SRRT (Social Responsibilities Round Table)

 View Only
last person joined: 21 hours ago 

The Social Responsibilities Round Table works to make ALA more democratic and to establish progressive priorities not only for the Association, but also for the entire profession. Concern for human and economic rights was an important element in the founding of SRRT and remains an urgent concern today. SRRT believes that libraries and librarians must recognize and help solve social problems and inequities in order to carry out their mandate to work for the common good and bolster democracy.

Learn more about SRRT on the ALA website.

FW: Call for Proposals: Critical Pedagogy Symposium: A Focus on Critical Race Theory

  • 1.  FW: Call for Proposals: Critical Pedagogy Symposium: A Focus on Critical Race Theory

    Posted Jan 11, 2023 08:33 AM

    FYI

     

     

    7.

    Call for Proposals: Critical Pedagogy Symposium: A Focus on Critical Race Theory

    Jan 10, 2023 8:36 AM

    Linda Miles

    ****Please circulate widely****

    Call for Proposals:

    Critical Pedagogy Symposium: A Focus on Critical Race Theory mnylc.org/cps

     

    Are you a library, archive, or information worker exploring a question, project, initiative, or idea that is aligned with or inspired by Critical Race Theory (CRT)? Are you seeking feedback or conversation?  This is a Working Symposium that continues the mission of the Critical Pedagogy Symposium 2021 that is focused on building a space to learn, collaborate, and engage with critical race theory in dialogue and community. We invite you to engage with the tenets of Critical Race Theory as they relate to the practice and the theory of Librarianship.

    Our working definition of critical pedagogy includes: teaching and learning in the library that interrogates power structures, distributions of labor, histories, queer, racial inequities, environmental and social justices, and other forms of anti-oppression frameworks. 

    Tenets of Critical Race Theory include: Race as a social construct; Racism is normal; Experiences and knowledge of BIPOC; Intersectionality; Interdisciplinary; Whiteness as property; Critique of dominant ideologies; Focus on historical contexts; Counter Storytelling and voice; and Interest convergence

    Proposals from anyone who works in libraries with questions and interest in Critical Race Theory are welcome. Inquiries might be from the perspective of reference, instruction, technical services, library administration, leadership, collection development, design, digital scholarship, open education, and archives. Additional areas of interest include work that extends to other parts of the information community, related to outreach, liaison work, research dissemination, scholarly communications, and programming. Some questions your proposal may consider are:

    • How does race play out as a social construct in your library practice: instruction, collections, pedagogy, community engagement, outreach, access, archiving, exhibitions, etc? 
    • How could CRT inform your engagement with library patrons?
    • How has the pandemic and its emerging racial and social disparities affected your experience of librarianship?
    • How have you applied critical feminist pedagogy, critical librarianship and critical race theory to a remote teaching environment? 
    • What is your experience in library school regarding critical librarianship and race?
    • What are case studies for library work in or against prisons? 
    • How do we respond as a profession to the climate of book banning, censorship, and other racially motivated ideological challenges? 

     

    Proposals may be panels, individual presentations, workshops, peer-review sessions, or facilitated discussions that:

    • Consider CRT in practice
      • Works-in-Progress- of something you are trying out in practice, seeking feedback
      • Co-creations – building something together
      • Initiative ideas or research findings for live peer review
    • Consider ideas you are working through (and want to discuss) 
    • Encourage community building
      • Topics for facilitated conversations
      • Readings that could spark small-group conversations
      • Questions leading to discussion

    And things that we haven't even thought of... We welcome anything that you think will foster dialogue...


    Timeline:

    Early deadline for feedback on your proposal: Feb 21st
    Final deadline for proposals: March 21st
    Notification of acceptance: April 3rd

    Symposium Date: May 15 - May 17th

    To submit your proposal, complete this form by March 21st (or Feb 21st for feedback which is encouraged). If there are any questions, email criticallibrarysymposium@gmail.com.



    ------------------------------
    Linda Miles
    Assistant Professor - Librarian
    Hostos Community College
    lmiles.librarian@gmail.com
    ------------------------------

     

     

     

     

    April Sheppard
    SRRT Coordinator

    RTT Advocacy & Resources Committee Chair

    SRRT & RRT Web Committee

    she/they

     

    Dean B. Ellis Library   |   Assistant Library Director

    P.O. Box 2040   |   State University, AR 72467

    Phone 870.972.2766   |   asheppard@astate.edu  

     

    Please know that I honor and respect boundaries around personal time, well-being, caretaking, and time off. My work hours may be different than yours. Should you receive emails from me during a time that you're engaging in any of the above, please protect your time and wait to respond until you're working.