Showing posts with label news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label news. Show all posts

5/17/2018

Library 2.0: the new UB library

http://blogs.ubalt.edu/newlibrary/


It’s a home, a university square where students and faculty will work together. It’s designed to inspire both individual research and collaboration.

The library is certainly home to us! With only a week before the highly anticipated move begins, we're packing, marking boxes, inventorying, and taking count of the lasts for Langsdale.

The last Final Finish.
The last birthday party celebration.
The last student appreciation event.
The last learning and success workshop.
The last Coffee Break.

What will the new UB library look like? Well, we're not sure--and that's kind of the point.

Learn more about the new library, its flexible space, and what we hope will be the new heart of the university at the Library 2.0 blog.

1/17/2018

Free Workshops for UB Students

Langsdale is gearing up for the Spring 2018 semester with FREE workshops for UB students! Langsdale's Achievement & Learning Center (ALC) offers around 200 workshops for the UB community every year. Whether you're looking for course preparation (happening now!), computer skills, or writing and communication--the ALC has it!


The full workshop selection is available online and all of Langsdale's events can be found here.

Spend your study break with Langsdale this semester!

8/08/2017

New Semester, New Workshops!

Langsdale and the ALC are thrilled to brag a little about our Fall 2017 semester offering of workshops. We're gearing up for this semester with a full staff and a full list of workshops FREE to UB students.

Whether you're looking to prepare yourself for a statistics course, strengthen your Adobe Creative Cloud skills, learn about plagiarism and APA citation, or set yourself up for the semester with goal setting and time management--the ALC has you covered!

Check out the full selection at ubalt.edu/workshops. Locations and RSVP details can be found at ubalt.edu/calendar.

Make sure you drop by our fall open house and learn about all of services at a Taste of Tutoring:

11/21/2016

Langsdale Holiday Hours



Here are Langsdale's holiday hours to help you plan your study schedule this week. We'll be back in full swing on Monday. Have a great holiday!

11/15/2016

Newest Additions to the Archives



Highlights from the Lidinsky Political Campaign Collection at Langsdale

We are pleased to announce the addition of two new archival collections this fall: the Frank Lidinsky Political Campaign Collection and the Betty Garman Robinson Papers on community organizing. Both collections are part of the Baltimore Regional Studies Archives in the library’s Special Collections.

Why were these materials added to the archives at Langsdale? Frank Lidinsky, a 1976 alumnus of the UB School of Law, assembled a truly impressive collection of political flyers, buttons, bumper stickers, and campaign signs that chronicle local politics throughout the second half of the 20th century. These materials have been carefully cared for and organized over time, transforming ephemera—or records created for short-term use, then typically discarded—into a valuable set of visual artifacts from local political history.

Equally valuable to researchers are the records in the Betty Garman Robinson Papers. Robinson’s work as a local community organizer, particularly her work with the Save Middle East Action Committee (SMEAC), is documented in these papers. SMEAC was a grassroots neighborhood coalition of residents in East Baltimore that fought the loss of their homes through eminent domain during the construction of the Johns Hopkins biotech park.

Records like these, which document neighborhood and local political activity, as well as urban planning and redevelopment initiatives, build on the core collection strengths of the Baltimore Regional Studies Archives. The staff of Special Collections has described these collections in our online archival database and we're ready to schedule your research appointment to use these historically significant local research materials!

11/10/2016

APA Style Central Tutorials



Business, Psych, Criminal Justice, or any other APA major?

Don’t miss this opportunity to demo APA Style CENTRAL for free during the month of November. The ALC will be hosting a walk-in clinic for students and faculty to explore the program on Wednesday, Nov. 16 from 12 to 5:30 p.m. Langsdale has the official program for a 30 day trial and if you use APA, we want you to test yourself to improve your research and organizational skills.

The program operates around four centers: learning, writing, research, and publishing. Students are able to organize their research and writing in one central online location. Its word processor allows you to use several APA approved templates. It helps manage and create your reference sheet and citations. It can even search the APA PsychINFO database for citations.


The trial is only for 30 days, so don’t miss this opportunity to experience APA to the fullest.

11/07/2016

Baltimore Poetry Library comes to Langsdale


In the Winter of 2015, the University of Baltimore’s Klein Family School of Design became the new home of the Baltimore Poetry Library, the largest independent collection of poetry in the Baltimore metropolitan area.

In an effort to expedite campus-wide transparency, Langsdale Library recently partnered with the Baltimore Poetry Library to catalog the impressive collection consisting of thousands of volumes of poetry. 

Cataloging the collection will provide a proper accounting of what is in the collection, identify unique titles not yet available at Langsdale, and it will allow it to be searched online. The purpose of which will allow the collection to be accessible to the UB community and wider Baltimore community interested in special collections and poetry titles.

This process is currently underway, with approximately 10% of the titles cataloged. Due to the large and comprehensive nature of the collection, it is estimated that the project will be completed within a year and a half. That is a lot of poetry. The searchable WorldCat List of current titles and their contents can be found here.

Currently, a sampling of the Baltimore Poetry Library is on display in Langsdale Library. An assortment of handmade books, zines, and broadsides serve as examples of the broad definitions that “book,” and “poetry” can take. While some pieces are Xeroxed and glued together, there are also perfect bound collections from local and regionally diverse small presses.
 
Read the press release to get a better sense of what the collection includes and its broader purpose. To access the collection, contact Lyndsay Bates (LAP 107, lbates@ubalt.edu, 410.837.6038). It is located in UB’s Liberal Arts and Policy building, room 303.

11/01/2016

Happy NaMoWriMo


Happy NaMoWriMo! It is officially November, which means it is officially National Novel Writing Month as well. The event began in 1999, and last year there were over 480,000 participants. Over 1000 libraries, bookstores, and community centers found new ways to engage their communities in writing and creativity.

The goal? Write a novel in a month. The official website offers support through mentors, pep talks, community forums, and more. You can track your progress and watch others as well. During the off months, NaMoWriMo supports writers through the editing and publishing process with their “Now What?” webinars. They even provide publishing professionals for advising.


Over 250 NaNoWriMo novels have been professionally published. Will yours be next?

(image and statistics courtesy of NaMoWriMo)

3/04/2015

Roots in the Road Fights

Photo credit: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center/Bill Hrybyk

"Mikulski's legacy starts with the 'battle of the road.'" That's the Baltimore Sun headline that caught my eye on the iPad this morning. Columnist Dan Rodricks highlights the roots of Senator Barbara Mikulski's political career in Baltimore's expressway fights of the 1960s and 1970s.

According to Rodricks, "There are a lot of parts to the Mikulski legacy. But the one Baltimore long-timers remember -- and newcomers should know and appreciate -- was the fight against the highways, way back when."

Want to know more about the road fights? You're in luck, because Langsdale Library contains the archival records of two of the grassroots organizations that fought expressway construction through their neighborhoods: Southeast Council Against the Road (SCAR) and Movement Against Destruction (MAD).

Check out our digital exhibit, which highlights selected material, or browse the collections as they've been scanned in their entirety: MAD and SCAR.

Want to learn more? Contact Special Collections or make an appointment to view the collections in person.

9/13/2013

The Ranking Jangle in Higher Ed

Mark Twain via Wikipedia
There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics. - Mark Twain
How does one chose a single university out of all the stellar universities in this country? Answer: Rankings?

Earlier this month, US News and World Report put out their annual ranking of US colleges. Happily, the University of Baltimore was ranked in the "Top 25 Public Universities in North Region." And considering how many public colleges there are in the northern region of the US, that ain't too shabby. The university has come a long way, even since I started in 2009.

But what exactly does that mean? How did all those highly-caffeinated statistician's in their binder-clogged offices come up with that number? What was taken into account? And how could they possibly have quantified some of the most intangible, and arguably the most important, aspects of a great education--like engaging teachers or peer groups that challenge you to always do better, etc?

4/24/2013

Churnalism: Holding Journalists Accountable

I love deadlines. I love the whooshing sound they make as they go by.
Douglas Adams
by flicker user anniemole
When it comes to writing, we all have to face down deadlines. Whether it's a student working on a term paper, a librarian trying to come up with a blog post, or a journalist covering a breaking story. And, all too often we are all tempted to copy and paste just a line or two from someone else.

Well, things may have just gotten a little tougher for journalists in the US seeking to take a shortcut. The Sunlight Foundation, a non-profit organization who's mission is to make government more transparent, has partnered with Media Standards Trust, from the UK, to release Churnalism US.

The service, delivered as a website or browser extension, checks articles against other published works to see if text has been lifted from somewhere else. Based on an open source search platform, Churnalism compares the submitted text against a selection of sites that publish government and corporate press releases. It then displays the results side-by-side, highlighting and linking suspicious text blocks.

Besides being a tool to catch plagiarism from deadline-crunched journalists, Churnalism can also serve to detect those who are purposefully misrepresenting their subjects. Sometimes authors with a particular agenda will selectively quote their subjects in order to make a story more juicy or to try and influence their readers. In its side-by-side comparison mode, Churnalism can make it easier to spot such selective quoting.

Check it out, catching deceptive journalists has never been so fun!