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Renee Register to Receive Outstanding Aluma/us Award

Renee Register (’89) (formerly Renee Stamper, when a student in the School) has been chosen to receive the School’s 2009 Outstanding Alumna/us Award, which will be presented to her at the May 1st Alumni and Awards Banquet. She was nominated for the Award by three people who work or have worked with her: Cindy Cunningham, Director, Partner Programs, OCLC; Mary Ann Abner (’96), cataloging contractor, employed by OCLC and Special Libraries Cataloguing; and Shannan Starnes Rosa, Collection Development Librarian at Ingram Book Company.

After completing the master’s-degree program, Renee worked initially at the Council of State Governments as Information Resources Coordinator. She then joined Book Wholesalers, Inc, as Cataloger, and moved to Sullivan Business College – now Sullivan University – in 1992 as Assistant Librarian. The following year she was promoted to Library Director at Sullivan.

In 1994 Renee joined the staff at Ingram Library Services, in LaVergne, TN, as Cataloger. In 1996 she was promoted to Manager, Cataloging Services, and in 1998 she was promoted again, to Director, Classification and Bibliographic Control. After a decade with Ingram, Renee joined OCLC, as Production Manager, Metadata Contract Services, Dublin, OH. In the position she was in charge of a production team of approximately 90 professionals and paraprofessionals, providing cataloging and metadata services to hundreds of libraries in support of four products.

In May 2006 Renee was promoted to her current position, Global Product Manager, Cataloging Partnering, with OCLC’s Cataloging and Metadata Services division. She is responsible for products, services and strategic planning relating to partnering with vendors and publishers in metadata creation, enrichment and delivery. She provided a link to a recent presentation that describes the focus of her work at OCLC: http://www.oclc.org/us/en/multimedia/2009/From_ONIX_to_MARC_.htm

In her letter nominating Renee, Cindy Cunningham wrote: “I have known Renee for only a year, yet I have known of her work for 10 years, as she was head of cataloging at Ingram while I was head of cataloging at Amazon.com. She and I did not directly interact during that time … yet, the results of her team's work were known throughout the industry. Ingram had the fastest response time, most accurate and thorough cataloging, and best cataloging customer service of any of the major book industry players I had to work with….

Renee and I met finally when I joined OCLC, where she has been for the past two and one half years. With her dual perspective, being a librarian yet working in a non-library setting, she has been able to brainstorm an entirely new business opportunity for OCLC and is nearly single-handedly executing on this vision. Her ability to think way outside the box and see new ways to bring libraries and publishers together in the electronic world of metadata is unique and noteworthy. Her energy is tireless, her ideas novel and do-able, and her attitude impressive. She is driven, yet easy to work with, independent, yet collaborative and a great team player. I admire her very much and believe that the unique role she is playing in this important space is worthy of the highest recognition.”

In her letter nominating Renee, Mary Ann Abner wrote that in 1996, “with a newly-minted MLIS from the University of Kentucky, I began my first ‘real’ library job. (I had worked at King North that June and July in a professional position, but it was grant-funded. We all know how those jobs go – great experience but few human resources benefits.) I began work as a cataloger at Ingram Library Services in LaVergne, Tennessee.

… When I began as a cataloger at Ingram, our group was growing quickly. There was no move on management’s part to assign us any leadership, so we came up with our own de facto choice. Renee had been there the second longest of any of the catalogers [and] it was Renee who gave our department momentum. It was she that we trusted the most, and she who worked the hardest.

Renee has a gift for working with people. When I started out, I was young and unsure of myself. Renee became my mentor and my friend. She is very experienced and very intelligent, and she used those gifts to guide me, to encourage me, to bolster my self-confidence.”

Dr. Sujin Kim awarded Donald A. B. Lindberg Research Fellowship

February 13, 2009 -- Dr. Sujin Kim, Assistant Professor, School of Library and Information Science, University of Kentucky, is the recipient of the 2009 Donald A. B. Lindberg Research Fellowship sponsored by the Medical Library Association. The Lindberg Research Fellowship, established in 2003, is awarded annually by MLA through a competitive grant process. The purpose of this fellowship is to fund research aimed at expanding the research knowledgebase, linking the information services provided by librarians to improved health care and advances in biomedical research.

Professor Lisa O'Connor Named Recipient of the 2008 College Excellence in Teaching Award

October 15, 2008 -- Professor O'Connor has been given the 2008 2008 College Excellence in Teaching Award. The award, based on student nominations, will be given at the College Awards and Recognition Ceremony to be held from 6:00 - 9:30 p.m. at the Hillary J. Boone Center on the University of Kentucky campus. Tickets are $25.00 per person.

SLIS Begins a Community Outreach Program in the Lexington Pralltown Neighborhood.

October 1, 2008 -- The School's new student group Library C.A.T.S. (Children's and Teen Services) began their first community outreach project. Students meet with the younger members of the Pralltown community for story time on October 9th, and the preteen members for a book club meeting on October 10. Story time will continue on Thursdays and the book club on Fridays through the fall semester and resume again in January. This project was made possible by Gail Kennedy,  Director of Little Fine Arts Library; Susan Daole, Acting Head of the Education Library; Lisa Broome-Price, Associate Director of the Gaines Center; and Lisa Higgins-Hord, Assistant Vice President for University Engagement. The Library C.A.T.S. thank them for their ongoing support. Professor Stephanie Reynolds is the group's faculty advisor.

ALA's Carrie Russell Visits the School

September 30, 2008 -- Carrie Russell, Copyright Specialist and Director for the American Library Association’s Washington Office’s Program on Public Access to Information, paid SLIS students and faculty a visit during the month of September to discuss the importance of information literacy and research on the national level. In addition to discussing the kinds of careers for librarians and information scientists interested in policy or information technology policy, Russell discussed current lobbying efforts on Capitol Hill on behalf of public library funding, especially in the areas of information equity and access to internet technologies. Russell also discussed her first career in academic librarianship and her passion for copyright, answering students’ questions on the topic ranging from its impact on higher education to cultural commodities.

Russell’s visit was co-sponsored by LISSO and the ALA Student Group. An impressive thirty-five students and faculty attended the daytime program and special thanks is extended to our new SLIS Director, Dr. Huber, for providing pizza, as well as to various student volunteers who provided extra refreshments.

School Announces John Thomas Durham Graduate Student Fund

September 17, 2008−THE JOHN THOMAS DURHAM GRADUATE STUDENT FUND was established by Mr. Henry Durham to honor his son, a 1997 graduate of UK’s School of Library and Information Science. Tom’s experience as a student worker in the UK Libraries while a student at the School of Library and Information Science pro-vided a rich learning environment, and the Fund was established to provide enrichment experiences for SLIS students who are also employed at the UK Libraries. The income from the Fund is “used to support and enrich the experiences of School of Library and Information Science graduate student(s) working in the UK Libraries. Graduate student expenses may be partially or totally supported with the income from the Fund.” In selecting recipients and use of funds, the Director of the School of Library and Information Science will consult with the UK Dean of Libraries.

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The School invites requests for funding and will consider requests received through October 15, 2008. As provided in the agreement to establish the Fund, only those enrolled in the School’s master’s-degree program who are also employed at University of Kentucky Libraries qualify. Preference will be given to students who, in addition to being employed at University of Kentucky Libraries, are enrolled full time in the School’s master’s-degree program. For additional information and to submit a request, see the Procedure to Request Funding.


Dr. Lois Chan Gives Presentations

Over the summer, Professor Chan stayed busy, traveling to Portland and Montreal to give presentations.

On July 14, Professor Chan was in Portland, OR at the 101st AALL (American Association of Law Libraries) Annual Meeting and Conference. There, Professor Chan presented on "The Future of Subject Access in the 21st Century: Thoughts on the Future of LCSH". Then, on August 7, Professor Chan and Professor Kway Yi gave a dual presentation at the ISKO (International Society for Knowledge Organization) Conference, held in Montreal, Canada, titled "A Visualization Software Tool for Library of Congress Subject Headings".

Dr. Jeffrey Huber to start as Director of SLIS

March 6, 2008− The University of Kentucky School of Library and Information Science has a new director; Jeffrey T. Huber will assume the position Aug. 15 of this year.

College of Communications and Information Studies Dean J. David Johnson commented: “Dr. Huber was the unanimous choice of a blue ribbon selection committee that recognized his roots in the tradition of library and information science and appreciation of the school’s contribution to librarianship in the Commonwealth, as well as his potential contributions to health informatics initiatives critical to University of Kentucky’s Top 20 mandate.”

Huber, who completed the SLIS master's program in 1987 and earned a doctorate at the University of Pittsburgh in 1991, has been on the faculty in the School of Library and Information Studies at Texas Woman’s University since 1998. He has a concurrent appointment as associate director for research at the Houston Academy of Medicine-Texas Medical Center (HAM-TMC) Library, a position he has held since 2001. In that year he also was appointed adjunct associate professor in the School of Health Information Sciences at the Health Science Center at Houston, University of Texas. In 2000-2001 he was research information scientist, HAM-TMC Library, Information Technology Research Group. More on this story...

Martin Dillon presented Annual Lazerow Lecture at noon on Monday, April 7, 2008

December 6, 2007 -- Dr. Martin Dillon was the founding Executive Director of the OCLC Institute. From 1970 to 1985, Martin Dillon served on the faculty of the School of Information and Library Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where his research and teaching focused on topics in library automation and information retrieval. He came to OCLC as Visiting Distinguished Scholar in 1985. In 1986, he assumed the position of Director of the Office of Research, where he guided a staff of 30 in research supporting OCLC's mission of improving access to information. From June 1993 until he became executive director of the Institute in January 1997, he served as director of OCLC’s Library Resources Management Division, which is responsible for managing OCLC's Cataloging and Resource Sharing services. More on this story...

Lecture topic: "The Web was created in 1989 and has been rapidly evolving ever since. We are well into Web 2.0 and breaking ground for Web 3.0. The information industries are dominated by the growth of the Web – its technologies, capacities, extent and reach throughout the world. This talk will provide a glimpse of the Web trends that track this growth and are central to information and its dissemination. It will also look closely at Web features, focusing on the social 'activities' of Web 2.0, but also looking ahead to what many are calling the semantic Web of Web 3.0. The purpose throughout will be to suggest ways that information providers and libraries in particular might leverage their intellectual capital and habits of collaboration into a more prominent Web presence."