Add It Up: Using Data to Make Informed Spatial Decisions
O Criador:
Colbert, Lynne'
Descrição:
In 2016, Marian University’s library began collecting data on how patrons utilized our building. We conducted student surveys, held focus groups, and collected spatial data using Suma, an open-source assessment toolkit. In 2019, in response to the student surveys, the library began upgrades to our building including new furniture and additional technology. We utilized results from Suma studies to make evidence-based decisions about where to focus our improvements. This poster covers using SUMA for assessment. It covers what SUMA is, what sort of data can be collected, and how it can be tailored to your library’s needs.
Declaração de direitos:
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Língua:
English
Tipo:
Poster
Palavra-chave:
evidence-based decisions, library, libraries, space planning, data, space management, and suma
Colbert, Lynne', Brubaker, Noah, and Wilson, Cynthia
Descrição:
Librarianship is becoming more complex with a broader range of services to support with little or no new people to take on these additional roles. The group of libraries in the Private Academic Library Network of Indiana consortium are working together to grow their expertise by expanding their role beyond their single library. With initial and projected ongoing training from OCLC and coordination from PALNI, a team of experts in acquisitions, cataloging, serials, circulation, and discovery systems from multiple PALNI libraries provide consultation and site visits to provide in-depth, in-person support to libraries. Future areas of expert development will include license and knowledgebase collaboration. By pooling our resources and experience together, we are creating space for innovation.
Consortial Collaboration in the Cloud: an Innovative Group Implementation of Web-scale Management
O Criador:
Mandity, Edward, Wilson, Cynthia, Petrusa, Josh, and Magnuson, Lauren
Descrição:
In 2013, a consortium of small to medium academic libraries prioritized moving to a shared web-scale management system in order to enhance collaboration between the members and realign services within them. The group implementation required a creative approach to data migration and workflow analysis, facilitated by technological solutions as well as internal change management. Panelists representing the consortium, member libraries and vendor will discuss innovative resource sharing in a consortial web-scale system, data migration from disparate local systems into the shared system and e-resource knowledgebase, plus the potential for new developments regarding shared print and online collections.
Declaração de direitos:
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Língua:
English
Tipo:
Presentation
Palavra-chave:
ILS, Worldshare Management System, PALNI, and Web-scale
Marian University's COM opened in 2013. Medical library resources are 95% online only -- however there was no specific online access point outside of the undergraduate library's website. I made the decision to utilize the LibGuide platform from Springshare as the defacto website for our medical library.
Keeping pace with the rapid advance of library technology and electronic services can be both exciting and daunting, especially for libraries with a small (but mighty!) staff. Out of necessity, small staffs often undertake many disparate tasks in order to keep electronic resources running smoothly for users. Because of these constraints, it is useful for small library staffs to take a step back and consider re-organization in order to streamline their processes and maximize staff efficiency. As two librarians of a small staff (one veteran acquisitions librarian, Lynné Colbert, and one newcomer, electronic resource management librarian, Caitlin Balgeman), we seek to explain our current methods of re-organizing our electronic resource management (ERM) responsibilities and workflows in ways that make sense for our evolving library. For each of our three focus areas, we will describe our shifts in practice and list practical ways other small library staffs can re-focus their efforts in order to make the most of their time, and ultimately improve external service by improving internal workflows.
Declaração de direitos:
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Língua:
English
Editor:
Taylor & Francis
Identificador:
https://doi.org/10.1080/1941126X.2018.1494090
Tipo:
Article
Palavra-chave:
Electronic Resource Management, Library and Informational Science, and Staffing
The Great Migration: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Tipasa
O Criador:
Colbert, Lynne'
Descrição:
MU Library recently made the decision to migrate from Illiad to Tipasa. Our motivation for the move was a recent merger with another university and discovering Illiad no longer met our needs. While the prospect of doing a software migration was daunting, I learned a lot about project management, delegating tasks, and managing the different learning styles of my staff while navigating the prospect of our library being shut down for the summer due to construction. This presentation will discuss the process of migration, focusing more on the large scale management of the project and people instead of specific technical details.
Declaração de direitos:
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Língua:
English
Tipo:
Presentation
Palavra-chave:
Tipasa, ILL, Libraries, ILLiad, Interlibrary Loan, and Resource sharing
How Librarians Brought an NLM Exhibit to their Institutions
O Criador:
Bishop, Chris
Descrição:
Three libraries in Indianapolis provide a unique example of collaboration by hosting a National Library of Medicine traveling exhibit at three locations within the city. Hosting the exhibit, “Harry Potter’s World,” will provide greater awareness of the libraries and their host institutions through a fun educational atmosphere and bring attention to National Library of Medicine resources through Harry Potter stories.
Declaração de direitos:
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Língua:
English
Tipo:
Poster
Palavra-chave:
Harry Potter and National Library of Medicine Traveling Exhibit
Level Up! Online Strategies for Managing Student Workers
O Criador:
Colbert, Lynne'
Descrição:
Marian University has a small but mighty staff that thrives on the power of our student workers. In order to successfully manage them, we created an online space in our LMS and started to incorporate project management applications, Google apps, and web-based data collection tools to assist with supervising them.
This project was an attempt to better integrate library resources within the campus LMS (Canvas), specifically through the application of the LibGuides widget tool linking feature. With content directly discovered in the LMS, students have seamless access to library-related course content, primarily created in LibGuides. Linking was done without an LTI tool, and proved useful in embedding whole guides, specific pages, content boxes as well as our discovery layer (OCLC's Discovery). Limitations included embedded media (streaming) or other objects with more complicated coding structure.
Declaração de direitos:
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Língua:
English
Tipo:
Poster
Palavra-chave:
Embedded Librarianship, Canvas, LMS, and LibGuides
Malnutrition Screening and Treatment in Pediatric Oncology: A systematic review
O Criador:
Runco, D.V., Bishop, Chris, and Franke, Jessica
Related Url Tesim:
Available from vthe publisher: https://www.researchsquare.com/article/rs-1499120/v1
Descrição:
Purpose: Malnutrition and cachexia during pediatric cancer treatment worsen toxicity and quality-of-life. Clinical practice varies with lack of standard malnutrition definition and nutrition interventions. This systematic review highlights available malnutrition screening and intervention data in childhood cancer and the need for standardizing assessment and treatment. Methods:
Ovid Medline, CINAHL, and Cochrane Library were searched for studies containing malnutrition as the primary outcome with anthropometric, radiographic, or biochemical measurements. Secondary outcomes included validated nutritional assessment or screening tools. Two authors reviewed full manuscripts for inclusion. Narrative analysis was chosen over statistical analysis due to study heterogeneity. Results: The search yielded 234 articles and 17 articles identified from external sources. Nine met inclusion criteria with six nutritional intervention studies (examining appetite stimulants, nutrition supplementation, and proactive feeding tubes) and three nutritional screening studies (algorithms or nutrition support teams) each with variable measures and outcomes. Both laboratory evaluations (albumin, prealbumin, total protein) and body measurement (weight loss, mid-upper arm circumference) were used. Studies demonstrated improved weight, without difference between formula or appetite stimulant used. Screening studies yielded mixed results on preventing weight loss, weight gain, and survival. Conclusion: Our review demonstrated a paucity of evidence for malnutrition screening and intervention in pediatric cancer treatment. While a variety of malnutrition outcomes, interventions, and screening tools exist, nutritional interventions increased weight and decreased complications. Screening tools decreased malnutrition risk and may improve weight gain. Potential age- and disease-specific nutritional benefits and toxicities also exist, further highlighting the benefit of standardizing malnutrition definitions, screening, and interventions. This is a preprint submission.
Declaração de direitos:
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
licença:
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Língua:
English
Editor:
Research Square
Identificador:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-1499120/v1
Tipo:
Article
Palavra-chave:
cancer cachexia, nutrition, malnutrition, and pediatric