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The Intellectual Freedom Round Table (IFRT) provides a forum for the discussion of activities, programs, and problems in intellectual freedom of libraries and librarians.

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Library Research Seminar Conference deadline extended!

  • 1.  Library Research Seminar Conference deadline extended!

    Posted 18 days ago

    The Library Research Seminar VIII: Telling Library Stories Conference Committee has decided to extend the submission deadline for papers, panels, and workshops to Friday, May 17Please visit the https://ci.uky.edu/lrs8. Click or tap if you trust this link." data-linkindex="0">conference website to submit a proposal; registration will open in May. The conference will be held at the University of Kentucky (UK) in Lexington, KY on Sept. 16-18, 2024.

    This seminar's theme is Telling Library Stories. We will focus on how to use statistics to tell compelling stories, how research stories reflect library practice, how library stories impact research and development and how libraries can tell stories to advocate for themselves and their communities. In Kentucky, storytelling is situated within strong connection to Appalachian storytelling traditions. Our goal is to connect scholars and librarians or other practitioners in joining to tell library stories and communicate library value. 

    An abridged CFP follows our signature, with the full version and the submissions portal being available https://ci.uky.edu/lrs8/call-for-proposals 

    Sincerely,

    Maria Cahill, Professor ● Colleen Barrett, Rare Books Librarian ● Sean Burns, Associate Professor ● Brian Real, Assistant Professor ● Shannon Crawford Barniskis, Assistant Professor ● Shannon Oltmann, Associate Professor UK School of Information Science, College of Communication and Information, & University of Kentucky of Kentucky Libraries

    Library Research Seminary 8: Telling Library Stories

    University of Kentucky

    September 16-18, 2024

    The eighth Library Research Seminar (LRS8) will highlight the theme Telling Library Stories, by bringing together a diverse community of scholars and students from academia and practitioners from libraries who are conducting research, or are interested in research that tells stories that center libraries and the value they provide for their communities. 

    These stories can center on library impacts, best practices, decision-making and creative storytelling methods or technologies in libraries and the communities they serve. Participants will share research projects, discuss potential new research agendas and have the opportunity to refine research methods and facilitate successful completion of research projects.  

    LRS is a research meeting that can include empirical, methodological and conceptual work with the field of library and information science. It can include, but is not limited to, the following kinds of scholarship: 

    • Quantitative and/or qualitative inquiry
    • Research on any aspect of library services, with an emphasis on conveying library impacts and value
    • Inquiry related to specific environments, such as public, academic, special or school libraries
    • Research conducted by scholars, students or practitioners
    • Collaborative work between professional practitioners and educators
    • Practitioner research or storytelling methods are highly encouraged

    The LRS8 Planning Committee invites proposals for papers, panels, posters and workshops. We anticipate that discussion will examine methods of communicating research on libraries to stakeholders in communities, academia and among practitioners, on storytelling as a research tool and on ways to center voices in the library story that are often marginalized or silenced. We welcome creative and non-traditional storytelling contributions (including visual storytelling or other methods) from individuals and groups, students, faculty and practitioners on a broad range of topics related to libraries, including but not limited to: 

    • Cutting edge research that crosses boundaries within and beyond the field of library and information science
    • How values such as social justice ground stories in LIS research and practice
    • Connecting diversity and inclusion consciousness to research and practice
    • Community/campus engagement and collaboration
    • Identification of research agendas and knowledge gaps
    • Exploration of innovation in LIS education and storytelling
    • Librarian/practitioner/faculty and other partnerships and their impact on research and the collaborative approach to storytelling
    • Transformation of libraries and LIS research
    • Innovation in evidence-based practice
    • Public and school library stories
    • Communication and sharing processes within and across institutional boundaries 


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    Shannon Oltmann
    Associate Professor
    University of Kentucky
    She/Her/Hers
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