GSLIS students, alumni present at ISLMA mini-conferences

Several GSLIS students and alumni presented at a series of mini-conferences held by the Illinois School Library Media Association over the past month.

The following presentations and workshops were given on April 20 at Westfield Middle School in Bloomingdale, Illinois:

"More Than Just a Handsome Face: Male Protagonists in YA Literature and Their Struggles with Body Issues"
Leanne Brown (master's student)
This presentation provided a comprehensive, thematic list of young adult fiction and nonfiction that feature a male protagonist who has some type of physical struggle—a speech impediment, a birth defect, or weight issues, etc.

"Tumblring Storytelling"
Mary Dubbs (master's student)
Tumblr can be used to collect and organize storytelling ideas and experiences, as well as connect with other relevant storytelling Tumblrs for inspiration and networking. This presentation was based on a final project for a storytelling course: http://minnestory.tumblr.com/.

"Exploring Anti-racism in School Libraries: Contributions and Gaps"
Miriam Larson (M.S. ’12; C.A.S. student)
During this workshop, participants examined existing scholarship about racism in librarianship and then looked at several scenarios and discussed how librarians might play a role in working towards racial justice. This workshop was based on Larson’s masters’ thesis project.

"Using Visual Primary Sources"
Jeanné Lohfink (M.S. ’00)
This workshop taught participants how to utilize an analysis tool created by the Library of Congress, learn two ideas on how to bring primary sources that use pictures into the classroom, and where to find them.

The following presentations and workshops were given on April 27 at Charleston High School in Charleston, Illinois:

"Maximizing the Monarch"
Peggy Burton (MS ’03) and Jennifer Muzzy
Burton and Muzzy announced the 2014 nominated titles for the annual Monarch Award list. Concrete activities to tie books to genres, author studies, the Common Core and more were also presented.

"Pin It! Mark It! Tag It!"
Gretchen Zaitzeff (master's student)
This presentation examined social bookmarking sites like Pinterest, Delicious, and Diigo and strategies to help students enhance their personal and academic research.

"Reeling for Literature: A Media Specialist Teaching How to Watch Films in Class"
Anna McClellan (master's student)
In this workshop, participants learned the basics of educating students on film techniques. By having students analyze lighting, angles, and framing as they watch, an educator can combine critical thinking skills with the students’ interests in multimedia.

"What's Happening in the Library?!!?"
Gretchen Zaitzeff (master's student) and Latrice Ferguson
5 BIG programming ideas—one for each day of the week—to draw students and faculty into the library were presented.

 
Updated on
Backto the news archive

Related News

Get to know Cadence Cordell, MSLIS student

Cadence Cordell was inspired by her undergraduate work experience to pursue a degree in library and information science. She followed in her mother’s footsteps by selecting the iSchool for her MSLIS. After completing a recent research poster presentation, she combined her scholarly pursuit with her hobby by sewing her fabric poster into a squirrel plushie.

Cadence Cordell

BIG delves deeper into digital transformation via experiential learning

Last semester, students in the Business Intelligence Group (BIG), the student consultancy group affiliated with Associate Professor Yoo-Seong Song's Applied Business Research class (IS 514), worked with Wismettac, a Japanese food distribution company. As a large global company with 47 offices in North America, Wismettac sought to study how data science and AI-based technologies could help the company's operations. 

BIG_Fall 2024

Recent graduate committed to making libraries accessible and inclusive

Joshua Short knows firsthand the barriers to public library access that patrons living on modest wages experience. Having grown up in a self-professed "low-income environment," Short has made it his mission to reduce these barriers, such as library fines, inadequate transportation, and limited computer literacy.

Joshua Short

Spectrum Scholar Spotlight: Leslie Lopez

Twelve iSchool master's students were named 2024–2025 Spectrum Scholars by the American Library Association (ALA) Office for Diversity, Literacy, and Outreach Services. This “Spectrum Scholar Spotlight” series highlights the School’s scholars. MSLIS student Leslie Lopez graduated from the University of North Texas with a BA in psychology.

Leslie Lopez headshot

Nominations invited for 2024 Downs Intellectual Freedom Award

The School of Information Sciences at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign seeks nominations for the 2024 Robert B. Downs Intellectual Freedom Award. The deadline for nominations is March 15, 2025. The award is cosponsored by Sage Publishing.