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October 2008 Archives

October 1, 2008

Learning about trackbacks...

Earlier this week, I made reference to an MLA-Phil news blog entry. The MLA-Phil blog is an excellent example of how social media can work well for small associations like ours. They presented this poster at MLA '08 evaluating their use of "2.0" approaches. Gary from MLA-Phil sent me an e-mail yesterday to inform me that he wanted to establish a trackback but had encountered some problems. Well, dear readers, your intrepid blog editor has never even considered what trackbacks are or how to implement them in this blog. So I'm experimenting with the trackback settings on this blog to see how things work. It's all about letting the world know what the Midwest Chapter and its members are all about.

October 3, 2008

In memory

Communications Committee member Jason Young sends along this information:

Midwest Chapter member Jeanne Gittings passed away on Tuesday, September 30, 2008, at Trinity Medical Center in Moline, Illinois. She was a medical librarian for 39 years for Trinity Medical Center. Jeanne was a dedicated health sciences librarian and very active in the Medical Library Association and local library organizations and served as a mentor to many.

Her obituary is posted at Quad-Cities Online: http://qconline.com/archives/qco/display.php?id=407192. Memorial contributions in her honor may be sent to:

First Covenant Church Piano Memorial Fund
3303 41st Street
Moline, IL 61265

She will be greatly missed.


October 4, 2008

Touring around Troy

You can find lots of great tourist information on the official Midwest MLA/MHSLA 2008 Conference website! Click on the Detroit Area Attractions for a list of everything there is to see around our conference location.

I'm interested in things to do close to our conference hotel. Well, the biggest attraction is the Somerset Collection mall which bills itself as "the epicenter for luxury retail in the State of Michigan." It is just a little ways west of the hotel on Big Beaver Rd. Check out the mall's website where you can even take a virtual tour. This place is amazing! The mall is actually two malls connected by a 700 ft. glass enclosed moving walkway!

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Another interesting looking attraction is the Cranbrook educational complex about 5 miles northwest in Bloomfield Hills. Your can check out the contemporary art at the Cranbrook Art Museum. The Andy Worhol exhibit opens during our conference on October 19. The Cranbrook Institute of Science has a small planetarium and is featuring the Bats: Myths and Mysteries exhibit. The Cranbrook House & Gardens look fabulous. You can take a self-guided garden tour.

The Troy Museum & Historic Village is just a couple of miles north of the conference hotel. Admission is free!

Phillip J. Huber Park is right by the hotel. For those of you who would enjoy a nice fall walk, the park has a 1.3-mile walking/fitness trail through a wooded section of the site.

If you would like to visit any of these attractions, you'll be glad to hear that our conference hotel, the Detroit Marriott Troy, offers a complimentary shuttle service to locations within five miles of the hotel, available upon request.

October 7, 2008

Driving to Troy

If you will be driving to Troy to attend the Midwest MLA/MHSLA Conference from the south, make a note of this!

Yesterday, the official conference website reminded us that I-75 in Detroit is closed in both directions for a big construction project. So you will need to take an alternate route. The suggested alternatives are also listed on the Transportation and Directions page of the conference website. And for those of you who are using other modes of transportation, you can find oodles of useful information on the page as well.

October 8, 2008

Midwest Chapter Conference Award Winners

And the winners are...

This year's winners of the Midwest Chapter Annual Meeting Scholarships are Chrysta Meadowbrooke from the University of Michigan and Zach Young who attends the University of Kentucky. Their $500 awards will support attendance at the Midwest MLA/MHSLA Conference. Scholarship applicants are judged on the basis of academic achievement, interest in health sciences librarianship, and potential success in the field.

The winner of the Professional Development Award is Christine Allen from Munson Medical Center in Michigan. The Professional Development Award supports the first-time attendance of chapter members at the Midwest Chapter’s Annual Meeting.

Your intrepid Midwest Chapter editor has already sent them all an e-mail warning them that I will be tracking them down at the conference to take photos to accompany their required MIDLINE articles!

October 11, 2008

MLA President Mary Ryan Visits ConnectMidwest

MLA President Mary Ryan will be presenting the MLA Update on Sunday, October 19 at the Midwest MLA/MHSLA Conference. Your intrepid blog editor interviewed her via e-mail this week:

CM: Welcome! Thank you for visiting us here at ConnectMidwest!

MLA Pres: Thanks. I’m happy to be here.

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CM: You are nearly to the halfway mark of your presidential year. What have you found to be the most pressing issues facing medical librarians right now?

MLA Pres: Survival of health sciences libraries is a critical issue right now. Because of increasingly difficult economic times, and because so much information is available on the Internet, some administrators think that libraries can be eliminated. Evidence of this is the closing of some hospital libraries and the EPA libraries. Flat or reduced budgets have affected our ability to provide the services and information resources our users need, and reduced staff development dollars have made it more difficult for us to get the continuing education we need to perform our jobs well. Another development which makes the survival of libraries an issue is the major changes that are taking place in scholarly publishing as authors begin sharing information in ways other than the traditional publishing models.

Another major issue is the recruitment and retention of health information professionals. Half of MLA members are over 50, and many baby boomer librarians have started retiring, leaving many vacancies to be filled in the near future. We must find ways to recruit new members to the profession to fill these vacancies, and we must find better ways to retain the talented librarians that we already have working in our libraries.

Finding good ways to utilize current and new technologies to provide better service for our users is another challenge. It is difficult to keep up with all of the changes taking place in technology and to identify effective ways to use those technologies.

CM: You have chosen “iFusions” as the theme for your presidential priorities. How is this concept guiding your activities as MLA president?

MLA Pres: "IFusions: Partnerships for Addressing Information Issues" is my theme. The i in iFusions can stand for the individual members of MLA, for the interrelationships that members form with each other to meet the goals of the association and our profession, and the interrelationships that MLA forms with other associations in order to meet our goals. I’ve focused on encouraging all members of MLA to become more involved in the association (all new members of MLA who volunteered for committee appointments were offered appointments, we’ve established a blog to improve communication between MLA leaders and members, we’re working on providing more opportunities for members who cannot attend the annual meeting to participate in some sessions electronically, etc.). We’ve also worked on expanding our activities with other associations in order to benefit from “strength in numbers”. I’ll give more details about these activities at the MLA Update.

CM: Last week, you made the first post to the new MLA Connections blog. Would you comment on the progress of initiatives to incorporate the use of current technologies by MLA and its members?

MLA Pres: MLA is currently evaluating association management systems and will implement one soon to better provide services to MLA members. Many chapters, sections, committees and task forces are now using blogs, wikis, twitter, etc. in their work. We’re working to expand the amount of the annual meeting which will be available electronically, and we’re increasing the number of CE opportunities available online. I think the establishment of the MLA Connections blog will improve communication between MLA leaders, headquarters staff, and members. And finally, the MLA Board is considering replacing one of the three face-to-face board meetings per year with a virtual board meeting.

CM: Could you share with us a little preview of the MLA Update that you will be sharing with us?

MLA Pres: I’ll talk about the progress we’ve made on priorities, such as conflict of interest issues (establishment of the MLA Ethics Task Force), the environment (greener meeting for 2009), more efficient and effective association operations (review of strategic plan, management software), advocacy for the profession and issues of importance to us (salary survey, legislative activities), emergency management/disaster preparedness (fall webcast, resources on MLANET), recruitment and retention activities (work/life balance webcast), etc. I’ll also discuss briefly the Health Information Literacy Research Project and other priorities carried over from previous years, and I’ll give some details of the preparations for the MLA ’09 meeting in Honolulu.

CM: The MLA president does a lot of traveling. Have you attended any other MLA chapter meetings yet?

MLA Pres: I attended the Mid Atlantic (MAC) chapter meeting last fall in Baltimore. I will attend the South Central Chapter meeting in Dallas next week before heading to Troy for the Midwest Chapter/MHSLA meeting.

CM: Where are you headed after the Midwest Chapter MLA/MHSLA Conference?

MLA Pres: I’ll go straight from Troy to the Upstate New York and Ontario (UNYOC) Chapter meeting in Ithaca NY, and then on to Hoover (Birmingham), Alabama for the Southern Chapter meeting.

CM: Do you have any conference advice to share with our readers?

MLA Pres: Since work/life balance is one of my priorities for this year, I would encourage all members to try to get enough rest and exercise during the meeting, and to try to eat a balanced diet (I have problems with all three of these when I’m at meetings). Also, take advantage of the many opportunities for informal sharing of information with colleagues. (I sometimes find that I learn something very important while standing in line in the restroom, talking to others at social events, etc.)

CM: Thank you! We are looking forward to seeing you in Troy!

MLA Pres: Thanks. I’m looking forward to attending the meeting and getting the opportunity to visit with the attendees.

October 13, 2008

Chapter Blogger Workshop

Consider this YOUR invitation to join the Midwest Chapter blogging team! It's easy to post to this, our chapter blog. You can learn how at this year's Midwest MLA/MHSLA Conference.

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Your intrepid blog editor will be presenting a blogging workshop on Saturday, October 18 at 4:00 p.m. in Salon C of the Detroit Marriott Troy. Any and all interested chapter members are invited! We'll learn all about posting stories and photos using Movable Type. I'll start you blogging right away at the conference! If you cannot make the workshop, visit me in the exhibit area during the conference where I will be demonstrating the blog.

Join the team on ConnectMidwest, where people and ideas mix and mingle!

October 14, 2008

Foodie Update

This year's Dine Arounds have been announced! This week the Hospitality Committee posted the schedule for these popular conference dinner events. On Friday, our hosts will be escorting interested conference attendees to restaurants in Troy. On Monday evening, the outings will feature restaurants in Royal Oak. The schedule page has handy links to information about each of the featured restaurants.

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Have you seen the nifty Google maps showing the restaurants and other local establishments in the area around our conference hotel? Start out at the Restaurants / Local Information page and click on the area of interest. Be sure to click on the "View Larger Map" link to use the custom interactive Google map. Thank you to Juliet for making these for us!

October 15, 2008

Taking Care of Business

Our chapter's annual business meeting is held during the chapter conference each fall. This year's meeting will be held on Monday, October 20 over lunch in the Mediterranean room. This week Chapter President Mary Markland posted the business meeting agenda here on the chapter website. You'll also find on this page Friday's Executive Board meeting agenda and supporting documents for both meetings.

The first order of business at the chapter business meeting will be chapter bylaws revision vote. In September, Sheryl Stevens sent a note to the chapter members discussion list outlining these major changes found in the revised bylaws:

Most of the changes that have been made from the current version are in format and editing: e.g., the first page of the revised version has a table of contents with page numbers; headers, lettering, and numbering have been made more consistent throughout; the entire document has been edited to improve clarity and make more consistent with MLA's Model Bylaws for Chapters.

A few content changes have also been made (as recommended by the Chapter Board at the Spring 2008 Board meeting) and number of minor inaccuracies corrected, for example:

Changed Treasurer's budget preparation duty (new Article IV, Section 2.F.4) - Treasurer will now be required to bring preliminary budget for following calendar year to the Fall Executive Board meeting for discussion/approval - in the past Treasurer didn't present budget until Spring Board Meeting so Chapter had no approved budget for the first 3 months of the year.
Abolished Governmental Relations (standing) Committee and replaced with new appointed position called Governmental Relations Liaison (see Article IV, Section 3.A. and Section 4.C. - this committee has been removed from standing committee list in Article VII, Section 1.B.

Fixed inaccuracies such as:

"To confirm selection of Annual Meeting Coordinators..." deleted from duties of President as Executive Board does this."
"To appoint Parliamentarian..." moved from President-Elect's duties to President's duties.
"To maintain a current list of all Executive Board and all committee members..." removed from Recording Secretary's duties as President does this.

To prepare for the bylaws vote, be sure to read over the proposed revised bylaws here on the chapter website!

October 17, 2008

We've Arrived

Treasurer Marlene and your intrepid blog editor have safely arrived. It was a lovely day for a drive. The trees are glorious!

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We were welcomed by our conference planners in the hotel lobby. We're all settled in ready to start the chapter board meeting.

Midwest Chapter Board Report

The discussion was lively and the food was fabulous at this evening's Midwest Chapter Executive Board meeting. Nearly 20 board members and interested chapter members were in attendance.

The new membership Midwest Chapter display was unveiled at the meeting. Chapter members can borrow this handy rollup display to exhibit at library events to recruit new members. I'll certainly take this to next year's Kent State SLIS career night! Thank you to Beth Carlin for spearheading this project for us!

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It was a productive meeting! Some interesting tidbits:

  • Our 2009 chapter conference will be held October 3-6 in Columbus, Ohio. Clifford Stoll will be one of the plenary speakers. The featured special event will be held at the recently restored Ohio Statehouse. The 2010 chapter conference will be held in Madison, Wisconsin September 24-28. Since MLA 2011 will be held in Minneapolis, the chapter conference state rotation will be changed with the 2011 chapter conference being held in Indiana and the 2012 conference will be in Minnesota (possibly Rochester).
  • Based on information provided by the Online Finances Special Committee, the chapter will be testing the use of Acteva for online registration for the 2008 conference.
  • The Policy and Procedure Manual is under development as a wiki. Board members and committee chairs will be working on their sections for review at the spring board meeting.
  • Archives and website issues were discussed at length. Mary Hitchcock will be taking over archive duties in 2009 as Rebecca Caton moves to Membership Secretary. Brian Finnegan will be joining the Communications Committee as the Assistant Webmaster. A members-only section of the website will be explored.
  • Chapter committees will be asked to develop formal goals and objectives for submission at the spring board meeting. It is suggested that committees consider holding in-person meetings during the annual chapter conference.
  • Incoming president Deb Lauseng will be appointing a special committee to address issues of what should be kept in the archives.
  • Chapter conference planning and financing issues and revisions to the Annual Meetings Guide were discussed. An Annual Meetings Special Committee will be established to explore annual meeting coordinating models.
  • Procedures for voting on the proposed revised bylaws were reviewed in preparation for the chapter business meeting.

October 18, 2008

Touring Cranbrook

It is a beautiful fall day here in Michigan. Not a cloud in the sky. Three of us drove up to the Cranbrook campus and visited the art museum and walked the gardens this afternoon. (Ask me about "Michigan left" turns!) It was wonderful and we all took loads of photos.


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Blogger Workshop

This afternoon your intrepid blog editor is showing the chapter board members how to post to ConnectMidwest!

Here is a photo of Communications Committee Chair Karen conducting a workshop on the chapter website.

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October 19, 2008

Great Start!

We are off and running early this morning! MLA President Mary Ryan shared breakfast with library students before starting off our program with the MLA Update.

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Coming up: the GMR Update and a report from NLM.

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We're Motivated!

As I type this, Deena Ebbert is generating energy and inspiring us. Her questions to us:


  • What is your theme song?

  • What idea would you like to infect others with?


Her point: We need bring the texture of what we are to become a part of our jobs.

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Who are you being

While you are doing

What you are doing?


The FISH! Philosophy - 4 Simple Principles:

  1. Play

  2. Make their day

  3. Be there

  4. Choose your attitude


October 20, 2008

Exhibit Day

Today your intrepid blog editor will be in the exhibit area demonstrating ConnectMidwest. If you are interested in how YOU can become a Midwest Chapter blogger, stop by to see me!

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Vital Signs, Bottom Lines

Today's plenary speaker M.J. Tooey is sharing her thoughts on how to keep our libraries relevant in "interesting" times.

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"

"Link your passion, mission, and values with what you do best, and align that with what is important to your administration."

She is sharing with us many of the ideas from the Jim Collins book Good to Great in the Social Sectors.

Screencasting a Wide Net

My first "official" CE at an MLA meeting was this past weekend, during the Midwest Chapter of the Medical Library Association Meeting in Troy, MI. When I saw that the class Screencasting: How to Create Effective Instructional Video Content was one of the CE's available, I was excited. Scott Garrison from Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo was our instructor.

The class was held off-site at the Beaumont Royal Oak Hospital Computer Lab down the street from the meeting hotel. It held promise to be a fun-filled day as you will see below - we had a most interesting ride to the site:
Fancy Ride In the photo you can see instructor Scott Garrison and on the right, Jonathon Koffel from Hardin Library for the Health Sciences at the University of Iowa. This was more of a party bus - and at 7:45 am, I don't think any of us were in THAT much of a party mood. It made for a good ice-breaker!

What I really enjoyed about this class: spending time looking at different instructional design methods like Blooms Taxonomy, the ADDIE method and then took a look at what exactly IS a screencast. As Scott explains in class:

A screencast is a recording of actions a person performs on a computer screen, to demonstrate a computer-based task or set of tasks to others.

Note Taking during Screencasting

We discussed the different software packages and websites that help to create a screencast. Some examples: Jing, Camtasia, and Captivate. The focus was on using Captivate which I have had some experience using in a previous work life.
Scott teaching Screencasting

I think discussing the pedagogical elements prior to creation was so crucial to a successful screencast. Evaluation was also covered - and various means of doing so like using SurveyMonkey.

If you get a chance to participate in a class that covers this topic, I would definitely suggest considering it. Take a look at how you are delivering short informational/instructional content and see if screencasting might help you to achieve this more effectively.

Max Anderson
Technology Coordinator
NN/LM GMR
max@uic.edu
1-800-338-7657

October 21, 2008

Technology Forum

Nearly 40 of us are here learning about emerging technologies. Our tour guides for this morning's adventure are Allan Barclay, Mike Sensiba, and Sandy Swanson. Later on, we will participate in break out sessions to learn about specific technologies.

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Why does everyone hide when your intrepid blog editor enters the room with her camera???

Our panelists used a wiki to prepare today's program. For example, Sandy's presention outline is here.

Sandy is also blogging this conference, see her posts at the MHSLA Blog.

October 23, 2008

What's Next?

You know how it is. You return to work after being gone nearly a week and it takes forever to catch up... I have all my notes from our 2008 conference in a neat pile on my workdesk. I'll be digesting these and will be sharing my take on the conference with you over the next week or so. And I'm expecting that some other chapter members will be posting as well. Hint, hint everyone!

So stay tuned!

Did you notice the information about our 2009 Midwest/MLA Conference in my post about the chapter board meeting? The conference planners exhibited at the meeting in Troy, handing out Buckeye candy. Christopher Columbus himself attended the chapter business meeting to invite the membership to come October 3-6, 2009 to Columbus, Ohio to "Seek, Explore, Discover."


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Here is a great information sheet that will tell you all the things to see and do in Columbus. Our conference hotel will be the Hyatt on Capitol Square just across from the beautiful Ohio Statehouse. Join us! Your intrepid blog editor is on the planning committee and knows that you'll have a great time!

P.S. The 2009 conference planners would like to announce the WINNERS of the three $100.00 gift certificates for the 2009 conference (good toward registration or CE's) that were given away during the prize drawings at the 2008 conference. And the winners are:


  • Katherine Chew, University of Minnesota, Bio-Medical Library

  • Merle Rosenzweig, University of Michigan, Health Sciences Libraries

  • Chrysta Meadowbrooke, University of Michigan, School of Information


Congratulations!

New Approach to Medical Education

With the current drive to reform health care, it was no surprise to see a presentation focused on changing the way medical education is taught. In the Midwest MLA/MHSLA conference Concurrent Session Competency-Based Medical Education, Dr. Rajesh Mangrulkar shared about the University of Michigan program "ENCORE: Ensure Competence, Inspire Excellence" - and I was fascinated.

According to Dr. Mangrulkar, ENCORE has several meanings, but he prefers "Ensuring Competence in Outreach and Research in Education". This self-directed, collaborative, flexible, competency (rather than curriculum) based, and outcome (rather than objective) based program identifies nine competency domains, each related to existing ACGME competencies.

The goal of each is to focus on "what residents should be able to do when they leave" the program. "ENCORE will be organized around a set of 126 clusters of patient symptoms, and work to create outcomes that students must be able to demonstrate." This view of education was so radical, he noted, that "opening the box on the medical education program was like opening a can of worms."

The standard four years of lecture and tests with clinical experience beginning in year 3 will be replaced by lecture, self-directed focused study modules including pod- and webcasts, practical experience beginning in the first year, and no specific time-line for completion. Part of the goal is to cover the new fields of medicine such as personalized medicine, the global impact of health and disease, systems-based thinking, and information management. Part is to incorporate the many ways folks learn, part to promote life-long learning and part to focus on practicality and excellence.

The project has just reached the stage of identifying which of the 126 modules are appropriate for the equivalent of year 1. Obviously LOTS of questions remain on topics such as: How long is too long? How will costs be handled? Evaluation and review? Continuing education? Are there modules we shouldn't have eliminated? In what new ways will librarians interact with students and residents? I'm glad there are librarians on the ENCORE team!

For a brief description of ENCORE, visit the UMHS Inside View, page 3, at:
http://www.med.umich.edu/insideview/Volume3/Issue6/Sep_Oct_2008.pdf

Thank you Clare for asking me to blog this!

Holly Ann Burt
Outreach and Exhibits Coordinator
NN/LM-Greater Midwest Region
http://nnlm.gov/gmr/
haburt@uic.edu


October 24, 2008

MLA Reminders

This week, Karen Hanus our chapter's Alternate Representative to the MLA Chapter Council sent out a couple of reminders to the Midwest Chapter discussion list.

Karen serves as one of the co-chairs of Chapter Council Presents Sharing Roundtables Committee and invites us to participate in their topics survey:

If you haven't completed the Chapter Council Presents Sharing Roundtables survey yet, please do so by October 24. Your input is important to us.

The 2008 Chapter Council Presents Sharing Roundtables event in Chicago, IL was a great success! Each year, this popular event attracts many participants. Eight chapters supported attendance at the roundtables either by sponsoring attendance of members of their own chapters or of new MLA members. Thank you all for your support and generosity! The discussion summaries can be viewed on the Chapter Council website: http://www.chaptercouncil.mlanet.org/roundtables/2008/.

Chapter Council needs your help to ensure that the topics at the event remain useful and interesting. Please take a few minutes to complete an online survey at to help us decide on discussion topics for MLA '09 in Honolulu. The roundtable topics are determined from the previous events' attendee evaluations and the survey; therefore, your feedback is important.

The survey is online at: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=mk2PjIfKn0OsIHnUGGbROw_3d_3d.

The topic selections for the Chapter Council Presents Sharing Roundtables reflect what you want to discuss, so please complete the survey by October 24, 2008. If you have any questions, please contact Karen Hanus (khanus AT mcw.edu) or Angela Dixon (Angela_Dixon AT URMC.Rochester.edu), co-chairs, Chapter Council Presents Sharing Roundtables Committee.

Karen also reminded us that MLA offers a variety of scholarships and grants to assist qualified students in graduate library science programs and to enable practicing health sciences librarians to take advantage of opportunities for continuing professional development.

You can get downloadable applications and information on the MLA Website at http://www.mlanet.org/awards/grants/. For more information, you should contact the jury chair for the grant/scholarship you are interested in. Most of the awards have a December 1 application deadline. The Donald A. B. Lindberg Fellowship has a November 15 application deadline.