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Follow and share the meeting on Twitter at #NEKS2016 Nebraska C & U/Kansas CULS 2 nd Joint Spring Conference Networking with Colleagues across State Lines April 21-22, 2016 Holiday Inn at the Campus Manhattan, Kansas Open Access, Open Borders

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Page 1: Open Access, Open Borders

Follow and share the meeting on Twitter at #NEKS2016

Nebraska C & U/Kansas CULS

2nd Joint Spring Conference

Networking with Colleagues

across State Lines

April 21-22, 2016 Holiday Inn at the Campus

Manhattan, Kansas

Open Access, Open Borders

Page 2: Open Access, Open Borders

Pre-Conference

April 21, 2016 1:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.

C. Jason Kegler

Director of Student Rights and Responsibilities,

Pittsburg State University

Pittsburg, Kansas

ALICE TRAINING ALICE is the leading training solution that increases

students’ and employees’ odds of survival during a violent

intruder event. ALICE, which stands for Alert, Lockdown,

Inform, Counter, and Evacuate, is a post-Columbine, Virginia

Tech, Sandy Hook strategy that goes beyond the

conventional lockdown. Mr. Kegler will address situations

specific to college and university libraries and resource

areas. A guest panel will follow up with questions and

comments.

C. Jason Kegler serves as Pittsburg State University’s

director of student rights and responsibilities. He is

responsible for the overall administration of the university’s discipline and judicial system. He coordinates

the university’s Behavioral Intervention and Threat Assessment Team to design and deliver educational

programs and materials addressing community issues. Kegler came to PSU from Neosho County

Community College Previously, where he was dean of student development at NCCC from 2010 until

2013 and Allen Community College, serving first as director of admissions and marketing and then as

director of student life from 2000 until 2010.

Kegler earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in psychology from the University of Saint Mary and master’s

degree in organizational leadership from Fort Hays State University.

Networking & Entertainment

April 21, 2016 5:00- 6:30

Jennifer White & Friends

Jennifer White-Vocalist

Roger Wilder-Piano

Bob Bowman-Bass

Page 3: Open Access, Open Borders

Conference Keynote Speaker

Josh Bolick

Scholarly Communication Librarian

Shulenburger Office of Scholarly Communication & Copyright

Watson Library

University of Kansas

Josh Bolick joined the University of Kansas Libraries' Shulenburger

Office of Scholarly Communication and Copyright as scholarly

communication librarian in August 2015. He received an M.S. in

library and information studies from Florida State University and

subsequently worked in the Office of Scholarly Communication in

FSU Libraries. Josh is interested in how the Web is changing

academic publishing and the ways that scholars are using Web tools

to increase their visibility as researchers and the impact of their

scholarship.

As the scholarly communication librarian, Josh actively promotes

author rights, as well as those of the creators, disseminators and

users of scholarly information, under fair use. Josh also assists in the

promotion of the university’s institutional repository and open

access initiatives.

In addition to open scholarship, Josh likes bicycles and tacos, “sometimes consecutively”. To

supplement his career in librarianship and need for tacos, Josh has worked in the bicycle industry, as a

kayak guide, and served in the U.S. Navy as a radioman on the submarine U.S.S. La Jolla (SSN 701).

Page 4: Open Access, Open Borders

Schedule of Events

Thursday April 21st

12:00 – 1:00 Registration Main Floor Pre-convene

1:00 – 4:30 Preconference-Landon Room ALICE TRAINING C. Jason Kegler, Director of Student Rights and Responsibilities, Pittsburg State University. Pittsburg, Kansas

ALICE is the leading training solution that increases students’ and employees’ odds of survival during a violent intruder event. ALICE, which stands for Alert, Lockdown, Inform, Counter, and Evacuate, is a post-Columbine, Virginia Tech, Sandy Hook strategy that goes beyond the conventional lockdown. Mr. Kegler will address situations specific to college and university libraries and resource areas. A guest panel will follow up with questions and comments.

4:00-6:00 Registration Main Floor Pre-convene

4:30-5:00 Free time-hotel check-in

5:00 – 6:30 Networking & Entertainment–Landon Room Jennifer White Trio Jennifer White-Vocalist Roger Wilder-Piano Bob Bowman-Bass Cash Bar Available

7:00-?? Dine arounds/Fun stuff At the conclusion of the networking event on Thursday evening, you are invited to join your fellow librarians for dine-arounds in Aggieville (at your own expense). Attendees will meet in the Landon Room (the same room as the networking event) starting at 6:30pm and depart for their restaurants at 6:45pm. Please sign up using the google spreadsheet. We are also trying to form a group to escape Locked Manhattan following dinner ($21 plus taxes and fees per person). If you are interested in joining this group, please contact Ray Walling to express your interest.

Friday April 22nd

8:00 – 9:30 Registration Main Floor Pre-convene Poster Sessions will be set up in the Pre-Convene

9:00 – 9:45

State Meetings- Landon Room Nebraska-East side Kansas –West side Continental breakfast available

Page 5: Open Access, Open Borders

10:00-10:50 Sessions Breakouts #1 (Five Rooms) Lower Level Room A Juggling Collections and Connections to Community: Changing Role of

Libraries~~Jorge A Leon, Learning Outreach Librarian, Pittsburg State University ,Barbara

Pope, Periodicals Reference Librarian, Pittsburg State University Room B Opening Borders: Current Information Literacy Strategies of the Small University Kind~~Julie Pinnell Director, Doane College, Jayne Germer, Learning & e-

Resources Librarian, Doane College Billy Moore, Reference and Instruction Librarian, Concordia University Martha A. Tanner, Head of Library Instruction & Reference and Assistant Professor, Nebraska Wesleyan University Room C An Exercise in Self Improvement: Using Gold Rush's Library Catalog Comparison System to Improve Collections ~~ Robert Kelly Library Director,Hutchinson Community College, Rose Nelson, Assistant Director Prospector/Gold Rush Coordinator CO Alliance of Research Libraries Kansas Room Manual Not Included: Technical Services Librarians Developing Digital Curation Workshops for the Community~~Allison Ringness, Digital Initiatives Librarian, Kansas State University

State Room Lightning Sessions

Bridging the Communication Gap Successfully for Library/IT Projects~~Amanda Harlan,

Metadata Librarian, KSU, Dhanushka Samarakoon, Programmer, Kansas State University Summer LibGuide Workshops: Making our digital content more user-friendly~~Eleanor Johnson, Assistant Professor (Social Sciences Librarian),UNO Library Instruction with Rural Nebraska Public Schools~~Julia Powell, Coordinator of Instruction and Government Documents Librarian, University of Nebraska-Kearney

11:00-11:20 Break (Snacks provided) Pre-Convene Lower Level

11:20 – 12:20 Welcome/Keynote Landon Room Josh Bolick University of Kansas Libraries Shulenburger Office of Scholarly Communication and Copyright

"The (Rough & Divergent) Road to Open: How Do We Get There From Here?" Josh Bolick joined the University of Kansas Libraries' Shulenburger Office of Scholarly Communication and Copyright as scholarly communication librarian in August 2015. He received an M.S. in library and information studies from Florida State University and subsequently worked in the Office of Scholarly Communication in FSU Libraries. Josh is interested in how the Web is changing academic publishing and the ways that scholars are using Web tools to increase their visibility as researchers and the impact of their scholarship. As the scholarly communication librarian, Josh actively promotes author rights, as well as those of the creators, disseminators and users of scholarly information, under fair use. Josh also assists in the promotion of the university’s institutional repository and open access initiatives

12:25 -1:30 Lunch Landon Room

Page 6: Open Access, Open Borders

1:40-2:30 Session Breakouts #2 (Five Rooms) Lower Level Rooms Room A Transfer Skills and Google Searching: Applying Nowacek’s Concept of

Recontextualization to Search Skills~~Ruth Mirtz, Library Director, Kansas Weslyan

Room B Transcending institutions and borders: 21st century digital scholarship at K-

State~Ryan Otto, Digital Scholarship Librarian, Kansas State University,

Char Simser, Coordinator of Electronic Publishing, Kansas State University, Rebel Cummings-Sauls, Director-Center for the Advancement of Digital Scholarship, Kansas State University, Rachel Miles, Digital Scholarship Librarian, Kansas State University,

Room C Creating our Spaces, Evolving our Roles~~Joyce Neujahr, Director of Patron

Services, University of Nebraska, Criss Library, Jackie Mitchell, Creative Production Lab Supervisor, University of Nebraska, Criss Library

Kansas Room An Overview of Free and Useful Resources from the NLM~~Alicia

Lillich, Kansas Outreach Coordinator, National Network of Libraries of Medicine

State Room Lightning Sessions Academic Libraries and Open Educational Resources : a Preview of what to do when your college puts "Open Access" in their description ~~Robert Kelly, Coordinator of Library Services, Hutchinson Community College, Rita Sevart, Library Director, Wichita Area Technical College Do I need clearance? Serving as the library liaison to USSTRATCOM Fellows~~Heidi Blackburn, STEM Librarian, University of Nebraska - Omaha

2:40 - 3:30 Session Breakouts #3 (Four Rooms) Lower Level Rooms Room A Creating Green Open Access to Institutional Scholarship using Digital

Commons~~Deborah White,Digital Resources & Initiatives Manager, Pittsburg State University, Yumi Ohira, Digital Curation Librarian, Fort Hays State University

Room C Can smaller colleges use the AAC & U Value Rubrics?~~Gloria Creed Dikeogu,

Director of Library Services, Ottawa University

Kansas Room New Framework, New Friends: Open Access Information Literacy

Instruction and Collaboration ~~Heather Healy, Health Sciences Librarian, University of Kansas Medical Center, Julie Hartwell, Health Sciences Librarian, University of Kansas Medical Center

State Room A Fireworks Display of One Shot Library Instruction~~Terri Rickel, ILL

Lending Team Leader, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

3:30-4:00 Networking/Door Prizes (Snack) Lower Level Room B

4:10-5:00 Kansas Roundtables and Interest Groups Meetings State Room PALS Kansas Room TYLDC

Page 7: Open Access, Open Borders

Concurrent Session Descriptions

10:00-10:50 Juggling Collections and Connections to Community: Changing Role of Libraries

Jorge A Leon, Learning Outreach Librarian, Pittsburg State University, Barbara Pope, Periodicals Reference

Librarian, Pittsburg State University

The traditional role of librarians has long been to support the university’s needs through instruction, collection

development, and research assistance. Pittsburg State University’s challenge has been to balance our print and

electronic collections at a university whose programs sometimes do not draw enough on library resources while also

creating meaningful connections with students and faculty. In an effort to increase the relevancy of our collections

and create meaningful connections with the university community, we have been actively creating opportunities for

patrons to create content in the library. This has allowed users to engage with library resources and services in a new

and different way while helping to shape the space. The goal is to make users content creators and empower them to

be invested in the future development of the library space. This approach allows us to share with students, faculty,

and staff the wide variety of library resources and services that can be both informative and fun. Room A

Opening Borders: Current Information Literacy Strategies of the Small University Kind

Julie Pinnell Director, Doane College, Jayne Germer, Learning & e-Resources Librarian, Doane College Billy

Moore, Reference and Instruction Librarian, Concordia University Martha A. Tanner, Head of Library

Instruction & Reference and Assistant Professor, Nebraska Wesleyan University

Four librarians from three smaller Nebraska universities speak about their latest Information Literacy endeavors:

improving instruction and support for distance students, piloting a personal librarian program, incorporating open-

access resources into reference and instruction, working with first year seminar faculty to re-energize IL instruction

and assessment within the course, writing a program review to focus IL learning outcomes, assessment and

curriculum mapping,and using different apps or using apps differently to help various processes and engage students

and instructors in different ways.

Room B

An Exercise in Self Improvement: Using Gold Rush's Library Catalog Comparison

System to Improve Collections Robert Kelly Library Director, Hutchinson Community College, Rose Nelson, Assistant Director

Prospector/Gold Rush Coordinator CO Alliance of Research Libraries

An overview of Gold Rush's Library Catalog and Database Comparison Tools and its intended use by a Kansas

community college to improve collection assessment and purchasing decisions will be presented. Other use cases for

the tools will also be explored.

Room C

Manual Not Included: Technical Services Librarians Developing Digital Curation

Workshops for the Community

Allison Ringness, Digital Initiatives Librarian, Kansas State University

Scanners may come with instruction manuals, but unfortunately they don’t come with a manual for curating digital

objects. The need for practical community guidance in digitizing, curating, and enhancing historic images led Kansas

State University Digital Initiatives Librarian Allison Ringness to collaborate with Chapman Center Visiting Instructor

Tom Parish to deliver a workshop on digitizing and enhancing historic photographs.

Kansas Room

Lightning Sessions-Each session approximately 15 minutes

Bridging the Communication Gap Successfully for Library/IT Projects

Amanda Harlan, Metadata Librarian, KSU, Dhanushka Samarakoon, Programmer, Kansas State University Highlight specific examples of communication barriers faced in collaborative library/IT projects, and how they have

informed the current processes and methodologies used to complete projects successfully.

State Room

Page 8: Open Access, Open Borders

Summer LibGuide Workshops: Making our digital content more user-friendly

Eleanor Johnson, Assistant Professor (Social Sciences Librarian), UNO

In July of 2015, a series of internal library workshops were conducted to improve the quality and accessibility of our

LibGuides. The Summer LibGuides Revamp was a four week series, with each week focusing on a different aspect of

LibGuides best practices. Each workshop built upon the last one in a scaffolding approach: the profile box/guide

homepage, links, appearance, and accessibility. A key component of the workshops was two hours of reserved time

each week for participants to work on their LibGuides in a computer lab. Participants had devoted time for

implementing ideas from that week’s lesson with others working on the same task nearby. This fostered a sense of

collaboration and teamwork, in addition to providing an opportunity to ensure the changes were made.Participants at

this lightning round session will understand the importance of internal training to ensuring high quality output and

recognize the necessity of devoting time to best practices in LibGuides.

State Room

Library Instruction with Rural Nebraska Public Schools

Julia Powell, Coordinator of Instruction and Government Documents Librarian, University of Nebraska-

Kearney

Many of the public schools in the communities around Kearney bring their students to campus in order to conduct

research at the Calvin T. Ryan Library (CTR) at UNK. Also, many of the schools are a 1-to1 laptop or iPad school,

which would allow them to conduct research both at school and at home. I am the Coordinator of Instruction at CTR,

and I have been conducting library instruction classes with various high schools in the Kearney area. At the

beginning of each school year, I send a letter most of the public schools in roughly a 70-mile radius to UNK. I invite

the teachers to bring their students to campus to experience the ability to conduct research in an academic library,

and use resources that might not be available to them at school. When the students arrive in the library, they are

brought to a computer lab, and I go through a library instruction session with them.

State Room

1:40 – 2:30 Transfer Skills and Google Searching: Applying Nowacek’s Concept of

Recontextualization to Search Skills

Ruth Mirtz, Library Director, Kansas Weslyan

This presentation uses Rebecca S. Nowacek’s (2011) work on transfer in order to devise rhetorically rich and

meaningful questions about using Google as an information search strategy. Rather than see Google as a problem to

be avoided or solved, or as a tool to be used or misused, librarians can recast Google as a point of inquiry for helping

students articulate the transfer of search and research skills from one location (such as everyday search using

Google) to another (such as academic information search using a library database) and back again (complex search

strategies using both Google and library databases). As collaborators, students and instructors can move through at

least three interconnected processes: the contextualization of Google in a broader world of information searching, the

defamiliarization of Google by observing and questioning how searchers use Google, and Nowacek’s

recontextualization, where skills transfer to new purposes and genres.

Room A

Transcending institutions and borders: 21st century digital scholarship at K-State

Ryan Otto, Digital Scholarship Librarian, Kansas State University, Char Simser, Coordinator of Electronic

Publishing, Kansas State University, Rebel Cummings-Sauls, Director-Center for the Advancement of Digital

Scholarship, Kansas State University, Rachel Miles,Digital Scholarship Librarian, Kansas State University,

Digital scholarship of the 21st century transcends institutions and borders with its freedom from print and physical

locations. In this session, the presenters will discuss various aspects of establishing a digital scholarship center,

supporting open access through the institutional repository (K-State Research Exchange - K-REx) along with other

outreach efforts, and the implications of building a sustainable open access publishing platform (New Prairie Press-

NPP). The Center for the Advancement of Digital Scholarship at K-State Libraries serves our campus community, but

digital scholarship extends K-State's impact far beyond Manhattan, Kansas. Highlighting the scholarship at our

campus is only one small piece of the landscape. Collaboration on campus with both faculty and students includes

working with authors, editors, and site administrators; but our roles in publishing, supporting, and managing open

access, including data management, publishing funds and textbook initiatives, have broader implications. The

presenters will demonstrate how a single direct connection to K-State can translate into partnerships which have

regional, national, and international reach and will lead to the development of standards and best practices. We will

highlight the Center's engagement with university press partners and colleagues at national organizations and other

universities. We will illustrate how our strategies have changed and will change over time in order to support all types

of digital scholarship.

Room B

Page 9: Open Access, Open Borders

Creating our Spaces, Evolving our Roles

Joyce Neujahr, Director of Patron Services, University of Nebraska, Criss Library, Jackie Mitchell, Creative

Production Lab Supervisor, University of Nebraska, Criss Library

Academic libraries are relentlessly evolving as are the communities we serve. What will we be the next disruption in

our professional role? Being fiscally responsible, how do you decide where to invest knowing rapid obsolescence is

ensured? Maker Spaces are an example of this evolution. Is this a fad? How do I start? What will it cost? This

engaging and informative session will help take some of the mystery and guessing out of creating your own space.

Have your questions answered about how to start and what to avoid while we share some of the Do’s and Don’ts we

have learned over our two years of creating and making at the University of Nebraska, Omaha Criss Library.

Room C

An Overview of Free and Useful Resources from the NLM

Alicia Lillich, Kansas Outreach Coordinator, National Network of Libraries of Medicine

It’s hard out there for a librarian supporting health and/or science programs. You’re expected to provide access to

cutting-edge research, without breaking the bank on costly subject-specific databases. Luckily, the National Library of

Medicine (NLM) can help. NLM, a division of the National Institutes of Health, is the world’s largest medical library

whose mission is to advance the progress of medicine and improve health through access to health information. This

session will focus on the free products and services offered through NLM such as online databases, training, and

promotional/educational resources. This will include: MedlinePlus, PubMed, PHPartners, the Household Products

Database, Genetics Home Reference, and the NLM Exhibition Program. This session will equip librarians to utilize

and provide instruction on a variety of resources suitable for students and faculty teaching health professions and

science curricula.

Kansas Room

Lightning Sessions-Each session approximately 15 minutes

Academic Libraries and Open Educational Resources : A Preview of what to do when

your college puts "Open Access" in their description. Robert Kelly, Coordinator of Library Services, Hutchinson Community College, Rita Sevart, Library Director,

Wichita Area Technical College

Our college is in the midst of the great OER or Open Educational Resources switchover. This change has been

followed by many questions and concerns about the Library's role and some possible new avenues in marketing the

Library to the departments. ACRL's Community & Junior College Library Section is sponsoring a session at

American Library Association's 2016 Annual Conference in Orlando, FL, entitled "Academic Libraries and Open

Educational Resources : Developing Partnerships." As a committee member of the CJCLS ALA Annual Conference

Planning Committee I will provide a preview of that presentation, of which I will be moderating.

State Room

Do I need clearance? Serving as the library liaison to USSTRATCOM Fellows

Heidi Blackburn, STEM Librarian, University of Nebraska – Omaha

The University of Nebraska at Omaha (UNO) hosts the Strategic Fellows Leadership Program, a graduate education-

level leader development program for the United States Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM) civilian employees

who have been identified as committed to delivering results, making sound decisions, and showing commitment to

the mission, values, and personnel of USSTRATCOM. The Fellows complete a rigorous 13-week program housed full

time in UNO’s College of Business Administration Strategic Leadership Laboratory. The educational program

increases the students’ mission awareness and breadth of skills across Command-specific areas by providing a

cohesive set of exercises, applications, experiences, and projects geared at increasing core competencies related to

diverse issues of national security.

The individuals in this program are technically students at UNO and have a required capstone paper and

presentation. The final deliverable is a paper written with the intent of submission for publication in a reputable journal

at the end of the semester. The literature review and resources required for this program were of the highest caliber,

mainly academic journals and government reports. Most of these participants had never been in Criss Library let

alone performed advanced academic research or prepared a manuscript submission. Criss Library was contacted

about providing an orientation and tour for the Fellows to show resources specific to their research needs and nine of

the ten Fellows participated (the absentee had a follow-up one-on-one consultation later). Additionally, a

multidisciplinary LibGuide was created pulling together information from government documents, criminal justice,

public administration, information systems, and computer science. The background of the USSTRATCOM program,

the librarian’s preparation for helping this distinct patron population, and research guidance on sensitive projects will

be covered in this presentation.

State Room

Page 10: Open Access, Open Borders

2:40-3:30

Creating Green Open Access to Institutional Scholarship using Digital Commons

Deborah White, Digital Resources & Initiatives Manager, Pittsburg State University, Yumi Ohira, Digital

Curation Librarian, Fort Hays State University

Has your institution mandated an Institutional Repository for open access? Do you feel intimidated by working with

two digital repositories simultaneously? We will share our success and experience of working with two repositories

with a small staff at two small universities in rural Kansas.

The repository serves as a Green Open Access solution to globally share. Both Pittsburg State University (PSU) and

Fort Hays State University (FHSU) currently use CONTENTdm (CDM) as their primary digital repository. In 2015 both

PSU and FHSU purchased and launched BePress Digital Commons (DC), a more robust repository. If you see global

discoverability, unlimited storage, efficient technical support, and the ability to share a wide range of file formats in

one interface, then Digital Commons by BePress is the most reliable.

We will share the experiences and challenges of adapting and implementing the IR at PSU and FHSU. We will

compare and contrast our advantages and disadvantages of the two platforms. Finally we will share the challenges

associated with IR initiatives at PSU and FHSU including marketing, workflows, and collection development.

Room A

Can smaller colleges use the AAC & U Value Rubrics?

Gloria Creed Dikeogu, Director of Library Services, Ottawa University In 2009 the American Association of Colleges & Universities (AAC&U) Value Rubrics were created by a group of ARL

colleges/university faculty experts for use in the assessment of the skills of undergraduate students at their

colleges/universities. Currently many ACRL exemplary colleges/universities are tweaking several of the rubrics and

using them to assess their integrated information literacy programs. Like the larger ARL universities, smaller

colleges/universities can also use these rubrics for assessment. This presentation will introduce participants to these

Value rubrics and suggest ways in which they can be used to meet their unique outcomes and assess how their

students are faring in information literacy and other related skill areas. Room C

New Framework, New Friends: Open Access Information Literacy Instruction and

Collaboration Heather Healy, Health Sciences Librarian, University of Kansas Medical Center, Julie Hartwell, Health

Sciences Librarian, University of Kansas Medical Center

The New Literacies Alliance (NLA) consortia collaboration creates online, open access lessons that are based on

ACRL’s Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education. The lessons are designed to teach students the

literacies needed for academic success and lifelong learning. Discover how librarians and instructors can freely

embed these lessons into their courses and become members of the collaboration to actively participate across

institutional borders in the creation of new lessons. Listen to two librarians share how they implemented NLA lessons

in an online course and in a flipped classroom environment. The session examines planning for initial lesson use,

differing degrees of implementation, results and feedback, and strategies for the future.

Kansas Room

A Fireworks Display of One Shot Library Instruction

Terri Rickel, ILL Lending Team Leader, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Instructing students on how to use the library and the databases in one setting, especially when there is only 50

minutes, can be extremely overwhelming for the students and instructor. This session will cover tips that can be used

in the interview process with the professor, creating a flipped classroom or blended instruction opportunities to

enhance the learning process ( including pre or post-session), as well as demonstrating guides for assisting students

in database searching techniques. Finally, the session will end with ways to get buy-in from professors about

tutorials and guides used outside the lessons. State Room

Presenters’ slide will be posted with permission by May 8th.

Refer to the CULS Website or Twitter (tagged NEKS16) for

location.

Page 11: Open Access, Open Borders

Directions to Conference Hotel

Holiday Inn at the Campus 1641 Anderson Avenue

Manhattan, KS 66502

From I-70, take Exit 113 - KS-177 North 8.3 miles to KS-18. Take the KS-18 ramp on right. Turn left onto KS-177

North; the street becomes US-24 West (Turtle Creek Blvd). Turn left onto Bluemont Ave. and continue 0.9 of a mile to

Anderson Avenue. Turn left into hotel parking lot.

Page 12: Open Access, Open Borders

Holiday Inn at the Campus

Conference Room Map

Main Level

Landon Room

Lobby

and Pre-convene

Lower Level

A

Kansas State

C B

Lower Level Lobby

and Pre-convene

Page 13: Open Access, Open Borders
Page 14: Open Access, Open Borders

Thank you to the many sponsors, vendors, and

individuals that worked at making our 2nd joint

conference a success.

ALA/ACRL

EBSCO

WT Cox

Nebraska C & U

Kansas CULS

Labette Community College Print Shop

The faculty, staff members, and student assistants at

our institutions for all their work and for use of their

use of presentation materials

Baker University

North Central Kansas Library System

Kansas State University

Manhattan Area Technical College

Manhattan Christian College