Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Student Multimedia Design Center end of the semester photo fun!

By Guest Blogger Hannah Lee

Prospective students and parents are often surprised to see the services and equipment we offer at the Student Multimedia Design Center at the University of Delaware. I always enjoy visiting other libraries and seeing how they do things-- so for some end of semester fun, I'll leave you with some photos of our students workers in action. Enjoy!

At the service desk, showing someone how to use a video camera.











Some storyboard fun in the studios.

Playing around with the new green screen.


Showing someone how to use the multimedia editing software in the studios.
At the digital mapping station.
In the Skype studio.


 In the "streets," using a loaned laptop.






In the sound studio.













End of semester jam session and graduation party for our student workers.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Multimedia literacy in the academy

By Guest Blogger Hanna Lee

Hello world! It’s been a while since I’ve blogged about anything, and when Shannon asked me to be a guest blogger for the next few weeks, I jumped at the chance. I’m a little less than mid-way through my two-year residency at the Student Multimedia Design Center (SMDC) at the University of Delaware Library, and one of my long-term goals is to be able to articulate how multimodal composing practices can align with the goals of the library and scholarly community. Some may question the place of a multimedia design center within an academic library setting. However, I firmly believe that scholarship is moving in this direction, and that the library can play an integral part in it. Students are very used to seeing multimedia content in entertainment—in music videos, YouTube videos, social networking sites, and so on. The academic world needs to think critically about how digital media can be used for its own purposes—to engage students in deep scholarly exploration, to probe ideas, to further thought.

I first got a taste of this as a graduate student in the Writing Studies program at the University of Illinois, where I took an experimental course called Writing withVideo. The following semester, I was asked to teach the undergraduate section of it. It was a hybrid sort of course that some people had a hard time wrapping their minds around—at least back in the day. An art class where students get advanced composition credit? A writing class where students make videos? The course was designed to “engage students in a comprehensive exploration of creative inquiry, self-reflection, social engagement, and media production. Directed writings in concert with video production projects allow students to experience an integrated process of thinking, creating, and problem-solving.” Taking and teaching the course stretched me in so many ways, and changed the way I viewed writing, media, and scholarly engagement for good.

All of this to say that I was super excited to see this recent Chronicle of Higher Education article: “Across More Classes, Videos Make the Grade.” It describes the various multimedia projects that professors from different institutions have begun assigning their students, and how some colleges and universities are considering adding multimedia literacy as a core skill required for graduation. The article even mentions how librarians have been quick to see the trend, with the Association of College and Research Libraries drafting its first visual-literacy standards. It includes how students should be able to "design and create meaningful images and visual media." This is definitely a step in the right direction. The Writing with Video class doesn’t seem as experimental now as it did five years ago when it first started, and I think people are understanding more and more the need for students to be able to critically communicate and engage in this networked world that we live in. I don’t know if we’re completely there yet in terms of fully addressing the need for multimedia literacy, but it’s a step in the right direction.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Conference Season!

Once again it's conference and poster season! Although, it almost feels like that aspect of librarianship is a constant. Sure, there are more in the spring and summer, but you could probably find a librarian or librarian-related conference almost any week of any year. Well that's just me speculating, anyway. The  poster I displayed at the National Diversity In Libraries Conference last summer, will be up on Thursday at the Maryland/Delaware Librarians Association conference. I finally got around to putting the poster up on slideshare and can therefore share with you some of the research I did from last year.

I was hoping to attend but will not be able to due to personal reasons. Nothing serious, only good!  I will also be signing off from the Bookie for a couple of months due to the same happy personal reasons.  But, don't despair! I've found a wonderful replacement for May. Hannah Lee, the Pauline A. Young Residency Librarian from Delaware will be posting for a few weeks, and she's pretty awesome. You will soon see!

Click "Menu" and "View full screen" in order to enlarge.

As for my research from last year, I'm really hoping to finally get an article together by the end of the summer on all of my findings, but in the meantime, I'll be peddling this poster. Please let me know if you would like to talk about it, or get involved in this research in any way. I'd love to hear from you!

See you all soon & happy conferencing!