The new ALA @ UBC t-shirt is ready to order. The design is from SLAISer Alyssa Feir (Thanks Alyssa!). Placing your order is very simple – just click on this link and follow the directions. Ordering is open until midnight, Wednesday, October 2nd.
The new ALA @ UBC t-shirt is ready to order. The design is from SLAISer Alyssa Feir (Thanks Alyssa!). Placing your order is very simple – just click on this link and follow the directions. Ordering is open until midnight, Wednesday, October 2nd.
ALA is hosting and ALA Conference Roundup this Friday, September 27th, at 5pm. You are all invited!
We’re getting some T-shirts printed! They’re going to be black and red. Here’s an example and the full size logo! More details soon! We’ll be ordering them from here.
Hey all, welcome back to SLAIS! (Or welcome to SLAIS if you’re just starting.)
First Meeting of the Year!
Learn more about ALA, and order a tshirt.
Monday, September 9th, 1pm
SLAIS Trail Room
Discussion Panel: How to Go to a Huge Conference
Several current SLAIS students will describe their experiences attending the huge (almost 27,000 attendees!) ALA Annual Conference in Chicago earlier in the summer.
Friday, September 27th (Exact time and place to be determined)
More events to come this fall! (Including an exchange with our sibling group in Seattle?)
If you want more information, send us an email, follow us on twitter, or join our mailing list.
Email: ala.slais.ubc@gmail.com
Mailing List: groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/ubcala
Twitter: ubcALA
Here’s your chance!
One of our lovely colleagues on the Arcan-l listserv suggested that we need “a fabulous YouTube video showing archivists and librarians doing high risk activities. Skydiving, train hopping, parkour, taking books out of the library, writing something at home with the blinds drawn, entering a university lecture hall – the sky’s the limit! All the while with that wonderful all-purpose Canadian tool, duct tape, plastered on our faces.”
Sooo…go ahead and start staging some “high risk” photo and video shoots to add to the video! We’ll all be done with assignments soon enough, and what better way celebrate than by contributing to a fun little project that shows solidarity and support to our colleagues in Ottawa and around the country! Send your photos and videos clips to cgshriver at gmail dot com. If your submission is too large to send, just shoot me an email, and I will invite you to a Dropbox. The deadline is April 15.
Thanks so much…and stay risky!
ALA Meeting Minutes: March 12, 2013
IKBLC Trail Room, 1:00pm
Attendees:
Carolyn Heine, Elspeth Olson, Anna Ferris, Matthew Murray
Agenda:
i. Just over $100
ii. What funds do we have available at this point?
i. We have to have better publicizing. Possible strategies include coordinating with librarians and professors (English dept, Creative Writing, Film Studies, MACL), and earlier postings in the dorms
ii. Possibly a shorter time span (Elspeth closed down at 6:30)
i. We would like to see if we can block a locker out for ALA use for future years. Anna will talk with admin to see if this can happen.
i. Anna plans to do co-op in the fall, and Eka plans to do co-op in the spring
UPDATES:
Anna has booked the Trail Room
Elspeth has received permission from Alyssa to use her design
Do you have what it takes to become Haiku Master?
Do you like Japanese culture and food?
Do you like free prizes?
Then join ALA for the second annual Haiku Extravaganza!
We’ll celebrate the coming of spring with a haikai, a traditional haiku exchange and gathering.
Nick Josten will teach a brief workshop on haiku, explaining the rules of traditional haiku and incorporating the more western form, then lead us in a haikai. By the end of the exchange, a Haiku Master will be chosen. THERE CAN BE ONLY ONE!! But there will also be prizes for runners-up.
Sign up at http://haiku-extravaganza2013.
Can’t make the Haiku Extravaganza? ALA will exhibit a Haiku Cherry Tree in the SLAIS lounge. Write a haiku on a slip of paper provided, attach it to the tree, and watch it grow throughout the week. Donations will go to support ALA@UBC.
The first thing you should learn for attending the Midwinter Meeting of the American Library Association (hereafter ALA MW) is this: ARC stands for Advance Reader Copy, and these, fellow library students, these are your booty. Pirate-style booty, just so we’re clear. Publishers hand out ARCs to anyone passing by (for real, you can get an “exhibits only” pass and just wander around getting free books), so be prepared for the impending onslaught. Don’t think you can get this book selection out of the way on the first day either — new books are unpacked daily. You can even get some books signed by the author!
Not all the books are free, of course — some of the books are set to be released in only a few months, but these are available for *well* below retail value, and the author was frequently there signing. There are also display copies so librarians can make note of possible acquisitions, and these go on sale the last day of the conference. While I wasn’t there, I was warned it would be a madhouse. As proof of the utter bounty of books, I present my swag. I don’t even feel ashamed posting this because I saw other people taking this many books at a time (it took me three days).
The second thing to learn: don’t bring bags. Or do, if you have a favorite heavy-duty-bag, and a long way to walk, but don’t feel required to, as publishers also hand out bags like candy.
On a more serious note, make sure you have business cards — if only because it’s easier to hand over a business card than write your contact information every time you want to enter a drawing (I think there were 10 companies raffling off iPad minis?). Even more, though, it’s amazing how unprepared you can feel without a business card the instant that someone asks you for one — so learn from my mistake and print some business cards — you can find great deals on the internet.
Next, and possibly most important rule for visiting ALA MW: go with a friend. If you’re not the networking/gregarious/extroverted type, try to find someone who is, and learn from what they do. Even a fellow non-networker/introvert could make it less intimidating to talk to people — strength in numbers! If you’re one of those networking types, don’t think your friend will take advantage of you; also, I have it on good authority that it can be helpful to have another person, to enable easy escape from dragging conversations and generally help build a conversation rather than an interview. Also, it’s rather nice to have a friendly face in the big crowd, someone with whom you can share ALA MW tips: “Penguin has cake at 3:30! ACRL has cupcakes! Trashiest romance I’ve ever seen at booth 100 — check it out!”
I fall onto the introvert/listening-not-talking side of the equation myself, so I can’t give tips-for-extroverts,* but here are my ALA MW-specific tips for introverts: go to the newcomer/first-timer meetings, because everyone else is in the same boat and go to themed social events where you know everyone will have something in common. My favorite ploy for social events in general: wander around until you hear someone talking about something you’re interested in, and join the conversation with a “I didn’t mean to eavesdrop, but I heard someone mention [totally awesome thing of awesome] — can I join the conversation? I love [totally awesome think of awesome]!” Sadly, one of the social-event rooms at ALA MW was too loud for this to work, but it is a tried and true technique in my social event arsenal.
* if you want the extrovert’s tips for attending ALA MW, contact Mary J.
Rick Brooks (L) and Tod Boll (R), founders of the Little Free Library movement. We chatted with them for some time due to some research on Little Free Libraries being conducted by SLAIS students (I don’t remember their names! mea culpa).
But ALA MW isn’t just about the exhibit hall — it’s the meetings too. There is a huge variety of meetings, even ignoring the closed ones. Many of these meetings are small, so don’t be afraid if you’re one of eight people, including presenters, in a huge ballroom (true story). Sessions also come in many formats — discussion groups, presentations, updates, interviews — and the details aren’t always listed. Go to something that sounds cool, and hopefully it will be! Just remember that you might have to walk 5 blocks to a different hotel.
Lastly, if you’re the type who had library mentors before you came to SLAIS (especially if you don’t see them often now due to distance), reach out to them before ALA MW — they might just be attending! I forgot to do this, and then almost literally ran into one of my old library inspirations, so once again, learn from my mistake, and make coffee plans in advance, not when you almost run smack into someone in a hotel lobby.
In short, go forth and make use of the ALA MW possibilities! It’s the smaller, cheaper, less intimidating (if you don’t like crowds) version of ALA Annual meeting, and it will almost certainly be awesome.
Freedom to Read week is approaching, so to celebrate our right to intellectual freedom in Canada and make people think about censorship, we’re co-hosting a marathon reading event! We’ll be reading from banned (and just otherwise awesome) books all day, and also helping to raise money for the One to One children’s literacy charity! Hurray!
Sign up to read something soon.
Any passionate designers out there?
The ALA student group would like YOU to get involved in our most recent project! We are calling for submissions to our logo design contest, and everyone is invited to participate!
One-colour designs for a one-sided shirt are due in electronic form (please e-mail to ala.slais.ubc@gmail.com) by the end of the day on Saturday, February 16th.
The design should incorporate ALA & UBC, but otherwise, it is up to you!
Some incentive? The winning designer will receive a free t-shirt!
Ready, set, GO!
Show us what you’ve got. Oh, and have fun!