Date
Tuesday, July 16, 2024
Session Type
Lightning: 20 min
Name
Lightning: "Enhancing Accessibility: Sustainable Management of CEAL Statistics Database" and "Decolonizing librarians’ teaching practice: In search of a process and a pathway"
Description

"Enhancing Accessibility:  Sustainable Management of CEAL Statistics Database"

Dongyun Ni, University of Hawaii at Manoa Library    
Anlin Yang, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Explore how the Council on East Asian Libraries (CEAL) Statistics Committee is actively working to ensure the sustainability, and accessibility of the CEAL statistics database. This session will delve into the challenges and strategies in maintaining a valuable resource for global communities interested in East Asian libraries and collections statistics. Participants will gain insights into the intersection of inclusion, and data management, and how CEAL's efforts contribute to sustainable resistance and restoration in the realm of library statistics.

"Decolonizing librarians’ teaching practice: In search of a process and a pathway"

Cory Laverty, Queen's University

Many educators across post-secondary institutions are learning about their colonial histories and the need to decolonize curriculum, learning materials, and teaching practice described in the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada: Calls to Action (2015). This qualitative study explored the meaning of decolonizing with a group of ten instruction librarians at a mid-sized Canadian institution. The project was conducted as a learning program for predominantly white settler librarians. It provided an opportunity to document a learning process and a pathway to initiate change. A five-month learning program uncovered participant questions and interpretations of decolonizing drawing on transcripts of individual learning journals and a focus group as the data set. The program inspired a community of practice enabling the learning and unlearning essential to decolonizing. We report, from the perspective of two white settler librarians, on the meaning of decolonizing as an ongoing process that enables awareness of colonization, personal identity, and positionality and includes strategies librarians can use on the path to decolonizing teaching, collections, and spaces. Participant self-awareness surfaced a critical librarianship mindset where information is understood as a product shaped by cultural, historical, social, and political forces, and where we acknowledge that academic libraries and their information sources and systems are not neutral and empower specific voices.
 

Track
Data Management