School of Information Sciences

McDowell awarded grant for data storytelling kit implementation

Kate McDowell
Kate McDowell, Professor
Matthew Turk
Matthew Turk, Associate Professor
Jill Neiman
Jill Naiman, Assistant Professor

Associate Professor Kate McDowell has been awarded a $578,677 grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS grant RE-256709-OLS-24), under the Laura Bush 21st Century Librarian Program, which supports "developing a diverse workforce of librarians to better meet the changing learning and information needs of the American public by enhancing the training and professional development of librarians, developing faculty and library leaders, and recruiting and educating the next generation of librarians."

The three-year grant is an extension of the Data Storytelling Toolkit for Librarians project, which helps librarians present data in story form using narrative strategies. The new project, "Implementing the Data Storytelling Toolkit for Libraries," is a collaboration with the Public Library Association (PLA) that will combine PLA Benchmark: Library Metrics and Trends, a tool for data-driven planning and advocacy in public libraries, with innovative data storytelling instruction and lessons learned from the original project. Assistant Professor Matthew Turk and Teaching Assistant Professor Jill Naiman will serve as co-principal investigators. 

According to McDowell, while libraries have access to more data tools than ever, they face the challenge of translating data into stories that resonate with key stakeholders and demonstrate the value and impact of library services for their communities.

"Libraries are more effective when library staff understand and serve real, measurable community needs. Being able to better tell the story of their work will, in turn, help libraries secure funding and resources to continue to serve their communities into the future," said McDowell. "The Data Storytelling Toolkit for Librarians makes the connection between data and the stories that can have real impact."

McDowell's storytelling research has involved training collaborations with advancement staff both at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and the University of Illinois system; storytelling consulting work for multiple nonprofits, including the 50th anniversary of the statewide Prairie Rivers Network that protects Illinois water; and storytelling lectures for the Consortium of Academic and Research Libraries in Illinois (CARLI). McDowell researches and publishes in the areas of storytelling at work, social justice storytelling, and what library storytelling can teach the information sciences about data storytelling. She holds both an MS and PhD in library and information science from Illinois.

Updated on
Backto the news archive

Related News

Wang group receives ICWSM Best Dataset Paper Award

A paper from Professor Dong Wang's Social Sensing & Intelligence Lab received the Best Dataset Paper Award at the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media (ICWSM) held in May 2026 in Los Angeles, California. According to Wang, the paper was accepted in the first review round, which had an acceptance rate of 4.7 percent (14 of 298 submissions). 

Adler and Wang to present at RESPECT 2026

Associate Professor Rachel Adler and Informatics PhD student Olive Wang will present their work at the Association for Computing Machinery Special Interest Group on Computer Science Education Conference on Research on Equity and Sustained Participation in Engineering, Computing, and Technology (RESPECT), which will be held in Chicago this week.

Bashir group presents work at PEPR 2026

PhD students Ramazan Yener, Eryue Xu, and Mubarak Raji presented their research this week at the 2026 USENIX Conference on Privacy Engineering Practice and Respect (PEPR) in Santa Clara, California. PEPR is focused on designing and building products and systems with privacy and respect for their users and the societies in which they operate. The students received USENIX grants covering their conference registration and providing travel support to attend the conference. 

Bashir group PEPR 2026

2025 Downs Intellectual Freedom Award given to Nicole A. Cooke

Nicole A. Cooke has been named the 2025 recipient of the Downs Intellectual Freedom Award for her advocacy, groundbreaking research, and dedication to diversity, equity, and inclusion within the field of library and information science. Cooke is the Augusta Baker Endowed Chair and professor in the College of Information and Communications at the University of South Carolina.

Nicole Cooke

iSchool researchers to present work at CVPR Conference

Assistant Professors Ismini Lourentzou and Yaoyao Liu, along with students from their labs, will present their research at the IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR), held in Denver, Colorado, from June 3–7. CVPR is the flagship annual meeting of IEEE/CVF and PAMI-TC, where researchers present their latest advances in computer vision, pattern recognition, machine learning, robotics, and artificial intelligence, both in theory and practice. 

School of Information Sciences

501 E. Daniel St.

MC-493

Champaign, IL

61820-6211

Voice: (217) 333-3280

Email: ischool@illinois.edu

Back to top