Serbanuta and Sweeney awarded Garfield Dissertation Fellowships

GSLIS doctoral candidates Claudia Serbanuta and Miriam E. Sweeney have been honored with 2013 Eugene Garfield Doctoral Dissertation Fellowships from Beta Phi Mu, the International Library and Information Studies Honor Society. Up to six recipients are selected each year for this prestigious award, a national competition among doctoral students who are working on their dissertations. The amount awarded for each fellowship is $3,000.

Serbanuta’s dissertation, tentatively titled “Voices from the Other Side of the Wall: The Case of Romanian Public Libraries of the 1970s and the 1980s,” explores the recent history of public libraries in Romania. She also is studying and documenting how libraries functioned in the communist regime.

Serbanuta’s advisor is Kathryn La Barre. Her dissertation committee includes GSLIS Professor Emeritus Chip Bruce, Keith Hitchins of the University of Illinois, and Hermina Anghelescu of Wayne State University.

“I am honored to receive this fellowship from the Beta Phi Mu Honor Society,” said Serbanuta. “This award will support the extensive field work needed for my dissertation, work that represents a starting point for future inquiries into recent history of memory institutions in the Eastern Bloc. I am grateful for the encouragement received from Beta Phi Mu and from my committee. Thank you!”

In Sweeney's dissertation, “Servants of Cyberspace: A Critical Analysis of Microsoft's Ms. Dewey,” she critiques anthropomorphized design of interfaces, using Microsoft's former “Ms. Dewey” search engine interface in a case study. She will look at the performance, representation, and reception of Ms. Dewey, inquiring about the implications for gendering, racializing, and sexualizing information artifacts.

Sweeney’s advisor is Linda C. Smith. Her dissertation committee includes GSLIS Professor and Interim Dean Allen Renear,  and Andre Brock and Lisa Nakamura of the University of Michigan.

“It is an honor to receive the Garfield Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship and be part of such a rich scholarship community with fellow recipients,” said Sweeney. “This award is special to me since it is given by colleague librarians and library educators of Beta Phi Mu. This award will support my research that integrates gender issues into the investigation of information artifacts. Thank you, Beta Phi Mu!”

Prior winners of the Garfield Fellowship include current GSLIS doctoral candidate Sarah T. Roberts, who received the award in 2012, and Ellen Rubenstein (PhD ’11), who was selected for the award in 2010.

Founded in 1948, Beta Phi Mu recognizes and encourages scholastic achievement among library and information studies students. Eligibility for membership is by invitation of the faculty from an American Library Association accredited professional degree program.

Updated on
Backto the news archive

Related News

Mattson receives ISTE Making It Happen Award

Adjunct Lecturer Kristen Mattson has received the 2024 International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) Making It Happen Award. The award honors educators and leaders who demonstrate outstanding commitment, leadership, courage, and persistence in improving digital learning opportunities for students.

Kristen Mattson

Bonn elected president-elect of ASIS&T

Maria Bonn, associate professor and director of the MSLIS and CAS programs, has been elected president-elect of the Association for Information Science and Technology (ASIS&T). She will begin her one-year term immediately following the ASIS&T Annual Meeting, which will be held from October 25-29 in Calgary, Canada, and will assume the presidency in fall 2025.

2022 Maria Bonn

Gabriel joins academic affairs team

Gillian Gabriel joined the iSchool on June 3 as an office administrator - course scheduler. In this position, she will work with the Academic Affairs team to design the schedule and input it into Banner, work with Catalog Management and Section Scheduling (CMSS) to arrange classroom space, manage the final exam schedule, and coordinate with the bookstore on textbook orders.

Gillian Gabriel

Zhao selected as 2024 Beckman Institute Undergraduate Fellow

Zifan Zhao, who is pursuing dual degrees in information sciences + data science and psychology with a concentration in cognitive neuroscience, has been selected as a 2024 Beckman Institute Undergraduate Fellow. The program provides undergraduate students with a $3,000 award to pursue interdisciplinary research at the Beckman Institute during the summer. 

Zifan Zhao

New grant to increase financial literacy among older adults

PhD student Abhinav Choudhry has received a 2024-2026 Institute for Information Literacy at Purdue research award for his project, "Gamified Finance Simulator for Older Adults: A Financial Literacy and Vulnerability Intervention." The $4,000 award is intended for research that enables people to navigate and contribute to today's information environment. Associate Professor Rachel Adler and PhD student Kyrie Zhixuan Zhou will serve as co-principal investigators on the project, which aims to create a gamified simulation of digital banking. 

Abhinav Choudhry