Board Meeting Minutes — March 15, 2023

Attendees: Caitlin Angelone, Maisha Carey, Melissa Correll, Nicholas Cunningham, Jess Denke, Theresa Hessey, Brendan Johnson, Angela Perkins, Karen Sheldon

Absent:  Caitlin Angelone, Maisha Carey, Melissa Correll

The meeting was called to order at 11:05 AM.

The minutes from the February 15, 2023 meeting were approved.

The spring program is being finalized. The CFP deadline will be April 15 and registration will be through Wild Apricot. 

The meeting was adjourned at 11:37 AM.

Theresa Hessey (Secretary) 

DVC Call for Board Nominations

Dear DVC Community,

After an engaging and generative Spring Program, I am so happy to reach out to you all to begin the election cycle for future leadership of the ACRL DVC chapter. 

This past year has seen a return to in person programming, a strengthening of community engagement in support of our values, and the continuation of our guiding questions framework. There is still much to do as we enrich our local academic library community and we need new voices and ideas to make that work a reality. This year, we have openings for following positions:

Vice-President/President Elect

Archivist

Webmaster 

To place your name on the ballot or nominate someone else, please email me at maisha@udel.edu by Wednesday May 31, 2023. Visit our website for more information, including position descriptions. You are also welcome to reach out with questions. 

Cheers

Maisha Carey

Past President, ACRL DVC

Deputy University Librarian and Director of Organizational Learning, University of Delaware

CFP: ACRL DVC Spring Conference, May 18, 2023

ACRL DVC Spring Conference, May 18, 2023

Charles Library at Temple University, 1900 N 13th St, Philadelphia, PA 19122

Wellness and Our Work

Wellness, including mental, physical, social, financial, environmental, and vocational, can be challenging to achieve. Ettarh’s (2018) description of vocational awe is a warning to the modern library worker not to conflate the importance of one’s profession and the joy of work with overall wellness and meaning in one’s life. Librarians often overstate the importance of their vocation, describing it as a calling “because the sacred duties of freedom, information, and service are so momentous.” Which leads us to ask – How does our work in libraries impact our wellness? How can we center wellness in our interactions with colleagues? Patrons? Local communities? How do library spaces contribute to wellness?

The keynote speakers for the 2023 Spring Program are James Templeton; Assistant Vice President and University Architect; Temple University, and John Cearley; Associate; The S/L/A/M Collaborative, who will discuss the WELL building certification process and the design of the Charles Library, and the reimagining of the former Paley Library.

Spring Event Registration

Please register for the 2023 ACRL DVC Spring Program at https://bit.ly/ACRL_DVC_Spring_Program_Reg_2023

For this year’s Spring Program, DVC welcomes submissions on any area related to wellness, and encourages you to consider our 2022-2023 guiding questions:

  • How do you find meaning in your role/work? How do you disengage in extraneous work that you don’t find meaningful?
  • How do you feel about the idea of “quiet quitting?” Does periodic reassessment of how much time that you devote to work versus other important factors in your life (e.g. family, health, etc.) automatically constitute abdicating your job responsibilities?

Reflect on the ways that your work intersects with your well-being (or doesn’t). We welcome public reflection in the form of stories, presentations, panel discussions, lightning rounds, prompts for play and inspiration, or facilitated community conversations.

Ideas for potential topics:

  • Assessment for growth vs assessment to prove value – what drives assessment?
  • Work-life balance in librarianship, setting boundaries at work  
  • Supporting student or community wellness, mental health initiatives
  • Affective/emotional labor in librarianship 
  • Labor organizing in libraries 
  • Rethinking or rejecting the one-shot instruction session
  • Trauma-informed instruction, critical pedagogical practices
  • Job scope creep

Instructions for Proposal Submissions

Proposals can be submitted here and should include the following information:

  1. Proposal title
  2. Names, affiliations, positions, and email addresses of the presenters
  3. Preferred presentation format
    1. Option A – 30-45 minute presentations
    2. Option B –  10-minute lightning round presentations
  4. A 250-word summary of the topic you wish to present including the points you intend to make and the way(s) you intend to engage the audience, if applicable.

Please submit your proposal by Monday, April 17, 2023.  Accepted presenters will be able to attend the program at no cost. Any questions about the process can be emailed to vicepresident@acrldvc.org.  We look forward to hearing from you!

CALL FOR PROPOSALS — ACRL DVC SPRING 2022 PROGRAM 

The Delaware Valley Chapter of ACRL invites you to participate in our Spring 2022 Programs, collectively titled The Essential Work: Centering Our Values, Health, and Humanity. 

This program and our guiding questions were inspired by the ongoing uncertainty around and the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. Over the past 22 months we have been asked to reinvent our work, (re)define what is “essential,” and negotiate the tension between our values and our responsibilities. This spring we invite you to join us as we explore our guiding questions:

  • How has the pandemic changed our understanding of the value of our work and which workers are most “essential” to our organizations? 
  • How has the culture of our workplaces and our profession supported or undermined our health and wellbeing?
  • How can we negotiate the conflict between our personal values and our practical responsibilities?

Interested? Here’s how you can participate:

Submit a presentation proposal — Shared learning is a fundamental part of our mission. To support that continued learning, we welcome submissions that help us explore some element of our guiding questions. Recorded presentations will be posted and shared via chapter’s YouTube page in April 2022. 

To submit a proposal, please complete this proposal form. Proposals should include the following:

  1. Names, affiliations, positions, and email addresses of the presenters
  2. Preferred presentation format
  3. Topic Summary, including a description of how the presentation connects with the guiding questions (up to 300 words) 

Please submit by March 7, 2022. Any questions about the process can be emailed to programs@acrldvc.org  

Additionally, watch our Events page for details on upcoming live events.

Attend our Live Keynote and Discussion in May — Join us in May as we welcome a keynote speaker to share themes related to our guiding questions. 

Healing in Nature this June — While some parts of our work can be negotiated, the importance of our individual health cannot be questioned. Plan to join us this June as we learn to find strength and healing in nature. Details coming soon.

We hope you will join us as we continue to ask questions, seek answers, and center values in our work – together. We look forward to hearing from you.

Maisha Carey

President, ACRL DVC

On behalf of the Program Planning Committee

Meet the Board: Caitlin Angelone, Collection Management Librarian, Rosemont College

Tell me about your path to librarianship

So this is kind of a funny and embarrassing story. I was in undergrad studies as an English major and I was about to go out into the world. I had no clue what I wanted to do with my degree. Around that time, my friends and I were playing a role playing game that was similar to Dungeons and Dragons called Mouse Guard. It’s based off the comic and I had to pick a profession for my mouse from a list. I ended up as the archivist and special collections librarian mouse. My role in the game was to find different books and things like that to support our missions. I was like ‘this is actually kind of fun and interesting’ and I started to look into how to become a librarian in real life. I saw you needed to get an MLS, so I started to look at different career paths and I saw the archives and special collections path at Drexel and I enrolled. 

It kind of made sense once I did do it. I was always a fan of reading and just information in general. When I was younger, I loved the encyclopedia. It was my favorite thing. I had my mom read to me all the time and I just loved information and absorbing information and learning things. So once I started on that career path, it just made a lot of sense and kind of fell into place.

These past 20+ months or so have produced a tremendous amount of social, political, and medical upheaval in this country and around the world. These events have created many new challenges to what is an already challenging job working in higher education. How have these challenges affected your work? Have you changed how you approach any of your responsibilities? Has the last year and a half reinforced the work that you were already doing? Both?

I would say that it definitely made me realize what I enjoy doing as a librarian. I was in a weird spot during the pandemic in which I had just resigned my position at the College of Physicians and had taken a new position. I realized fairly quickly, I did not like the position. It just wasn’t for me. I realized a lot about what I just enjoy as a librarian. I’m good at logistics and planning, so I was in charge of reopening the library. That wasn’t necessarily an issue but it definitely made me realize I needed more creativity in my librarianship. Having to staff a desk just wasn’t for me. 

As a manager there, it was very hard to balance what I needed to do for the university as a whole, my own values, and also advocate for my staff and other Librarians. I think that was an issue that a lot of managers had and probably still do right now. It definitely made me realize that you can think you’re the best manager out there and you’re doing everything right but you’re still making these decisions that affect others. And you know someone’s going to be disappointed at the end of the day, whether it’s your staff, the university or just yourself because you’re making decisions that you don’t want to make. 

It also made me realize a lot about equity issues. It was difficult seeing students not be able to take tests, because they didn’t have access to computers, or not being able to get books and supplies. We didn’t do reserves because our students tended to gather around reserves and we just knew it was going to be an issue. That was a hard decision because I knew at that point students weren’t going to be able to get those books and they either had to go and buy them or find someone else on campus or at home. So it definitely made me remember more about the equity issues, and that even if a library can’t provide everything, we as librarians need to think about those things and advocate for them. We need to talk to the administrators and talk to other faculty members about the struggles that students may be facing because the library is not there. And that’s definitely something I’ll continue to do in my work, whereas before I might not have thought about it as much or wouldn’t have thought it was my problem to solve. I definitely feel like now it’s something I should advocate more for.

Let’s switch gears… What have you read, attended or participated in recently that has had an impact on your professional development?

Over the summer, I virtually attended the Ephemera Society conference which was my first Ephemera Society conference. I’ve done ALA and things like that, but this was specifically for ephemera and I love ephemera. It was really fun and it did remind me why people enjoy ephemera and why it may spark interest in special collections and archives for people that may not know what ephemera is or what special collections are. 

Also, to be honest, our last program also made a large impact on me. When I mentioned I was looking for a new position, I was flooded with messages, job postings, and support from all these people that didn’t even know me, and that was really admirable. It definitely gave me a boost and it made me remember that our profession is just filled with really great, caring people that, even if they don’t know me at all, and they were trying to support me in some way.

With so many responsibilities and so much going on, why did you choose to contribute so much time and energy to the Delaware Valley Chapter of the ACRL?

I originally joined the ACRL-DVC programming committee because I felt like I should get involved more in the profession. Once I did, I really liked all the people in it. I really believe in the kind of programming we are doing and the conversations that we have. They’re very thought provoking and not always just about professional development but about personal development, which I really enjoy. I think the best way to gain professional development is when you’re working on yourself. So I felt that it was a good way to make an impact and, on a more selfish level, I would say that I’ve learned so much from the committees and board. As someone that was newer to the profession, I felt a little out of place for a while. But it’s been really great to have these mentors that are really brilliant and caring. They probably don’t even know they’re mentoring me. But so many of them are already so successful and are just good people and it’s been great to learn from them and take that forward.

What are your goals or hopes for the upcoming year?

I’ve been doing this ephemora blog and I want to obviously continue doing that. But I also did want to start a next phase of it, which involves starting to reach out to people. Up to now, I’ve been kind of working solely on my own ephemora collection. I just kind of thought it was just going to be interesting to people who like ephemera or other Librarians or it was just gonna be me rambling for fun. But people are actually really interested in talking about their own collections, like their own concert tickets or these memories attached to a journal or memories attached to a magazine. So I want to start interacting with people and talk about other people’s collections and how ephemora connects to this kind of human existence that everyone has these things in their lives that they hold on to, for whatever reason. I am interested in exploring that a little more.

What about your non-working time? Tell me about your interests:

For stereotypical Librarian things, I like knitting and I like reading. I also like researching for fun. Aside from the blog, I’ve also done volunteer work with Laurel Hill cemetery doing data accounts or even research for grant projects. We just did some research on some headstones and the people that were buried there for a grant. We actually researched who was buried with these headstones to give them a little more life. 

For reading, I enjoy a lot of nonfiction. I’m particularly drawn to mysteries and accult and cryptid nonfiction. Just kind of like thinking about weird things is definitely my bag. I still play the Sims a lot too because I’m stuck in 2000. 

I love baking and I enjoy doing weird old recipes. Right now I’m about to make a cookie that has the cereal Trix in it. It’s from 1963 from the Cookie Book. Whether people eat them or not, I don’t care, I’ll still show up with it. 

I’m also a big fan of jello molds. I love making a weird jello mold which is, again, not usually something people really end up eating, but I just think they’re fun. I use a regular mold but then I make it with weird fillings. I haven’t done any savory ones, yet (I know that they have salmon ones. I haven’t attempted those yet, they really just seem weird). I know there was an asparagus one that I’ve always been very interested in. I made an ambrosia jello mold once. But yeah, they just amuse me, I don’t know why. 

I go to a lot of local music things with my husband in Philly and a few years ago, actually started boxing as well. I just felt like I needed to do something out of my comfort zone so I signed up at a local boxing gym. We actually have to fight each other and it’s not just on bags, so it definitely made me uncomfortable at first. It took me a lot to punch someone (we’re only punching mits so we’re not like actually smacking someone in the face). But after I did it, it started giving me a lot of confidence and I actually enjoy it. You have to think a lot during it. You’re always thinking because if not, you’re going to get punched in the head. You have to be constantly moving and thinking of the next strike. And there’s also a very big community aspect to it, which I did not think about either. People bring their sons and daughters, and I’ve actually formed relationships with people outside of the gym which I did not expect when I walked in there. 

Call for Committee Membership at ACRL DVC

ACRL DVC is looking for colleagues to participate in the leadership of our community. We have recently created additional subcommittees in order to build capacity within our community, advance and promote our work, and connect library workers. Each subcommittee includes a member of the board, but is driven by the goals of its membership. These committees include: community liaison, resume review/mentorship, and social events.

Let us know that you are interested by filling out this Google Form. The chair of the committee will reach out to you to connect and share more information. Thank you for supporting this member-driven community!

Call for Board Nominations from Jess Denke, DVC Past President

Dear Community,

It is during this season every year that we hold elections to determine the future leadership of the DVC chapter. As Past President, I am responsible for running these elections as one of the last responsibilities of my term. It has been my pleasure in serving you for these past three years. I have greatly enjoyed the board and committee meetings, resulting programming, and relationships established because of my involvement in the chapter. 

We have worked hard to encourage increased participation in the DVC chapter by expanding the role of committees in developing and running our programs (conferences, mentoring program, and resume review) and through equity measures like providing free membership to students and first-year librarians. We have been encouraged by the participation in the chapter and are edified by your feedback.  However, this year it has been quite difficult to find individuals who are willing to lead us into the future in the role of President-Elect.  If you are interested in placing your name on the ballot or nominating someone else, please email acrldvc@gmail.com.

Information regarding the position is available on our website, but I am also happy to provide answers to questions or concerns you may have when considering this opportunity .

Thank you for your time, your consideration, and your community.

Sincerely,
Jess Denke
Past President 2019-2020

Fall 2019 Program Dialogue : A Cultural Humility Dialogue

by Stefani Gomez, Jasmine Woodson, and Jess Denke

Last year’s ACRL DVC fall program was focused on incorporating cultural humility into professional development in academic libraries. Cultural humility is a cousin to the cultural competency often discussed in diversity training, but while cultural competency means learning about other cultures, cultural humility means continuously uncovering and making ourselves accountable for the ways that our institutions are complicit in under-serving some and over-serving others. We wanted to explore this issue because we felt that much of the meaning is lost in the typical ways that many of our institutions talk about equity, diversity, and inclusion (EDI). In these conversations, equity often gets sidelined and diversity planning becomes a kind of tokenism rather than the cultural shift it needs to be to create real change.  

The Fall program turned out to be a great success. In the morning we got advice on developing allies, heard about personal experiences developing and participating in cultural humility programming, and learned about the unique problems and potential of library and archival collections. In the afternoon we had a workshop with Theatre of the Oppressed NYC designed to break us out of our solidified ways of thinking. It gave everyone the opportunity to share their own experiences with others in a way that is not typical of a professional conference. The conversation left many of us moved and thinking about the concept of cultural humility for long after. Jasmine Woodson, Jess Denke, and I decided to dialogue together to process what we had learned and think about what types of changes we believe are needed. What you read below is our conversation. We are sharing it with you because it was helpful to us and we thought it might be to you as well.. 

Being a Librarian Practitioner

Stefani:  
I think it is helpful that the cultural humility terminology makes us reexamine the diversity terminology we have been using and acknowledge its limitations. When certain words are used for a long time we all begin to think we understand what they mean and therefore they lose their power to make us reevaluate and reflect. 

The nice thing about cultural humility is its emphasis on self-reflection, making it not only about others, but about our own growth. This makes the project more relevant to each individual and integrates the notion that it is each of our responsibility to promote equity and that if we don’t, we are part of the problem. It uses everyone’s self-centered tendency to its own advantage to provide the impetus for the ongoing social justice project.  

Jess:
I really like your emphasis on self-reflection. I believe that being intentional about reflection following classes, meetings, appointments with students, etc. has helped me evaluate my assumptions and actions on a day-to-day basis. To me, part of being a practitioner of cultural humility means that I value reflection as a crucial part of the work, enough that I schedule it into my week. I also find that writing my reflections helps me grow over time.

I also think that practicing vulnerability increases cultural humility. During the Fall program, Muhlenberg College archivist Susan Falciani Maldonado mentioned that she acknowledges gaps in the college archive and speaks with students about why these gaps persist – I also seek to be transparent about gaps in my own knowledge and recognize that others may know or have ways of knowing with which I am not familiar. I think that this works to the benefit of my community in (at least) two ways: knowledge is demonstrated to be constructed and contextual in a practical, not theoretical, way and I am able to enter into real relationships with others, not ones that are predicated on my ability to answer questions as an “authority.” 

Stefani:
I liked what Susan said about cultural humility being a practice and I can really see that in the ways you have incorporated reflection into your work, Jess. What you say about vulnerability seems crucial to this because maybe more important than any kind of knowledge we bring into a situation is being open to learning from it. The popularity of “cultural competency training” gave people the idea that they could learn a few facts or skills and they would be set. In this scenario people learned general facts about different “cultures” that they could then use in their work. However, we know that this won’t work because people are not general. Each person is a specific person with a very unique combination of experiences.  

In my own work I look at culture in Latinx families. The important thing being that the individual culture of each family is a much more dominant force in peoples’ lives than is some abstract notion of Latinx culture. Depending on cultural competence training is just one step up from navigating from stereotypes. While you have probably learned more sensitive depictions you are still mapping individuals to generalized ideas about what it means to be a part of certain cultures. Latinx are this way or that way for example, ignoring the fact that the Latinx terminology encompases a huge range of racial, ethnic, religious, national origin, documentation status, socio-economic standing, native languages, and education differences, among many others. A big part of what joins us together, is the tendency in the United States to imagine us as all belonging to one group and our struggle for equality in the face of that perspective.

Jasmine:
I first came across the term cultural humility when taking a Community Based Participatory Research (CBPR) course. I was searching youtube for videos that demonstrated examples of CBPR and came across this one featuring interviews with the originators of the term, Doctors Melanie Tervalon and Jann Murray-Garcia. It was the proverbial lightbulb moment. Like, OH. Yes. Yes! Like you’ve both emphasized, Stefani and Jess, continual self-reflection is not typically centered in ‘diversity speak’ or diversity “training” (whatever that means…) for that matter.

So to come back round to the question, I think what we’re all articulating is that there is no BEST way, really: what cultural humility means to me and my particular context is likely a different process from what it may mean to another. Implicit to me in the concept of cultural humility is the acknowledgement of intersectionality. To your point, Stefani, about individual families having their own culture and not adhering to ideas about what constitutes Latinx culture, is that we all, individually, are an intersection of identities and that we should be thinking of that not just in terms of the individuals we work with, but within ourselves, and how our identities (and any attendant privilege) and experiences shape our ideologies, values, and interactions. Our understanding of our relationships to others don’t occur in a one-way vacuum. We all operate under a particular lens and a culturally humble PRACTICE (what a necessary word for this: practice. It implies both non-expertise and continual exercise. Even the greatest athletes, musicians, artists, etc practice and they practice often.)  incorporate this dually reflective understanding into their day-to-day ACTIONS.

Getting People to Care

Jess:
Getting people to care is an issue when their privilege is heavy (a phrase that Stefani used in an earlier conversation that I love). Most times, it isn’t challenging to get people to care because they have been the victims of marginalization and marginality, which results in what Sandra Harding refers to as a “feeling of enrage(d).” My initial suggestion when Jasmine asked this question was to make that individual a minority – I guess it’s a cheeky suggestion, but I haven’t come up with a better one yet…

Stefani:
The idea of making majority culture people feel like a minority is an interesting one. It seems like it could be helpful to those that don’t operate from that place during their everyday life. 

At the same time, while we can’t avoid conflict and we need to challenge people to see things differently, it helps if we are not too threatening. This is somewhere where it’s possible that the language that has been adopted to talk about all these issues becomes problematic. Having a specific vocabulary easily separates people into those that are in the know and those that aren’t. I think people are naturally suspicious when they are approached by others that are seeming to take a superior stance. We need to consider our own motivations for doing diversity work and reflect on whether we are in it to spread freedom or to build up our own egos and sense of belonging to what has become a culture with its own ways of being and language.

Jess, getting past our own egos is another place where your idea to bring in vulnerability is very helpful. It is very hard to be truly vulnerable without breaking down our own walls. We must come into these situations being as open to learning and being wrong as we think those that are not in the know should be. Jasmine, this relates to what you said above about being aware of our own many intersected identities and how they influence our worldview. This should make us more sensitive to the difficulty of taking on new epistemological frames. Though hooks warns against being afraid of conflict In her book Teaching to Transgress, she also emphasizes the need to be sensitive to the pain that change causes others. 

I think this aligns with what we know about learning. It needs to be challenging enough to keep someone’s interest and create a sense of accomplishment, but not so hard that it becomes more frustrating than rewarding or people will simply give up. 

Jasmine:
Your reference to bell hooks made me super excited, Stefani, and made me think of an essay I read by her, titled “The Heartbeat of Cultural Revolution” in her book Outlaw Culture. hooks talks about sitting on her couch with two little girls from the neighborhood, talking to them about a painting, and how she and these girls have a wonderful dialogue about how they analyze the painting’s colors and composition and what the painting’s visual elements make them feel. Hooks writes that experience was an example of practicing “cultural criticism” and feeling the “excitement of learning in relation to living regular life”. Later she goes on to say how this type of work, once thought illegitimate and unscholarly, when taken up by white male academics, became “all the rage”. 

Both those points — the need for our critical frameworks to be grounded in the language and experience of the everyday, and how that everyday-ness can evaporate once academia gets hold of an idea — come to mind when thinking about this question. 

I frequently use jargon to talk about these concepts. I’m doing it now. But that is in part because these concepts have become jargonized — they’ve been subsumed into a very particular academic and professional discourse and with that often comes inaccessibility and ingroup/outgroup dynamics.  That emphasis on the everyday is really important, and a way to mitigate those divisions. In their presentation on the work done in UDel’s libraries, Maesha Carey and Adam Foley explicitly talked about forgoing one-off staff development programming models for ones that embed this kind of dialog and reflection across regularly occurring professional development programs. I’m interested in how we can take the language we use to describe our values, already largely centered on access and equity, and use it as the building blocks by which a bridge can be built across the widening insider/outsider division. How do we imbue cultural humility into collection development, into instruction, into relationships with other staff and faculty within and across institutions, into our interactions with students? How do we incorporate these principles into cataloging and metadata work, or library systems? How are we already doing that work?

This isn’t to discount what Jess said about marginalization, or the lack thereof, playing a significant role in some individuals’ apathy toward D&I efforts — I agree entirely. I suppose my strategy is more about reframing our work such that these principles are understood to be everyday and not optional — how can we be a service profession if we only provide service on our own narrow terms? How can we grow as professionals if we don’t reflect, or change? This is a part of our jobs, PERIOD.

Jess:  
Yes!  And, so, we need to think about how we demonstrate value in a way that holds individuals accountable – how to align evaluation and promotion efforts with D&I, how do we communicate our values in library assessment to the institution?  These questions are important for library leadership, but it is also important that we can articulate the reasons we make particular decisions about our time, energy, and choices on an individual level.

Stefani:
Jasmine, I love what you are saying here.  I like hooks’ commitment to practicing what she calls an engaged pedagogy that is focused on the self-actualization of her students rather than simply their intellectual understanding. This gets at the difference between intellectual and experiential knowledge. It occurs to me that cultural humility and vulnerability practice are both almost spiritual ideas. Not to scare anyone away, but they remind me of what I’ve read about mindfulness practice. When individuals begin to become aware of how they show up to the momentary occurrences of everyday life, the intricate and beautiful fullness of life becomes more apparent and creates more space for change. The idea being, I guess, that if someone is paying better attention they will see people beyond the roles they are playing and the scripts we have assigned them and will be more likely to interact outside of their own habits and therefore create change.

Valuing Different Types of Expertise

Stefani:
Jasmine and Jess, you both mention the need to connect learning to regular life and our professional lives. Moving on to our next question, a reevaluation within librarianship of what we value as expertise may be at the heart of how to approach making EDI relevant to the library communities as they exist now. Many individuals at our Fall program mentioned how their own situated expertise were not respected in their libraries. They discussed how academic credentials were routinely valued over community-based knowledge and labor and how this made them feel unappreciated. The phenomenon they mention has a number of damaging implications for diversity work as well as for morale. The fetishization of credentials and expertise as defined by majority culture librarians serves to effectively keep much of the diversity that is espoused to be valued out of the academy. Building diversity is seen as charity as opposed to something that is necessary for the provision of adequate and improved service. If we actively value more nuanced definitions of expertise and knowledge as a community we can use them to tackle recruitment and retention of “diversity hires” (a thoroughly annoying term), but also to appreciate the types of knowledge that are already contained in our libraries that go unrecognized. Feeling appreciated for their own situated knowledge might make the entire library community more likely to value the need for people with bodies of knowledge that are different from their own and could help to improve their ability to effectively serve their populations and avoid blindspots. 

Jasmine :
Stefani, you’ve stated this so well I don’t have much to add! Just thinking of my own experience, I’ve grown so much as a librarian (and reader and writer and creator and PERSON) through learning from people and groups that we typically do not imbue with authority in our field: students, “support”/”non-professional” staff (that label feels so diminishing I cringe to use it), individuals outside of academia without traditional college credentials, who’ve taught me so much about outreach, marketing, teaching, presenting, project management, etc. And my own growth in these areas has translated into bettered service to the communities that I serve. Ultimately we do ourselves and the populations we work with a disservice when we think so insularly and myopically about ‘who knows what’ and also, crucially, what’s worth knowing. Shoutout to the DVC program planning committees: one of the many things I’ve admired in a number of our events is how much I’ve been able to learn from people whose expertise is not within the tidy confines of the academic library, but very much related to the work that we do (case in point: the Theater of the Oppressed facilitators!), and I hope to maintain that thread in future programs. 

—-

The DVC community is tasked with professional development and provides a valuable network for our local librarian community. Our Fall 2019 program explored the role of cultural humility in our library work. It was so valuable to have peers with whom to share our practice, concerns, and questions, that we decided to continue the dialogue here.  We encourage you to continue these conversations with others as well and share your uncertainties and wishes in an attempt to practice vulnerability at work. The upcoming Spring 2020 ACRL DVC program will continue this focus on practice. It is entitled: Working out loud: Reflections, revisions, & recipes and will be held at the Temple University’s new Charles Library on April 3rd. Please join us to explore how to grow and even flourish from our most challenging academic library experiences. We look forward to seeing you there.

Respectfully Yours,

Stefani Gomez, Jasmine Woodson, and Jess Denke

*If you would like to explore this topic further, check out the following amazing public bibliography, “LIS Diversity Readings” posted anonymously online.

Fall Conference update

Sadly, our afternoon speaker and workshop leader, Lorin Jackson, is unable to be present at our conference next Friday, October 25 at Cedar Crest College.

But luckily, people from the Theater of the Oppressed in NYC are able to come and lead us in a workshop entitled: Spect-Actor Workshop: Moving Practice into Action.

We look forward to seeing everyone there!

Thoughts on Cultural Humility

Hello Everyone,

My name is Stefani Gomez and this year I am serving in the role of the ACRL/DVC president.  I am the Information Literacy Librarian at Kutztown University and a technology and culture researcher focused on how our families, groups, and communities influence the ways we use information and technology. Currently, I spend most of my time teaching information literacy (IL) to first-year students.  I attempt to pay attention to the experiences and knowledge my students bring to the classroom and whose voices I am highlighting. Sometimes, however, like most of us, I’m guessing, I get caught up in the politics and busyness of my job and forget to think about what I’m trying to accomplish with my teaching and what I might be unintentionally communicating.  

To help me reflect on how I teach, during the summer, I participated in the Digital Pedagogies Lab conference held at Mary Washington University in Virginia.  It was great to have this rare time away to revisit foundational ideas on education from thinkers such as bell hooks and Paulo Freire and consider whether my practices contribute to my students’ freedom or their dominion and think about what I should be doing differently.

One of the keynote speakers at the lab was Ruha Benjamin.  She researches how everyday information systems serve as technologies of racism by reinforcing and amplifying biases.  She says that rather than get bogged down with outrage over individual acts of obvious racism, we need to turn our attention to the systems themselves.  She likened this behavior to calling out someone that has spit in a water bottle over someone who is poisoning the water source. In this scenario, the person that is pulling the lever to the poison is less obvious than the person that spit in the water bottle despite being many magnitudes worse.  Unintuitively, this makes the poisoning of the water source much easier to ignore and to be complicit with.

This metaphor can easily be applied to the importance of reflecting on the structures underlying the services we provide in our universities and libraries.  In this vein, I would like the organization to use this coming year to ask big questions about our responsibility as college and university librarians to our most vulnerable populations. 

We have already gotten off to a great start with a successful and well-attended screening and talkback of the film The Public at ArtsQuest in Bethlehem, which considers librarians’ responsibility for institutionalized inequities experienced by the homeless.  Also, our topic for the 2019 fall program on October 25 at Cedar Crest College will be cultural humility.

Cultural humility is a cousin to cultural competence, but while cultural competence is about getting to know information about other cultures, cultural humility is about learning to continuously do the hard work of uncovering how we and our institutions are contributing to marginalization and thinking about the structural changes that are needed to rectify this.  Conversations like these can be awkward and uncomfortable, but they are incredibly important and can make a positive impact on our students.

During the first half of the program presenters from across the valley will speak to their successes and failures in their attempts to integrate cultural humility into special collections, programming, and community collaborations. .  

In the afternoon, Theatre of the Oppressed in NYC (TONYC) will run a workshop devoted to reflecting on some of the ways that systems of power structure how we and our institutions do our work.*  Their methodology is based on techniques developed by the legendary Brazilian theatre director and activist Augusto Boal, who based his work on Paolo Freire, who many of us are already familiar with. The workshop promises to be fun, enlightening, and practical and we are very excited to be able to offer it.

Please consider joining us. You can click here for more information and/or to register for Beyond Diversity Speak: Practicing Cultural Humility in Your Library.

My hope is that the fall program and all of the other events and services that ACRL/DVC will provide throughout this next year, such as student stipends (stipends will be awarded at the fall program) and mentorships, will help to solidify a network of people passionate about equity and anti-oppression work that are looking for others to collaborate with, learn from, or simply commiserate with.  Developing these types of relationships across institutional boundaries makes it easier for us all to build a career and extend our influence.

The ACRL/DVC would love to use our platform to help you share your thoughts, start important conversations, and build connections.  I would encourage all of you, as you go about your year to share the work that is inspiring you or making you think with all of us. You can reach out to us at acrlpa.dvc@gmail.com or on twitter @acrldvc.  I am so excited to do this work with you.  I look forward to meeting you all and talking with you over the coming year. 

Warm Regards,

Stefani Gomez

*Due to extenuating circumstances, Lorin Jackson, the Research and Instruction Resident Librarian from Swarthmore College and co-founder of WOC+Lib, an online community dedicated to amplifying the voices of librarians of color, will be unable to run the afternoon workshop.  We are disappointed that she won’t be able to share her expertise, but hopefully, we will be able to work with her in the future.

Stefani Gomez, PhD, MLIS
President, ACRL Delaware Valley Chapter
Information Literacy Librarian
Kutztown University
gomez@kutztown.edu
She/her/hers