Category Archives: Uncategorized

Call for AAAL Mentorship Committee member

The Executive Committee is looking for a library staff member from an AAAL member institution to join the new Mentorship Committee. The AAAL Mentorship Program will run during the 2017-18 academic year as a one-year pilot. The Committee currently has 3 members, but an additional member is needed for a one-year term, and would be part of a team responsible for:

  • Recruiting and pairing of mentors with mentees over the spring & summer 2017
  • Offering any additional support or training needed to run the program
  • Conducting program evaluation upon completion of the pilot program
  • Seeking feedback and making recommendations to the AAAL Executive as to the program’s future continuation

If you are interested, please email LemayN2@macewan.ca by Friday, June 9, 2017.

Thank you.

AAAL Executive

Spring Meeting Package and Minutes Available!

The AAAL 2017 Spring Meeting Package and Minutes are now available from the Meetings Page.

This Spring’s lightning strike presentations are also available for viewing. This year we had a variety of topics including innovations in digital scholarship, using play to reduce stress, student engagement strategies, service desk re-designs, and digital literacy in maker spaces. Make sure to check them out!

7 questions with Alison Pitcher

May’s installment of 7 Questions features Alison Pitcher, Collections Assessment Librarian at Macewan University Library. 

1. If you could learn to do anything, what would it be?
Surf

2. If you had to work on only one project for the next year, what would it be?
Making a library-wide plan for a variety of usage/statistics collection and implementing it in a way that allows the library to showcase how it’s being used and track changes and trends year-over-year.

3. What would you name the autobiography of your life?
Daughter of Dreamers and Doers

4. What is your best piece of life advice?
Make time for yourself. It’s simple, but I find it’s necessary.

5. What is your proudest non-work related accomplishment?
Buying a house.

6. What do you do when you’re not working?
I tend to inhale books and movies. I also have a love of food, so I bake (and destroy my kitchen) quite a bit.

7. What is your favourite colour?
Purple

Call for Communications Committee member

The Executive Committee is looking for an enthusiastic library staff member from a AAAL member institution to put their name forward to join the Communications Committee as Blog Administrator.

The responsibilities of this position are as follows:
  • Work with committee members to copyedit and schedule blog posts and newsletter communications
  • Provide backup support for website maintenance and social media postings
  • Collaborate with the webmaster and social media coordinator to conduct all other day-to-day communications tasks/initiatives
The position has a two-year term. Candidates should have strong technical writing skills. An understanding of WordPress is helpful but not necessary.
Please express your interest via email to LemayN2@macewan.ca  by Friday, May 19th.

Thank you,

AAAL Executive Team

News Flash from the Past

By Jordan Serben, MacEwan University, Library and Information Technology program

AAAL has now made its print newsletters available online! The newsletter began in 1976 as a brief one-page document, titled “News Flash or First (I Hope of Many) Newsletter”. It never wavered from good humour: “The Data Centre will not bill for services until April, 1977, so we MAY get it free (but don’t hold your breath).” Tongue-and-cheek articles like this persisted throughout the newsletter’s history.

If you wander through past issues, there are harsh tales of late fee consequences. In the fall of 1983, in Gatineau, Quebec, the town council passed a bylaw to throw its residents in jail for a maximum of 60 days as punishment for overdue library books. Other stories describe disastrous events. At Keyano College, in the spring of 1984, during a performance of “Alladin and His Wonderful Lamp”, a mishap with the lamp torched the theatre scenery and the backstage experienced smoke and water damage. But, the real excitement was in the Learning Resource Centre where the new ENVOY 100 Electronic Mail network was being “hooked up”, putting the college at the doorstep of the digital age!

Technology was embraced wholeheartedly throughout the 90s as hobbyist microcomputers became PCs and computer labs became the norm. Nineteen-ninety was a busy year for barcoding collections and the installation of 3M security systems, which had library staff cause “patrons some embarrassment by not desensitizing material.” Olds College became an Internet-capable site in 1995, and the library purchased the agricultural database Agricola. Internet classes and Internet facilitators were leading topics across Alberta, while libraries were also faced with converting catalogue records to MARC in the mid-to-late 1990s. And, in the fall of 1999, Grant MacEwan College launched its virtual Ask a Reference Question, leading the way for chat reference.

Find these stories and more in the archives!

AAAL Newsletter Archives