Friday, January 27, 2012

Ideas Have Consequences: The Radical Pedagogy of W.E.B. Du Bois

The UMass Amherst Libraries will host the 18th Annual Du Bois Lecture on February 23, 2012, at 4:30 p.m., at the Cape Cod Lounge, Student Union, UMass Amherst.  Keynote speaker Derrick P. Alridge will give a talk "Ideas Have Consequences: The Radical Pedagogy of W.E.B. Du Bois."  Refreshments will be served.  The event is free and open to the public.



Derrick P. Alridge, an educational and intellectual historian, is Professor in the Curry School of Education at the University of Virginia. Previously, he served as Professor of Education and African American Studies and Director of the Institute for African American Studies at the University of Georgia.

Alridge has published The Educational Thought of W.E.B. Du Bois: An Intellectual HistoryMessage in the Music: Hip Hop, History, and Pedagogy (an edited volume with James B. Stewart and V.P. Franklin); and numerous articles in the fields of history, education, and African American Studies.  Alridge also serves as an associate editor for the Journal of African American History and is Distinguished Lecturer for the Association for the Study of African American Life and History.   Currently, he is writing The Hip Hop Mind: An Intellectual History of the Social Consciousness of a Generation and conducting research on the role of education and schooling in the civil rights movement.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Professional Tools to Improve Your Library Service

Librarians and Trustees–

Don’t forget that the Massachusetts Library System (MLS) maintains a collection of professional books and resources at its Whately Office. The materials are accessible in person or by request, searchable by author, title, subject and a variety of other search keys on MassCat: http://masslibsystem.masscat.org/. Professional materials will help you perform better and access new ideas and techniques. Many of these titles are expensive for smaller libraries, and larger libraries don’t always have the budget for them either. These materials on children’s services, readers advisory, budget, planning, surveys, and a host of other topics are available for the asking. Libraries can place their own requests to borrow items by following the instructions found on the MLS website: http://www.masslibsystem.org/mls-professional-collection/.

The six regions built this collection, and the MLS is continuing to support it. The Western MA Library Club’s Humphrey Fund also contributed for almost 20 years. The collection is a great resource, and it is housed in the Whately Office. Give it a try online and take a look at the holdings when you are in Whately. Contact either MLS office if you need assistance.

Friday, January 20, 2012

Congressman Neal visits GCC Library


We were very pleased yesterday in The Library at Greenfield Community College to be visited by Congressman Richard Neal and Representative Paul Mark! They toured our new library, and were seemingly quite pleased with the facility. We are always very thankful for the ongoing support that we receive from our elected officials. (Photo by Paul Franz)

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Time running out on survey!

Please take 5 minutes out of your day to fill out the MLS' Strategic Planning Survey! It can be accessed by clicking onto this link:

http://www.zoomerang.com/Survey/WEB22E9Z6S39UA/

It is crucial that the needs of our libraries are articulated to those who make decisions that affect them. So, your participation in this is really important. The deadline is January 23rd.

Thanks!

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Exhibit: The Gesture in Light: Illuminated



The UMass Amherst Libraries host an exhibit, “The Gesture in Light: Illuminated,” by Theresa Antonellis from Monday January 9, 2012 through Sunday May 11, 2012, in the Science and Engineering Library, Lederle Lowrise, UMass Amherst.  A reception will be held Thursday, February 2, from 4-6pm.  The exhibit consists of a related series of framed prints featuring photo-enhanced light photography.  
Theresa Antonellis is the Director of the UMass Student Union Art Gallery and a second year graduate student in the University’s MFA program in Studio Arts.  She graduated magna cum laude from Mount Holyoke College as part of the Frances Perkins Scholarship program. With double majors in Art Studio and Art History, Antonellis was the recipient of the Fitz-Randolf Prize for Outstanding Work.  Recent participation in juried art exhibitions include Art In Nature (Fruitlands Museum - Harvard, MA); Paperworks  (Joshibi University of Arts And Design -Tokyo, Japan); and Arches Exhibition (Boston Printmakers Guild, Framingham, MA).
“My interests include the drawn line as a record of human gesture, patterns in nature, the mirrored image and evidence of time found in accumulation of layers,” says Antonellis.  “In choosing to work in non-representational methods, the work both negates and invites the gaze. The intention is that the images will engage the viewer in a meditative discovery of familiar places and events both in the mind and in nature.”  
For more information, contact Madeleine Charney (413-577-0785, mcharney@library.umass.edu).

Thursday, December 22, 2011

New Book Boss

From the Greenfield Recorder

GREENFIELD — The library has a new director who will begin on |Feb. 6.
Library trustees made their recommendation to the mayor and he approved their choice.
Ellen R. Boyer of South Burlington, Vt., will bring more than 20 years’ experience to Greenfield.
Dennis Helmus, the town’s human resources director, said Boyer’s salary will start at approximately $60,000 a year. He said all of the terms of her employment have been negotiated.
The trustees have been searching for a new library director since Sharon Sharry decided to take a job as director of the Jones Library in Amherst. Sharry left in August and the local library has been operating without a director since.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

WMHIC (Western Mass. Health Information Consortium)

To all

We have a new partner in our efforts to connect all libraries in Western Mass. WMHIC is a group of libraries that have an interest in health information - hospitals, colleges with Allied Health and Nursing programs and individuals interested in health education. If you fit one of these categories - consider joining. See text below for more information.

The Western Massachusetts Health Information Consortium (WMHIC) met last Friday, December 16th, for their winter quarterly meeting. The meeting included updates from all the member institutions and concluded with a tour of the cutting edge and unique medical simulation lab at Springfield Technical Community College.

The next meeting will take place in March, time and place TBD (will be announced on this blog). If you are a librarian who works with health information in any capacity and might be interested in joining, please check out our website (http://wmhic.blogspot.com/) and consider joining our Google Group to receive email updates. You can also contact the president, Margot Malachowski, at margot.malachowski@baystatehealth.org.

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Thursday, December 15, 2011

South Hadley town meeting OKs plan to borrow $4.2 million to build new public library

Published: Wednesday, December 14, 2011, 9:51 PM     Updated: Wednesday, December 14, 2011, 10:11 PM
Jeanette DeForge, The Republican
101211 new south hadley library rendering.JPGThis is a graphic rendering of the proposed new South Hadley Public Library.
SOUTH HADLEY– Town meeting members voted overwhelmingly to borrow up to $4.2 million to build a new library Wednesday night.

During the meeting, most people spoke in favor of the project. A group of supporters sat in the back showing signs pushing for a yes vote.
A two-thirds majority was needed to pass the proposal. The 67-17 vote meant it easily passed. When the vote was announced, the hall erupted in applause.
“This is the time to have a new library,” said Robert Robertson, a town meeting member. “I have never had the volume of support from people coming to me.”
In lobbying for the project, Mitchell Resnick, chairman of the Public Library Board of Trustees, argued that the circulation of books and use of computers and other materials has been increasing.
“To build a new library is a popular initiative,” he said, citing numerous letters to the editor and the support of voters in the Nov. 8 election.
But others said the project is not something that the town can afford.
Town Meeting Member Larry Dubois argued for converting the Plains School into a library and said he was opposed to locating the library as close to the Connecticut River where the humidity is higher.
“They are not doing anything to reduce costs,” he said. “We need to have a townwide plan for what we are going to do.”
 The full cost of the library is $10.1 million. The town has received a $4.8 million grant from the Massachusetts Public Library Construction Program, but taxpayers had to agree to borrow $4.2 million for the construction.
Private donors are to raise the remaining about $1.1 million. Already the community has raised $400,000.

The town had to secure the finances to build the library by a Jan. 31 deadline or risk losing the grant.

“We should stand up and claim our grant. We use it or we lose it forever,” Resnick, said.
Town officials have been debating replacing the aging, cramped library for at least three years. The existing library is not accessible to the disabled and repairs needed to the roof and carpeting and others would cost about $230,000, said Joseph Rodio, the library director.
Already the location, a brownfield formerly owned by Northeast Utilities at Main and Canal streets, has been selected for the new building by Town Meeting. Architect Philip O’Brien of Johnson Roberts Associates, has been hired to design the building and completed a rendering of the proposed library.

In November, voters passed a referendum asking them if they supported the debt exclusion which would raise taxes for the 20-years of the bond. The vote was close with 1,751 residents voting yes, 1,412 voting no. Voter turnout was 25 percent.
Despite the referendum vote, Town Meeting still had to vote to bond for the money because it it the financing authority of the town.
 Library trustees have said the average homeowner would see an increase of $38 a year in their tax bill.



© 2011 masslive.com. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Legislative Breakfast season is coming up!

Thanks to all the hosting libraries for taking on this responsibility. Their efforts will help all of us.

Copied and pasted below is the list of breakfasts. Find your senator and then sign up for his/her breakfast. In a separate email to the WMRLS list, we will forward the entire 2 page letter that has gone out to libraries in the Pioneer Valley. Hope to run into some friends at the Breakfasts!

Please register with the hosts so that they can plan on refreshments, etc.

Western Mass Library Legislative Breakfasts Schedule ~ 2012

Full descriptions of the Breakfasts, plus registration information and directions are available at http://mla.memberlodge.org/Breakfasts

Thanks to the Mass. Library Association for hosting the information this year.

Senator Michael Knapik

Friday, January 27, 2012 ~ 8:00 a.m. ~ Holyoke Community College, Kittredge Center Room KC 303
Host: Kathleen McDonough, Interim Dean of Library Services and Academic Support
Registration email: jtomlinson@hcc.mass.edu

Senator Stanley Rosenberg

Friday, January 27, 2012 ~ 8:00 a.m. ~ Forbes Library, Northampton

Host: Janet Moulding, Library Director
Registration email: LDowning@forbeslibrary.org

Senator James Welch

Friday, January 27, 2012 ~ 8:00 a.m. ~ Agawam Public Library
Host: Judith Clini, Library Director

Registration email: jclini@agawamlibrary.org

Senator Benjamin Downing

Friday, January 27, 2012 ~ 8:00 a.m. ~ Berkshire Athenaeum

Host: Ron Latham, Library Director

Registration email: l.kaufmann@mcla.edu

Senator Gale Candaras

Friday, February 10, 2012 ~ 8:00 a.m. ~ East Longmeadow Public Library
Host: Susan Peterson, Library Director

Registration email: speterson@eastlongmeadowma.gov

Senator Stephen Brewer

Friday, February 24, 2012 ~ 8:30 a.m. ~ Palmer Public Library

Host: Nancy Menard, Library Director

Registration email: nmenard@palmer.lib.ma.us


Find the names of your state Senator and Representative(s) by visiting the Massachusetts Library Association - Elected Officials website http://capwiz.com/ala/ma/state/main/?state=MA