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Purdue Libraries and School of Information Studies News

Support Purdue Libraries, Active Learning Center through Purdue’s first annual Day of Giving

Support Purdue Libraries, Active Learning Center through Purdue’s first annual Day of Giving

April 30th, 2014

Purdue’s first annual Day of Giving is TODAY!  This 24-hour, online event invites anyone who loves Purdue to join together and grant opportunities for Purdue students.

Your gift to Purdue Libraries will help us earn extra funds that will directly support world-class research, scholarship and information literacy that is transforming education at Purdue University.  And, you will be joining together with alumni, friends and fans of Purdue across the globe to make a significant philanthropic impact.

Ways to donate:

–          Save a step:  Purdue Libraries is automatically selected here or visit purduedayofgiving.com and click “Donate Now.”

–          Text “PurdueALC” to 41444 and follow the prompts

–          Call +1 (800) 319-2199 to give over the phone

Already given?  Here are some other ways to help:

–          Send this message to a friend

–          Like our Facebook page and share messages

–          Follow our Twitter account and retweet!

Learn more about the Active Learning Center:

–          Support the Active Learning Center through Purdue’s Day of Giving here


Hicks Undergraduate Library Offers ‘Study Break’ Activities During Prep/Finals Week

April 29th, 2014

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – Hicks Undergraduate Library will hold several “study break” activities in conjunction with prep/finals week:

  • Therapy DogsTuesday, April 29 and Tuesday, May 6 – 6:30 p.m.

Therapy Dogs, International will be bringing several dog teams to the main common area in Hicks.  Students will be allowed to visit with the dogs to help lower their stress levels.

Location: Hicks Main Common Area

  • Music TherapyMonday, May 5 – 7 p.m.

Julia Lopez – Kaley, MT-BC will provide customized activities with goals of decreasing stress and identifying ways to recognize and manage symptoms in a musical context.

Location: Hicks G980D

  • Game BreakWednesday, April 30 and Thursday, May 8 – 6:30 p.m.

Hicks Undergraduate Library will offer a variety of classic board and card games to allow students to de-stress and have fun.

Location: Hicks G980D

  • A Taste of RelaxationThursday, May 1 and Wednesday, May 7 – 6:30 p.m.

Instructors from the Purdue Recreation center will provide instruction on various stress reduction techniques including meditation, progressive muscle relaxation and guided imagery.

Location: Hicks G980D

Source: Shannon Walker, Purdue University Libraries – walker81@purdue.edu; (765)496-9610

Related web site: www.lib.purdue.edu

 

 


Purdue Libraries Extends Hours to Help Students Prepare for Finals

April 28th, 2014

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – Purdue University Libraries will extend hours and offer special services at four facilities to help students prepare for final exams, which run from May 5-10.

Starting at 11 a.m. Sunday (April 27), the Siegesmund Engineering Library will remain open 24 hours a day through 5 p.m. May 10. The John W. Hicks Undergraduate Library, which is open to Purdue students 24 hours a day when classes are in session, will stay open from 1 p.m. April 27 through 5 p.m. May 10. Please see the Purdue Libraries website for details on special programming to take place in Hicks.

The Humanities, Social Science and Education Library will be open 1 p.m. to midnight on April 27; 7 a.m. to midnight April 28 through May 1; 11 a.m. to midnight May 3; 1 p.m. to 2 a.m. May 4; 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. May 9; and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. May 10. The Roland G. Parrish Library of Management and Economics also will offer extended hours and services.

During extended hours, Libraries staff will be on site to assist students, and refreshments will be provided.

All other libraries will maintain regular hours.

Writer: Jim Bush, 765-494-2077, jsbush@purdue.edu

Source: Beth McNeil, 765-496-2261, memcneil@purdue.edu


Voice Exhibit Explores the History of International Students at Purdue

April 15th, 2014

VOICEIf you haven’t had the opportunity to check out the display created by international students on the history of international students at Purdue, you are in for a treat! The display is currently up in the Hicks Undergraduate Library. The students who created it volunteered all of their own time, coming to the archives over many months to research student life and experiences of international students at Purdue from the first international student enrolled here. The exhibit charts the first international student organizations as well as ways the university responded to increased numbers of international students.

Congratulations to the Hicks Undergraduate Library staff for partnering with the students who are leaders of the VOICE (Chinese students at Purdue) magazine in making this a reality. You will be impressed by the efforts these students made to educate others about our history, and to help make international students at Purdue feel connected to our past. Neal Harmeyer, Archives and Special Collections Digital Archivist, also went above and beyond in assisting the students with their many digitization requests for use in the display.

The exhibit will be at the Hicks Library until April 17 and later be on display at the Dauch Alumni Center and Purdue residence halls.


Alumni astronaut Cernan donates mapbook from Apollo 17 lunar mission (From Purdue Today)

April 14th, 2014

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – Eugene Cernan, the most recent person to walk on the moon, was recognized Thursday evening (April 10) during an invitation-only reception at Purdue’s Mackey Arena for donating an Apollo 17 Lunar Roving Vehicle mapbook to the university.

The event was part of a reunion of some of Purdue’s 23 astronaut alumni that will culminate Saturday (April 12) with a free, public forum.

Cernan, a 1956 Purdue graduate, donated his personal papers to the Barron Hilton Flight and Space Exploration Archives in January 2009. He followed up with the donation of the Apollo 17 mapbook this past December, and Thursday’s event will serve as the public announcement.

The maps are mounted in a custom-made book and are accompanied by several contextual documents and photographs. The maps provided the crew with bearings and ranges to each investigation site on the lunar surface during more than 22 hours of exploration.

The Barron Hilton Flight and Space Exploration Archives was established with gifts from Barron Hilton and the Conrad Hilton Foundation. It is part of the Purdue Libraries’ Virginia Kelly Karnes Archives and Special Collections Research Center. In addition to being home to the largest collection of Amelia Earhart papers in the world, the archives include the papers of engineers, aviators, aviation professionals, scholars and alumni astronauts including Neil A. Armstrong and Cernan – the first and last persons to walk on the moon – Jerry Ross, the late Janice Voss and Roy Bridges Jr.

The public forum, titled “A Conversation with Our Astronauts,” featuring seven returning astronauts, will be at 7 p.m. Saturday in Elliott Hall of Music. While free and open to the public, attendees must have tickets, which are available at the box offices in Elliott Hall of Music and Stewart Center or by calling 765-494-3933. Those expected to attend include astronauts Cernan, Mark Brown, Andrew Feustel, Gary Payton, Loren Shriver, Scott Tingle and Charles Walker.

Writer: Jim Bush, 765-494-2077, jsbush@purdue.edu

Source: Tracy Grimm, Barron Hilton Flight and Space Exploration archivist, 765-496-2941, grimm3@purdue.edu

http://www.purdue.edu/newsroom/releases/2014/Q2/alumni-astronaut-cernan-donates-mapbook-from-apollo-17-lunar-mission.html

 

 


Four Purdue Libraries faculty members honored as 2013 Top Twenty Article Authors from American Library Association (ALA)

April 8th, 2014

Catherine Fraser Riehle, associate professor of Library Science and Sharon A. Weiner, professor and W. Wayne Booker Chair in Information Literacy, Purdue University Libraries were recently selected as a 2013 Top Twenty Article from the American Library Association’s (ALA’s) Library Instructional Round Table’s (LIRT’s) Top Twenty Committee for their article, High-impact educational practices: An exploration of the role of information literacy.

In selecting this article, the committee especially noted that:

[The authors] include a helpful appendix that maps the literature they reviewed to high impact educational practices and to specific information literacy competencies.  This chart would be helpful to librarians who would like to take an evidence-based approach to their outreach in these five areas.  In addition, the recommendations provide a general blueprint of how to expand the information literacy program in these areas on any campus.

Additionally, Amy Van Epps, associate professor of Library Science and Megan Sapp Nelson, associate professor of Library Science Purdue University Libraries were recently selected  2013 Top Twenty Article honorees from the American Library Association’s (ALA’s) Library Instructional Round Table’s (LIRT’s) Top Twenty Committee for their article, One-shot or embedded? Assessing different delivery timing for information resources relevant to assignments.

In selecting this article, the committee noted that:

this article provides librarians with evidence that “just-in-time” instruction may be a more effective alternative to the traditional “one-shot” session.

During the review process, the selection committee read over 160 articles this year.  LIRT will publish information about the 20 selected articles in the June issue of LIRT News.  You can find more information about the Top Twenty Committee as well as information about past selections at http://www.ala.org/lirt/top-twenty.


Mellon Foundation awards Purdue with $539,000 Interdisciplinary Discovery Program Grant; Call for Proposals

April 8th, 2014

WEST LAFAYETTE, IN — Water scarcity, food insecurity, energy dependence, global pandemics, and climate change are examples of the ill-defined “Grand Challenges” for which public policy makers look to researchers for solutions. Science and engineering can suggest technological solutions to some aspects of these problems, but real world implementation fails without the insights of humanists and social scientists.

Purdue University Libraries and Press, the College of Liberal Arts, the Global Policy Research Institute (GPRI), and Discovery Park have received a $539,000 grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. The funding will support an innovative program that combines interdisciplinary discovery led by humanists, social scientists, and STEM faculty with impactful delivery of research results to policy makers. Activities begin April 2014 and last for two years.

The first goal of the project to encourage humanities and social sciences (HSS) faculty to initiate and fully participate in research programs that address the “Grand Challenges” of the 21st century, large-scale, pressing, public policy problems which can only be solved through interdisciplinary research. $300,000 in grant money will be offered to fund up to six projects.

The second goal will be to facilitate the scholarly communication process in a way that maximizes the political and social impact of research. The remaining funding provides for information management and publishing support for the grant awardees, and builds on a growing program of public policy publishing at Purdue University Press.

A Call for Proposals open to Purdue University faculty is now available at: https://www.purdue.edu/research/gpri/research/mellon-grand.php. Interested faculty may also RSVP on the site to attend an informational workshop to be held on May 1, 2014, from 12 – 2 pm in the Discovery Learning Research Center.

Purdue Provost Professor Timothy Sands noted, “This is an important award at a critical time.   The comprehensive university model only works going forward if the disciplines are woven together across the university. This is a great step toward that goal.”

Further Information:

Amber Thompson, Senior Policy Associate, Global Policy Research Institute

765-496-6392 (office), 765-427-1908 (mobile), athompson@purdue.edu


Baker-Taylor Forecast interviews Charles Watkinson, Director of Purdue University Press; Highlights Newly-Published ‘The Deans’ Bible’

April 7th, 2014

Purdue University Press book, “The Deans’ Bible: Five Purdue Women and Their Quest for Equality” is highlighted in Baker-Taylor Forecast along with an in-depth interview with Charles Watkinson, Director of Purdue University Press.

The issue goes to 22,000 booksellers and public librarians. 

Charles Watkinson is interviewed on page 20 and “The Deans’ Bible” is featured on page 21.

http://www.baker-taylor.com/pdfs/pub-forecast-201403.pdf

 


Applications sought for next IMPACT cohort

April 7th, 2014

The IMPACT program is now taking applications for the fall 2014 cohort, and applications are due by 5 p.m. May 9.  The application link and information about the program are available at www.purdue.edu/impact.

IMPACT (Instruction Matters: Purdue Academic Course Transformation) is a campus-wide initiative begun in 2011 by the Provost’s Office for the redesign of classes. Its aim is to engage students more fully in their learning, thereby improving competency, retention and completion in classes that serve students across the entire campus. It is related to Purdue Moves and the University’s efforts to be the national forerunner in transformative higher education.

For more information on the program, contact Chantal Levesque-Bristol, director of the Center for Instructional Excellence, at cbristol@purdue.edu.

 


Purdue University Libraries Awards 2014 Library Scholar Grants

April 4th, 2014

Purdue University Libraries recently awarded faculty members with 2014 Library Scholar Grants.  The grant recipients were recognized at an honorary luncheon in which several past Library Scholar grant recipients spoke about the impact and significance of the research made possible through their grants. 

2014 Library Scholar Grant Recipients:

Decker

Alicia Decker
Assistant Professor of History, West Lafayette

“Public Secrets: A Gendered History of Enforced Disappearance in Post-Colonial Africa”

Johnston

Michael Johnston
Assistant Professor of English, West Lafayette

“The Reading Nation in the Age of Chaucer”

Mitchell

Silvia Mitchell
Assistant Professor of History, West Lafayette

“Spain under Mariana of Austria: Court, Dynastic, and International Politics in Seventeenth-Century Europe”

Pitts

Yvonne Pitts
Assistant Professor of History, West Lafayette

” ‘Vile Characters’ and Property Law: Regulating Prostitution and Creating Property in Civil War Era Nashville, 1860-1868″

Zimmer

Michael Zimmer
Assistant Professor of Biological Sciences, Calumet

“Biography of John F. Enders and His Contributions to Microbiology”


2014 Presentations by Past Grant Recipients:

  • [2012] Jennifer Foray, Associate Professor of History, West Lafayette, “Imperial Aftershocks: The Legacies of Decolonization in the Netherlands”
  • [2013] Jonathan Swarts, Associate Professor of Political Science, North Central, “Friends and Allies: The Greek Military Junta and the United States”

About the Library Scholars Grant Program: 
The Library Scholars Grant Program was established in 1985 by the 50th anniversary gift of members of the Class of 1935, and the class has been continuously supportive of this fund for the past 29 years. This program supports access to unique collections of information around the country and the world for untenured and recently tenured Purdue faculty in all disciplines from the West Lafayette, Calumet, Fort Wayne, IUPUI and North Central campuses. The grants cover expenses associated with the cost of transportation, lodging, meals and fees charged by the library or other collection owner.