National 
Archives, Swedish National 
Heritage Board, Biblio-
thèque de Toulouse, and 
Oregon State University. 

The program has two 
main objectives: to increase 
access to publicly held pho-
tography collections and 
to provide a way for the 
general public to contribute 
information and knowl-
edge. Flickr Commons was launched in 2008 
in partnership with The Library of Congress. 

Smith named Project MUSE director
The Johns Hopkins University Press an-
nounced the appointment of Dean Smith 
as director of Project MUSE. Smith began 
leading the electronic scholarly journals 
publishing program March 10, 2010. Smith 
will oversee an expansion to include more 
archival journal content on the MUSE plat-
form and enhanced services to subscribers, 
content providers, and end users. Project 
MUSE offers electronic access to more than 
400 peer-reviewed journal titles from more 
than 100 university press, society, and in-
dependent scholarly publishers. Researchers 
and students in more than 60 countries ac-
cess full-text, current, and archival content 
on the MUSE platform through a model that 
provides subscription options to institutions 
and a sustainable digital publishing option 
for nonprofit content providers. For more 
on Project MUSE, visit muse.jhu.edu.

OA at Harvard Business School 
The Harvard Business School (HBS) ap-
proved an open access policy on February 
12, 2010, becoming the fifth Harvard school 
to adopt open access. Under the policy, HBS 
faculty agree to include scholarly articles in 
the university’s DASH repository and grant 

the university permission to distribute the 
articles as long as they are not sold for a 
profit. The new policy applies to all articles 
authored or coauthored while a member of 
the HBS faculty. According to The Occas-
sional Pamphlet blog, HBS is the third busi-
ness school to enact an open access policy. 
The MIT Sloan School of Management ap-
proved open access in March 2009, and the 
Copenhagen Business School followed suit 
in June 2009.

NCSU WolfWalk
In honor of Founders Day at North Carolina 
State University (NCSU), the NCSU Libraries 
have released WolfWalk, a mobile smart-
phone tool design to enhance exploration 
of the campus and its history. WolfWalk 
capitalizes on the location awareness of to-
day’s mobile devices to allow users to give 
themselves a self-guided historical walk 
through NCSU’s main campus in Raleigh. 
As WolfWalk users stroll around campus, 
their mobile devices detect their current lo-
cations and then deliver a tour of nearby 
buildings and other historically significant 
locations. Users with devices that don’t sup-
port GPS or other location detection can 
manually navigate through the site to enjoy 
a tour of campus.

“As the official repository for the univer-
sity, our archives have mountains of incred-

Hot on the Web

The following are the top five most read articles on C&RL 
News online during February 2010:

1. “Social media:  A guide for college and university libraries” 
by Andy Burkhardt (January 2010).

2. “Holocaust resources on the Web” by John Jaeger (Febru-
ary 2010).

3. “Superpower your browser with LibX and Zotero: Open 
source tools for research” by Jason Puckett (February 2010).

4. “Recognizing opportunities: Conversational openings to 
promote positive scholarly communication change” by Adrian 
K. Ho and Daniel R. Lee (February 2010).

5. “It came from Hollywood: Using popular media to en-
hance information literacy instruction” by Nedra Peterson 
(February 2010).

Visit C&RL News online at crln.acrl.org to find your favor-
ite current and past articles. And discover something new.

april10a.indd   183 3/18/2010   9:22:43 AM



C&RL News April 2010 184

Apply now for Immersion ’10 Program Assessment and Intentional Teacher Tracks

Application materials are now available for 
the ACRL Immersion ’10 Program—Assess-
ment and Intentional Teacher Tracks. The 
program will be held November 10–14 in 
Nashville. Applications for both tracks are 
being accepted through May 7, 2010. Com-
plete details about the program, including 
curriculum, learning outcomes, and ap-
plication instructions are online at www.
acrl.org/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/issues/infolit/
professactivity/iil/immersion/programs.cfm.

The Assessment Track is intended for 
experienced academic librarians (five-
plus-years teaching experience) active in 
teaching and learning along with those in 
leadership roles for information literacy 
program. This program will approach assess-
ment from a learning-centered perspective; 
participants will emerge with a broader 

understanding of assessment and how to 
use assessment as an important tool to guide 
evidence-based classroom, curriculum, and 
program development. 

The Intentional Teacher Track is aimed 
at the experienced academic librarian (fi ve-
plus-years teaching experience, in a library 
or other setting) who wants to become 
more self-aware and self-directed as a teach-
er. The program facilitates the process of 
critical refl ection through peer discussion, 
readings, and personal refl ection as a path-
way to professional growth and renewal. 

Acceptance for both tracks is competitive 
to ensure an environment that fosters group 
interaction and active participation. Questions 
concerning the program or application pro-
cess should be directed to Margot Conahan at 
(312) 280-2522 or mconahan@ala.org

ibly interesting material about the history 
of NCSU,” noted Greg Raschke, associate 
director for collections and scholarly com-
munication at the NCSU Libraries. “This new 
tool gives us a great way to extend the reach 
of these materials and to give our donors 
and the people of North Carolina even more 
value for the history we collect for them.”

The initial version of the tool provides 
a brief historical description of more than 
50 sites on campus and provides digitized 
photographs that show the site over the 
course of the school’s history. WolfWalk 
draws on the resources of the university 
archives in the NCSU Libraries’ Special Col-
lections Research Center and a vast array of 
documents, photos, audio fi les, and other 
historical materials from the founding of the 
school up through the present. 

More information on WolfWalk is avail-
able at www.lib.ncsu.edu/wolfwalk. 

LCA brief on streaming fi lms 
The Library Copyright Alliance (LCA)—
ACRL, ALA, and the Association of Research 
Libraries—has released an issue brief that 
reviews the legal status of streaming entire 
fi lms to students located outside of physical 
classrooms. Innovations in secure stream-
ing and online courseware systems hold 

signifi cant promise for institutions serv-
ing faculty and students who demand in-
creased access to institutional and library 
holdings. 

Many questions have been raised con-
cerning the use of these technologies and 
copyright law, and the LCA issue brief 
aims to dispel some of the mystery and 
uncertainty that surround this issue, and 
to foster a balanced discussion. The brief 
explains characteristics that could increase 
the likelihood that a particular use will be 
allowed, as well as the arguments that could 
lead a court to fi nd in favor of educational 
uses. It also explains how these statutory 
provisions interact, and, most importantly, 
how the scope of fair use is affected by 
the other provisions in copyright law. The 
full text of the brief is available on the LCA 
Web site at www.librarycopyrightalliance.
org/.
 
Digitizing the CFR
The United States Government Printing 
Offi ce (GPO) and the Cornell University 
Law School are beginning a yearlong pilot 
project to evaluate a conversion process of 
the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) in 
XML format. CFR is the codifi cation of the 
general and permanent rules published in 

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April 2010 185 C&RL News

the Federal Register by the 
executive departments and 
agencies of the federal gov-
ernment. The Cornell Legal 
Information Institute will con-
vert various titles into XML 
and place them on the uni-
versity’s Web site. GPO and 
Cornell share the information 
and lessons learned form the 
project with members of the 
Federal Depository Library 
Program (FDLP) to find ways 
of providing the public open-
ness to government docu-
ments.  

“Cornell University Law Li-
brary is a recognized leader in 
providing outstanding and in-
novative information services 
and resources,” said Pat Court, 
associate law librarian. “As a 
federal depository library, we 
will assist the public and the 
university community with 
the expanded functions for 
tracking and updating federal 
regulations that are developed by this part-
nership.”

GPO has also announced the conversion 
of CFR into XML for placement online at 
GPO’s Federal Digital System (www.fdsys.
gov) and the site for government data (www.
data.gov). This project will initially include 
content from 2007, with plans to add to the 
archive. This project and the Cornell pilot are 
part of the ongoing effort to meet President 
Obama’s challenge to federal agencies to 
create a more open and transparent govern-
ment. For more information on GPO, visit 
www.gpo.gov.

Diversity Research Center to open at 
Rutgers
The chancellor of Rutgers University’s 
Newark campus has announced the estab-
lishment of a new Diversity Research Center 
in the campus’ John Cotton Dana Library. As-
sistant Chancellor and Dana Library Director 
Mark Winston will serve as director of the 
center and Dana Library Associate Director 
Haipeng Li will serve as codirector. 

“The Diversity Research Center at the Dana 
Library will play an important role in promot-

ing the value of diversity in education, organi-
zational performance, and librarianship” said 
Miguel Figueroa, director of the ALA Office 
for Diversity. “Guided by leaders in diversity 
research and on a campus where diversity is 
an integral part of the learning experience, this 
Diversity Research Center is well-positioned 
at Rutgers-Newark’s Dana Library.”

The Diversity Research Center’s mission 
will include conducting research associated 
with the relationship between diversity and 
organizational performance, promoting the 
dissemination of diversity research, and 
conducting institutional research and assess-
ment related to academic preparation and 
student learning on the most diverse doctoral 
degree-granting university campus in the 
United States.

The center will create a dedicated collec-
tion of research materials related to diversity; 
host noted speakers, organizational leaders, 
and visiting scholars; and disseminate its 
findings and research through presentations, 
publications, and electronic media. The center 
will also establish a faculty fellowship pro-
gram to support faculty who conduct diversity 
research in their disciplines. 

The University of Tennessee (UT ) Libraries has announced its 
newest team of diversity librarian residents. Rabia Gibbs (right) 
and Kynita Stringer-Stanback (left), both 2009 MLIS graduates 
(from the University of Pittsburgh and the University of North 
Carolina-Chapel Hill, respectively), began their two-year intern-
ships February 2010. The Diversity Librarian Residency Program, 
initiated in 2002, attracts recent library school graduates to a 
challenging career in academic librarianship. Residents gain 
rich and varied work experiences at UT, while advancing the UT 
Libraries’ diversity goals.

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