Program Book Section 2 - 2014 ALA Annual Conference

Transcription

Program Book Section 2 - 2014 ALA Annual Conference
Conversation Starters & Ignite Sessions
LVCC-N239/241
Saturday, June 28
Conversation Starters
Storytime: Not Just Reading Out Loud
8:00 am – 8:45 am
Storytime presenters can get caught up in books—we’re librarians, after
all! But reading is only 20% of the ECRR2 early literacy practices; the initiative asks us to sing, talk, play, and write as well. That means we should
be spending at least as much time planning our songs and our play, letter
knowledge, and response activities as we do planning our books. Join
the Storytime Underground Joint Chiefs to learn about great storytime
resources and share your best practices for widening parent and child horizons when it comes to early literacy. Parachutes, felt boards, and beyond!
Speakers: Cory Eckert, Houston Public Library Librarian III; Kendra Jones,
Fort Vancouver Regional Library Children’s Librarian
conversation starters & ignite sessions
Practical Outreach: Best Practices for
Engaging Your Community
9:15 am – 10:00 am
The co-chairs of the 2013 Atlanta Emerging Librarians, a networking subcommittee of the Georgia Library Association, detail the lessons learned
from their year of event planning. Areas of discussion include: designing an
event or program, event promotion and marketing timelines, taking your
event online, and cultivating an audience by soliciting and analyzing feedback. Learn how to solicit speakers and donors, how to create a planning
and promotion timeline, how to use promotional tools, and how to create
digital archives of your events.
Speakers: Benji Barton, Brenau University Collection Development
Librarian; Lindsay Cronk, Lyrasis Member Services Specialist; Melissa
Perez, Georgia State University Library Assistant III
Virtual Passport: Connecting Teens Through
YouTube
10:30 am – 11:15 am
Imagine this...breakfast in London, lunch in Morocco, and dinner in South
Africa. You can do this and more through the global community of YouTube.
Teens in Columbia, South Carolina, are discovering that they don’t only
have to be consumers, but can be creators of this original content.
To foster these experiences we have developed My World, a unique
programming series that teaches and empowers teens to create original
visual art using new media. The hope is that this leads to career paths and
hands-on learning opportunities that will open the world both locally and
globally for teens.
Speakers: Christina Fuller-Gregory, Richland Library Teen Services
Librarian; Mary Kate Quillivan, Richland Library
Secret Shopping @ Your Library
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
See and hear what one library system learned when it sent secret shoppers
into its branches to improve usability. Learn how to replicate this process at
your own library or system!
Speakers: Matt Krueger, Irondequoit Public Library Teen/Media Services
Librarian
What Oral History Can Do for Your Library!
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
Learn how to connect the dots between exhibits, social media, creative
reuse of materials, and opportunities for outreach when working with oral
history interviews. Whether your library has an existing collection of recordings to creating new interview content, this ignite session will provide ideas
for working with audio/video materials in diverse ways, from the traditional
to the cutting edge. Come learn how oral histories can add increased value
and visibility to your institution.
Speaker: Juliana Nykolaiszyn, Oklahoma State University Assistant
Professor/Librarian
A New Approach to Summer Reading
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
The Maricopa County Library District built an open source software for
managing summer reading programs called The Great Reading Adventure.
Come to learn of its origin and development and how it can change how
your library approaches summer reading.
Speaker: Caris O’Malley, Maricopa County Library District Teen Services
Manager
Not the Same Old Story
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
A person’s first experiences of the library often include sitting down to story
time at the public library and being shown the wonder of books by a librarian. This creates fond memories, but can that experience be duplicated
when that child goes to college? We will examine some best practices of
children’s librarians to see how they can serve instruction librarians. These
techniques for keeping audience attention, explaining new concepts, and
managing difficult patrons translate surprisingly well to the academic environment. They also allow instruction librarians and patrons to relive the
days when the library was a place of discovery.
Speaker: Kelly McElroy, University of Iowa Libraries Undergraduate
Services Librarian
Don’t Sweat That Presentation!
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
Giving a presentation can be a daunting task no matter who the audience
is—colleagues, funders, the library board, students or the public. Learn
quick and easy tips to make it look like you’re not even breaking a sweat
while speaking.
The fictional casino, The Tangiers, is the
setting of the movie Casino, and is also
featured as a location on TV show CSI.
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Ignite Saturday Session
Speaker: Andrea Snyder, Nassau Library System Outreach Services
Specialist
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Play, Baby, Play!
Sunday, June 29
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
What can you do with your youngest patrons? Explore early literacy in this
IGNITE session! Real life examples of early literacy spaces and programs
will be presented.
Conversation Starters
Speakers: Kendra Jones, Fort Vancouver Regional Library Children’s
Librarian; Brooke Rasche, La Crosse Public Library Early Literacy Librarian
8:00 am – 8:45 am
There is a lot of discussion about professional behavior and professionalism but there are times when professionalism actually works to hold us
back. Professionalism creates barriers to legitimate brainstorming, can
silence good ideas, and build a culture that abhors discomfort. In this
panel, you will hear from professionals who have worked to break down
the professional walls between them. They will talk about the importance of
partying and other un-professional behavior, the unusual media platforms
they use, how to break or bend rules, and they will talk about many of their
successes and their failures.
Conversation Starters
People Experiencing Homelessness: How
Libraries Can Be Community Collaborators &
Catalysts for Positive Action
1:30 pm – 2:15 pm
Homelessness is a challenge for communities across the country and
public librarians find themselves at the forefront of this issue. From navigating the political process to hiring a Peer Support Specialist to collaborating
with homeless service providers, learn how to position your library to be
part of the solution in your community.
Speakers: Raye Oldham; Elizabeth Skinner, Forsyth County Public Library
Assistant Director
2:45 pm – 3:30 pm
Are you inspired by the conversations that happen at Annual? Do you get
new ideas from talking to librarians from different backgrounds? In this
session we will discuss ways that you can bring these conversations to life
in your own community. We will share with you a way to increase local and
regional engagement between different types of librarians. The panel with
talk about planning, executing and repeating a regional conference that
brings together librarians from both sides of the US Mexico border. The
conversation will continue with audience sharing ideas and experiences of
local networking success.
Speakers: Ady Huertas, San Diego Public Library; Veronica Maciel, San
Diego County Library; Leslie McNabb, San Diego Public Library Branch
Manager; Abigail Morales, San Diego County Library
Speakers: Jaime Hammond; JP Porcaro; Patrick Sweeney, SMCL Branch
Manager; Kate Tkacik
Pinterest and Digital Archives
9:15 am – 10:00 am
A conversation starter on the advantages of using Pinterest to visualize,
highlight, promote and make Digital Archive Collections completely discoverable to the university community, in-person visitors, and researchers
as well as virtual ones. In this discussion I hope to shed some light on the
vast uses of Pinterest in highlighting Archives Display exhibits, future ones
as well as current Digital Collections and forthcoming ones.
Pinterest also can be utilized to attract potential donors to the Archives/
Special Collection Department. Attract potential collaborators who may
have same goals and interests to complete a particular digital project;
consequently, can share resources.
Speakers: Latanya Jenkins; Marilyn Lee; Michele Woods
Connect and Create @ your library
10:30 am – 11:15 am
We love art! We love books! Come to a discussion with the Library as
Incubator Project, Jessica Pigza, author of BiblioCraft, and 2013 Mover &
Shaker Rebecca Zarazan Dunn, about book inspired art programs for your
library. We will look at examples, such as Pages to Projects, the Book to Art
Club, and Handmade Crafternoons that take stories, concepts, images,
and inspiration out of the pages of books and turn them into hands-on
maker and creative projects.
From Fired to Fired Up!
Speaker: Holly Storck-Post, Library as Incubator Project Associate Editor
4:00 pm – 4:45 pm
After a reduction in force removed 20 certified teacher librarians from
Ogden School District, parents, librarians, teachers, and students voiced
their objections and concerns at school board meetings and through local
newspapers. As a result, the school district found money to rehire seven
teacher librarians to develop an innovative library program.
Ignite Sunday Session
Join the conversation as we discuss sure fire ideas to fuel your library program, help your library program rise from the ashes and how to fight fired
with fire! Discussion topics include harnessing public support, promoting
your program, linking your program to student achievement through learning objectives and standards.
Speaker: Katie Kilts, Ogden School District Teacher Librarian
Five Minute Activities
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
Discover some quick activities to reward or assess students, no special
materials or setup required. Whether your class has been so focused
that they’ve completed the lesson with time to spare or you are waiting
in line for a teacher to pick up their class, it is beneficial to have some five
minute activities at your ready. These activities can be used to encourage
students’ focus at the beginning of a lesson, as a reward, or as a quick
assessment.
Speaker: Laura Lowe, Unit 4 Schools Library Media Specialist
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conversation starters & ignite sessions
Igniting the Conversation: Bringing
Inspiration Home
Professionalism is Killing the Profession
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SMART Enough to Collaborate
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
Far beyond the expected uses of group work and peer-to-peer studying,
students at the University of West Florida found some creative and innovative uses for 10 newly installed SMART boards in the main library. Studying
how they utilized the technology gave tantalizing hints about how instructors could build more collaboration into classes and assignments.
Speakers: Melissa Gonzalez, University of West Florida Head of Reference;
Amanda Ziegler, University of West Florida Head of Circulation
Human Libraries: Bringing Personal Stories
to Research and Learning
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
Libraries are all about books and journals and finding ways for people to
acquire information. Wait, there’s more! We implemented the “augustana
human library” where PEOPLE are the information! In the form of “human
books,” people tell their story typically of lived prejudice or discrimination
(born with one arm, being transgender, sex addiction) or about unique life
experiences (war vet, overcoming drug addiction, being adopted). We
have students attend these sessions learning about their topic of research
from a human first and then approach the scholarly resources. Adding the
human touch to student learning and research!
Speaker: Nancy Goebel
Conversation Starters
Student-Centered Library Design
1:30 pm – 2:15 pm
The design of today’s Academic Library is the subject of much debate.
However, there is growing consensus that the modern University Library
should no longer simply be a passive receptacle for cataloging and storage, but rather serve as a vital, dynamic center for teaching, learning,
and exploration. What might once have resembled a vast reading room
appended to a densely packed storehouse of books is evolving into a carefully calibrated learning environment dedicated to a full range of studentfocused educational and recreational spaces.
Speakers: Joseph Atkins, VMDO Architects; Elliot Felix, Brightspot
Strategy Director; Jim Kovach, VMDO Architects; Marcy Pride, Liberty
University Dean of Library
Stand Up and Shout
2:45 pm – 3:15 pm
The presenters will discuss what is needed to thrive as a young leader
taking the helm of a field that is changing direction. We pose an “embrace
it” approach to programmatically shifting the work from “divide” to “allin.” We discuss our views of growing up in tough economic times (always
behind the 8 ball) in shaping our expectations for working with little, and
how to turn a little into a lot.
Speaker: Peter Struzziero, Winthrop Public Library Director
conversation starters & ignite sessions
The Ally-brarian
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
How does a librarian assist an underserved population that they are not a
part of? They become an ally. The “Ally-brarian” works to help those who
would normally not “see themselves” in the library, either as a patron or
professional, find a welcoming place. This session will outline how those
who are part of a majority have the ability, and the responsibility, to use
their capacity as librarians to advocate for those in the minority. It will also
demonstrate how allies are crucial to promoting inclusivity in libraries, both
in who they serve and who they employ.
Speaker: Jordan Moore, Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff
Library Reference Librarian
Online Post-Its; Library Collaboration and
Assessment Using Padlet
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
Wake Tech Community College has been using an online tool called Padlet
as collaboration and assessment tool for information literacy.
Using this simple online tool, embedded in our Libguides, faculty and
librarians can assess student research knowledge and article selection.
Students find an article and post on the course’s Padlet. Librarians and
faculty can then use the tool to assess how students understand the concepts taught. Faculty can create group exercises where students results
can be used to create final reports. Our faculty love Padlet and you will too.
Speaker: Julia Mielish, Wake Tech Community College Instruction Librarian
Fonts in Space: Engaging Document Design
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
What makes a handout readable, engaging and useful to patrons and
why? This ignite session will focus on document design for instructional
materials. In addition to briefly exploring how good design can make a
difference, this presentation will include three specific tips for how to captivate your audience without eclipsing your meaning.
Speaker: Kate Hinnant, UW-Eau Claire Assistant Professor of Research
and Instruction
Change Does Not Suck
4:00 pm – 4:45 pm
Change is not only inevitable, it is necessary. In this session librarians from
a variety of organizations will discuss strategies on coping with change
on both a personal and institutional level; how to make hard choices and
decide what must be prioritized; and how to get buy in for change from
managers, staff, and other stakeholders. This lively session will include
real-world examples and lessons learned. Participants will be encouraged
to weigh in and share their own stories of making change happen.
Speakers: Kate Kosturski; Angie Manfredi
Monday, June 30
Conversation Starters
Where Does My Money Come From and How
Can I Get More?
8:00 am – 8:45 am
EveryLibrary is the nation’s first and only SuperPAC for libraries that has
helped raise over 15 million dollars in library funding in the last year. We
want to talk to you about where library funding comes from, how libraries can receive better funding, and the strategies that you can start using
immediately that we have learned to help ensure library funding in the
future. This session is for any librarian who is worried about library funding,
library advocacy, and the future of libraries.
Speakers: John Chrastka, EveryLibrary Director; Erica Findley; Patrick
Sweeney, SMCL Branch Manager
TumblarianTalk
9:15 am – 10:00 am
TumblarianTalk pushes Tumblr for libraries and librarians beyond 101. This
conversation starter will feature a panel of seasoned “tumblarians” (librarians on tumblr) sharing expert tips and tricks for creating original content,
engaging with the tumblr community, and maximizing the platform for professional and personal purposes.
Each TumblarianTalk panelist will share a brief highlight of their area of
expertise in using tumblr for academic libraries, public libraries, archives,
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special collections, resource sharing, and networking. A generous portion
of the session will be reserved for audience participation and questions.
Panelists will be on-hand to answer questions and foster discussion with
session attendees.
Moderator: Kate Tkacik, BMO Business Research Research Analyst
Speakers: Katie Anderson, Rutgers University Reference and Instruction
Librarian and Social Media Coordinator; Rachel Dobkin, University of
Wisconsin-Madison Coordinator, Government Info/Docs Student Interest
Group; Fobazi Ettarh, Rutgers University MLIS Candidate; Daniel Ransom,
Holy Names University Librarian for Research and Electronic Resources;
Ian Stade, Hennepin County Library Online Communication Senior
Librarian System Services; Colleen Theisen, University of Iowa Outreach
and Instruction Librarian for Special Collections & University Archives;
Molly Wetta, Lawrence Public Library YA/Media Selector, Collection
Development
Convincing the Decision-Makers: Turning
Skeptics into Champions
10:30 am – 11:15 am
Do you have a great idea you’d love to see implemented at your library, but
aren’t sure how to get approval from leadership?
Using web design, social media, and marketing initiatives as examples,
Ben Bizzle will offer strategies anyone can use to help leaders understand
and approve your projects. Whether you’re a staff member working with
your department head or an administrator proposing an idea to your library
board, this session will teach you how to overcome objections and turn
skeptics into champions.
Ignite Monday Session
Everyone Lives in the Greatest Place on
Earth: Librarian as Local Area Guide and
Advocate
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
It’s very easy for everywhere else to seem better than where you are. But
actually, everyone lives in the greatest place on earth. There are wonderful
sights, experiences, history, people, nature, and food waiting almost under
your nose for you to discover.
Librarians can help others discover the great things waiting locally for them
through strategic collection development, social media outreach, and
community partnerships.
Speaker: Rebecca Carlson, Southwest Baptist University Nursing & Health
Sciences Library Director
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
The EBSS Higher Education Committee would like to inspire you with ideas
about building collaborative partnerships across your college or university
campus. In this lightening round, we’ll give you 20 ideas for ways you can
partner with various student organizations, faculty groups, and university
administrators across your campus.
Speakers: Cynthia Crosser, University of Maine; Karen Downing,
University of Michigan; Anne Driscoll, George Mason University; Qunying
Li, Northwestern University; Robyn Reid, Texas Christian University
The Learning Theater: Radical Space Design
in an Urban Academic Library
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
In New York City, space is at a premium and the opportunity to redesign
an entire floor of the library is extraordinary. At The Gottesman Libraries at
Teachers College, Columbia University, the emerging design of our fourth
floor “learning theater” must consider current community needs as well as
library patron and educator expectations decades into a technologically
uncertain future. This presentation will examine the ways we spread the
word, educated the community, collected feedback, and made decisions
in this innovative learning space.
Speaker: Laura Costello, Teachers College, Columbia University Materials
Management Librarian
What’s Popping Up?
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
The Pop Up Library is a transportable unit, funded by a grant from the
Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) and fueled by a partnership with the Children’s Museum of Houston (CMH). Houston Public
Library’s (HPL) Pop Up Library delivered 139 early literacy programs to
3,244 parents and children from May through August, 2013. The Pop Up
tent popped up in 33 different zip codes, 73% of which have poverty rates
between 15% and 40%. Join us in saying “good-bye” to summer slide and
“hello” to Pop Up Library!
Speaker: Mary Wagoner, Houston Public Library Team Leader
Soon to be Famous Illinois Author Needs to
Cross State Lines
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
Do you want to demonstrate the power of libraries while supporting
emerging authors? The Soon to be Famous Illinois Author project will ignite
that energy.
Speaker: Julie Stam, Eisenhower Public Library
Blurring the Lines of Books
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
Recent books have begun to blur the lines between media, form, and
genre, transcending tradition and setting expectations on edge. These
postmodern masterpieces may defy classification but they are worthy
additions to collections in numerous institutions as they reinvent the rules
of the book world.
Speaker: Erin Reilly-Sanders, The Ohio State University PhD Candidate
& Instructor
conversation starters & ignite sessions
Speaker: Ben Bizzle, Craighead County Jonesboro Public Library Director
of Technology
Campus Collaborations!
The longest Morse code telegram ever sent
was the Nevada State Constitution. Sent from
Carson City to Washington D.C. in 1864.
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Monday, June 30 - Cont’d
Conversation Starters
We Make Everyday: How You’re (Most Likely)
Already Doing the Makerspace Thing
1:30 pm – 2:15 pm
Makerspaces aren’t all 3D printers and building boats in the library. At their
core, makerspaces are about a simple maker attitude: to foster exploring new skills and creating in the library in meaningful ways. You may be
surprised to find that making is already in everything you do—and if it isn’t,
it can easily be incorporated. Explore a range of makerspace mentalities,
including low- and medium-tech examples and ideas for tapping potential
partners in your community. When you return from ALA, you’ll be able to
grab some duct tape and glue and help your community start making!
Speakers: Justin Hoenke, Chattanooga Public Library Teen Librarian;
Claire Moore, Darien Library Head of Children’s Services
What I Really Want to Do is Direct: First-Time
Library Directors Discuss Their Experiences.
4:00 pm – 4:45 pm
You know that cliché about actors really wanting to direct? It turns out
that it’s also true of new (or not so new) librarians. In this panel, four firsttime library directors will discuss how they arrived in their positions, the
skills that helped them move into leadership, and the obstacles they didn’t
anticipate.
This panel discussion is intended for those who are interested in moving
into management positions, as well as new library administrators facing
similar issues. Panelists include academic library directors Jacob Berg and
Jessica Olin, and public library administrators Kristi Chadwick and John
Pappas. Daniel Ransom will moderate.
Moderator: Daniel Ransom, Holy Names University Librarian for Research
and Electronic Resources
Speakers: Jacob Berg, Trinity Washington University Director of Library
Services; Kristi Chadwick, Emily Williston Memorial Library Library Director;
Jessica Olin, Wesley College Library Director; John Pappas, Bucks County
Library System Manager of the Bensalem Branch
conversation starters & ignite sessions
Data for Librarians
80
2:45 pm – 3:30 pm
In an era of tight budgets and finite resources libraries are using data to
make decisions and justify the spending of time and money. Many librarians don’t come from a data heavy background and are unsure of how to
approach collecting the data they need or evaluating the data they already
have. You don’t have to be a math whiz to work with data! This session will
give a librarian friendly crash course in what data is, how to collect reliable
data, and how to interpret it.
Speaker: Elizabeth Psyck, Grand Valley State University Government
Documents Librarian
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2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
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Come by Booth #442–443 to get a FREE book signed by one of your favorite authors and illustrators.
SATURDAY, JUNE 28
JOAN BAUER
9:00 A.M.–10:00 A.M.
MARILYN SINGER
11:00 A.M.–12:00 P.M.
KRISTIN LEVINE
JONATHAN FRIESEN
9:00 A.M.–10:00 A.M.
JACQUELINE WOODSON
12:00 P.M.–1:00 P.M.
10:00 A.M.–11:00 A.M.
KEITH CAMPBELL
1:00 P.M.–2:00 P.M.
KATHERINE HOWE
2:00 P.M.–3:00 P.M.
NEAL SHUSTERMAN
10:00 A.M.–11:00 A.M.
ROSEMARY WELLS
3:00 P.M.–4:00 P.M.
SUNDAY, JUNE 29
MOLLY IDLE
10:00 A.M.–11:00 A.M.
ALLY CONDIE
12:00 P.M.–1:00 P.M.
DAN SANTAT
10:00 A.M.–11:00 A.M.
MARIE LU
12:00 P.M.–1:00 P.M.
JANDY NELSON
11:00 A.M.–12:00 P.M.
ANNA DEWDNEY
1:00 P.M.–2:00 P.M.
MEG WOLITZER
11:00 A.M.–12:00 P.M.
OLIVER JEFFERS
1:00 P.M.–2:00 P.M.
STARS!
Come by Booth #442–443 to get a FREE book signed by one of your favorite authors and illustrators.
SUNDAY, JUNE 29
LOREN LONG
JON SCIESZKA
2:00 P.M.–3:00 P.M.
LAUREN MYRACLE
2:00 P.M.–3:00 P.M.
TRACY HOLCZER
4:00 P.M.–5:00 P.M.
JAY ASHER
3:00 P.M.–4:00 P.M.
LAUREN MAGAZINER
4:00 P.M.–5:00 P.M.
3:00 P.M.–4:00 P.M.
GAYLE ROSENGREN
4:00 P.M.–5:00 P.M.
MONDAY, JUNE 30
TUESDAY, JULY 1
9:30 A.M.–11:00 A.M.
Don’t miss the chance to meet
Closing General Guest Speaker
B. J. NOVAK
Exclusive ALA sample of
The Book With
No Pictures
available during his signing!
MARILYN NELSON
9:30 A.M.–10:30 A.M.
JUDY SCHACHNER
9:30 A.M.–10:30 A.M.
PENGUIN’S BOOK BUZZ CASINO!
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Saturday, June 28, from
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Refreshments will be served
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10:30 A.M.–11:30 A.M.
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Meet Our Stars!
Booth #567
Gail Jarrow
Red Madness
How a Medical Mystery Changed What We Eat
Friday, June 27 • 6–7 p.m.
Nikki Grimes
Words with Wings
Saturday, June 28 • 10–11 a.m.
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to Nikki G tions
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Coretta S es,
cott
King Aut
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Winner!
Gretchen Woelfle
Write on, Mercy!
The Secret Life of Mercy Otis Warren
Saturday, June 28 • 11 a.m.–Noon
Rich and Sandra Neil Wallace
Babe Conquers the World
The Legendary Life of Babe Didrikson Zaharias
Saturday, June 28 • 3–4 p.m.
Alexis O’Neill
The Kite that Bridged Two Nations
Sunday, June 29 • 10–11 a.m.
Fox Forgets
Suzanne Bloom
Fox Forgets
Sunday, June 29 • Noon–1 p.m.
Suzanne Bloom
Program Descriptions
Friday, June 27 • 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm
Intellectual Freedom 101
FTRF, IFRT, MERRITT FUND
LVH-Pavilion 11
Core Values
At this one-hour fast-paced session you will learn about the intellectual
freedom activities of ALA and affiliated organizations, get all the details on
the IF programs planned for this conference and other upcoming events,
and find out how you can get involved in the intellectual freedom workings
of the Association.
Intellectual Freedom Round Table (IFRT), Committee on Professional
Ethics (COPE), Freedom to Read Foundation (FTRF), LeRoy C. Merritt
Humanitarian Fund, Intellectual Freedom Committee (IFC)
Friday, June 27 • 12:00 pm – 2:30 pm
ALA/Council Incoming Committee Chairs
Strategic Leadership Meeting
ALA
LVH-Ballroom E
This is a meeting for the incoming ALA/Council Committee Chairs and the
ALA President-elect
Friday, June 27 • 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm
Conference Orientation (NMRT)
NMRT
CAP-Florentine II-IV
Transforming: Customer & User Expectations
New to the Annual Conference or ALA? Get a fun and informative introduction to the Annual Conference and Las Vegas. Learn how to navigate
the exhibits and decipher the conference program, how to make ALA and
NMRT work for you, and where to spend your free time in the city. NMRT
provides tips from the pros and an orientation that will prepare you to take
full advantage of the conference experience.
Friday, June 27 • 2:30 pm – 4:00 pm
ALA Council Orientation Session for New
and Reelected Councilors
ALA-COUNCIL
LVH-Paradise North
Updates/Briefings
“How to” orientation for new and reelected councilors.
Saturday, June 28 • 8:30 am – 10:00 am
Accessible eBooks: Ensuring that Your
Library’s eContent is Universally Accessible
to All
ASCLA, SRRT
LVCC-N237
Transforming: E-Book & Collections
As library’s purchase an ever increasing amount of electronic content,
questions about universal accessibility become ever more important. Since
the advent of Ebooks and other electronic content, people with print disabilities have fought for equal access to these library materials. Gradually,
equal access has become more prevalent, often only after long legal
battles. In this session, attendees will learn timely options for making their
collections accessible to patrons with print disabilities and will walk away
with concrete steps and strategies that libraries can implement to ensure
their ongoing accessibility.
Speakers: Brian Charlson, Carroll Center for the Blind, Director of
Computer Training Services; Denise Davis, Sacramento Public Library
Deputy Director; Mike Marlin, Braille and Talking Book Library, California
State Library, Regional Librarian; Adina Mulliken, Subject Librarian for
Social Work, Disability Studies, CFS, MFT, Aging Library Disability Services,
Bird Library; Patrice Johnson, Talking Book Center, Chicago Public Library,
Librarian; Rivka Sass, Sacramento Public Library, Library Director
ACRL 101 & Membership Meeting (ACRL)
ACRL
BALLY-Gold Room
ACRL leaders will meet with the first-time attendees and explain how to get
the most out of the ALA Annual Conference experience, as well as opportunities for engagement with ACRL. A membership meeting (30 minutes)
will be followed by the orientation program.
International Librarians Orientation
IRRT
LVCC-S223
Updates/Briefings
This is a “must-attend” session for first-time international attendees and
other members from abroad. ALA members will provide an overview of
ALA, the conference, exhibits and the city of Las Vegas, including recommended programs and social activities. This program provides an opportunity to meet other colleagues who will help international librarians get the
most from their conference experience.
program descriptions Friday–Saturday
Transforming: Library Leadership Expectations—Staff
and Boards
Saturday, June 28 • 8:00 am – 10:00 am
Beginning in 1951, atomic bomb testing starts
at the Nevada Test Site north of Las Vegas.
Once watched by spectators, the Test Ban
Treaty of 1963 required that nuclear tests be
moved underground.
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85
Boba Fett at the Circ Desk: Library
Leadership Lessons from The Empire Strikes
Back
PLA
LVCC-N256
Two public library directors (and Star Wars geeks) share wisdom gained
from their first years on the job. Framed by their favorite movie and their
efforts to implement organizational change, their perspectives will resonate
across the public library galaxy. Both emerging and experienced leaders
will find inspiration from lessons like: How minor characters (like Boba Fett
or a jaded employee) have major impact; How to promote staff positivity
(the Force) and combat negativity (the Dark Side); How a clear mission is
essential to instituting change (and combating the Galactic Empire of the
status quo).
Speakers: Brad Allen, Lawrence Public Library Director; Susan Brown,
Chapel Hill Public Library Director
Building Holistic Library Assessment: Space
+ Collections = Effective Services
LLAMA_MAES
LVCC-N258
Transforming: Systems & Technology
Program will discuss a holistic approach to assessment of library space,
collections and services. With all libraries facing challenges of re-designing new space for students, an assessment of collections, especially
e-resources, plays a primary role in re-configuring spaces and establishing new services. Collection assessment informs the use of space which
impacts service effectiveness. The panel will discuss methodologies used
for assessment of collections, space and services for libraries of all kinds.
Rubrics and evaluations will be provided.
Speakers: Alex Cohen; Laura Newton Miller; Danuta Nitecki
saturday program descriptions
LITA
LVCC-N232
Transforming: Systems & Technology
Transforming: Library Leadership Expectations—Staff
and Boards
Collaborate to Innovate @ Chicago Public
Library: Engaging the Community to Design
the Future
LITA
LVCC-N254
Transforming: Community Relationships
The Chicago Public Library (CPL) Innovation Lab uses design thinking to
advance and accelerate the development of new programs and services
for library users. This allows CPL to quickly adapt to our community’s
changing needs. As part of the Innovation Lab, CPL partners with community organizations and businesses to test new services, programs and
products; to develop staff skills and competencies; and to expand community awareness and access to emerging technologies.
Data-Driven Decision-Making: LRRT
Research Forum
LRRT
LVCC-N235
Transforming: Services
Libraries collect data on usage of collections, services, and physical space.
However, much of these data are not utilized to capacity. This session
will feature three research papers, selected by a review committee, that
demonstrate how to leverage user-centered data to develop services.
Less than 25% of Nevada residents were born
in the state—the lowest percentage of native
born residents in any US state.
86
Electronic Lab Notebooks: Managing
Research from Data Collection to Publication
Electronic lab notebooks (ELN) are becoming an integral part of the data
management services provided to researchers by academic libraries.
These tools allow researchers to keep track of their lab’s products throughout the research data life cycle. You will see how Yale and Cornell chose
and implemented the LabArchives cloud-based electronic lab notebook,
including a demonstration of the software, and how the ELN fit into their
broader data management support programs.
Every Child Ready to Read 2—Does It Really
Work? Evaluating the Program
ALSC
LVCC-S228
Transforming: Services
What research and evaluation has been done to determine whether ECRR2
is really supporting our children? What are the research results? How can
you use their results to support your work? Two IMLS research grants will
be discussed: Project VIEWS and Bringing Home Literacy: determining the
impact of library programming on parent behavior. Research results will be
shared and discussed. Other research on using ECRR2 with in home child
cares will be shared.
Speakers: J. Elizabeth Mills, University of Washington iSchool Graduate
Researcher; Judy Nelson, Pierce County Library System Customer
Experience Manager—Youth; Ivette Bayo Urban, University of Washington
iSchool Doctoral Candidate, Research Assistant Project VIEWSZ
Experimenting with Animation: Lehman
College’s Animated Information Literacy
Advocate
LITA
LVCC-S224
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
This presentation will report the outcome of a $25,000 IMLS Sparks!
Ignition Grant awarded to the Library and Art Department at Lehman
College, City University of New York. Through the grant, we are testing
whether an animated character, rendered and controlled using an innovative, live-animation software package, can provide effective information
literacy learning opportunities for college-age students. Both the animated
character and pre-/post-testing results from student focus groups will be
featured during the presentation.
Get HIP: Highly Interactive Programs for
Multicultural Communities
EMIERT
LVCC-N231/233
Transforming: Services
Learn how to embrace the diversity of your community through HIP multicultural programs. Presenters will share programming tops and techniques
such as fingerplays, action rhymes, current books, music and more
designed to get all participants excited about fresh programming.
How To Convince Management to Approve
Your New ILS
ERT
LVCC-N243
So you want an new ILS—how do you persuade management to approve
it? Whether you’re dealing with a board, a city council, an executive team,
or other decision makers, this session shows what you need to convince
your stakeholders to approve your decision.
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
International Developments in Library Linked
Data: Think Globally, Act Globally
ALCTS
LVCC-N264
Sci Fi for Librarians Who Don’t Like Sci Fi
YALSA
LVCC-S221
Books & Authors
Transforming: Systems & Technology
Libraries have the potential to make major contributions to the Semantic
Web, but are still emerging as global participants. RDA implementation
and the BibFrame initiative have drawn fresh attention to the promise and
potential of linked data. What are the international developments in linked
data, emerging from libraries and other memory institutions? Come hear
our speakers address current projects, opportunities and challenges.
Note: The program will continue with Part Two from 10:30 am – 11:30 am;
it is not necessary to attend both.
Moderator: Theo Gerontakos, Metadata/Cataloging Librarian, University
of Washington Libraries
Speakers: Jodi Schneider, Centre de Recherche; Richard Wallis, OCLC
Technology Evangelist; Neil Wilson, The British Library, Head of Metadata
Services
Is That a Penguin on Your Desktop?
PLA
LVCC-S231
Transforming: Systems & Technology
Linux is so hard. Wait! No, it’s not: ask anyone with an Android phone. With
the sun having set on Windows XP and the fleet of older computers that
most libraries have in abundance, it’s time to rethink the advantages and
disadvantages of having Linux-based public facing PCs. Join us for a panel
discussion with vendors and librarians who have made the switch and
consider your options for getting more value from your existing PC stock
and Chromebooks, saying goodbye to expensive licenses and never again
worrying about slow machines, viruses, trojan horses and other malware.
When you hear Sci Fi do you automatically think of Klingons, light sabers,
and robots? Does sitting down for an all-day Star Trek marathon make
you cringe? Well, never fear—just because you don’t like Science Fiction
doesn’t mean you can’t recommend Science Fiction. This presentation will
provide middle school, junior high, and high school librarians assistance
with readers’ advisory and collection development in the area of Science
Fiction literature.
Speakers: Karin Perry
The Apps are All Right! Exploring the Role of
Apps in Children’s and Teen Services
ALSC
LVCC-S230
Transforming: Services
Designed as a primer for children’s and teen librarians, this session offers
a dynamic overview of the place of the app as a new format within our
profession. Four panelists will provide relevant research and examples from
practice with diverse populations of children and teens. Participants will
also be invited to explore the continuously evolving rationale for strengthening the role of the children’s and teen librarian in app recommendation
for the communities we serve.
Speakers: Cen Campbell, LittleeLit.com Founder; Barbara Klipper,
Consultant and Author; Carisa Kluver, Digital-Storytime.com,
0DigitalMediaDiet.com, Editor; Tess Prendergast, University of British
Columbia Doctoral Candidate, Early Literacy
Speakers: Brian K. Auger, Somerset County Library System Director;
Angela Brade, Howard County Library System Chief Operating Officer;
Michael Pardee, Open Sense Solutions, LLC President
ALA
LVCC-N252
FULFILLING LIBRARIES FOR
Career Development
New and emerging leaders within the profession share information about
mentorship programs across library organizations and lead a discussion
on best practices. Join in to hear about what mentorship offerings are
available across ALA, discuss how to find the best fit for a mentor or
mentee, and share what works and what doesn’t when it comes to starting
a mentoring relationship.
UNPARALLELED SERVICE AND SELECTION FOR BOOKS, FURNITURE, AND SUPPLIES
Speakers: Alanna Aiko Moore; Christina Bailey; Deana Greenfield; Brian
Leaf; Ashley Rayner
NMRT 101
NMRT
LVH-Ballroom E
Transforming: Customer & User Expectations
New Members Round Table leaders and experienced members welcome
current and prospective NMRT members to the NMRT 101 session.
Learn about what NMRT does, NMRT events happening at ALA Annual
Conference, benefits of membership, and how to get more involved. This
will be a great place to make connections and network with other new
members and experienced leaders alike.
As a leader of library needs, we faithfully
devote ourselves to your service for books,
furniture, and supplies along with the
unparalleled support you deserve.
www.brodart.com
program descriptions Saturday
Making a Mentorship Match: What Works,
What Doesn’t, and What Can ALA Offer?
Connect with us on:
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The New Library Imprint: Libraries and SelfPublishing
ALA
LVCC-S227
Transforming: Services
Public libraries have long made published works available. Now your community is creating content and self-publishing online and in print. How are
libraries transforming their communities with self-publishing? Libraries are
encouraging content creation rather than simple consumption, recording
the community’s stories, and helping local authors. Learn how three libraries are bringing self-published works to life with new programming opportunities and community collaborations. Provincetown (MA) Public Library,
State University of New York at Geneseo, and Sacramento (CA) Public
Library discuss their successes, cautionary tales, and how they sustain
their self-publishing programs.
Speakers: Matt Clark, Provincetown Public Press Creative Director; Cyril
Oberlander, Milne Library, SUNY Geneseo Library Director; Rivkah Sass,
Sacramento Public Library Library Director
Saturday, June 28 • 10:30 am – 11:30 am
ASCLA 101
ASCLA
LVH-Ballroom E
If you’re an ASCLA newbie or are a longtime member looking for opportunities to connect with members and ways to get involved, make sure to
add ASCLA 101 to your conference schedule! Learn, network and engage
with this small, but mighty division!
Batman: A Celebration of 75 Years
ALA
LVCC-S223
ALA, ERT
LVCC-S224
All communities have challenges. Librarians are uniquely positioned to help
conquer them—given the right tools. Through four hands-on sessions,
Harwood Institute coaches will show you how to leverage your trusted
position in the community you serve to engage people on issues that
matter to them. Each stand-alone session focuses on a single tool; taken
together, they become a powerful framework for engaging community and
leading change. Session 1 will help librarians focus on community aspirations and identify next steps for change.
Speakers: Cheryl Gorman, Harwood Institute Vice President of National
Programs; Carlton Sears, Harwood Institute Harwood Coach
saturday program descriptions
YALSA
CAP-Florentine IV
Are you a member of the Young Adult Library Services Association who’s
familiar with the basic programs, services and opportunities that the organization has to offer? Are you interested in becoming more involved in the
association or are you ready to step up to a leadership position? If so, this
event is designed for you! Come learn how to be more involved!
Turning Outward to Lead Change in Your
Community: Aspirations
Transforming: Community Relationships
88
YALSA 101
Using Instructional Design Applications to
Effectively Flip Library Instruction
Books & Authors
Throughout his 75 year history, the Dark Knight has become one of the
most popular and widely recognized super heroes in the world. From
comics to TV to movies to video games, the World’s Greatest Detective
has permeated all entertainment mediums and beyond. Come by for a look
at Batman’s rich history and what the future holds this pop culture icon!
Moderator: Mike Pawuk
Speakers: Brian Buccellato; Patrick Gleason; Francis Manapul; Peter
Tomasi
Panelist(s): Pete Thomasi, Pat Gleason from Batman & Robin, Brian
Buccellato and Francis Manapul from The Flash and Detective Comics
Presented by the Graphic Novels & Comics in Libraries MIG with thanks
to DC Comics
Bookmobiles 101
ACRL
LVCC-S225
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Instructional design applications help to determine the efficacy of learning
outcomes for any subject. This presentation is designed to demonstrate
how instructional design applications can assist librarians with successfully flipping their classrooms. Several instructional design models will be
reviewed and the presenter will cover why flipping the classroom enhances
learning environments.
Speaker: Melinda Livas, Winston-Salem State University Distance
Services Librarian
Washington Update—2014 Congressional
Election and Its Impact on Libraries
ALA
LVCC-N259/261
Updates/Briefings
Former Virginia Senator, Jim Webb will look at the 2014 Congressional
elections and talk about how a new Congress could impact library legislation. There is the very real possibility that the Republicans will take over
the Senate at a time when we will need a new director for IMLS to be
confirmed, the reauthorization of LSTA is up in 2015, we want access to
Workforce Investment funds, early learning funds, and school librarians
want to be better integrated into K-12 schools’ learning environment.
ALA
LVCC-S222
Transforming: Services
Representatives from the Association for Bookmobile and Outreach
Services will discuss the benefits and opportunities for professional
involvement through ABOS and the ALA Office for Literacy and Outreach
Services.
Consulting After Retirement: Is it Right For
You?
ASCLA
LVCC-N231/233
Career Development
Thinking of retiring? Want to utilize your skills and expertise on a part-time
per project basis? Like to keep your hands on the pulse of change? Then
maybe being a library consultant is the right path for you? Or is it? You
make your own decision after listening to this expert panel who have gone
through the process and will share their experiences.
Speaker: Allan Kleiman, Montville Township Public Library, Library Director
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Creating Fun, Accessible Programming for
Youth with Disabilities
Is the Public Library the New Education
Institution of the Future?
ASCLA
LVCC-N237
PLA
LVCC-S221
Transforming: Services
Transforming: Services
Speakers: Jordan Boaz, NYPL’s Andrew Heiskell Braille & Talking Book
Library, Children’s Librarian
Speakers: Pam Smith, Anythink Libraries Director; Felton Thomas,
Cleveland Public Library Director
Future of Libraries
Leading from the Side: On, Off and Within
Your Campus
Youth patrons with disabilities are members of every public library’s population. This presentation will review best practices on accessible, engaging
and entertaining programs for children of all ages and abilities. Throughout
the presentation there will be examples and discussion of accessible technology options for children with varying disabilities and how to apply them
to specialized programming that caters to their individual needs.
ALA
LVCC-N254
The Future of Libraries will feature ALA President Barbara K. Stripling moderating a panel of participants from Libraries From Now On, a convocation
of librarians and future thinkers, framing questions and ideas for the future
of libraries—our changing organizational roles, shifting cultural community
expectations, and determining our influence. Join Eanes Independent
School District (TX) and Westlake High School Librarian, Carolyn Foote,
Chattanooga Public Library Director, Corinne Hill and Bay Area Community
College-College of Marin, Library Director Pearl Ly for a lively conversation
on their insight about libraries and library service of tomorrow.
Implementing an IL Curriculum, with a Little
Help from My Friends
ERT
LVCC-N243
How can libraries meet the demands of teaching information skills, improving student retention, and meeting institutional goals—with less time and
staff than ever before?
International Developments in Library Linked
Data: Think Globally, Act Globally—Part Two
ALCTS
LVCC-S230
Transforming: Systems & Technology
Libraries have the potential to make major contributions to the Semantic
Web, but are still emerging as global participants. RDA implementation
and the BibFrame initiative have drawn fresh attention to the promise and
potential of linked data. What are the international developments in linked
data, emerging from libraries and other memory institutions? Come hear
our speakers address current projects, opportunities and challenges.
Note: Part One of this program takes place from 8:30 am – 10:00 a.m.: it
is not necessary to attend both.
ACRL_DLS, ACRL_ULS
LVCC-S220
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
In collaboration, DLS and ULS bring together academic librarians to
speak about their roles as leaders within their institutions, not through
administrative authority but through innovation and creativity, with special
emphasis on the changing landscapes of digital research and distance
learning. Panelists will discuss their experiences including: communicating
effectively to foster innovation; developing a self-awareness of leadership
potential while recognizing that potential in others; and building coalitions
horizontally and vertically within an organization.
Speakers: Kyle Denlinger, Wake Forest University eLearning Librarian; Wm.
Joseph Thomas, East Carolina University Assistant Director for Research
and Scholarly Communication; Jade G. Winn, University of Southern
California Assistant Dean for Instruction, Assessment & Engagement
Librarians as Digital Leaders: Collaborating
on the Development and Use of Digitized
Collections
ACRL
LVCC-N252
Transforming: Systems & Technology
Digitization has enormous potential to bring local history collections to a wider
audience, often through academic and public library partnerships. In this
session, participants will hear from several successful collaborations funded
through IMLS that highlight promising practices for the wider dissemination
of digitized collections. Panelists will share tools they leveraged to bring their
materials to researchers, students, and the general public, as well as evidence of how these collections are being used in unanticipated ways.
Speaker: Maura Marx, Institute of Museum and Library Services Deputy
Director of Library Services
Moderator: Sarah Quimby, Minnesota Historical Society, Library
Processing Manager
Speakers: Gordon Dunsire, Independent
Heuvelmann, German National Library
Consultant;
Reinhold
program descriptions Saturday
This session will outline how one library successfully implemented Credo’s
Information Literacy Course Module to meet their library and institutional
goals. We will discuss strategies for designing an IL curriculum and using it
to supplement one-shot workshops, reach online/distance students, and
provide materials at students’ point of need.
How does formal education fit into the future of public libraries? What role
will public libraries play in an ever growing digital learning landscape? In
2013, The Aspen Institute facilitated discussions on the future of public
libraries and the future of learning via the Internet. This session will showcase the reports that have been recently published by both groups and
delve deeper into the connections, and significance of the results.
Benjamin “Bugsy” Siegel opened the Flamingo
Hotel and Casino as part of Mafia kingpin
Charles “Lucky” Luciano’s national syndicate.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
89
Libraries in the Publishing Game: New Roles
from Content to Access
Metadata and Indicators for Discovery and
Open Access
ACRL
LVCC-N262
ALCTS
LVCC-N253
Transforming: Services
Transforming: Systems & Technology
Moderator: Melinda Dermody, Syracuse University Libraries Head, Access
& Resource Sharing
Speakers: Nettie Legace, National Information Standards Organization
(NISO) Associate Director for Programs; Ben Showers, Brettenham House
Head of Scholarly and Library Futures
Libraries have been at the receiving end of the publishing process, but
things are changing for the good of libraries, authors and scholarly communication. Libraries are taking on new and innovative roles in every aspect
of the publishing process. Examples of such innovation include partnering
with publishers, creating content, providing author-support services and
publishing an assortment of content. Hear from libraries and institutions
that serve in a variety of publishing roles, affecting publishing by becoming
integrated into it.
Speakers: Rebecca Kennison, Columbia University Director, Center for
Digital Research and Scholarship; Catherine Mitchell, California Digital
Library, University of California Director, Access & Publishing Group; Cyril
Oberlander, State University of New York, Geneseo Library Director
RUSA
LVCC-N232
LITA
LVCC-S225
Transforming: Services
Get up to the minute updates from your colleagues in this series of 5
minute presentations about the usage of technology in libraries.
Making Tenure: A Model for Collaborative
Publishing
ACRL
LVCC-S227
Transforming: Library Workforce
saturday program descriptions
Smart investing @your library®: Adding Value
In Your Community
Lightning Presentations
Transforming: Services
90
This program addresses metadata needs of open access (OA) materials
and the use of visual indicators to help users determine their access rights.
Presenters may discuss: use of existing or new vocabularies, schema,
and other projects, such as Crossmark, JISC/UKOLN’s Vocabularies for
OA, and ONIX-PL in library systems; use of OA vocabularies and schema
for faculty consultation and education related to scholarly communication, author’s rights; and open access studies of OA indicator use and
successes/failures.
Discover a new group publishing model that supports academic librarians
in tenure-track positions. Listen as newly tenured and new tenure-track
faculty librarians demonstrate their model and provide the tools you need
to bring the model back to your own library environment. From the research
brainstorming step through journal selection and the submission process,
you will learn to tackle publishing obstacles such as the Institutional Review
Board application, fair work distribution, group organization, and clear
communication.
Speakers: Erin Cassidy, Sam Houston State University Associate
Professor/ Web Services Librarian; Angela Colmenares, Newton Gresham
Library Assistant Professor, Instruction Librarian Education Librarian
Managing Challenges, Maximizing Impact:
Policies and Practices for Controversial
Programming
ALA
LVCC-N240
Core Values
From religion to health care to immigration—controversial subjects can
pose a unique challenge for librarians. How can we offer high-quality programs on these important, but potentially polarizing, topics while maintaining an environment conducive to civil dialogue? In this session, intellectual
freedom advocates and experienced programming librarians will discuss
how to prepare for and host events that may attract controversy, but also
can increase visibility and foster community engagement.
In 1990, the University of Nevada, Las Vegas
(UNLV) won the NCAA Men’s Division I
Championship by defeating Duke 103–73,
which set tournament records for most points
scored by a team and largest margin of victory
in the national title game.
Learn how financial literacy programs are increasing libraries’ social capital.
By leveraging existing programming and integrating this service innovation,
libraries add value that reaches across all ages and economic levels.
Moderator: Margaret Monsour, ALA Program Director
Speakers: Brian Barrett, Carmel Clay Public Library Head of Adult
Services; Robert Ganem, FINRA Investor Education Foundation Senior
Program Director, Grants; Carrie Herrmann, Boone County Public Library
Public Service Coordinator; Lisa Liu, Santa Clara County Library District,
Saratoga Library Children’s Librarian; Dan Rutherford, Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau Senior Content Specialist, Office of Financial Education
The Strategic Plan is Dead; Long Live
Strategy
PLA
LVCC-S223
Transforming: Library Leadership Expectations—Staff
and Boards
In today’s fast-changing world, why freeze your strategic thinking in a fiveyear plan? The opportunity we have today is to free strategy from the binder
and take it back to its roots as the dynamic art of making tough choices
with imperfect information. In this interactive working session we will discuss why it is essential today to create “adaptive strategy,” then move into
hands-on practice with the widely-used Choice Cascade, a tool you can
take home to structure your leadership team’s ongoing strategic dialogue.
Speaker: Noah Rimland Flower, Monitor Institute Manager
Turning Books Into A Cool New Tool: RA
Marketing in the Age of Makerspaces
RUSA, RUSA_CODES
LVCC-S233
Books & Authors
Makerspaces and 3D printers are hip and libraries are using them to ensure
that they remain relevant and are perceived as keeping up with the latest
trends. One of the trends that hasn’t gotten much attention, however, is
the fact that books are still our brand and reading is the main reason citizens view the library as valuable and continue to support it. Does the key
to public library success lie in adopting new technologies or in revitalizing
the one that has been at the heart of our services for more than 100 years?
Join library marketing expert Tina Thomas of Edmonton PL and Duncan
Smith of Novelist and find out at this program which argues that the key to
our future is contained in our past.
Speakers: Duncan Smith, Novelist, Vice-President; Tina Thomas,
Edmonton Public Library Director, Marketing, Communications and Fund
Development Division
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
What No Tchotskes? Creating an Experience
Based Summer Program
ALSC
LVCC-S231
Transforming: Services
Looking to better engage your summer reading patrons? Hear from a
panel of librarians who have incorporated 21st century skills into their programs, to create dynamic customer driven learning experiences. Summer
Reading should be a time for exploration and discovery. Learn how your
library can drop the incentives, increase your programs participation, and
inspire patron creativity.
Speakers: Amber Creger, Arlington Heights Memorial Library, Kids’ World
Manger; John Ferrari, Lisle Public Library Assistant Director of Youth
Services; Elizabeth McChesney, Chicago Public Libraries Director of
Children’s Services
Whither Library Consortia?
ASCLA
LVCC-N264
Transforming: Services
Based on research for a forthcoming book on library consortia, our co-presenters will discuss changes in the landscape of consortia, e.g., funding,
membership, and services as well as innovations designed to add value to
membership and enhance the sustainability of consortia.
Speakers: Valerie Horton, Minitex Executive Director; Greg Pronevitz,
Massachusetts Library System, Executive Director
WO Breakout Session I: Information
Manipulation Part I: Net Neutrality
ALA
LVCC-N259/261
Core Values
Speaker: Gigi Sohn, Special Counsel for External Affairs, Federal
Communications Commission [invited]
Panelists: Vivian R. Wynn, Chair of the ALA Committee on Legislation and
President of Wynn Library Consulting; Aaron Dobbs, former member of the
OITP Advisory Committee, past chair of the ALA Web Advisory Committee
and Systems and Electronic Resources Librarian, Shippensburg University;
Emily Sheketoff, Director of the ALA Washington Office
WO Breakout Session III: Libraries and
E-government
ALA
LVCC-N260
Come join a discussion on e-government activities that libraries are currently participating in and new tools that might prove helpful in serving your
patron’s e-government needs.
Speakers: Eunice Anderson, Neighborhood Library Services Baltimore
Place Acting Chief; Homa Naficy, The American Place Chief Adult Learning
Office; Chris Culp, Alachua Florida
WO Breakout Session IV: Making an Impact:
Proven Grassroots Strategies for Friends,
Trustees, Advocates, and Foundations
ALA
LVCC-N263
Saturday, June 28 • 10:30 am – 12:00 pm
ACRL President’s Program: Financial
Literacy at Your Library
ACRL
LVCC-N255/257
Transforming: Customer & User Expectations
The program will bring together leaders in financial advising and higher
education to discuss ways in which college students especially can learn
how to more effectively manage their finances. In addition, the program will
highlight ways in which librarians and libraries can partner with others on
and off campus to aid our students in these endeavors.
Moderator: Scott Garrison, Ferris State University Dean, Ferris Library for
Information, Technology and Education
Speakers: David Eisler, Ferris State University President; Michelle
Singletary, Washington Post Columnist and Financial Educator
LLAMA President’s Program
LLAMA
LVCC-S229
“Leaders as Followers, you don’t have to be in charge to be a leader.”
Speaker: Carrie Messina, Vice-President of Human Resources, Wynn &
Encore, Las Vegas, NV
AASL President’s Program
AASL
CAP-Octavius 09-11
Donalyn Miller says she has yet to meet a child she couldn’t turn into a
reader. Author of The Book Whisperer, Donalyn reflects on her journey to
become a reading teacher and describes her unconventional approach to
inspire and motivate middle school students to read 40 or more books a
year. In her latest book, Reading in the Wild, Donalyn collects responses
from 900 adult readers and uses this information to teach lifelong reading habits to her students. Donalyn has worked with elementary and
middle school students and currently teaches fifth grade at O.A. Peterson
Elementary in Forth Worth, Texas.
Speaker: Donalyn Miller
Saturday, June 28 • 10:30 am – 1:00 pm
Leaders Wanted / LIS Doctoral Program
Options Fair: Cultivating Diversity in LIS
Education
ALA
LVH-Paradise South
Representation of diversity in LIS education and research is paramount to
achieving our diversity recruitment goals. A panel featuring current doctoral
students will be followed by an hour-long Options Fair with representatives
from LIS doctoral programs. Don’t miss this unique opportunity to explore
PhD and funding options from schools across the country. All are welcome
to join us!
program descriptions Saturday
How does the recent network neutrality court case impact the public’s right
to know? Is public access to the Internet being manipulated? Learn about
how the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is addressing network neutrality issues and what ALA is doing to support an open Internet.
Now more than ever libraries need advocacy on every level, especially
from their Friends, Trustees, Advocates and Foundations; Members
of Congress want to hear from their constituents. Are you a member of
one of these groups wishing to get more elected officials and influencers to listen to your message? Join this session—led by advocacy expert
Stephanie Vance and sponsored by the ALA Washington Office and United
for Libraries—for tips and examples on how to have an impact through
grassroots organizing and messaging.
Transforming: Community Relationships
Looking for ways to engage your friends and trustees in a grassroots campaign at your library? Need proven strategies for mobilizing your advocates
or foundation to share the value of your library to an outside audience?
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Saturday, June 28 • 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm
“Embedded” Cultural Communities in
Europe and the Americas: Challenges for
Librarians
ACRL_LES, ACRL_SEES, ACRL_WESS
LVCC-S232
Transforming: Community Relationships
In Europe and the Americas, ethnic groups living within or dispersed
among larger communities often seek to preserve their own languages,
literatures, artistic traditions, and social identities. What strategies do they
use? How can libraries and librarians collect and preserve the languages,
literatures, and cultural heritage of these communities? Focusing on
Basque, Romani, and Native American cultures, this panel will address the
challenges librarians face as they collect materials for and about “embedded” ethnic groups.
Moderator: Maira Bundza, Western Michigan University Associate
Professor and ScholarWorks Librarian
Speakers: Oksana Marafioti, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Kluge
Fellow, Black Mountain Institute; Pedro Oiarzabal, University of Deusto
Researcher on Migration Studies, Institute of Human Rights; Loriene Roy,
School of Information, UT-Austin Professor
3D Printers and Library Policies
UNITED
LVCC-N237
saturday program descriptions
Transforming: Library Leadership Expectations—Staff
and Boards
RUSA, RUSA_STARS
LVCC-S228
Transforming: Services
Emerging technologies in ILL and Document Delivery now permit an
unprecedented amount of scripting and coding development in libraries, but as resource sharing librarians we’ve only taken advantage of this
opportunity in isolated pockets. Code4ILL is an attempt to showcase what
our colleagues are up to, share out best hacks, and inspire attendees to
take the spirit of innovation back to their own resource sharing operation.
Our panel will feature speakers from three different resource sharing initiatives: Mark Sullivan, Executive Director of the IDS Project, will talk about
the IDS Project, a nationally-recognized resource sharing initiative comprising over 70 libraries in New York State; Steelsen Smith, Fulfillment Systems
Specialist from the Yale IT Enterprise Systems Group, will speak about the
experience of being an embedded resource sharing guru in the Yale Library
IT department; and Ryan Litsey (Document Delivery Librarian at Texas Tech
University), Kenny Ketner (Software Development Manager at Texas Tech
University), Joni Blake (Executive Director of the Greater Western Library
Alliance), and Naomi Chow (Interlibrary Loan Librarian at University of
Hawai’i at Manoa) will talk about the Occam’s Reader Project, the first
major collaboration between academic libraries and a major publisher in
e-book resource sharing.
Speakers: Joni M. Blake, GWLA, Executive Director; Naomi Chow,
University of Hawai’i at Manoa, Interlibrary Loan Librarian; Kenny Ketner,
Texas Tech University, Software Development Manager; Ryan Litsey, Texas
Tech University, Document Delivery Librarian; Steelsen Smith, Enterprise
Systems Group, Fulfillment Systems Specialist; Mark Sullivan, Milne
Library, SUNY Geneseo, Executive Director, IDS Project
Many public and academic libraries are making 3D printers available for
patron use. A panel of speakers will talk about this new trend, including
concerns and issues to address when creating library policies related to
patron access to and use of 3D printers.
Common Core State Standards and General
Education: Information Literacy Connects
the Dots
Moderator: Diane Sarantakos, director of development for the Metropolitan
Library System (Oklahoma City, Okla.) United for Libraries Trustee at Large
ACRL
LVCC-N253
Speakers: Charlie Wapner, information policy analyst for ALA’s Office for
Information Technology Policy (OITP); Barbara Jones, director of ALA’s
Office for Intellectual Freedom (OIF); Corinne Hill, executive director of the
Chattanooga (Tenn.) Public Library
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
3D Printing at the Reference Desk & Library
Makerspaces Without the Space
Utilizing expert speakers in both K-12 and higher education, this panel session will provide a connection between the newly-implemented Common
Core State Standards (CCSS) and the Association for American Colleges &
Universities (AACU) Essential Learning Outcomes by concentrating on the
strong information literacy thread between them. Through an awareness of
common CCSS assessments and trends in higher education, school and
academic librarians will be prepared to support student transitions.
LITA
LVCC-N258
Moderator: Jennifer Fabbi, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Associate
Dean
Transforming: Physical & Virtual Space
Speakers: Cyndi Giorgis, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Associate
Dean, College of Education; William Speer, University of Nevada, Las
Vegas Professor of Mathematics Education and Director of the UNLV
Mathematics Learning Center; Ken Stewart, Blue Valley High School
School Librarian
Want a makerspace, but don’t have the space? Hear from two Silicon
Valley libraries who have introduced maker activities without adding real
estate. Mountain View Public Library has introduced pop-up participatory
programming, such as 3D-printing, eTextiles, molecular gastronomy and
soldering. Sunnyvale Public Library is offering daily 3D printing behind its
reference desk after an intensive round of staff training. We’ll share tips for
implementation and our many lessons learned.
Speakers: Ann Awakuni; Rachel Collier; Wendy Silver; Paul Sims
Creative Collaborations: Successful
Partnerships That Serve Children With
Autism
A New Campus Library: Vision, Design, and
Assessing Usage
ASCLA
LVCC-S227
LLAMA_BES
LVCC-N254
With the incidence of autism now at 1 in 88, children with this disability
need our libraries. Librarians want to serve this population, but may not
have the expertise or resources to offer appropriate programming. This
panel will feature librarians who forged partnerships with outside organizations in order to serve their young patrons with autism in new and exciting
ways. Find out how they did it, and be inspired to do it too.
Transforming: Physical & Virtual Space
The recently completed Mary Idema Pew Library at Grand Valley State
University is the case study for a panel discussion by a librarian, an architect, and a representative of a furniture manufacturer. The panel will discuss
how the librarian’s vision for a 21st century university library was addressed
in the design of interior and exterior spaces and in the programs and furnishings that are already engaging students and the campus in new ways.
Speakers: Lee Van Orsdel
92
Code4ILL: How to Grow Your Own Innovation
for Resource Sharing
Transforming: Community Relationships
Speakers: Carrie Banks, Brooklyn Public Library Director of the Child’s
Place for Children With Special Needs; Sarah Hinkle, Queens Library, New
York Assistant Coordinator of Children’s Services, Programs and Services
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Department; Holly Jin, Skokie (Ill.) Public Library Youth Services Librarian
and Coordinator of Services for Children With Special Needs; Jen Taggart,
Bloomfield Township Public Library Asst. Department Head, Youth Services
Developing Collaborative Spaces that
Encourage Community Engagement
ERT
LVCC-N243
With technology we can collaborate anytime, anywhere and with anyone
around the globe. But sometimes we need to be face-to-face and need
spaces that elevate working collaboratively. Providing furniture that supports group work or a whiteboard and monitor in a study room is a good
start, but collaborative space demands more thought and planning to be
successful. This program discusses the building blocks of developing great
collaborative spaces and explores how they can be the basis of greater
community engagement.
E-Books and E-Readers: Leveling the Playing
Field or Widening the Digital Gap?
IRRT
LVCC-S233
Transforming: E-Book & Collections
With their ease of distribution and availability in large numbers, E-books
and e-readers hold great promise for delivering currency and intellectual
content to the information poor. At the same time, digital information is
often only available to those who can afford internet access and the technological infrastructure needed to provide that access. This program will
feature projects and research illustrating how e-books and e-readers have
impacted libraries and readers globally in many different ways.
ECRR 2.0: Using Apps and eBooks in Early
Literacy Programs
PLA
LVCC-S230
Interactions between grownups and young children using technology can
enhance the child’s learning experience, just as using printed storybooks
can. This panel will discuss digital technology for young children in the
context of the ECRR Five Practices. Come join the discussion.
Moderator: Cen Campbell, LittleeLit.com Founder
Speakers: Chip Donohue, Erikson Institute Dean of Distance Learning
& Continuing Education, and Director of TEC Center; Carisa Kluver,
Founder, Digital-Storytime.com, and Editor, DigitalMediaDiet.com; Claire
Moore, Darien Library Head of Children’s Services; Kathleen Reif, St.
Mary’s County Library Director; Naomi Smith, Pierce County Library Youth
Services Librarian
Embedding Librarians in Virtual Communities
ASCLA
LVCC-N231/233
Career Development
Librarians are increasingly supporting information literacy needs in online
virtual communities. This program will share examples of embedding
librarianship through MOOCs, wikis, mobile devices, and virtual worlds on
an international scale. New tools for the role of the 21st century librarian
will be featured as we seek best practices for serving the needs of users in
physical, virtual, and augmented spaces.
Speakers: Douglas Campbell, University of North Texas Libraries Librarian
to the Mayborn School of Journalism; Angela Colmenares, Newton
Gresham Library Assistant Professor, Instruction Librarian Education
Librarian; Valerie Hill, Texas Woman’s University School of Library and
Information Studies Adjunct Instructor; Lilly Ramin, University of North
Texas Libraries Instructional Technologies & Sociology Librarian
ALA
LVCC-N263
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Free and Affordable Apps for Accessibility
ASCLA
LVCC-N264
Transforming: Services
Library personnel are the greatest resource in providing outreach services
to those with special needs or underserved populations. Free and low
cost applications for smart phones and tablets have gone beyond simply
games and utility functions and can be used to increase accessibility for
library patrons of all ages. These apps and how to implement them in the
library’s existing outreach resources will be discussed and demonstrated,
and a go-to list of further resources will be provided.
Speakers: Nancy Fletcher, (former) Library Outreach & Marketing
Consultant; Rhonda Puntney-Gould, Gould Library Consulting, Public
Library Consutant
Grow Forward: Professional Education
Needs in the 21st Century
ALA
LVCC-S219
Transforming: Library Workforce
Twenty-first century libraries, archives, and museums (LAMs) face tremendous changes in how they select, acquire, preserve and provide access
to content, especially “born digital” materials. LAM professionals need to
acquire 21st century skill-sets encompassing websites and social media,
content management systems and online exhibits, digital preservation and
forensics to respond to these changes. But many of our newest graduates
report that they cannot find jobs, in some cases because they lack traditional skills. Our speakers will look at the new educational expectations,
how traditional GLAM education is adapting, and discuss areas in which
improvement is needed.
Moderators: Su Kim Chung, University Libraries, UNLV Head, Special
Collections Public Services; Danielle Plumer, dcplumer associates Digital
Collections Consultant
Speakers: David Ferriero, National Archives and Records Service Archivist
of the United States; Maureen Sullivan, Maureen Sullivan Associates
Consultant
Leading Successful Media Production
Services in Academic and Public Libraries:
Different Models, Perspectives, and
Recommendations
VRT
LVCC-S225
Transforming: Services
Increasingly, libraries of many types are expanding their role from providers of information to supporters of content creation. This session will
bring together a panel of academic and public librarians to describe how
their organizations are providing media production to their communities.
Discussion topics will include a brief tour of the production lab facilities,
staff training, production equipment and software.
Speakers: Alex Hoffman; Sara Sunshine Holloway; Shelly McCoy; Scott
Spicer
program descriptions Saturday
Core Values
Europe Subcommittee Program
The first hotel and casino to open in
Las Vegas was the Golden Gate Hotel and
Casino in 1906.
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MAGIRT Program: The Accidental Map
Librarian
MAGIRT
LVCC-N232
Digital or paper maps can pop up in anyone’s collection. Whether you
inherited official map duties or are struggling with a few unexpected items,
this outcome-oriented session will ensure that you make the most of the
opportunity
More than Fun in the Sun! Building
Collaborative Relationships and Using Real
Data to Increase Summer Learning
PLA
LVCC-N262
Transforming: Community Relationships
A library summer reading program can only accomplish so much on its
own. Learn how to build collaborative relationships with your school district and community partners that turn shared purpose into shared power!
Get real data that increases real outcomes, and yields shared indicators of
progress! Working collaboratively, libraries, schools, and community partners can build a learning continuum that progresses children effortlessly
from schoolroom to summer learning and back to school again.
Speakers: Susan Cormier, Connecticut State Library Children’s Services
Consultant; Lisa McClure, Hartford Public Library Youth and Family
Services Director; Matt Sheley, Evanced Solutions Vice President, Product
Design and Marketing
New Directions for Data Visualization in
Library Public Services
RUSA, RUSA_MARS
LVCC-S224
Transforming: Systems & Technology
saturday program descriptions
ALA
LVCC-N256
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Transforming: E-Book & Collections
94
OITP—Copyright Hot Topics and Big Ideas
A wide array of new instructional technologies have joined an increased
understanding of the diversity of learning styles to foment new forms of
teaching and information sharing. Data visualization is increasingly used in
higher education and libraries to organize information, or provide new and
innovative ways of disseminating data and learning objectives. The speakers at this event will provide further detail and background on the topic of
data visualization, as well as examples of their use in various projects and
settings.
Speakers: Josh Boyer, North Carolina State University Head, User
Experience; Angela Zoss, Duke University Data Visualization Coordinator
OITP—ALA and Moving Ahead with Digital
Content
ALA
LVCC-N255/257
Transforming: E-Book & Collections
Come to learn about ALA’s efforts to advance ebook access in libraries.
Also discussed will be directions on digital content more broadly, including key policy issues. A panel of leading technologists, practitioners, and
policy analysts will provide perspectives to inform ALA future directions.
In the Q&A session, attendees are welcome to provide their thoughts on
these important issues.
Speakers: Sari Feldman, DCWG Co-chair, Incoming President-elect of
ALA, Executive Director, Cuyahoga County (Ohio) Public Library; Alan
S. Inouye, Director, ALA Office for Information Technology Policy; Robert
Wolven, DCWG Co-chair and Associate University Librarian, Columbia
University; Gretchen Caserotti, Director, Meridian (Idaho) Library District;
James Neal, Member, ALA Executive Board and Vice President, Columbia
University
This panel presentation modeled after LITA’s Top Tech Trends will highlight
recent copyright policy developments including copyright legislative reform
and the status of the HathiTrust and Georgia State court appeals. Other
expected topics include digital first sale, an international copyright treaty
on library and archive exceptions, global licensing, and Senate confirmation of the Marrakesh Treaty for a copyright exception for the blind and
other people with print disabilities.
OITP—Cutting-edge Technology in Library
Services
ALA
LVCC-N259/261
Updates/Briefings
Does your library offer cutting-edge library services? Learn about how four
ALA-recognized libraries are using novel and cost-effective methods to
leverage technologies to better serve their communities. Each year, OITP
and LITA recognize cutting-edge technologies in library services. This
session features representatives from the libraries who will discuss their
services that earned the cutting edge recognition. Learn about some ideas
that you may be able to implement in your library!
Speakers: Somerset County Library System Digital Services Manager
Rich Loomis; Edmonton Public Library Deputy CEO Pilar Martinez and
ILS Administrator Andrew Nisbet; North Carolina State University Digital
Services Lead Librarian Jason Casden; Penn State University Libraries
Education & Behavioral Science Librarian Ellysa Cahoy and Media
Commons University Park Coordinator Ryan Wetzel
Online Inside: Justification, Issues and
Solutions for Digital Literacy in Correctional
Settings
ASCLA
LVCC-N235
Transforming: Services
Now more than ever individuals housed in US prisons need to be digitally
literate if we want to increase their chances of successfully transitioning
back into the community. The panelists will demonstrate why, consider the
obstacles and talk about work being done to expose people in prison to
the tools they will need to engage in activities ranging from job searching
to getting access to health and social services.
Speakers: Velva Hampson, California Substance Abuse Treatment Facility
and State Prison in Corcoran Senior Librarian; Elizabeth Marshak, CTF
Soledad Librarian; Clifford Missen, Widernet Founder; Cheryl Stewart,
Coastline Community College Librarian
Promotion, Advocacy, and Creative Funding
Ideas for Rural or Tribal Libraries
ALA
LVCC-N236
Core Values
In this panel, Andrea Berstler will talk about how small and rural librarians
can use data they receive as tools for advocacy and promotion. Tameca
Beckett will present programming ideas for youth services in rural and
small libraries, including STEM programming, stealth programming, and
community conversation. Yunfei Du will discuss how rural libraries from
UNT PEARL project reuse existing community outreach plans to secure
additional funding. Robert Horton will introduce funding opportunities
for rural and tribal libraries from federal Institute of Museum and Library
Services.
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Real Leaders in a Virtual World: Tools and
Strategies for Success
Teaching Teens How to Fail: Library Spaces
and the Maker Movement
ALCTS
LVCC-N252
YALSA
LVCC-S221
Transforming: Systems & Technology
Transforming: Services
Speakers: Betsy Appleton, George Mason University, Electronic
Resources Librarian; Joni M. Blake, GWLA, Executive Director; Jennifer
Duncan, Utah State University, Head of Collections, Merrill-Cazier Library;
Anne McKee, GWLA, Program Officer for Resource Sharing
Speakers: K-Fai Steele
Science + Form = Function: The Impact of
Neuroscience on Architecture & Design
ALCTS_AS
LVCC-S231
ACRL_CLS
LVCC-S220
As collaboration between Technical Services departments in different
libraries increases, technology is there to help with communications. A
panel will describe their experiences with different types of technology that
have helped librarians to communicate effectively. Experiences include collaboration between the Cornell University and Columbia University technical services operations, implementation of a shared ERM across the Five
Colleges of Ohio, and the BookOps center communications with New York
Public Library and Brooklyn Public Library.
Lead a committee in a virtual environment? Participate with colleagues
a thousand miles away? Yes, it’s possible, easy, and can be amazingly
effective. If you’ve ever wondered how a virtual leader leads, what tools
to use, and how committee members contribute, this program is for you.
You’ll hear ideas and answers to questions not only about how committee
work can be done between conferences, but how to meet deadlines and
accomplish goals more effectively.
Transforming: Physical & Virtual Space
What can the new interdisciplinary field of neuroscience for architecture tell
us about the connection between physical space and personal experience
and well-being? Join us as we explore this topic and examine how this
research can be applied to library building design and overall use of space.
As the “library as place” debate continues, libraries are feeling mounting
pressure to justify use of institutional resources to support brick-andmortar facilities. Does this research speak to the value of physical library
spaces?
Moderator: Eric Kidwell, Huntingdon College Director of the Library/
Professor
Supporting Community Transformation:
Becoming a Community-Engaged Academic
Library
ACRL_ANSS, ACRL_EBSS
LVCC-S229
Transforming: Community Relationships
Researchers and their academic library partners will illustrate their direct
impact on local communities. Speakers will explore the collaboration of
researchers and academic libraries involved in community-engaged learning, service, and scholarship through two current UNLV projects—one that
teaches community members about business opportunities using librarian
curated resources and strategies, the other an oral history project that
engages and strengthens ties within the local African-American community.
Speakers: Patrick Griffis, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Business
Librarian; Claytee White, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Director, Oral
History History Research Center
Taking Action: Linked Data for Digital
Collection Managers
LITA
LVCC-S222
Transforming: Systems & Technology
The linked data movement has gained momentum. But how does paradigm shift affect digital collection workflows? This workshop will provide
key theoretical concepts of linked data and engaging hands-on activities
demonstrating how CONTENTdm metadata can be transformed into
linked data. The workshop will also provide a forum to discuss how linked
data might alter our current practices and workflows. This workshop is
geared toward beginners and is designed for curious exploration and
active learning.
Technical Services Collaboration Through
Technology
Transforming: Systems & Technology
Speakers: Debra Andreadis, Denison University Libraries, Assistant
Director for Education and Research Services; Boaz Nadav-Manes, Cornell
University Library, Director, Acquisitions and Automated Technical Services;
Charlene Rue, BookOps, Deputy Director of Collection Management
The Comic Book Legal Defense Fund—
Intellectual Freedom and the Defense of
Graphic Novels and Comic Books
IFRT
LVCC-N240
Career Development
The Comic Book Legal Defense Fund is a non-profit organization that protects the freedom to read comics. At this presentation, learn how they have
been a leader in opposing censorship for nearly 30 years by performing
legal aid, education, and advocacy activities in the service of the community that reads, creates, and circulates comics and how you can be part
of their ongoing mission.
Speaker: Charles Brownstein
Turning Outward to Lead Change in Your
Community: Turn Quiz
ALA
LVCC-S223
Transforming: Community Relationships
All communities have challenges. Librarians are uniquely positioned to help
conquer them—given the right tools. Through four hands-on sessions,
Harwood Institute coaches will show you how to leverage your trusted
position in the community you serve to engage people on issues that
matter to them. Each stand-alone session focuses on a single tool; taken
together, they become a powerful framework for engaging community and
leading change. Session 2 will introduce librarians to the “Turn Quiz” tool,
enabling them to assess the focus of their efforts in the community as they
shift their orientation from internal to external.
program descriptions Saturday
Speakers: Michael Arbib, University of Southern California University
Professor and Director of the USC Brain Project; Hannah Bennett,
Princeton University School of Architecture Library Head; Kenneth
Kornberg, Kornberg Associates Founding Principal & President
The maker movement has already infiltrated many libraries. But who is a
maker? What does s/he do? The Free Library of Philadelphia offers maker
programs, from e-fashion to printed circuits. Much of the philosophy
behind making is mentoring youth in tinkering and experimentation; teaching the making process as one of inquiry and inevitable failed attempts. We
see the library as the ideal environment to mentor youth as they learn that
it’s okay to fail.
Speakers: Cheryl Gorman, Harwood Institute Vice President of National
Programs; Carlton Sears, Harwood Institute Coach
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Saturday, June 28 • 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm
ALSC Board Orientation
ALSC
LVCC-N202
Orientation for newly elected board members, along with current board
members.
Saturday, June 28 • 3:00 pm – 4:00 pm
“TC Reads!” Breathing New Life into Book
Program
AASL
LVCC-S225
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Want to make a high school reading program more participatory and hip?
Rejuvenate your reading program and create a culture of reading. Find out
how one large, diverse, suburban high school was able to use branding,
Skype sessions, ebooks, augmented reality, and social media to garner
excitement for literacy. Presenters will demonstrate Aurasma AR application allowing participants hands on experience as used in our library orientation. Participants encouraged to bring smart phones/devices. There will
also be a display of student and librarian generated materials. Presenters
will share successful strategies and lessons learned to get you started.
Speakers: Beth Ebenstein Mulch; Gerard Joria
saturday program descriptions
AASL 101
AASL
LVCC-N110
Experienced members of American Association of School Librarians
(AASL) will show you how to navigate Annual Conference and fill you in
on other ALA/AASL events. Don’t miss this opportunity to learn the AASL
ropes regarding everything from the features and benefits of your membership to practical tips and ideas that can help you in your career as a
school library professional. First time attendees and prospective members
are invited, and long-time members are welcome, to attend this great networking opportunity.
AASL Best Apps for Teaching and Learning
AASL
LVCC-N264
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
GAMERT
LVCC-S222
Transforming: Services
Ever wanted to make a game? You have many users who feel the same
way Help turn gamers into creators!
Game Jams are intense game-creation experiences where participants
create a game in a short period of game. Tabletop Game Jams require
little more than poster board, index cards, and markers, and Digital Game
Jams can be done with free game creation software. Libraries can use
Game Jams to bring together a group of patrons to address a local need
through the power of play. At this session, Scott Nicholson, director of
the Because Play Matters game lab at the Syracuse University School of
Information Studies, and members of the Games and Gaming Round Table
will facilitate a Game Jam, where you will be making a game! Once you
have participated in a game jam, you will have the knowledge and experience to bring this low-cost, high-impact and flexible gaming program back
to your library!
Speaker: Scott Nicholson, Syracuse University iSchool Director of the
Because Play Matters game lab
Continuing Education for Libraries: A
National Conversation
PLA
LVCC-S224
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
In 2013, IMLS and OCLC Webjunction began to address Continuing
Education (CE) efforts across the field of librarianship through a convening
of CE influencers, a white paper, and several targeted grants. The challenges to this sphere are abundant: learners face limited time, funding,
and organizational support; providers face questions of sustainability and
inconsistent standards for CE delivery; and the overall ecosystem suggests
significant duplication of effort. How do we do CE better? Join IMLS and its
partners for an overview of progress thus far, and contribute to a national
conversation that is certain to shape future CE.
Speakers: Robert Horton, Institute of Museum and Library Services
Associate Deputy Director for Libraries; Chrystie Hill, Director of Community
Relations, OCLC
Discovering Open Access Articles: Maximum
Access, Maximum Visibility!
ALCTS_CRS
LVCC-S228
There are thousands of apps available in the iTunes Store, Play Store, and
other online app stores. How do educators and school librarians evaluate, vet, and use these apps with students? Join AASL’s Best Apps for
Teaching and Learning Committee for their 2nd annual list of app honors.
This session will review 25 of the year’s most innovative apps available for
instruction, student engagement and creation. Presenters will address the
use of apps in the school library, how to use these tools with students,
and provide opportunities for developing skills needed by 21st Century
Learners for college/ career readiness.
Transforming: Systems & Technology
Speakers: Melissa Jacobs Israel, Chair; Melissa Johnston; Sue Bartle;
Mary Ann Scheuer; Cathy Potter; Terry Young
Speakers: Mary Ann Jones, Mississippi State University Libraries,
Coordinator of Electronic Resources; Nettie Legace, National Information
Standards Organization (NISO), Associate Director for Programs;
Angela Riggio, University of California, Los Angeles, Head of Scholarly
Communication and Licensing
An Hour of Power: United for Libraries
Leaders Orientation
UNITED
LVCC-N263C
Updates/Briefings
Both longtime and new United for Libraries committee members and officers are invited to join this program to find out everything you need to know
to be effective in your volunteer leadership for United for Libraries.
96
Come Make a Game: Library Game Jams
We hear about Open Access everywhere—green or gold, embargoed
or immediate, available from publishers or from institutional repositories.
This development raises practical questions for libraries, researchers, and
students. How to ensure discoverability of OA content in unsubscribed
journals through link resolvers and metadata attributes? What is the
impact of OA mandates? Join the ALCTS CRS Education, Research, and
Publications Committee to learn about challenges and potential solutions
to make article-level content more visible.
Finding Dead People: Genealogy and Local
History Resources for the ILL Practitioner
RUSA, RUSA_STARS
LVCC-N232
Transforming: Services
This program will provide a brief overview of core tools of genealogical
research including census records, county histories, family books, and
local newspapers. Participants will then learn how to locate these materials in online repositories such as FamilySearch and American Memory and
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
in major genealogical centers. The program will also introduce services
offered by local historical and genealogical societies, and participants will
learn to look beyond libraries as potential suppliers.
Speakers: Amber Case, University of Washington Libraries ILL Borrowing
Lead; Cherie Weible, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Head of
Central Access Services, Associate Professor
Teen Reading Lounge: Engaging Teens
Through Interactive Humanities Based
Programming
ASCLA
LVCC-N231/233
Transforming: Services
I’m a Librarian! NO! I’m an Author! NO! I’m a
Librarian and an Author!
ERT
LVCC-N243
We’ve just learned that 3 of our authors with new novels in 2014 are all
bona-fide in-the-trenches librarians... Would it be fun to have a “I’m a
Librarian! NO! I’m an Author! NO! I’m a Librarian and an Author” kindasorta panel/ discussion moderated by Brad Hooper, Bill Ott or Stephanie
Chase? Adult & YA authors alike... with all very different backgrounds and
books... What do you think? CRAZY? AWESOME?
Speakers: Katarina Spears; Will Thomas; Ashley Weaver
Intellectual Freedom in the Surveillance
State
SRRT
LVCC-N240
Transforming: Systems & Technology
IRC Americas Subcommittee Program
ALA
LVCC-S227
Teen Reading Lounge, an interactive book discussion series created by
Pennsylvania Humanities Council (PHC) for public libraries to encourage
teens to read and talk about literature that matters to them, engage teen
audiences in out-of-school time learning in the humanities and increase the
capacity of libraries to conduct public humanities programming for teen
audiences. Session attendees will learn about best practices in building
a successful humanities-based program and how collaboration leads to a
successful and rewarding program with lasting benefits. Specific examples
from a pilot program in Western Pennsylvania will be shared during the
program.
Moderator: Susan Pannebaker, State Library of Pennsylvania, Youth
Services Advisor
Speakers: Jen Danifo, Pennsylvania Humanities Council Program Officer;
Karen Schmidt-Ramsey, North Versailles Public Library, Library/Program
Director
Teens, Turntables, and Tater-Tots:
Lunchroom Outreach with CLP—BAM!
(Books and More)
YALSA
LVCC-S221
Transforming: Services
Updates/Briefings
IRC Americas Subcommittee
ALA, RMRT
LVCC-N258
Speakers: Brooke Askew; Abby Harwood; Annica Stivers; Joseph Wilk
Career Development
Before the program starts, please celebrate with the Retired Members
Round Table (RMRT) as they announce the 2014 recipient of the Norman
Horrocks-Scarecrow Press Annual Conference Award. Whether you are
planning to retire next year or in 2053, it’s never too early or never too
late to plan your retirement. This program is designed so you can ask the
experts to help you understand the decisions you need to make now to
meet your financial objectives, plan your retirement strategy, the benefits
of making a planned gift, and how to keep involved after your retirement.
Moderator: Kim Olsen-Clark, Director, ALA Development Office
Speakers: Carolyn Caywood; Irene Briggs, Assistant Director, Baltimore
County Public Library
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
LEARNRT
LVCC-N254
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Sometimes your training will be a rousing success. Sometimes your training will be a colossal failure. Sometimes your training outcomes look like
nothing like you had planned. This session will share what you learned from
our excellent outcomes, horrible train wrecks and our square pegs that
turned into round holes programs. All presentations will be used to spark a
substantive group discussion around the topic.
Speakers: Maurice Coleman; Virginia Sanchez; Colleen Eggett
Technology Priorities for the New Library
Reality
The Other Content: Creating Accessible
Documents and Presentations
LITA
LVCC-S230
LITA
LVCC-N235
Transforming: Systems & Technology
Fiscal resources are being reallocated between library service areas and
slowly returning funds are looking for a new home. Is technology the right
place for this money? Where should you focus your technology budget
as new money becomes available to your budget? Technology staff (and
what kind), hardware, software, network infrastructure, web services, eResources, and more all battle it out in our hearts for first priority. Results
of a broad survey of librarians will be presented as well as strategies for
evaluating competing priorities in your own unique library budget.
Transforming: Systems & Technology
Library web developers are used to creating accessible, usable websites.
But is all your content accessible? Word documents, PowerPoint presentations, and other types of files require special attention to be accessible
by people with disabilities. This presentation will give attendees immediate
skills and essential techniques for remediating existing files and creating
accessible files from scratch. Open the doors wide to all the content on
your library’s website with the skills learned during this presentation.
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program descriptions Saturday
Retirement Fundamentals: Are You Ready to
Retire?
Is your outreach to classrooms dwindling? Ask your schools to “do lunch”!
Join librarians from Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh’s award-winning school
outreach program CLP—BAM! as we demonstrate how to develop a
cafeteria-based outreach initiative on any scale or budget. Learn how you
can give students “a taste” of what your library offers by providing readers’
advisory, circulation, card registration, craft programs, music, gaming, and
more to entire school populations—all during lunch!
97
Time to Reskill: An Action Plan for Literacy
Diversity Success Stories
ALA
LVCC-N236
ALA
LVCC-N240
Core Values
Core Values
Results from the latest international study of adult skills, Programme for the
International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC) Survey of Adult
Skills, show that the U.S. workforce trails many other developed nations
in foundational literacy skills essential for both individuals and the nation
as a whole to thrive. These skills include: (1) ability to read, (2) ability to
understand numbers and do math, and (3) ability to solve problems using
technology. In this session we will hear an overview of the survey results
and a report on the new National Action Plan from the U.S. Department of
Education, Office of Career, Technical and Adult Education (OCTAE). This
plan outlines steps that we need to take as a nation to improve the skills of
our adult population. We will discuss how this action plan affects libraries
and how library staff can contribute to the solutions.
Saturday, June 28 • 3:00 pm – 5:30 pm
Bringing the Comic Festival to YOUR Library!
ALA
LVCC-N263
Transforming: Community Relationships
A unique blend of comics, artists, writers, fans, teachers, and librarians,
the Toronto Comics Arts Festival has become one of the premier comics
events in North America. Learn how a public library and a comic book
store work together to create a successful community-wide program that
attracts guests and attendees from around the world.
Speakers: Christopher Butcher (The Beguiling); Andrew Woodrow Butcher
(Little Island Comics); Gina Gagliano (First Second); Phyllis Jacklin (Toronto
Public Library)
saturday program descriptions
Saturday, June 28 • 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm
Our Values, Ourselves: Examining Our Values
and What Others Value About Us (RUSA
President’s Program)
RUSA
LVCC-N255/257
Transforming: Customer & User Expectations
Are our own values and self-perceptions interfering with providing services
that our patron communities both need and want? Are we on the right track
or off the rails? Join us for a thoughtful debate, featuring a diverse group of
speakers including Wayne Bivens-Tatum (librarian and author of the book
Libraries and the Enlightenment as well as the weblog Academic Librarian),
Wayne Wiegand (library historian, academic, and author of several books,
including Main Street Public Library), Lisa Carlucci Thomas (librarian, consultant, and founder of Design Think Do), and Jeanne Goodrich (Executive
Director of Las Vegas-Clark County Public Library District).
Speakers: Wayne Bivens-Tatum, Princeton University Philosophy and
Religion Librarian; Lisa Carlucci Thomas, Design Think Do Librarian &
Consultant; Jeanne Goodrich, Las Vegas-Clark County Public Library
District Executive Director; Wayne Wiegand, Florida State University F.
William Summers Professor of Library and Information Studies Emeritus
Saturday, June 28 • 4:30 pm – 5:30 pm
Best Websites for Teaching and Learning
AASL
LVCC-N264
This session will feature a panel of librarians who will discuss diversity initiatives that have spurred organizational change in their respective libraries.
Dynamic Duos: Collaboration between
School and Public Library Systems
YALSA
LVCC-S219
Transforming: Services
School Teacher-Librarians and Public Librarians have much to offer each
other—skills, resources, audience—but realizing a successful collaboration
can be difficult. We will explore collaboration from both sides, helping you
to really take advantage of your colleagues (in a good way). We’ll present
the results of a national survey and present multiple models of mutual support. Improve every aspect of your library services while doing less work
and having more fun!
Speaker: Jack Baur
Graphic Novel Petting Zoo
ALA
LVCC-N116
Books & Authors
Do you have a graphic novel collection and need ideas for how to bump up
the selection? Are you worried that your limited budget is preventing you
from purchasing the best of the best? Do you have no idea what the best
books are? Graphic Novel enthusiasts and longtime collection developers Jack Baur (Berkeley Public Library) and Amanda Jacobs Foust (Marin
County Free Library) will introduce you to many of the best comics released
this year and allow you to flip through the books and judge for yourself.
Presented by the ALA Graphic Novels & Comics MIG
Library Services in Multi-branch Networks in
China
ALA
LVCC-S225
Updates/Briefings
China is multiethnic country with big population and vast territory, which is
the challenge to the public and other libraries in China. In the past years,
the libraries in China have been working to establish effective and modern
library service network, and provide equal service for all users.
Metadata Beyond the Library: Consultation
and Collaboration with Faculty, Staff and
Students
ALCTS
LVCC-N253
Transforming: Systems & Technology
This program will discuss ways in which metadata experts can share
expertise beyond traditional library settings. Presenters will share examples
of successful metadata consulting initiatives with their constituent communities, such as training sessions, workshops, boot camps, and other
venues for deploying metadata expertise outside the library.
Speakers: Jason Kovari, Cornell University Library, Web Archivist and
Metadata Librarian; Lisa McFall, Hamilton College, Metadata and Catalog
Librarian
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Come hear from the Best Websites for Teaching & Learning Committee as
they highlight some of the new 2014 Best Websites.
Speaker: Heather Moorefield-Lang
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Redefining Humans from the Past to the
Future
LITA
LVCC-S233
Books & Authors
Throughout science fiction and fantasy literature, humans are constantly
being redefined. A panel of authors will speak about how humans have
been redefined from the past to the future. This program is sponsored by
Tor and LITA’s Imagineering Interest Group.
Temporary Staffing Solutions for Libraries: A
Consortial Approach in Massachusetts
ASCLA
LVCC-N231/233
Transforming: Library Workforce
Libraries in Massachusetts needed assistance meeting short-term staffing
needs, while library workers wanted opportunities to earn income, gain
experience, and stay connected to the field during unemployment or retirement. The Massachusetts Library System recognized a potential solution
that could also generate additional revenue for our collaborative: a temporary library staffing service. This session will explain the process of launching BiblioTemps® as a successful statewide initiative; describe specific
benefits to client libraries, staff, and the collaborative; and share observations about the library work force from our first two years of operation.
Speakers: Greg Pronevitz, Massachusetts Library System Executive
Director; Kelly Woodside, Massachusetts Library System, BiblioTemps
Manager
The Pros and Cons of Coming in 3rd Place
AASL
LVCC-S224
Transforming: Community Relationships
Speakers: Verlene Schafer
You Shouldn’t Have to Find a Book By Its Cover
ERT
LVCC-N243
Many libraries are choosing to review and update their collections in
various ways by bundling multiple projects together at once, such as
Reclassification, RFID tagging, inventories, and weeding. This panel will
review how these various projects can improve materials access while also
looking at how the overall costs can be reduced by doing them at the
same time.
Speakers: Joyce Bell; Thomas Forsyth; John Reese; Monica Schultz;
Ruth Steward
Saturday, June 28 • 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm
Project Connect Panel
AASL
LVCC-N259/261
In this dynamic panel discussion, prestigious members of the Project
Connect team will share their views on the future of the school library, its
integration with the classroom, and the role of the librarian as a driver of
CCSS curriculum development, content selection, and the digital transition. And it starts from the top with districts who empower their school
Speakers: Dr. Mark Edwards; Dr. Steve Joel; Dr. Gail Dickinson; Todd
Litzsinger
Moderator: Britten Follett
ALSC 101
ALSC
FLAM-Laughlin II
If you’re new to ALSC or if this is your first Annual Conference as a children’s librarian, then this program is for you! We’ll provide you with information about the perks of ALSC membership, tips on how to get involved,
and tricks of the trade for navigating Annual Conference. We’ll also be
raffling off some great ALSC prizes.
Sunday, June 29 • 8:00 am – 10:00 am
Literary Tastes: Celebrating the Best
Reading of the Year
RUSA, RUSA_CODES
LVCC-N258
Books & Authors
Listen to some of the year’s best authors discuss their works and the craft
of writing while enjoying the company of other book lovers. All Annual
Conference registrants are invited to participate in this conference program.
Speakers: Author Daniel J. Brown (Penguin); Author Tessa Dare (Avon);
Author VE Schwab (Tor Books)
PR Forum: Stories Matter—13 Tips and One
Cautionary Note for Powerful Narratives that
Drive Social Impact
ALA
LVCC-S219
Transforming: Community Relationships
Who sets the narrative and how they set it impacts who cares about an
issue, what they hear, and what they are willing to do. Communicators
will receive insights from Eric Friedenwald-Fishman, the creative director/founder of Metropolitan Group (MG), a strategic communication and
resource development firm that works exclusively with social purpose
organizations. Friedenwald-Fishman specializes in integrating strategy and
creative to advance social impact through branding, public will building
and social marketing campaigns, and is the co-author of Marketing That
Matters: 10 Practices to Profit Your Business and Change the World.
Presented by ALA’s Public Awareness Committee.
Sunday, June 29 • 8:30 am – 10:00 am
Best Practice—Support Staff Edition
LSSIRT
LVCC-N240
Transforming: Services
This presentation will examine how the Access Services Department at the
University of North Texas increased staff productivity by implementing a
new staff development plan with staff involvement. Areas to be discussed
include interactive department meetings, staff retreats and workflow
streamlining. This presentation will also highlight how these areas led to
the creation of new services.
The presenter, Mary Ann Venner, is the Head of Access Services at the
University of North Texas Libraries. She received her MLS in August of
2010 from the University of North Texas. She has over 18 years of experience working in an academic library setting.
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program descriptions Sunday
While adults have places that are their “third place,” a home away from
home, few places in the community offer youth the same option. The
school library can and should act as a third place where students find
a place to be themselves away from home and the constraints of the
classroom. This presentation offers suggestions on how to advocate for
school libraries and make the most of what you have to encourage others
to invest in the library, including promoting resources (flaunt what you’ve
got), giving students “ownership” in the library and giving potential investors complete communications.
librarians to play a larger role in digital and curriculum decisions. Hear from
elite members of the education community on the future of your industry!
99
Building Gorgeous Responsive Web Sites
Fast with Twitter Bootstrap
Designing Effective Library Experiences for
African-American Male Youth
LITA
LVCC-S227
AASL
LVCC-S231
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Do you have a web site? Do you need it to look good, even if you’re not a
designer? Do you need it to work on lots of devices and browsers, even
if you have no testing budget? Of course you do! With Twitter Bootstrap,
you win. In this hands-on session (bring a laptop if you can) we’ll build a
gorgeous web site fast with the Bootstrap framework. (Basic HTML/CSS
knowledge required.)
Care of Borrowed Special Collections:
Playing Nice with Other People’s Toys
ALCTS
LVCC-S228
Speakers: Paula Brown Bracey; Sandra Hughes-Hassell; Casey Rawson
Transforming: E-Book & Collections
Going Beyond Job Search Help at Queens
Library
This program will spell out the complexities of borrowing and exhibiting
Special Collections from another institution, including legal issues, insurance, transportation, liability, security, display space, environmental issues,
lending institution restrictions and policies, selection and publicity. Based
on a recent collaboration between the Wayne State University Library
System, the Cohn-Haddow Center for Judaic Studies at WSU and the
University of Michigan’s Special Collections Department, material from the
Jewish Heritage Collection of UM was exhibited at WSU.
Speakers: Rachael Clark, Wayne State University, Librarian; Martha O’Hara
Conway, Special Collections Library, University Of Michigan, Director;
Mike Hawthorne, Wayne State University, Associate Director; Cynthia
Krolikowski, Wayne State University, Coordinator of Special Collections,
Humanities & Special Collections
sunday program descriptions
The goal of this session is to enable school librarians to create supportive
environments and meaningful experiences that enhance literacy achievement and life outcomes of African-American male youth. Supporting lifelong learning is a key component of the mission of school libraries. The
national crisis of literacy achievement of African-American males is an
extension of this mission, and one we believe the school library community must embrace. Research on best practice in the literacy instruction of
Black male youth, including effective pedagogy, text selection, and community empowerment, must be part of the professional repertoire of school
library professionals.
PLA
LVCC-S224
Transforming: Services
In a tough economy and labor market, many libraries have gone beyond
basic job search help to provide more extensive services for job search
training, from resume building to interview preparation and mock interviews. Queens Library expanded job search training beyond that to provide in-person and online career specific training opportunities that help
library customers to be more competitive in a tight labor market. Queens
Library staff will discuss the logical progression from resume help to careerspecific training and lead a discussion on what might work in libraries of all
sizes serving diverse populations.
Citizenship Programs and Resources at the
Library
Speakers: Tara Lannen-Stanton, Queens Library BTOP Coordinator;
Shakira Smalls, Queens Library Employment Counselor
ALA
LVCC-N236
IMLS Update
Transforming: Services
ALA
LVCC-N243
Susan Hildreth (Director, IMLS) and Maura Marx (Deputy Director, IMLS) will
provide an update on IMLS activities.
Community Driven Design
Innovative Talent Management Practices
in Federal Libraries: Responding to the
Challenges of Recruitment, Retention, and
Succession
The ALA Committee on Literacy and Outreach Services and the U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) will host a discussion of
examples of libraries providing citizenship resources and programs.
LLAMA_BES
LVCC-N231/233
Transforming: Physical & Virtual Space
From the beginning of the Branch Library Improvement Program in 2000,
the San Francisco Public Library and the city have had a strong commitment to engaging the local community in each of the library building
projects. The Bayview Branch Library and the North Beach Branch Library
are both remarkable examples of how community input was integrated into
the planning, design and construction of these new libraries.
Speakers: Kacey Jurgen; Marsha Maytum
Create, Transform and Sustain: Managing for
Edgy New Technology Services
LLAMA_SASS
LVCC-S230
Transforming: Services
Want to develop a new creative service in your library? This program will
present three library projects and talk about how the service was implemented by transitioning staff to new roles, as well as obtaining new funding
and reallocating existing resources. Speakers will address how the new
services gained staff buy-in and were sustained and evaluated once in
place.
FAFLRT
LVH-Ballroom E
Transforming: Library Workforce
Federal libraries are facing issues surrounding recruiting and retaining staff,
and planning for continuity. Join Roberta Shaffer—Library of Congress,
Mary-Deirdre Coraggio and Rosa Liu—NIST, and other panelists to hear
how they are managing talent in their libraries.
Leadership Orientation
RUSA_STARS
CAP-Capri
Transforming: Services
Orientation for incoming STARS committee chairs, officers, etc.
Speakers: Nate Hill; Shelly McCoy; Debbie Moss
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Let’s Play in the Sandbox! Creating a Digital
Literacies Program for Faculty and Students
LITA
LVCC-S225
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Seneca Libraries has developed The Sandbox—instruction programs and
physical spaces to support digital literacies development for faculty and
students. In The Sandbox you can create things like videos (animated
and live action), infographics, and podcasts or play with maker tools like
Raspberry Pis, Arduinos, and MakeyMakey kits. We also offer assignment
development support, in collaboration with our teaching support centre,
to faculty using assignments with digital components, such as websites,
digital storytelling, and social media.
Librarians take SXSW by storm!
ALA
LVCC-N254
The involvement of libraries, archives and museums at one of the biggest
tech conferences in the world reached a fever pitch in 2014. A number of
organizations and partners (including ALA, PLA, DPLA, ER&L, the Harvard
Library Test Kitchen, EveryLibrary, library vendors and others) have organized under the banner of #sxswLAM (Libraries, Archives & Museums) to
connect with the technology and creative community at the annual South
by Southwest conference in Austin TX. From presenting at the conference
(getting in is no small feat) to hosting houses (#ideadrop house), purchasing booth space in the vendor hall, and hitting the streets with one-to-one
guerrilla advocacy libraries are getting noticed. Come to this session to
learn about this growing presence and how you can get involved!
OLOS Outreach Panel I: Library Services to
the Underserved
ALA
LVCC-N235
Core Values
Space Planning Primer
LLAMA_BES
LVCC-S222
Transforming: Physical & Virtual Space
This interactive workshop will provide a primer for assessing space needs
and planning library space use. Attendees will be able to choose from an
array of topic-based consultation stations, each focusing on building block
basics, the most current application techniques, and emerging trends. For
each topic, identification of the most important “how tos” and most helpful
resources will enable attendees to define their vision for a new or renewed
library environment.
Speakers: Janette S. Blackburn, AIA; Terrence Vincent Morris; Daria
Pizzetta, AIA; Christopher Stewart, Ed.D.
Speakers: Cheryl Gorman, Harwood Institute Vice President of National
Programs; Carlton Sears, Harwood Institute Coach
Video Librarianship 101 (Public Libraries)
VRT
LVCC-N232
Transforming: Services
Are you a brand new Media Librarian? Or are you a librarian who suddenly
finds yourself in some way having to deal with video issues? Not sure you
what you are doing? Not sure what you should be doing? Panic no more!
This program is designed specifically to help you learn the basics of video
librarianship. Our panel of speakers will be taking on such topics as building the best video collection for your community; streaming; DVD security
issues; and putting on that film series that will absolutely wow your community. There will be time for questions and discussion.
Speakers: Michele Mckenzie; Tracy Montri; Mary Wallace Moore; Elizabeth
Myers; Shahin Shoar
What is an RDA “Record”?
ALA
LVCC-S220
This forum will address the essential question “What is an RDA Record?”
The panel will describe the bibliographic worldview of RDA and what
an RDA record might look like outside of the MARC21 format, present
examples of RDA records viewed from within an RDA editing system, and
discuss the documentation and other communication channels that can
support the management of such records.
Gordon Dunsire is the current chair of the Joint Steering Committee for the
Development of RDA (JSC), and has been a major proponent of RDA as an
important resource in mapping our way through the transition from MARC
to the new cataloging environment.
Jon Phipps, a principal in the firm of Metadata Management Associates,
LLC (MMA), has lead the effort to bring RDA data into a robust technical
environment, using tools such as GitHub to extend the capabilities of the
Open Metadata Registry (OMR), the ‘home’ of the RDA Vocabularies since
2008.
Deborah Fritz, a principal in the firm of TMQ, Inc. (The MARC of Quality), is
part of the development team for RIMMF (an RDA data creation tool based
on the constrained RDA elements, and made available in 2011 under a
Creative Commons license). The RIMMF team has recently been working
closely with JSC and MMA to enable export of RDA records in RDF format.
Speakers: Gordon Dunsire, Independent Consultant; Deborah Fritz; Jon
Phipps
Sunday, June 29 • 10:30 am – 11:30 am
Best and Worst Manga
ALA
LVCC-N116
Books & Authors
Turning Outward to Lead Change in Your
Community: Intentionality
ALA
LVCC-S223
Transforming: Community Relationships
All communities have challenges. Librarians are uniquely positioned to help
conquer them—given the right tools. Through four hands-on sessions,
Harwood Institute coaches will show you how to leverage your trusted
position in the community you serve to engage people on issues that
Join us as an opinionated group of manga and comics bloggers, retailers,
and librarians rant and rave about the best new manga that debuted in
the past year, the continuing manga series most worth reading, the most
anticipated upcoming releases, and of course, the worst manga that you’d
best avoid.
program descriptions Sunday
The first of two panel discussions from the ALA Office for Literacy and
Outreach Services panels feature experts from the field that will address
library services to the underserved, including adult new and non-readers;
gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people; incarcerated people and
ex-offenders; older adults; people of color; people with disabilities; poor
and homeless people; rural, native and tribal libraries of all kinds; and
bookmobile communities.
matter to them. Each stand-alone session focuses on a single tool; taken
together, they become a powerful framework for engaging community
and leading change. Session 3 will enable participants to test the external
orientation and mindfulness of their community engagement choices and
decisions.
Panelists: Christopher Butcher (The Beguiling, Comics212.net); Eva Volin
(Alameda Free Library, Good Comics for Kids); Jack Baur (Berkeley Public
Library, In the Library With a Comic Book); Deb Aoki (MangaComicsManga)
Presented by the ALA Graphic Novels & Comics in Libraries MIG
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101
Building a Learning Culture From the Inside
Out
Creativity and Innovation: LRRT Research
Forum
PLA
LVCC-S231
LRRT
LVCC-N263
Transforming: Library Leadership Expectations—Staff
and Boards
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Libraries are quickly moving from being repositories for content to fullfledged incubators for new ideas. Using technological tools, innovative
spaces, and creative programming, libraries are well-positioned to become
an even bigger part of the community’s creative process.
Novelty and innovation are needed to respond to many of today’s challenges. Libraries and librarians require new and creative approaches to
defining questions and finding answers. Three papers that demonstrate
innovative inquiry will be selected by a committee for inclusion in this
Forum.
Join a panel of library change agents as they examine strategies for kickstarting a culture of innovation in your library—for your staff and patrons
alike. We’ll look at examples both in and out of libraries, address challenges, and discuss what it takes to bring creativity out in the open.
Audience participation will be involved.
Data Driven Collections: Integrating
Evidence Into Your Collection Maintenance
and Development Procedures
Speakers: Emily Clasper, Suffolk Cooperative Library System System
Operation and Training Manager; Toby Greenwalt, Director of Digital
Strategies, Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh
Children’s Librarians in the Lead: Managing
Change, Inspiring Innovation & Empowering
the Next Generation
ALSC
LVCC-N232
Career Development
Children’s librarians are in a natural position to develop key leadership skills
that will serve them both in and out of the realm of children’s services. This
program will give children’s librarians practical front-line advice on managing busy libraries as well as provide longer-range tips on advocating for
youth services, leveraging statistics, strategic planning, and growing into
positions of leadership.
Speakers: Gretchen Caserotti, Meridian Library Director; Amber Creger,
Arlington Heights Memorial Library, Kids’ World Manger; Kiera Parrott,
School Library Journal Editor
PLA
LVCC-S229
Transforming: E-Book & Collections
This session will explore how evidence can be used in collection maintenance and development procedures to help manage budgets, track and
map patron use patterns, coordinate weeding and improve processes. A
panel of representatives from a sample of library systems will be present
to share their own experiences, discuss tools that encourage discussion
surrounding best practices. The tools discussed will include CollectionHQ,
ArcGIS Mapping Platform, ILS data extracts manipulated in Excel and
more.
Speakers: Shellie Cocking, San Francisco Public Library Collection
and Cataloging Manager; Mary Cohen, Palos Verdes Library District
Technical Services Department Head; Donna Mettier, Marin County Free
Library Technical Services; Denise Schmidt, San Francisco Public Library
Richmond Branch Children’s Manager
E-Books: Discovering the Virtual Backlog
ALCTS
LVCC-N231/233
sunday program descriptions
Transforming: E-Book & Collections
Common Core IRL: In Real Libraries
AASL
LVCC-S228
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Throughout the U.S., schools are implementing the Common Core State
Standards. Two key shifts are particularly important for our teaching and
learning; the call for balancing informational and literary texts, and the
focus on helping students read increasingly complex texts. Librarians can
play a vital role supporting the professional development of teachers as
they implement the Common Core. This panel discussion will show how
we can support elementary students as they read gradually more difficult
text around a subject, with a special focus on informational books. We will
show how school and public libraries can provide both stimulating readalouds and just-right books of increasing complexity.
Speakers: Alyson Beecher; Louise Capizzo; Cathy Potter; Mary Ann
Scheuer
Creative Aging @ Your Library
RUSA, RUSA_RSS
LVCC-N243
Transforming: Services
Help midlife and older adults realize their visual, literary and performing
artistic potential with programs and services at your library. Incorporating
researched-based programs and led by professional artists, creative programs from public libraries large and small with be highlighted, with practical tips and tools for implementing an arts education series in your library.
The book truck waiting to be cataloged is gone, but backlogs are not;
they’re just harder to find. E-book packages can be accompanied by
inaccurate title lists, front files, unavailable or poor quality MARC records,
pre-published chapters, and other issues that complicate discovery and
undermine the traditional technical services workflow. When this happens
resources slip through the cracks creating a hidden virtual backlog. The
creativity of today’s cataloger finds and makes discoverable these hidden
materials.
Speakers: Sommer Browning, University of Colorado, Denver Auraria
Library, Head of Electronic Access & Discovery Services; Rhonda Glazier,
University of Colorado, Colorado Springs Kraemer Family Library, Director
of Collections Management
Evidence Based Decision Making in Library
Technology
LITA
LVCC-S232
Transforming: Systems & Technology
Library services have been drastically changed by main-stream technology
trends such as mobile technology and ebooks.The hard part is trying to
decide which technologies will do the most to advance libraries services
and when. The LITA HoLT interest group will assemble a panel to discuss
different evidence-based planning and decision making frameworks that
can help libraries prepare for and take advantage of future technology to
improve services.
Speakers: Michele Farrell, Grants to States Program, IMLS, Senior
Program Officer; Allan Kleiman, Montville Township Public Library, Library
Director
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2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Going All In: Library Instruction for Students
in Online Education Programs
Makerspace and Digital Badging: New Avenues
To Help Students Show What They Know
LIRT
LVCC-N264
AASL
LVCC-N252
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Leveraging Librarian Expertise in Customer
Resource Management
Speakers: Kristin Fontichiaro
An increasing amount of coursework, both at the secondary and postsecondary level, is being conducted online. This shift in the delivery method
of education which began at the college level is now occurring throughout
the K–16 continuum. Because many of the students in these classes and
programs will never set foot into the host institution, this transformation
has necessitated a great deal of change in all aspects of library services,
including information literacy instruction. This conference program will
spotlight some innovative ways that libraries are conducting and delivering
instruction to this new cohort.
FAFLRT
LVH-Ballroom E
Transforming: Services
Hear how the EPA Library Network implemented a customer resource
management system that ensures inquiries/comments are effectively
routed, managed, tracked, answered and measured.
Leveraging National Data to Advocate
Locally
There are many pathways to learning and learning is happening everywhere: schools, libraries, clubs, community centers, homes, and religious
organizations. A makerspace culture, one that emphasizes creation over
memorization, open-source sharing over siloed knowledge, and process
over product, gives new ways for students to explore concepts and show
what they know. Coupled with makerspace culture is a movement to flexibly acknowledge growth: digital or open badges. In this session, we’ll talk
about budget-friendly school library makerspaces, strategies for promoting
healthy makerspace culture, and validating growth via digital badges that
go far beyond the sticker charts of the past.
OLOS Outreach Panel II: Library Services to
the Underserved
ALA
LVCC-N235
Core Values
The second of two panel discussions from the ALA Office for Literacy and
Outreach Services, featuring experts from the ALA affiliates that promote
services to the traditionally underserved populations that OLOS focuses
on.
PLA
LVCC-S224
Panel: Public Libraries and Digital Inclusion
Transforming: Library Leadership Expectations—Staff
and Boards
ALA
LVCC-N258
Speakers: Shannon Barniskis, Library Director Lomira QuadGraphics
Community Library; Renee Bennett-Kapusniak, University of WisconsinMilwaukee, School of Information Studies Ph.D Student; Adriana McCleer,
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, School of Information Studies Ph.D
Student; Jennifer Thiele, Marinette County Library Library Director
LHRT Edward G. Holley Memorial Lecture:
The Business of Lectures
LHRT
LVCC-N237
Transforming: Community Relationships
The ubiquitous nature of the Internet and accompanying services and
technologies makes digital inclusion—equitable access to and participation in the online environment—essential for success in education, employment, finance, health, civic engagement and more. This session brings
local community and public library leaders together to discuss the roles
public libraries play in building digitally inclusive communities, and presents
selected findings from the Digital Inclusion Survey funded by the Institute
of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) and conducted by the American
Library Association (ALA), University of Maryland’s Information Policy
& Access Center (iPAC) and the International City/County Management
Association (ICMA).
Speakers: John Bertot, University of Maryland Information Policy & Access
Center; Larra Clark, ALA Office for Information Technology Policy; Betsy
Fretwell; Jeanne Goodrich, Las Vegas-Clark County Public Library District
Executive Director
Rebranding Librarianship—Building a
Knowledge Alliance
ALA
LVCC-S225
Core Values
Thomas Augst, professor at NYU and NEH Fellow at the American
Antiquarian Society, presents a lecture entitled The Business of Lectures:
An Itinerant History of Public Culture in Nineteenth-Century America.
Following the transatlantic career of a uniquely successful temperance
advocate across spaces and platforms of mass communication, this paper
maps the development of the public lecture as a civic institution and a
professional enterprise.
Speakers: Thomas Augst
Transforming: Library Workforce
Building on the success of cohort-based diversity initiatives, 35 early career
librarians were convened through an IMLS funded project to develop a
diversity-focused recruitment strategy. The Knowledge Alliance brand
emphasizes peer mentoring and enables allies to engage potential library
professionals at every step of their journey, from initial interest to selecting a
graduate program and to pursuing professional opportunities. Learn more
about how this innovative program supports a network of passionate new
librarians who collectively serve as resources for individuals interested in
LIS careers.
program descriptions Sunday
Recent Pew Research Center reports indicate that public libraries are an
essential service, location, and resource in our communities. This program
will present a research project investigating responses of public library
directors and public library system directors to the findings of three reports,
measuring the significance of the data in the library’s operations, relationships with stakeholders, and highlighting areas of expansion for useful
public library research. In this interactive presentation you will explore ways
national reports on public library services can serve as advocacy tools
for your public library, including ways to support local data with national
statistics.
Speakers: Steven Booth; Isabel Gonzalez-Smith; Robert Jones; Hannah
Lee; Holly Smith
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
103
So Long, Drive-By Storytimes; Hello, Focus
and Impact!
The Unstaffed Library: Challenges and
Opportunities
ALSC
LVCC-N262
PLA
LVCC-N254
Transforming: Services
Transforming: Systems & Technology
This school readiness initiative titled, “Here Comes Kindergarten,” launched
a fundamental shift in the way Richland Library approached community
outreach through parent/child engagement based on the second edition
of ALA’s Every Child Ready to Read. The results were incredible! Family
learning made fun and easy, everyday! Come see it for yourself!
Speakers: Georgia Coleman, Richland Library Community Outreach
Manager; Laura Kennett, Richland Library Outreach Librarian
That Was Great, Now What?
LearnRT
LVCC-S227
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
So you have a learning session that blew their doors off? What do you do
as a learning leader to provide ongoing support to your staff and customers after the training? What can directors and managers do to support the
learning process after the training? How do you effectively evaluate your
training to see if it has become apart of your organizational culture? All
presentations will be used to spark a substantive group discussion around
the topic.
Speakers: Maurice Coleman; Paul Signorelli
The 2014 Alex Awards
YALSA
LVCC-S221
Books & Authors
sunday program descriptions
The 2014 Alex Award winners—what they are and how to sell them to
young adults—are highlighted in this panel presentation. John Searles,
winning author of Help for the Haunted will be speaking and signing books.
The Alex Award is given to the top 10 books that appeal to young adults,
and is administered by YALSA and sponsored by the Margaret Alexander
Edwards Trust and Booklist.
104
The Future of Library Services for and with
Teens
YALSA
LVCC-S223
Transforming: Services
YALSA’s IMLS-funded National Forum on Teens and Libraries was a yearlong effort that brought together key stakeholders from the areas of libraries, education, technology, adolescent development and the for-profit and
nonprofit sectors to explore the world of young adults and library services
for and with this population. This interactive session will offer a forum to
discuss the findings and what they mean for libraries. Come with ideas and
questions! The report is available at www.ala.org/yaforum.
Speakers: Linda Braun, Seattle Public Library Youth Services Manager
The Role of Libraries In Data Management
and Curation
LITA
LVCC-S222
Transforming: Systems & Technology
As increasing amounts of data are being generated, applying best practices in handling data is important, and librarians are well poised to assist
users. During this session, we will discuss the role of libraries in assisting
with data management, application of metadata, ontologies, data standards, and the publication of data in repositories and on the Semantic
Web. This talk will describe best data practices and engage the attendees
in interactive activities to demonstrate these principles.
With the proliferation of self-service technologies, unstaffed libraries are
becoming a reality. This solution can extend some library services with limited staffing, but creates its own set of challenges. When faced with drastic
cuts at their branch libraries, The Livermore Public Library took a hybrid
approach. Hear about their “Easy Access Library” that offers staffed library
services one day per week, along with six days per week of unstaffed
access. This presentation will include the project background, implementation process, and political aspects of creating a hybrid facility, along with
the practical side and challenges of operating an unstaffed library.
Speakers: Nathan Brumley, Livermore Public Library Electronic Resources
Librarian; Tamera LeBeau, Livermore Public Library Director of Library
Services
Understanding Schema.org
ALCTS
LVCC-S230
Transforming: Systems & Technology
Schema.org is an effort among major search engines to promote better
linking of Web content through the use of metadata attributes in HTML
markup, allowing for improved access to digital objects. The ALCTS/LITA
Metadata Standards Committee invites you to hear speakers who are
active in schema.org development in libraries, and who will discuss initiatives in this area within the GLAM community which promote a broader
understanding of the development of bibliographic information among
these communities.
Moderator: Amy Rudersdorf
Speaker: Dan Scott, Laurentian University Systems Librarian
Sunday, June 29 • 10:30 am – 12:00 pm
Connected Learning and Libraries: At
the Intersection of the Arts, Media, New
Technologies, and Informal Learning (ASCLA
President’s Program)
ASCLA
LVCC-N255/257
Core Values
Connected Learning is an exciting educational approach that is attracting
increasing attention from educators, librarians, foundations, and governments. It makes learning relevant to all populations, to real life and real
work, and to the realities of the digital age where the demand for learning
never stops. Join Dr. Kylie Peppler, Advisor to the Connected Learning
Research Network, to learn more about the connected learning approach,
underlying research, and how it can be successfully leveraged in the design
of library spaces and programming targeted at today’s youth.
Speakers: Dr. Kylie Peppler, Indiana University, Bloomington Assistant
Professor of Learning Sciences
Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday Multicultural
Exchange
SRRT
LVCC-N240
Transforming: Community Relationships
The program allows libraries to share how they celebrate the Martin Luther
King Jr. Holiday and exchange ideas with one another.
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Sunday, June 29 • 11:00 am – 3:00 pm
PR X-change
LLAMA_PRMS
LVCC-Exhibit Hall, Special Events Area
Transforming: Community Relationships
View and sample a showcase or PR materials (annual reports, newsletters,
program promotions, websites, YouTube videos, and more!), including
the winners of the Best of Show awards, a juried selection of the best
library promotional materials and methods from libraries of all types and
sizes (and budgets!) Exhibits include the John Cotton Dana award-winning
entries and social networking “talk tables.”
Sunday, June 29 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm
College Readiness Dialogues: Together We
Succeed!
AASL
LVCC-N264
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
In 2010 Blue Valley High School and Rockhurst University co-hosted a
College Readiness Dialogue for high school, college, and university librarians in the Kansas City metro area. The objective was to provide an open,
relaxed, and informal dialogue between high school and academic librarians on students’ college readiness. The event drew professionals from
public, private, and alternative schools in both Kansas and Missouri. This
session will discuss how we put this together, the results, where we’re
going with it in the future, and how you can organize this type of gathering
in your own area!
Speakers: Erin Ellis, University of Kansas Assistant Dean; Laurie Hathman,
Rockhurst University Director; Paul Steensland, St. Louis County Library
Reference Librarian; Ken Stewart, Blue Valley High School School Librarain;
Jessica Tipton, Johnson County Community College Assistant Professor
LITA
LVCC-N252
ALA
LVCC-S231
Updates/Briefings
Eurasia and Central Asia Subcommittee Program
From Stumbling Blocks to Building Blocks:
Using Threshold Concepts to Teach
Information Literacy
ACRL_IS
LVCC-S219
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Over the past decade, the “threshold concept” has emerged as a valuable tool for educators seeking to improve teaching and learning in higher
education. The term refers to the core ideas and “ways of thinking and
practicing” that are characteristic of a discipline but that students often
find difficult to grasp. This program explores ways that librarians can use
the threshold concept model to make information literacy instruction more
relevant, meaningful, and exciting to students.
Moderator: Lizz Zitron, Pacific Lutheran University Instruction Librarian
Speakers: Korey Brunetti, City College of San Francisco Librarian;
Samantha Godbey, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Education Librarian;
Xan Goodman, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Health & Life Sciences
Librarian/ Assistant Professor; Amy Hofer, Portland State University
Distance Learning Librarian; Wendy Holliday, Northern Arizona University
Head, Academic Programs & Course Support; Benjamin Murphy, Whitman
College Instructional and Research Librarian; Lori Townsend, University of
New Mexico Libraries Learning Services Coordinator; Susan Wainscott,
University of Nevada, Las Vegas STEM Librarian
Getting a Bigger Piece of the Pie: Effective
Communication with Funders & Policy
Makers
UNITED
LVCC-N240
Transforming: Community Relationships
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Digital badges are growing in popularity and adoption. Librarians from
three universities will share their experiences using badges for information
literacy instruction. In this hands on workshop panelists will lead participants through designing a customizable plan for implementing badges at
their own institutions, considering factors such as learning outcomes, student motivation, and flexibility for embedding in the campus environment.
Speakers: Emily Ford, Portland State University Assistant Professor Urban
& Assistant Public Affairs Librarian; Nicole Pagowsky, University of Arizona
Instruction Librarian; Annie Pho, University of Illinois Chicago Resident
Librarian
Environments by Design: Creating—and
Re-Creating—Spaces for Both Quiet and
Collaboration
LLAMA_BES
LVCC-S228
Transforming: Physical & Virtual Space
Libraries are using existing spaces within facilities for multiple program
types, and are challenged to re-imagine how spaces are repurposed for
changing demands. This session will discuss how to design for flexible
space use problems, and review key considerations in a successful multipurpose or repurposed space for both quiet and collaboration, such as
acoustics and lighting. The program will include examples and new ideas
on shared and repurposed space design and furniture solutions.
Learn from the experts about how to get to know, communicate with, and
influence those who approve your library’s budget. Even in tough times,
there are strategies to get your more.
Moderator: Dick Waters, library consultant, Godfrey’s Associates, Inc., will
moderate
Speakers: April Butcher, executive director of the Sacramento (Calif.)
Public Library Foundation and member of the board of directors of
California Public Library Advocates; Valerie Gross, CEO and president of
the Howard County (Md.) Library System, and Deborah Doyle, director of
development for the Friends of the San Francisco (Calif.) Library, president of the California Library Association, and United for Libraries board
member
Growing Libraries, Growing Librarians:
Partnerships with Libraries and Library
Schools in Africa
ALA
LVCC-N254
Core Values
This panel will highlight how American and African organizations are partnering to improve library services in Africa. Topics include book donation
drives, building village libraries, Internet access and skill-building, crowd
funding, and training the next generation of African librarians. Librarians
with an interest in Africa as well as those seeking ideas to link with sister
institutions in Africa will want to attend.
program descriptions Sunday
Dive into Digital Badges! A Badge Curriculum
Workshop
Eurasia and Central Asia Subcommittee
Program
Speakers: Arnold Hirshon; Nancy Levin; Adrianne Ralph; Glenda
Thornton, PhD
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
105
Immigration Reform, Asian Americans and
Librarianship
OITP—Libraries as Leaders for Community
Broadband Access
AFL-APALA
LVCC-N258
Asian Americans are the second fastest growing immigrant population
in the U.S., yet relatively little attention has been paid to their role in the
debate over immigration reform. This program will focus on the impact of
immigration reform on the Asian American and Pacific Islander communities and how libraries and librarians can help Asian immigrants navigate the
immigration system.
ALA
LVCC-N243
Speakers: Jade Alburo; Roberto Delgadillo, University of California-Davis,
Shields Library HSSGIS Resources Manager/Librarian; Loida Garcia-Febo;
Rozita Lee; Evan Louie; Rex Velasquez
Lightning Rounds: Sustainability at Your
Library
SUSTAINRT
LVCC-N237
Learn about exciting sustainability initiatives from a range of library communities (public, school, academic, special). Presented in five-minute
“lightning talks,” there will be time at the end for facilitated discussion,
brainstorming and networking. Attendees will leave with tangible information and ideas for initiating projects back in their own libraries and
communities.
sunday program descriptions
High-speed broadband is essential to support economic development,
education and learning, and digital connection in nearly all aspects of life.
Recent FCC proceedings (including a comprehensive E-rate review) have
raised the visibility and urgency of ensuring broadband access, and libraries are at the center of the action. Expert panelists will share best practices
from communities nationwide, as well as tools for libraries to increase their
broadband capacity and lead community digital inclusion efforts forward.
Out-of-the-Box Book Clubs to Banish the
Boring
ALA
LVCC-S220
Transforming: Community Relationships
Transforming: Services
106
Updates/Briefings
Speakers: Ronny Alders, National Library of Aruba Coordinator, Green
Education Symposium; Marcia Bailey, University of Michigan Libraries
Operations Manager; Julie Biando Edwards, University of Montana and
Peabody Institute Library Ethnic Studies Librarian, Young Adult Services
Librarian, Adult Services Librarian; Mandy Henk, DePauw University Access
Services Librarian, Associate Professor; Elizabeth “Betts” Markle, Sierra
Nevada College Library Director; Kimberly Medema, Loyola University
Chicago Monograph Acquisitions Associate; Mindy Reed, Austin Public
Library, Recycled Reads Managing Librarian, Project Director; Melissa
Robinson, University of Montana and Peabody Institute Library Young
Adult Services Librarian; Rene Tanner, Arizona State University Life Science
Librarian; Kelley Rae Unger, University of Montana and Peabody Institute
Library Adult Services Librarian
Money Smart Week @ Your Library
ALA
LVCC-S230
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Last April many libraries participated in Money Smart Week @ Your Library.
Come hear the success stories, what’s planned for 2015, and how your
library can participate!
No More Eye-Candy! Inspiring Visual
Imagination, Assessing Visual Creativity
AASL
LVCC-N231/233
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Every day, you are introducing cutting-edge technologies that allow students to mash up and create images in sophisticated ways. But with so
many tools making it simple to drag-and-drop, how do we guide students
beyond eye candy to find, evaluate, and use creative visual images that
push through to deeper learning and expression? Participants will experiment with a hands-on project, in the process learning to guide and assess
students’ visual products for creative and critical thinking. Join us as we
take on the challenge of fostering students’ visual imaginations.
Speakers: Debbie Abilock; Tasha Bergson-Michelson; Kristin Fontichiaro;
Jole Seroff
Book clubs can be so much more than just sitting around a table discussing plot twists. Find out how to reinvigorate your book discussion programs
and share your own ideas and experiences with others.
Moderator: Janie Hermann, Princeton Public Library Public Programming
Librarian
Speakers: Erinn Batykefer, Library as Incubator Project Co-founder &
Project Manager; Kristin Friberg, Princeton Public Library Readers Services
Librarian; Erin Shea, Darien Library Head of Adult Programming
PLA Awards Presentation and President’s
Program featuring Barry Lopez
PLA
LVCC-N249
Following the recognition of the PLA 2014 award winners, PLA President
Carolyn Anthony will welcome featured speaker Barry Lopez, author of
Arctic Dreams (National Book Award), Of Wolves and Men (National Book
Award finalist), and Light Action in the Caribbean, among others. His most
recent book is a short story collaboration with artist Barry Moser titled
Outside. He has also written for high-profile publications such as The New
York Times Magazine, Harper’s, The Paris Review, Orion, and National
Geographic. His books, along with his magazine work, reflect a life of travel
and cultural inquiry that has taken him to nearly 70 countries. Book signing
outside room immediately following event.
Rebranding Yourself for a Career Change/
Transition into Information Services
FAFLRT
LVH-Ballroom E
Career Development
Want to find out what bigger and better career paths exist for you in the
information services arena? Wendy Nolin, professional career coach and
founder of Change Agent Careers, will speak about growing careers and
alternatives that you may want to pursue.
Stop Dreaming and Do It! Best Practices
for Gaining Momentum, Developing and
Maintaining a Successful Residency Program
ACRL
LVCC-S229
Transforming: Library Workforce
This program will describe the creation of a library diversity residency programs at three very different academic libraries. The participants will leave
with the ability to make an informed decisions regarding creating residency
programs at their home institutions and applying to residency programs.
We will also offer advice to new and recent graduates interested in applying to residency programs. The panel is made up of individuals who have
designed residencies, residency coordinators and current residents.
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Moderator: Sojourna J Cunningham, University of Tennessee–Knoxville
Diversity Resident Librarian
Speakers: Nataly Blas, The University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Diversity Resident Librarian; Michael Crumpton, The University of North
Carolina, Greensboro Assistant Dean for Administrative Services,
University Libraries; Barbara Dewey, Pennsylvania State University Dean of
University Libraries and Scholarly Communications; Thura Mack, University
of Tennessee, Knoxville Coordinator of Community Learning Services &
Diversity; Ingrid Ruffin, University of Tennessee, Knoxville Diversity Resident
Librarian; Rachel Smith, Pennsylvania State University Resident Librarian
The Best of the Best from the American
University Presses
AASL
LVCC-N263
Transforming: E-Book & Collections
Join members from the joint AASL/RUSA committee, with presenters Nann
Blaine Hilyard (RUSA/CODES), Merlyn Miller (AASL), Judi Repman (AASL),
and Annemarie Roscello (AASL), as they highlight their favorite offerings
from AAUP’s (American Association of University Presses) members.
Stories from the Field—The American Dream
Starts @ your library
The Role and Limitations of Social Media as
an Information Source in the Middle East
ALA
LVCC-N235
ALA
LVCC-S227
Transforming: Services
Updates/Briefings
The newest American Dream libraries join a cohort of 100 previously funded
programs in Dollar General communities. These American Dream libraries
built easily replicable programs, developed coalition-building strategies and
provided annotated lists of proven resources for libraries across the country
serving adult English language learners. This program will bring together the
libraries and students as they share their American Dream story.
Social media play an important role in shaping the political landscape in
the Middle East. It serves as a tool of communication and possible as
an alternative to traditional media, such as television, newspapers, radio
etc. The Near East and South Asia Subcommittee of ALA’s International
Relations Committee is sponsoring a program on analyzing the impact and
influence of the social media tools on the political and cultural changes
taking place in the region.
Successful Outreach: Celebrating 5 Years of
Preservation Week
Top Technology Trends
ALCTS_PARS
LVCC-S224
Transforming: Services
A look back at the first five years of Preservation Week. Speakers will highlight successful past programs aimed at educating the public and saving
our history both in academic library settings and in within the local community. Learn about how and why Preservation Week came to be and take
a look with us as to where it might grow in the future. Leave inspired to plan
or host your own Preservation Week event!
Surveillance
ACRL
LVCC-S232
Transforming: Services
Surveillance is a big topic. What implications do the latest disclosures
about wide-spread government surveillance have for libraries and librarians? The purpose of this session is to provide librarians an update and
refresher on the impact of surveillance. The conversations will include
recent NSA disclosures, digital surveillance, as well as laws familiar to all
librarians, such as the Patriot Act, FISA, and more.
The Art of the Author Visit: Connecting
Teens with their Favorite Authors
YALSA
LVCC-S221
Transforming: Services
Want to engage your library’s teens with stand-out author events? Get
successful techniques from two youth services librarians who regularly
host high-profile authors at their libraries, and hear the insider’s perspective on what makes an ideal library visit from popular YA authors Leigh
Bardugo, and Jessica Brody. You’ll learn how to build bookseller partnerships, leverage social media to connect with authors and attendees, and
put on polished author programs that wow your teens.
Speakers: Courtney Saldana; Allison Tran
Transforming: Systems & Technology
This program features our ongoing roundtable discussion about trends
and advances in library technology by a panel of LITA technology experts.
The panelists will describe changes and advances in technology that they
see having an impact on the library world, and suggest what libraries might
do to take advantage of these trends. Presentation of LITA Awards and
Scholarships will take place prior to the Top Tech Trends program
Turning Outward to Lead Change in Your
Community: Sustaining Yourself
ALA
LVCC-S223
Transforming: Community Relationships
All communities have challenges. Librarians are uniquely positioned to help
conquer them—given the right tools. Through four hands-on sessions,
Harwood Institute coaches will show you how to leverage your trusted
position in the community you serve to engage people on issues that
matter to them. Each stand-alone session focuses on a single tool; taken
together, they become a powerful framework for engaging community and
leading change. Session 4 will help librarians personally map the components that feed their motivation and commitment for community work.
Speakers: Cheryl Gorman, Harwood Institute Vice President of National
Programs; Carlton Sears, Harwood Institute Coach
Video Librarianship 101 (Academic Libraries)
VRT
LVCC-N232
Transforming: Services
Are you a brand new Media Librarian? Or are you a librarian who suddenly
finds yourself in some way having to deal with video issues? Not sure you
what you are doing? Not sure what you should be doing? Panic no more!
This program is designed specifically to help you learn the basics of video
librarianship. Our panel of speakers will be taking on such topics as building the best video collection for your campus; streaming; promoting your
collection; and making sense of sometimes such daunting concepts as
“fair usage,” “public performance rights” and “institutional rates.”
program descriptions Sunday
Speakers: Jeanne Drewes, Library of Congress, Chief Binding and
Collections Care, Program Manager Mass Deacidification; Nancy Kraft,
University of Iowa Libraries, Preservation Librarian; Patrica Selinger, Virginia
Commonwealth University Library, Head, Preservation and Inventory
Management; Ruth Shasteen, Illinois State University, Instructional
Assistant Professor
LITA
LVCC-S233
Speakers: Brian Boling; deg farrelly, Arizona State University Libraries
Media Librarian/ShareStream Administrator; Tom Ipri; Laura Jenemann;
Steven Milewski
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107
What Would You Do? Ethics in Action:
Libraries and Law Enforcement
Dynamic Digital Dia: Promoting Cultural
Competence in Digital Storytimes
ALA
LVCC-S225
ALSC
LVH-Pavilion 11
Core Values
Transforming: Systems & Technology
Whet Your APPetite: Rapid Reviews of Apps
for Children from Preschool to Tweens
Speakers: Cen Campbell, LittleeLit.com Founder; Jamie Campbell
Naidoo, University of Alabama School of Library & Information Studies
Associate Professor; Karen Nemeth, Language Castle Author, Presenter,
Consultant
Whether you work at a public, academic, or school library, blurred lines
are all around. For example, if a police officer comes to your library asking
to view patron records to help locate a missing teenager, where do your
professional responsibilities as a librarian end and your civic duties as a
member of the community begin? In short, what would you do? Join us
to hear from librarians and police officers, review model polices, and roleplay scenarios to prepare you for real life ethical dilemmas involving law
enforcement.
ALSC
LVH-Pavilion 11
Transforming: Systems & Technology
Are you ready to start using apps in your library programs and services?
Already using apps but want to try something different? Looking for new
recommendations for caregivers and children? Come to our showcase
of new and favorite apps selected by ALSC’s Children and Technology
Committee and Digital Content Task Force. A variety of app recommendations will be paired with ideas for how to use them with children in your
library.
Speakers: Paige Bentley-Flannery, Deschutes Public Library Community
Librarian; Cen Campbell, LittleeLit.com Founder; Amy Graves, Manchester
City Library Teen Librarian; Marianne Martens, Kent State University
Assistant Professor; Claire Moore, Darien Library Head of Children’s
Services; Allison Santos, Princeton Public Library Youth Services Librarian
sunday program descriptions
Earn What You’re Worth: Salary Negotiation
for Library Workers
ALA-APA
LVCC-N263
Transforming: Library Workforce
Join ALA-APA for an interactive introduction to the principles of salary
negotiation during the hiring or promotion process. In this session, panelists will provide an overview of salary and non-salary compensation issues
to consider before you accept an offer, discuss common barriers to success, and offer concrete advice to both entry-level and established library
staff looking to improve their negotiating skills. You will leave the session
excited and empowered with tools you need to make your next offer your
best offer!
Ideas and Practices in STEAM Learning
Every Child Ready to Eat: Nutrition
Education for Families Using Early Literacy
Practices
PLA
LVCC-N243
PLA
LVCC-N232
Sunday, June 29 • 3:00 pm – 4:00 pm
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For almost 20 years, librarians have used Día to celebrate literacy and
cultural and linguistic diversity. By getting digital with Día, librarians can
provide broader access to culturally responsive materials, connect digital
natives with global children’s literature, and provide interactive programs
promoting cultural and digital literacies. Navigating the fluctuating landscape of digital media, this dynamic session provides selection criteria and
suggestions for using apps and digital books to promote cultural competence in children’s library programs.
Transforming: Services
Libraries are crucial to building Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and
Math (STEAM) skills among learners of all ages, and funding organizations
like IMLS and NSF have made STEAM efforts a priority. Federal agency
representatives will discuss national trends in STEAM-based programs
as well as future funding directions. Award recipients from the Carnegie
Library of Pittsburgh, Allegheny and East Liberty branches, will share
promising practices for programming in libraries. They will describe how
the STEAM focus amplified their library’s role as community technology
hub and informal learning space. Through exposure to lessons learned
and grant opportunities, participants will come away with their own ideas
for implementation.
Speakers: Paul Jennings, National Science Foundation Program Director;
Simon Rafferty, Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh-East Liberty Branch
Librarian; Sandra Toro, Institute of Museum and Library Services Senior
Program Officer; David Yake, Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh-Allegheny
Branch
A New Vision for Teen Read Week
YALSA
LVCC-S222
Transforming: Services
YALSA’s Teen Read Week was started in 1998 in order to provide libraries with a dedicated time to highlight all of the great reading and literacy
resources and services they provide for teens and their families. YALSA is
seeking feedback on how to make sure this event stays relevant and exciting for libraries in the years to come. Bring ideas and questions!
Transforming: Services
Healthy eating begins at home, and story time programming is an opportunity to educate children and their caregivers about the USDA Myplate
which replaced the food pyramid while encouraging “eating the rainbow”
of fruits and vegetables. This session will present an intersection of Every
Child Ready to Read 2nd edition and USDA guidelines for eating and introducing healthy habits. Includes an overview of early literacy components
including information about cognitive development, the five practices (sing,
talk, read, write, play), and making meals matter through new songs and
literacy activities for your storytime programs.
Speaker: Sarah E. Wright, Bull Run Regional Library Youth Services
Librarian
Expanding the School Library: Connecting
Students with Students, across International
Boundaries, Using Modern Technology—IRRT
Chair’s Program
IRRT
LVCC-S227
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Speakers will address what school libraries are doing or can do to reach
students from other countries with the use of modern technology.
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
FEAST: Future & Emerging Access Services
Trends
LLAMA_SASS
LVCC-N254
Smart Marketing Using Big (or little) Data
PLA
LVCC-N264
Transforming: Community Relationships
Transforming: Services
Why choose between presentations when you can come to one FEAST?
Future & Emerging Access Services Trends (FEAST) is back for a fourth
year, providing multiple speakers and topics in one 60 minute session.
Hear practitioners and experts discuss what’s new or just around the
corner in circulation, shelving, reserves, interlibrary loan, offsite storage
and more in short seven minute courses. Fresh and timely. Never frozen.
There’s always plenty to choose from at the FEAST!
Korean Libraries Today and Tomorrow
ALA
LVCC-S225
Updates/Briefings
Korea is the best wired country in the world. Learn from leaders of the
Korean Library Association how libraries are integrated into society, what’s
new and exciting, and what is on the drawing board.
LHRT Research Forum: The Library and the
City—Historical Perspectives
LHRT
LVCC-N240
Transforming: Physical & Virtual Space
Speakers will present recent scholarship on the history of libraries and
cities. Presentation topics include the Public Library in the town of Pullman,
IL in 1883; librarians’ response to open admissions and the City University
of New York in the 1970s; and Utah’s Library-Gymnasium movement in
1907-1912.
Speakers: Hal Grossman, Hunter College; Karl Pettit, Northern Illinois
University; Suzanne Stauffer, Louisiana State University
How do you measure whether or not your marketing strategies are effective or that your budget is being allocated correctly? Proving effectiveness
with outcomes and metrics is incredibly important in ensuring that you are
successfully engaging with your target audience. Using concrete examples
from four different library systems, this fun and exciting panel will provide
helpful tools and tips for leveraging big data (and little data) in making sure
your marketing return on investment is as high as it can be.
Speakers: Jeannie Allen, Kitsap Regional Library Marketing Manager;
Cordelia Anderson, Charlotte Mecklenburg Library Director of Marketing
and Communications; Julie Brand, King County Library System Marketing
and Community Relations Director; Stephen Halsey, Seattle Public Library
Director of Marketing and Online Services
Stepping Up: Providing Effective Library
and Information Services, Programs and
Resources to Students With Disabilities
AASL
LVCC-S224
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Research has demonstrated that school librarians often lack the skills
and knowledge to effectively design, implement and evaluate services,
resources and programs for students with a range of physical, neurodevelopmental and/or learning disabilities in their schools. This session will
be led by four distinguished university faculty with different perspectives
and areas of expertise: disabilities law, leadership and advocacy, communication disorders, and motivation and instructional design. The presenters
will use a variety of interactive knowledge-building exercises and participative activities (e.g., what it is like to have a learning disability, how to create
an accessible library facility) that motivate and engage participants.
Speakers: Nancy Everhart; William Myhill; Ruth Small
Tenure-track Support Systems: Perceptions
of Academic Librarians
LITA
LVCC-S233
ACRL
LVCC-S228
Transforming: Systems & Technology
Transforming: Library Workforce
LITA President Cindi Trainor Blyberg welcomes Kimberly Bryant, founder
of Black Girls Code. Black Girls CODE introduces computer coding lessons to young girls from underrepresented communities in programming
languages such as Scratch or Ruby on Rails. Black Girls CODE seeks to
introduce programming and technology to a new generation of coders who
will become builders of technological innovation and of their own futures.
In the tenure process for academic librarians, institutional support plays
a major role in their success. A survey of tenure-track librarians was conducted to gauge their perceptions of financial, institutional and sometimes
emotional support given by academic libraries to their librarians. In this
session, we will discuss some key findings in how librarians perceive the
support for tenure that they receive.
Speakers: Kimberly Bryant
Speakers: Molly Poremski, University at Buffalo International Languages
and Literatures Librarian; Amy Vils, University at Buffalo University Archivist
OITP—Digital Stuff and Copyright
ALA
LVCC-S219
Updates/Briefings
Speakers will address fair use and the provision of digital access such as
YouTube, library exceptions for born digital resources, and how mass digitization projects are faring given copyright restrictions on access and use.
Power, Privilege, and Positionality: Applying
a Critical Lens to LIS Education
ALA
LVCC-N116
Core Values
This session addresses how and why LIS educators use critical theory
in their research and teaching and the importance of critical theory as an
ongoing part of LIS discourse.
The Nevada Test Site Project: Bringing
Primary Resources to Researchers
RUSA, RUSA_HS
LVCC-N231/233
Transforming: Physical & Virtual Space
The Nevada Test Site Oral History Project, developed at the University of
Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV) Library, is a project dedicated to those “affiliated with and affected by” the “nuclear proving ground” in Nevada. The
interviews and subsequent transcription and digitization of 335 hours of
material has allowed the digital collections department at UNLV to provide scholars from across the world access to truly unique primary source
materials. This presentation will focus on the creation and curation of the
project, and how the researchers involved in digitization created a usable
resource for researchers of all skill levels.
program descriptions Sunday
LITA Awards Presentation & President’s
Program featuring Kimberly Bryant
Speaker: Cory Lampert, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Head, Digital
Collections
Speakers: Nicole Cooke; Robin Fogle Kurz; Safiya Noble
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109
Sunday, June 29 • 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Leading with Ebooks: New Strategies for
Librarians and Publishers
Down and Dirty Quick and Brilliant Training
Ideas
ALA
LVCC-N252
LEARNRT
LVCC-N231/233
Transforming: E-Book & Collections
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Sponsored by Total Boox, a new ebook service based on the premise that
libraries need not settle for less than instant, simultaneous access or pay
for the content not read by their patrons, this panel seeks to challenge
existing patterns in ebook buying and engage the leaders among us to
identify the trends moving the industry into promising new territories. One
of those trends is the strong interest in the reading activities of public library
patrons.
If patron’s reading—an act of not merely downloading an ebook or “checking it out” but of actually experiencing it (reading it page by page)—along
with librarians’ and publishers’ ability to gain insight into their readers’
activities, becomes the single most important factor driving the way
ebooks are accessed in libraries, what, then, do authors, publishers, and
libraries stand to gain? What becomes of the library in which a title’s value
(and cost) is based primarily on the reader’s experience with it?
The panel is moderated by Mirela Roncevic, an ebook expert, editor of
ALA’s journal eContent Quarterly, and independent consultant to vendors,
and features guest panelists from publishing houses as well as libraries
with a proven record of testing new services and possibilities with ebooks.
Sunday, June 29 • 3:30 pm – 5:30 pm
ALA Award Presentation and President’s
Program
ALA
LVCC-N249
Books & Authors
Join ALA President Barbara K. Stripling to celebrate the award winners and
hear featured speaker Lois Lowry with Jeff Bridges.
sunday program descriptions
Sunday, June 29 • 4:30 pm – 5:30 pm
Daniel Handler himself will present the first ever Lemony Snicket Prize for
Noble Librarians Faced with Adversity. This award, co-administered by
the ALA Governance Office and ALA Office for Intellectual Freedom, is
described by Handler/ Lemony Snicket as follows: “It is of the opinion of
Lemony Snicket, author, reader, and alleged malcontent, that librarians
have suffered enough. Therefore he is establishing an annual prize honoring a librarian who has faced adversity with integrity and dignity intact. . .
. It is Mr. Snicket’s hope, and the ALA’s, that the Snicket Prize will remind
readers everywhere of the joyous importance of librarians and the trouble
that is all too frequently unleashed upon them.”
Lois Lowry, legendary best-selling youth author and two-time Newbery
Medal winner will join ALA President Barbara Stripling as featured speaker
in the President’s Program. Stripling will interview Lowry along with actor
Jeff Bridges, star of the upcoming feature movie based on Lowry’s The
Giver. Lowry is one of the world’s most beloved and versatile authors for
children and young adults. The author of more than 40 books, including
the popular Anastasia Krupnik series, she has also been honored with the
Boston Globe-Horn Book Award, the Dorothy Canfield Fisher Award, the
California Young Reader’s Medal, and the Mark Twain Award. In 2007 she
received the Margaret A. Edwards Award for her contribution to young
adult literature.
Jeff Bridges is a popular award-winning actor, producer, and country
musician. He will next star in The Giver opposite Meryl Streep, Brenton
Thwaites, Alexander Skarsgard, Katie Holmes, Odeya Rush, Cameron
Monaghan and Taylor Swift. The film—which he also produced—has been
a passion project of his for more than a decade. Directed by Phillip Noyce,
it is set for an August 2014 theatrical release. Additionally he will be seen
in the adventure/fantasy film Seventh Son opposite Julianne Moore, Ben
Barnes and Kit Harington for director Sergey Bodrov. The film is an adaptation of a series of young adult books about a teen who learns the art
of wizardry after discovering that he is the seventh son of a seventh son
slated for a February 2015 release.
Give us an hour and we will guve you as many training ideas, solutions,
suggestions as you can handle. First there will be a presentation of 20 in 40
minutes. Then you will have a chance to discuss those ideas with people
who thought of them to take them back to your library. You can continue
the conversation after the program to build support, create new ideas and
programs and professional connections.
Speaker: Maurice Coleman
Focusing on the Big Picture: Re-imagining
the Library Website
LITA
LVCC-N243
Transforming: Physical & Virtual Space
When we redesigned the UNC Libraries website, we went beyond a simple
design upgrade and re-imagined our Web presence. We created goals for
discovery, access, service, branding, and device neutrality to guide our
design decisions. Our new user-focused, visually stimulating site was built
using a responsive Wordpress theme. This presentation will cover how
we analyzed our web presence, redesigned our content, made design
decisions, worked with library staff and developed a content management
strategy.
International Relations Program
ALA
LVCC-S224
Updates/Briefings
International Relations Program
We F’ed Up, But We Fixed It: Thriving When
Things Go Wrong
YALSA
LVCC-S223
Transforming: Services
“Failure” doesn’t have to be the “f-word.” We all fear the program that no
one comes to, but we’re not alone in failing, and in that empty room is a
lesson that can make future efforts successful. A panel of librarians will
discuss initiatives that didn’t turn out as planned and how they recovered
from their mistakes and went on to flourish. Participants will also have the
opportunity to workshop their own failures into successes.
Speaker: Gretchen Kolderup
What We Need Around Here is a Little More
Chaos: Embracing Disorganization and
Discruption
AASL
LVCC-S222
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Many school librarians and library programs today face many competing
challenges. Participants will be given a brief overview of a case study as an
example of how theories about chaos in organizations, the 21st-century
skills of collaboration, creativity, critical thinking, and communication
can be utilized to transform schools and their library program’s role in it.
Participants will end the session with a practice in “organized serendipity” in which they will work in small groups to discuss chaos in their own
schools and begin to create a plan for leveraging that chaos to create a
more effective environment.
Speaker: Jennifer Grub
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2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Sunday, June 29 • 8:00 pm – 10:00 pm
Monday, June 30 • 8:30 am – 10:00 am
Feminists’ Night at the Movies
Care and Feeding of Teen Volunteers
SRRT
CAP-Trevi
YALSA
LVCC-N259/261
Core Values
Transforming: Services
Shannon Sun-Higginson, the producer and director, will be speaking at
the program about the movie and will be answering questions. Shannon
Sun-Higginson is a documentary filmmaker from New York City. She first
discovered filmmaking in high school, where she founded and ran the
school’s first filmmaking club. She attended Wesleyan University, where
she received her B.A. in Film Studies and English. During college, she also
had her first documentary short “Hapa Perspectives” air on Current TV.
Speaker: Candice Mack
GTFO the Movie is a film exposing the harassment of women in video
games. It features gamers, bloggers, scholars, developers, and other
experts. Through this documentary the experiences of women in the
gaming world, both good and bad, are revealed. There are also suggestions of steps we can take to change the environment for the better.
She currently works as a Production Coordinator at Zero Point Zero
Production on such documentary television programs as “No Reservations”
on The Travel Channel and “Parts Unknown” on CNN.
Monday, June 30 • 8:00 am – 10:00 pm
Mad Men: The Business of Advertising
RUSA, RUSA_BRASS
LVCC-S230
Transforming: Services
The session kicks off with a continental breakfast, 8:00 am – 8:30 am,
sponsored by S&P Capital IQ.
Speakers: Wendy Diamond, California State University, Chico, Business
and Economics Librarian; Dale Skarl, MGM Resorts International, Internet
Marketing & Operations Search Engine Marketing Manager
Monday, June 30 • 8:30 am – 9:30 am
United for Libraries President’s Program with
Author and High Wire Artist Philippe Petit
UNITED
LVCC-N249
Books & Authors
Join United for Libraries President Rod Wagner for a talk, performance,
and book signing by Philippe Petit, subject of the Academy Award-winning
2008 documentary Man on Wire, and author of To Reach the Clouds and
Why Knot? Petit has been artist-in-residence of the Cathedral of St. John
the Divine for more than 30 years, and has performed on the high wire
more than 80 times around the world. He also lectures, practices magic,
and street juggles. He has been a featured speaker at TED and other
national venues.
Crash Course in Evaluation Research
ACRL
LVCC-N111
Transforming: Services
To demonstrate the value of their organizations, librarians must have some
knowledge of and facility with evaluation and assessment techniques,
including choosing and implementing appropriate methodologies to collect and analyze data, and packaging and presenting results for maximum
impact. This workshop will outline the basics of several methodologies,
including surveys and focus groups, for gathering valuable evaluation data.
Topics include developing effective questions, subject recruitment, and
basic data collection and analysis, as well as a primer on how to use study
results for accountability, continuous improvement, and outreach.
Speakers: Laura Saunders, Simmons College Assistant Professor; Mary
Wilkins-Jordan, Simmons College Assistant Professor
Digital Humanities and Academic Libraries:
Practice and Theory, Power and Privilege
ACRL_WGSS
LVCC-N252
Transforming: Services
Our panel explores the multiple roles libraries play in digital humanities.
Librarians’ capacity to engage critically with the production, consumption,
and pedagogy of digital humanities increases our ability to partner with
and be valued by our campuses. Whether we see ourselves in a service or
a scholar role, we are providing leadership for digital humanities. Our goal
is to foster lively discussion about practical and theoretical concerns, and
offer conceptual tools.
Speakers: Jane Nichols, Oregon State University Associate Professor/
Digital Humanities Coordinator/Social Sciences & Humanities Librarian;
Roxanne Shirazi, The Graduate Center at CUNY Co-Editor, dh+lib Adjunct
Reference & Digital Outreach Librarian, Mina Rees Library; Megan Wacha,
Barnard College Research and Instructional Services Librarian for the
Performing Arts
Information Manipulation Part II: Surveillance
ALA
LVCC-N243
What does the collection and retention of bulk phone records and other
personal information mean for the public and for our library users? Is personal information and Internet access being managed and manipulated
by the government and/private companies? Featuring Thomas Susman,
Esq., American Bar Association, Director of Government Affairs. A panel
of respondents include George Christian, Executive Director of Library
Connection and one of the Connecticut Four involved in the FBI/NASA
challenge, Vivian R. Wynn, President of Wynn Library Consulting and Chair
of the ALA Committee on Legislation and others to discuss the challenges
and implications.
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program descriptions monday
Many companies spend millions on advertising their brands and products,
yet data can be hard to find. Specialized sources, available at many large
libraries, focus on these statistics. The information they contain can be
used by business students, researchers, or the general public. In addition,
media planning, a component of a company’s marketing plan, will be covered. Entrepreneurs need information on placing ads (and on how much it
costs); reference librarians assisting these users will find the content of the
program very useful.
Is your library bombarded with prospective teen volunteers, but empty
of volunteer guidance or projects? Learn tips on how to design an infrastructure so that your volunteers have the maximum impact on your library
with the least hassle. We will also discuss ways to incorporate the 40
Developmental Assets for Adolescents into your program, thus creating
a volunteer experience that can tie into economic, education and career
development, advocacy for your library, and feed into the creation of more
robust teen councils and teen programming.
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Jean E. Coleman Memorial Outreach
Lecture: Equality…Equity…Diversity:
Libraries, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the
Mission
The Library Technology Prototyping Service
at Illinois: Products and Initiatives
ALA
LVCC-N231/233
An overview of the Technology Prototyping Services at the University of
Illinois. The service creates efficiencies in library services (e.g., chat software, data visualization web content, mobile app modules) and helps unit
libraries roll out new services through design of middleware, APIs and
lightweight web-services. An overview of the developed services will be
delivered along with discussion of managing, staffing and integrating the
work into IT production.
Core Values
This talk will look at how the library profession has respected and promoted the ideals of Martin Luther King Jr., through the Midwinter Sunrise
Celebration, and beyond. The MLK Jr. Multicultural Idea Exchange will
be examined in detail, and its practical applicability to promote Dr. King’s
ideals during the observance of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day as well as
throughout the year. Ms. Moore’s talk will discuss reports of participants
of the Social Responsibilities Round Table (SRRT) MLK Task Force King
Holiday Multicultural Idea Exchange (2000-2012), and the promotion of
equity of access through their activities, programs, reading lists, etc. She
will also address the Office of Literacy and Outreach Services’ history of
recognizing MLK, Jr., as well as the incorporation of the National Library
Involvement Committee into ALA via SRRT. In looking to the future, a forum
for dialogue about the ways libraries observe the event must continue in
order to empower individuals and communities through literacy, life-long
learning, and conserving valuable connections to the past and future, so
that libraries lead in this observance as an American celebration. Dr. Jean
E. Coleman was the first director of OLOS. This lecture series is a fitting
tribute to her work to ensure that all citizens, particularly Native Americans
and adult learners, have access to quality library services. The lecture series
will continue to teach library professionals more about their roles in providing equity of access. Sponsored by the Office for Literacy and Outreach
Services, the Jean E. Coleman Library Outreach Lecture is presented each
year during the American Library Association’s Annual Conference.
Say-it-in-Six Lightning Rounds: Case Studies
on Using Data to Improve Library Services
LLAMA_MAES
LVH-Pavilion 11
monday program descriptions
Transforming: Services
112
Hot topic! See how other libraries are using data (informally or formally) to
assess, promote, or improve their services. Sit back and watch the presenters zip from table to table and across data sets and themes in these
fast-paced “lightning rounds.” We will draw on the experiences of a broad
range of speakers to create a vibrant learning environment. Attendance will
be limited to 120 participants to allow for small group discussions.
LITA
LVCC-N232
Transforming: Systems & Technology
The Many Facets of Volunteerism—ISLD
Program
IRRT
LVCC-N264
Updates/Briefings
Join the International Sustainable Library Development Interest Group for
an interactive program on how volunteers participate in library development
projects worldwide through travel to project sites, through participation in
library to library collaboration such as sister libraries, through interactive
programming such as Skype, and through fundraising and book drives
to support library projects. Breakout sessions will give opportunities for
audience engagement and networking opportunities.
The New Central: Reimagining the Future of
Flagship Libraries
LLAMA_BES
LVCC-S219
Transforming: Physical & Virtual Space
Long thought of as the repository for a system, the central (main) library
is undergoing a major evolution. Leaders are seeking to create a unique
destination for their central libraries that goes beyond merely dedicating
space to a deep collection or being a downtown branch. This session will
explore what it takes—politically, financially, and functionally—to transform
mid-century modern library buildings to meet today’s needs and to reflect
a library system’s overall brand.
Speakers: Corinne Hill; Traci Lesneski; Greg Mickells; Gary Shaffer
Monday, June 30 • 10:30 am – 11:30 am
Sticking with STEM: How the Academic
Library Can Help to Retain Successful
Students
Are You Taking a Gamble on Your Academic
Library Career by Having a Baby (or Two)?
ACRL, ACRL_STS
LVCC-S220
ACRL
LVCC-N258
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Transforming: Library Workforce
How can librarians assist with student diversity and retention in the STEM
and health science fields at their institution? During this session, three
speakers will discuss how library services and instruction can aid student
performance overall, as well as highlighting specific retention issues for
student groups underrepresented in the STEM fields. Ample time will be
provided for audience questions and discussion. This is a joint program
between the ACRL Science and Technology Section and the ACRL Health
Sciences Interest Group. The STS Poster Session will immediately follow.
Moderator: Ariel Andrea, University of Wisconsin, Madison Chemistry
Librarian
Speakers: Jan Fransen, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Engineering
Librarian; Joanna Jezierska, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Director,
Multicultural Program for Engineering, Sciences, Allied Health Sciences,
Community Health Sciences, and Nursing; Carissa Tomlinson, Towson
University MLIS, Albert S. Cook Library
This program presented by two academic librarians, and coincidentally
both mothers of identical twins, will explore what the research says about
the impact of having children on an individual’s academic library career.
The presenters will also lead a discussion about what individuals and
ACRL can do to create better working conditions for parents.
Speakers: Leahkim Gannett, University of California Santa Barbara
Communication & Performing Arts Librarian; Joyce Garczynski, Towson
University Communications & Development Librarian
Best Practices in Training
LEARNRT
LVCC-N264
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Come to the Best Practices in Training featuring speakers from libraries
nationwide discussing how they created, managed or evaluated staff and
public training programs. The speakers will discuss what worked and what
did not work for their training programs. This workshop’s speakers will be
selected through an application process to get the best of best practices.
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
All presentations will be used to spark a substantive group discussion
around the topic.
Speakers: Maurice Coleman; Jerilyn Veldof; Crystal Schimpf
Let’s Talk Comics: A Roundtable Discussion
ALA
LVCC-N263
Books & Authors
Discovery: The New Name for Reader’s
Advisory?
ALA
LVCC-S219
Books & Authors
What to do when the bestsellers are all checked out? Keep your backlist
in the front of patrons’ minds. Join Booklist’s Reference and Collection
Management editor Rebecca Vnuk, along with reader’s advisory expert
Kaite Mediatore Stover and Bibliocommons CEO Beth Jefferson, as they
discuss both new and tried and true methods of leading your patrons to
their next good book.
Moderator: Rebecca Vnuk, Booklist Editor
Speakers: Beth Jefferson; Kaite Mediatore Stover
Energizing Teen Creativity by Letting Go
YALSA
LVCC-N259/261
Transforming: Services
Learn how the Visalia Branch Library “let go” of conventional summer reading program methods and let 10 teens plan their own program. In one hour,
these teens had the frame work laid out for a murder mystery summer. See
how they planned programming, wrote scripts, acted in videos, directed,
and filmed each other. Two of the teens created all the graphics used for
the websites, posters, bookmarks and t-shirts. Summer 2013 was just the
beginning!
Speaker: Faythe Arredondo
Labor Solidarity in a “Right-to-Work” State
Transforming: Library Workforce
The rich labor history of Las Vegas will serve as the setting to understand
the impact “right-to-work” laws have on the workforce. This program will
provide librarians with information they can use to help their patrons and
community members understand the impact of “right-to-work” laws.
Speakers: Dan’l Cook, Nevada State AFL/CIO, President; James Kraft,
University of Hawaii at Manoa, Professor of History
Leaning Your Library’s Materials Handling
Workflows
PLA
LVCC-N231/233
Transforming: Library Leadership Expectations—Staff
and Boards
Applying Lean concepts and tools to library materials handling workflows is
a low cost, highly collaborative, and staff-empowering approach to improving how we get items from our shelves, from another library, or from our
book jobbers and into the hands of our patrons. Lean involves training
every person in the workflow to take responsibility for continuously improving and optimizing their environment. Lean tools are most effective when
the principles are adopted by the organization and incorporated into the
culture. This program will provide an introduction to Lean principles and
explain how these principles apply to library materials handling.
Speaker: Lori Bowen Ayre, The Galecia Group Library Consultant
Presented by the ALA Graphic Novels & Comics in Libraries MIG
Rebranding the Library: Generating Visibility
in the Virtual Age
LITA
LVCC-N262
Transforming: Systems & Technology
When library patrons find scholarly material, they typically link directly to
the full text, bypassing any page that would draw attention to their library’s
involvement. Libraries need to find new ways to improve visibility lest their
funding be impacted. We suggest several ways of rebranding the library
as a space that exists virtually as well as physically and encourage the
audience to share their own “invisibility” challenges.
Singapore Libraries—Trend Setters in
Community Engagement and Collaboration
ALA
LVCC-N111
Updates/Briefings
Come hear how the innovative, award-winning National Library Board
of Singapore (NLB) has embarked on successful efforts such as Read@
Schools and SURE (Source, Understand, Research and Evaluate) to
encourage reading and through public libraries across the country to raise
the level of information literacy nationwide. In addition to learning how NLB
works collaboratively with government and community groups to achieve
societal goals within Singapore, NLB will discuss its leading efforts in the
Asia Pacifica project, modeled after the Europeana, to share digital materials from libraries, archives and other content institutions in the Asia Pacific.
Teen Spaces 201: What’s Next for Teen
Spaces in Libraries
YALSA
LVCC-N253
Transforming: Physical & Virtual Space
Learning labs, technology centers, teen centers, makerspaces—there are
no shortage of great ideas for creating spaces for teens in libraries. This
session is an opportunity to learn more about what these spaces have in
common, how to flexibly create spaces for teens in your library that meet
a variety of budget needs and how to gain support for creating these kind
of spaces in your library.
Speaker: Maureen Hartman
The HIP Film Fest: How to Plan, Partner and
Execute!
PLA
LVCC-N256
program descriptions monday
RUSA
LVCC-N236
It’s a wild free for all with comics creators, librarians, and everyone keen to
understand how to create engaging graphic novels and comics in today’s
diverse industry. Join comics professionals and your fellow librarians for a
roundtable discussion on everything from growing up with comics, writing
for different age audiences, everyone’s toughest jobs, ideal workspaces,
most tempting work distractions, valued critics, and favorite go-to sources
of inspiration. Creators will quiz each other, and with the guidance of moderator librarian Mike Pawuk members of the audience will get their chance
to talk comics with this stellar line up.
Transforming: Services
The Arlington Heights Memorial Library has completed our 7th Annual Film
Fest, where, over the last 2 years, we have seen over 600 attendees at
the two screenings! Our recipe for success: using a library wide approach
for organization and execution, establishing key community partners
(Including a professional film critic as one of our judges) to work with,
leveraging the fest through Digital Media workshops at our state of the
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113
art Digital Studio, utilizing our high school volunteer group as a sounding
board to elevate the event (paparazzi red carpet experience + After party
with Photo booth anyone?)!
Virtual Reference with JoinMe
ALSC Charlemae Rollins President’s
Program—The Ripple Effect: Library
Partnerships that Positively Impact Children,
Families, Communities, and Beyond
ACRL
LVCC-S220
ALSC
LVCC-N254
Speaker: Tom Spicer, Arlington Heights Memorial Library Teen Services
Supervisor
Transforming: Systems & Technology
Need to virtually show and tell a patron how to use a library service?
Want to conduct potent virtual sessions that go beyond chat or a phone
call? These are a few scenarios that can be accomplished with JoinMe.
JoinMe is a simple web tool that allows screensharing, chat, and VOIP. The
speaker will introduce you to the free web-based service called JoinMe
that allows you to show and tell your patrons anything.
Speaker: John Burns, Dixie State University Reference and Instruction
Librarian
Who Uses Libraries and Who Doesn’t: A
Special Typology
ALA
LVCC-N243
Transforming: Customer & User Expectations
Lee Rainie, Director, Pew Research Center’s Internet Project will describe
the Project’s new study about the different kinds of library users and nonusers. The research uses segmentation models to show how technology,
community orientation, and library activities affect the way people use
libraries. The research also shows the variety of reasons why people do
not use libraries. He will explore the implications of this work for library
leaders as they explore new services and for the library community as it
does advocacy.
monday program descriptions
Monday, June 30 • 10:30 am – 11:45 am
The Quiet Strengths of Introverts: ALCTS
President’s Program with Jennifer
Kahnweiler
ALCTS
LVCC-N249
Transforming: Library Leadership Expectations—Staff
and Boards
The world of work is changing. It’s fast, virtual, and global. The introvert’s
quiet strengths are keys to meeting the challenges ahead. Introverts can
challenge the status quo, provoke new thoughts, and inspire others. Most
importantly, they can be highly effective leaders, influencers, and colleagues when they build on their inherent strengths.
Jennifer Kahnweiler, PhD, is the author of The Introverted Leader: Building
on Your Quiet Strength and Quiet Influence: The Introvert’s Guide to
Making a Difference.
ALCTS thanks Elsevier for sponsoring this program.
Speaker: Jennifer B. Kahnweiler, PhD CSP, Speaker and Executive Coach
Transforming: Community Relationships
At the 2014 ALSC President’s Program, get inspired to create meaningful partnerships in your libraries! Learn how library and community collaborations can be the nexus of support for children and families. Amy
Dickinson, syndicated advice columnist, will inspire us with the keynote
address. She will speak about her collaboration with the Family Reading
Partnership of Ithaca, New York to launch the campaign “A Book in Every
Bed,” that then sparked a national movement. Anna McQuinn, author of
Lola at the Library, will bring an international perspective to our proceedings and speak of her work in the United Kingdom with young children
and their families. The program will culminate with a panel of librarians
from across the country discussing their innovative partnerships that support children and families. Nicholas Higgins, director of outreach services,
Brooklyn (N.Y.) Public Library, will discuss his efforts working with families
with parents who are incarcerated and their children. Beth Munk, children’s
services manager, Kendallville Public Library (Ind.), will discuss her collaboration with Big Brothers and Sisters. Lesley Clayton, manager of children’s
library services, Mamie Doud Eisenhower Public Library (Broomfield, Colo.)
will share her collaboration with the Bal Swan Children’s Center, a local
preschool, to host parent workshops that support early literacy and social
and emotional development.
Speakers: Amy Dickinson; Anna McQuin; Nicholas Higgins; Beth Munk;
Lesley Clayton
Articles on Demand: Library Perspectives
ALCTS_CRS
LVCC-N262
Transforming: E-Book & Collections
Articles-on-demand, also known as pay-per-view, is an evolving acquisitions model which allows libraries to purchase article content from a variety
of journals without having to subscribe to all of the individual titles involved.
Different vendors offer different models and options for libraries to participate. Libraries will discuss their decision-making process; successes and
challenges along the way; and their current methods for acquiring content.
Articles-on-demand options from both publishers and third-party vendors
will be discussed.
Speakers: Beth R. Bernhardt, University of North Carolina Greensboro,
Assistant Dean for Collection Management and Scholarly Communications;
Susanna Bossenga, Ronald Williams Library, Northeastern Illinois
University, Electronic Resources Librarian; Mark England, University of
Utah, Collection Development Librarian; Phil Jones, Digital Science, Head
of Publisher Outreach
Creating Sustainable AV Preservation in
Academic Libraries
ALCTS
LVCC-N252
Transforming: Systems & Technology
The elevators in the Luxor Hotel pyramid
move at a 39-degree angle and are called
“The inclinators.”
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Monday, June 30 • 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm
A few leading collecting institutions have developed extensive moving
image and recorded sound preservation programs, and have reported
their own models at professional conferences. However these prominent
examples can feel overwhelming to a library or archive that is only just
beginning audiovisual preservation. This presentation will give suggestions
and guidelines for librarians working in between the two extremes of largescale audiovisual preservation and zero priority being given to audiovisual
materials.
Speakers: Howard Besser, New York University, Director, Moving Image
Archiving & Preservation; Stefan Elnabli, Northwestern University Library,
Moving Image and Sound Preservation Specialist; Hannah Frost, Stanford
University Libraries, Manager, Stanford Media Preservation Lab; Siobhan
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Hagan, University of Baltimore Langsdale Library, AV Archivist; Steven
Villereal, University of Virginia Library, Audiovisual Conservator
Disaster Preparedness in the 21st Century:
Preserving Library Collections and Services
LITA
LVCC-N264
Transforming: Systems & Technology
This program will first evaluate the possibility of such an event in order
to justify taking the time to prepare for it, then examine practical ways to
prepare and cope, including considering the feasibility of alternate power
sources, making sure digital collections are backed up locally when possible (instead of or in addition to “in the cloud”), and preserving a core
physical collection. The program will also recommend resources for funding and further reading.
Play, Play, Learn: Games and the Common
Core Library
AASL
LVCC-N243
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
This program will focus on the application of play theory to Common Core
aligned instruction. The use of curriculum aligned modern board games
allows a library to provide an additional format of media to support student
learning. Participants will be introduced to play theory and shown how
the elements of play are closely connected with the underlying themes
of Common Core instruction. Though game play examples, participants
will learn how to identify successful game elements that promote learning
through play. A final major focus will be on the direct alignment of resources
to AASL and Common Core curriculum standards.
Speaker: Chris Harris
Get Writing! Overcome Procrastination,
Remove Roadblocks and Create a Map for
Success
Teach Me SUCCESS: Teaching Success and
Strong Character through Characters Kids
Love
ACRL
LVCC-N258
AASL
LVCC-N231/233
Transforming: Library Workforce
Overcome procrastination, remove roadblocks and create a map for successful completion of your paper. In this hands-on workshop you’ll break
down you writing project into manageable steps with deadlines and learn
simple approaches and techniques for sticking to your schedule. Whether
you’re just beginning the publishing process or are a more seasoned writer
stuck on a project that needs to get out the door, this workshop will help
you get going and stay on track.
Speakers: Jon Jeffryes, University of Minnesota Engineering Librarian;
Jerilyn Veldof, University of Minnesota Libraries Organization Development
Associate
ALA
LVCC-N263
Updates/Briefings
Are you an MLS student or a recent graduate interested in working internationally? Are you seriously considering it? Do you want to get a recipe
on how to prepare for this challenging and exciting opportunity? From
service-learning project in Sao Tome to exciting library jobs in China and
Kazakhstan…Come and hear first-hand from people who will share their
real-life experiences and help you to go in the right direction.
Speakers: Samuel Charles Boss; Sara Rizzo; Martin Wolske
Looking Clearly into the Crystal Ball: Using
Innovative Assessment Strategies to Predict
the Future Needs of Users in Academic
Libraries
LLAMA_LOMS
LVCC-S219
Transforming: Customer & User Expectations
This program will help academic librarians use quantitative and qualitative
assessment data to anticipate and plan for new and future services—creating a strategic vision for their libraries. Referencing scholarship on the
subject and using “real life” observations, the presenters will relay their
knowledge about innovations in assessment, and give strategies for presenting assessment data in a visually compelling way to key administrative
constituencies. Our program will include a panel presentation and audience breakout sessions.
Speakers: Jennifer Paustenbaugh; Chestalene Pintozzi; Elizabeth Titus
In an effort to reach the whole child with increasingly restrictive standardized testing, education leaders expanded the traits required in character
education curriculum to include intrapersonal skills that empower children
to set, pursue, and achieve personal goals. This prompted a research
study that determined that Child Choice Award-winning books, where educators choose nominees and children select winners, contain thousands
of models of the new SUCCESS traits, giving librarians 123 resources,
many of which are likely already in their collections, that meet standards
for school library collection development to recommend to teachers, use
in their own lessons, and support collaborative units.
Speaker: Roger James Leslie, PhD
Speaking about The Speaker
ALA
LVCC-N253
Core Values
In 1977, ALA released The Speaker, a film that led to unprecedented
rancor, division, and discussion within the association. Controversy over
the film dominated the 1977 Annual Conference in Detroit, and nearly 40
years later, strong opinions remain about the process and the end product.
We invite you to attend one of two screenings of the 42-minute film in
advance (either online or as part of the of the “Now Showing @ ALA” series)
and join us for this panel discussion of the film and the controversy, followed by an audience discussion.
Moderator: Julius C. Jefferson, Jr.
Speakers: Robert Wedgeworth, past ALA Executive Director; Beverly
Lynch, UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies; Marc
McCallon, Abilene Christian University.
Top Library Building Trends
LLAMA_BES
LVCC-N259/261
Transforming: Physical & Virtual Space
A panel of architects, librarians and consultants will provide an overview
of new and exciting ideas in planning public and academic library facilities. Topics will include the rethinking of spaces for services, new building
design, and other “must have” items to keep your library up-to-date. Each
panelist will provide a brief presentation with slides. The entire panel will
then field questions from the audience.
program descriptions monday
Leaning International…Recipes from the
Field
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Moderator: Rita Hamilton
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115
Tribes and Scribes: A Double Feature
Highlighting Native American and WPA
Historical Research
GODORT
LVCC-N232
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
Needles in the Haystack of History: How to use the WPA Historical Records
Survey, one of the best discovery tools for government records from the
1700s through the early 1940s, and now more easily accessed through
University of Kentucky libraries finding aids, for historical and genealogical
research. Learn strategies on how to track down current locations of these
archival materials.
Historic Indian Publications by the United States Federal Government.
Learn about materials from the Bureau of American Ethnology, the Census,
the Annual Reports of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, and other federal
documents and publications pertaining to Native Americans.
Monday, June 30 • 1:00 pm – 3:30 pm
YALSA’s President’s Program and
Membership Meeting
YALSA
LVCC-N255/257
Transforming: Services
Stranger than Fiction: Reader’s Advisory for
Nonfiction
YALSA
LVCC-N253
Books & Authors
Nonfiction for teens has started to come into its own as something beyond
report books. YALSA has an award recognizing outstanding nonfiction
books and new Common Core standards stress nonfiction titles. But how
do you match a reader to the right title? Learn how to apply basic reader’s
advisory principles to nonfiction books and learn new ones. Discover how
to find new and noteworthy titles, and great nonfiction read-alikes for
popular fiction titles.
Speakers: Angela Frederick; Jennie Rothschild
Teaching Digital Citizenship to Youth with
Autism Spectrum Disorders
AASL
LVCC-N231/233
Transforming: Teaching & Learning
With their ability to focus on topics of personal interest, engagement in
technology, attention to detail, appreciation for rules, and strong sense of
fairness, youth with ASD (Autism Spectrum Disorders) can become model
digital citizens. While some youth with ASD have difficulty in discerning
other people’s perspective, they are often willing to share their own knowledge. School librarians can help these youth interact with digital information knowledgeably, not only in terms of technical skills, but also helping
contextualize information, filling in experiential gaps and developing a critical eye towards content and the authors’ intent.
Speaker: Lesley Farmer, CSULB Prof.
monday program descriptions
Don’t miss the YALSA President’s Program titled: “A Burning Need to
Know: How Passion Connects to Learning” where you’ll have the chance
to talk with others about how to create learning opportunities for teens
in your library and in your community. In this highly interactive program
participants will be able to talk with connected learning coaches (librarians
from schools, public libraries, and library schools) who will answer questions and facilitate discussion about how to bring the ideas of connected
learning into the school and public library for and with teens.
Monday, June 30 • 3:00 pm – 4:00 pm
The iconic “Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas”
sign was designed by Betty Willis and has
been on display since 1959. Seven silver
dollars back the seven letters of the word
“Welcome” in a nod to the state’s nickname.
116
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Sponsored by LITA Imagineering Interest Group and Tor Books
Science fiction & fantaSy:
Redefining HumanS fRom tHe PaSt to tHe futuRe
Saturday, June 28, 2014 • 4:30 pm – 5:30 pm
Las Vegas Convention Center Room LVCC-S233 (South Hall Connector)
Terry Goodkind is a #1 New York Times
bestselling author. His books include the elevenvolume Sword of Truth series, beginning with
Wizard’s First Rule, the basis for the television
show Legend of the Seeker. Alongside a career
in wildlife art, he has also been a cabinetmaker
and a violin maker, and he has done restoration
work on rare and exotic artifacts from around the world. While continuing
to maintain the northeastern home he built with his own hands, in recent
years he and his wife Jeri have created a second home in the desert
Southwest, where he now spends the majority of his time.
“Wonderfully creative, seamless, and stirring.”
—Kirkus Reviews on Wizard’s First Rule
deborah Feingold
douglaS PReSton
douGlAS PreSTon is the author of The Monster
of Florence, currently being developed as a film
starring George Clooney as Preston himself,
and the New York Times bestsellers Impact,
Tyrannosaur Canyon, and Blasphemy. He is
the co-author, with lincoln Child, of the famed
Pendergast series of novels, including such
bestselling titles as The Book of the Dead and The Wheel of Darkness, as
well as The Relic, which was made into a number one box office hit movie.
H “His characters are so compelling, his storytelling so persuasive, that
we buy it all completely.”
—Booklist, starred review on The Kraken Project
V. e. ScHWab
Wen SPenceR
Hilton Photography
Sandy Aquila
teRRy goodkind
John W. Campbell Award Winner Wen
SPenCer resides in paradise in Hilo,
Hawaii, with two volcanoes overlooking
her home. Her novel Tinker won the 2003
Sapphire Award for Best Science Fiction
romance and was a finalist for the
romantic Times reviewers’ Choice Award for
Fantasy novel. Her Wolf Who Rules was a Top Pick by Romantic Times
and given their top rating of four and a half stars. Spencer’s love of
Japanese anime and manga flavors her writing.
“Spencer’s intertwining of current earth technology
and otherworldly elven magic is quite ingenious.”
—Booklist
Jo Walton
Jo WAlTon won the John W. Campbell Award for
Best new Writer in 2002, and the World Fantasy
Award for her novel Tooth and Claw in 2004.
Her several other novels include the acclaimed
Small Change alternate-history trilogy,
comprising Farthing, Ha’penny, and Half a
Crown. Her novel Among Others won the Hugo
and nebula Awards in 2012. She blogs at papersky.livejournal.com and
as a columnist on Tor.com. A native of Wales, she lives in Montreal. other
books from Walton include: The King’s Peace, The King’s Name, The Prize
in the Game, What Makes This Book So Great and My Real Children.
“Walton embarks on a deep and moving exploration of family, choices,
and the lives of ordinary women in the 20th and 21st centuries.”
—Publishers Weekly on My Real Children,
Best Summer Books 2014
V. e. SCHWAB is the author of The Near Witch and
The Archived. The product of a British mother, a
Beverly Hills father, and a southern upbringing,
Schwab has a penchant for tea and BBC shows,
and a serious and well-documented case of
wanderlust. Her first adult novel Vicious is a
ruSA reading list Selection.
H “masterfully told. […] this dark paranormal fantasy, a riveting tale of
vengeance and redemption, proves that extraordinary powers don’t
necessarily make superheroes.”
—ruSA on Vicious, the 2014 reading list’s Top Pick in Fantasy
Visit the Tor Booth #532
tor-forge.com
authors will be signing
complimentary copies of
their works immediately
following the program
Clarion Books
hmhco.com
HOLIDAY HOUSE
RENÉ COLATO LAÍNEZ
SUNDAY 3:00-4:00
ANGELA DOMINGUEZ
SUNDAY 10:30-11:00
Rich Schmitt
SATURDAY 4:00-4:30
Adrienne Dettore
DAVID A. ADLER
Holiday house
PATRICIA C. McKISSACK
SUNDAY 9:30-10:00
SUSAN GOLDMAN RUBIN
SATURDAY 2:00-3:00
CARMELLA VAN VLEET
SUNDAY 2:00-2:30
AU T H O R S A R T I S T S AU T O G R A P H I N G
SAT URDAY
S U N DAY
SUSAN GOLDMAN RUBIN
PATRICIA C. McKISSACK OL’ CLIP-CLOP: A Ghost Story
FREEDOM SUMMER:
The 1964 Struggle for Civil Rights in America
2:00-3:00
RENÉ COLATO LAÍNEZ
SEÑOR PANCHO HAD A RANCHO
4:00-4:30
9:30-10:00
ANGELA DOMINGUEZ CARMEN LEARNS ENGLISH
10:30-11:00
CARMELLA VAN VLEET
ELIZA BING IS (NOT) A BIG, FAT QUITTER
2:00-2:30
DAVID A. ADLER
Visit us online!
www.holidayhouse.com
COLONEL THEODORE ROOSEVELT
3:00-4:00
BOOTH #415
Daily Schedule
Access the Online Scheduler
To access the scheduler online, scan the QR code or visit: ala14.ala.org/scheduler
For mobile apps visit: ala14.ala.org/mobile-app
Hosted By
Event Name
End Time
Location
Hosted By
Event Name
Thursday, June 26
4:30 pm Start Time
8:30 am Start Time
AASL,
YALSA,
ALSC
*ACRL
Immersion Faculty Planning
Retreat I
5:00 pm
BALLY-Director’s
Room
*ACRL
Immersion Faculty I
5:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 1
FTRF
Freedom to Read Foundation
Board of Trustees Orientation
9:00 am
LVCC-N101
12:00 pm
LVCC-N101
12:00 pm
BALLY-ACRL
Suite
9:00 am Start Time
FTRF
Joint Youth Divisions Executive
Meeting
Location
6:00 pm
LVCC-N201
7:30 pm
BALLY-Skyview 5
9:00 pm
BALLY-Bronze 1
8:30 am
BALLY-Bronze 4
6:00 pm Start Time
*ALA
Library Champions, ALA
Advocates and Legacy Society
Reception
7:00 pm Start Time
Freedom to Read Foundation
Board of Trustees
10:00 am Start Time
*ACRL
End Time
Assessment in Action
Facilitator Preparation
*ALA
Friday, June 27
7:30 am Start Time
*ALA
1:00 pm Start Time
Assessment in Action, Part I
5:00 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 1 & 2
*ACRL
Assessment in Action, Part I,
Breakout 1
5:00 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 6
*ACRL
Assessment in Action, Part I,
Breakout 5
5:00 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 3
*ACRL
Assessment in Action, Part I,
Breakout 2
5:00 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 5
*ACRL
Assessment in Action, Part I,
Breakout 4
5:00 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 7
*ACRL
Assessment in Action, Part I,
Breakout 3
5:00 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 4
ALCTS
Fundamentals of Collection
Assessment
4:30 pm
LVCC-N234
2:00 pm Start Time
Spectrum Institute Breakfast
8:00 am Start Time
AASL
The Power of Persuasion:
Developing Influence to
Become Your Own Best
Advocate
12:00 pm
CAP-Milano I
*ACRL
Board Update
10:00 am
BALLY-Palace 1
ALA
External Review Panel Training
12:00 pm
CAP-Milano VII
IRRT
Training the Trainer: Keeping
up and staying ahead of
new trends, standards,
services and technologies-IRRT
Preconference
1:00 pm
LVH-Ballroom F
RUSA,
RUSA_
BRASS
Preconference: How
Business Librarians Support
Entrepreneurs
4:00 pm
CAP-Pisa
8:30 am Start Time
AASL
Executive Committee I
4:00 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 03
AASL
NCATE (CAEP) Coordinating
Committee Meeting
10:00 am
CAP-Siena
ALSC
Executive Committee Meeting
4:30 pm
LVCC-N216
AASL_ISS
OS-Off Site
Freedom to Read Foundation
Board of Trustees
5:00 pm
LVCC-N101
Independent School Section
(ISS) Tour
12:00 pm
FTRF
*ACRL
Assessment in Action, Part II,
Breakout 2
12:30 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 5
*ACRL
Immersion Faculty Planning
Retreat II
4:00 pm
BALLY-Director’s
Room
*ACRL
Assessment in Action, Part II,
Breakout 4
12:30 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 7
*ACRL
Assessment in Action, Part II,
Breakout 1
12:30 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 6
*ACRL
Assessment in Action, Part II,
Breakout 5
12:30 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 3
*ACRL
Assessment in Action, Part II,
Breakout 3
12:30 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 4
3:00 pm Start Time
*ALA
Spectrum Icebreaker &
Introductions
4:00 pm
BALLY-Bronze 1
3:30 pm Start Time
*AFLBCALA
BCALA Executive Board
Retreat
8:00 pm
PARIS-Burgundy
4:00 pm Start Time
*ALA
Spectrum Institute Opening
Reception
6:30 pm
BALLY-Bronze 4
ALA-EC
Executive Board Executive
Committee (ALA)
5:00 pm
LVH-Ballroom D
LVCC: Las Vegas Convention Center
BALLY: Bally’s Las Vegas
CAP: Caesars Palace Las Vegas
FLAM: Flamingo Las Vegas
LVH: Las Vegas Hotel
PARIS: Paris Las Vegas
daily schedule Thursday–Friday
*ACRL
Spectrum Institute Defining
Diversity Through Dialogue
For more detailed hotel information
see page 43.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
121
friday daily schedule
122
*ACRL
Immersion Faculty II
4:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 2
*ACRL
Assessment in Action, Part II
12:30 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 1 & 2
AFLBCALA
BCALA Executive Board
Meeting
1:00 pm
PARIS-Loire
AFL-ULC
Connecting Youth: Key
Findings from the Learning
Labs in Libraries and Museums
Projects
10:00 am
LVCC-S224
LEARNRT
Creating Effective Videos
and Screencasts: A Library
Learning Video and
Screencasts BootCamp
(LearnRT)
4:00 pm
CAP-Milano III
LLAMA
Library Tour: Las Vegas
Libraries, Legends and
Highrollers
4:00 pm
OS-Off Site
NMRT
Coming out of the Shell:
Becoming a Powerful Public
Speaker (NMRT)
12:00 pm
CAP-Anzio
RUSA,
RUSA_
RSS
Preconference: The Reference
Interview
4:00 pm
CAP-Florentine I
UNO
Print Archive Network (PAN)
& Looking to the Future of
Shared Print
3:00 pm
LVCC-N262
VRT
Managing Local and
Community-Produced BornDigital Audiovisual Content
4:00 pm
CAP-Neopolitan
II
12:00 pm
LVCC-N115
*ALA
Emerging Leaders Workshop
3:00 pm
LVH-Pavilion 01
*ALA
Branding You! Matching Your
Brand to Your Career Plan
10:00 am
BALLY-Bronze 3
ALA
Training, Orientation &
Leadership Development
Committee (TOLD)
10:00 am
LVH-Conference
Room 01 & 02
ALA
Intellectual Freedom
Committee I
10:00 am
LVCC-N101
ALA-EC
Executive Board Meeting I
(ALA)
11:30 am
LVH-Ballroom D
ALCTS
Fundamentals of Collection
Assessment
4:00 pm
LVCC-N234
ALCTS
Technical Services Directors
of Large Research Libraries
Interest Group
11:30 am
FLAM-Virginia
City I & II
*ALCTS,
ALCTS_
AS
Statistics and Reports: DataDriven Decision-Making
4:00 pm
LVCC-N235
ALCTS,
ALCTS_
AS
Streaming Media Passes the
Tipping Point: Now What?
12:00 pm
LVCC-N236
LITA
Web Therapy
4:00 pm
LVCC-N110
LITA
Practical Linked Data with
Open Source
4:00 pm
LVCC-N258
LITA
Executive Committee
9:30 am
LVH-Conference
Room 03
*ACRL
Board Orientation
12:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 1
*ALA
Advocating Smarter: Powerful
Persuasion Techniques for the
Influential Professional
12:00 pm
BALLY-Bronze 3
ALA
Round Table Coordinating
Assembly
12:00 pm
LVH-Ballroom G
ALA
Intellectual Freedom
Committee II
12:30 pm
LVCC-N101
ALCTS,
ALCTS_
CMMS
FRBR Interest Group
12:00 pm
LVCC-N263
PLA
PLAmetrics User Group and
Demonstration
11:30 am
LVCC-N237
UNO
OCLC Enhance Sharing
Session
12:00 pm
LVCC-N260
YALSA
Executive I
11:30 am
LVCC-N223
1:30 pm
LVH-Paradise
North
9:30 am Start Time
ALA
LITA
Managing Data: Tools for Plans
and Data Scrubbing
4:00 pm
LVCC-N109
PLA
Creating a Collaborative
Culture
12:00 pm
LVCC-N256
PLA
Beyond Glitz and Glitter: Great
Brands Start from Within
12:00 pm
LVCC-N252
PLA
Stepping Into the Director
Role: Preparing for the Part
12:00 pm
LVCC-N254
RUSA,
RUSA_HS
History Genealogy
Preconference
4:00 pm
CAP-Milano V
UNITED
Nuts and Bolts for Friends,
Trustees, and Foundation
4:00 pm
LVCC-S219
YALSA
21st Century Teens: Literacy in
a Digital World
4:00 pm
FLAM-Savoy
9:00 am Start Time
AASL
Affiliate Assembly Executive
Committee
11:00 am
CAP-Livorno
AASL,
YALSA,
ALSC
USBBY Board of Directors
Meeting (AASL/ALSC/YALSA)
4:00 pm
LVCC-N224
*ACRL
Assessment in Action Focus
Group I
10:30 am
BALLY-Palace 7
*ALA
Chapter Leaders Forum
3:30 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 08
ALA
Annual Unconference
12:00 pm
LVCC-N113
GAMERT
Using Meaningful Gamification
to Motivate Library Users: A
Hands-on Workshop
12:00 pm
CAP-Roman I
OITP Advsiory Committee
Meeting I
10:00 am Start Time
ALA
Committee on Diversity and
All Sub-Committee Business
Meeting
12:00 pm
CAP-Neopolitan
IV
LITA
Board of Directors Orientation
11:30 am
LVCC-N215
10:30 am Start Time
AASL
Alliance for Association
Excellence
12:00 pm
LVCC-N201
AASL,
AASL_
ESLS
ESLS Meeting
12:00 pm
CAP-Salerno
11:30 am Start Time
ALA
ALA Committee on
Membership Meetings
ALA-APA
ALA-APA Board of Directors
12:00 pm
LVH-Ballroom D
LLAMA_
BES
LLAMA/BES Preconference:
Serving the Homeless in the
Academic and Public Library
4:00 pm
CAP-Milano IV
12:00 pm Start Time
AASL
AASL-NCATE (CAEP) Program
Reviewer Training
4:00 pm
CAP-Messina
ALA
ALA Budget Analysis & Review
Committee (BARC)
3:00 pm
LVH-Ballroom D
* Closed meeting
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
*ALA
ALA/Council Incoming
Committee Chairs Strategic
Leadership Meeting
2:30 pm
LVH-Ballroom E
*ALA
Spectrum Institute Lunch
1:00 pm
BALLY-Bronze 4
UNO
NISO/BISG 8th Annual Forum:
The Changing Standards
Landscape
4:00 pm
LVCC-N231/233
12:30 pm Start Time
AASL
The PBL Way: Partnerships,
Pedagogy and Purpose
4:00 pm
CAP-Pompeian
III & IV
ACRL_
RBMS
Bibliographic Standards
Committee—DCRM/RDA
Revision Group
4:00 pm
BALLY-Bronze 2
FTRF,
MERRITT
FUND,
IFRT
Intellectual Freedom 101
1:30 pm
LVH-Pavilion 11
SIGN UP FOR TRIALS NOW
1:00 pm Start Time
AASL
Board of Directors Meeting I
4:00 pm
CAP-Milano VI
ACRL
Leadership Council
Networking Session
1:45 pm
PARIS-Versailles
1&2
ACRL
International Perspectives
on Academic and Research
Libraries Discussion Group
2:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 1
*ACRL
iPad, YouPad: Circulating
iPad Collections in Academic
Libraries
4:30 pm
PARISChampagne 4
*ACRL
Turn Your Intentions into
Results: Strategies to Improve
Productivity and Cultivate a
Habit of Scholarship
4:00 pm
PARIS-Chablis
*ACRL
Maximize Your Professional
Time: Strategies to Cultivate a
Habit of Scholarship
4:00 pm
PARISChampagne 1
*AFLBCALA
Dr. E. J. Josey Scholarship
Commitee Meeting
2:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 4
ALA
OITP Library Advisory
Committee Meeting
2:30 pm
LVCC-N201
COL Business Meeting I
4:00 pm
LVCC-N102
Committee on Literacy and
Literacy Assembly Meeting
4:00 pm
CAP-Trevi
ALA
TEDx: an Independently
Hosted Event at your Library
3:00 pm
LVCC-N264
ALCTS
Board of Directors
4:00 pm
LVCC-N117
ALCTS_
CMMS
Competencies and Education
for a Career in Cataloging
Interest Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N263
ALSC
Board of Directors Meeting I
4:00 pm
LVCC-N202
GODORT
Steering Committee I
2:30 pm
FLAM-Carson
City I
LLAMA_
BES
LLAMA Preconference: Tour of
Public and Academic Libraries
4:00 pm
OS-Off Site
NMRT
Conference Orientation
2:30 pm
CAP-Florentine
II-IV
PLA
Leadership Development
Committee Meeting (PLA)
2:30 pm
LVCC-N211
PLA
Public Libraries (Journal)
Advisory Committee Meeting
2:00 pm
LVCC-N215
*RUSA_
CODES
Sophie Brody Medal
Committee
3:00 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 04
LVCC: Las Vegas Convention Center
BALLY: Bally’s Las Vegas
CAP: Caesars Palace Las Vegas
FLAM: Flamingo Las Vegas
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ALA
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LVH: Las Vegas Hotel
PARIS: Paris Las Vegas
For more detailed hotel information
see page 43.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
123
UNO
OCLC Symposium
3:00 pm
LVH-Ballroom B
UNO
Northeast Research Libraries
Consortium Membership
Meeting
4:00 pm
LVCC-N115
1:30 pm Start Time
AFL-ARL
Library Assessment Forum
3:00 pm
FLAM-Lake
Mead
ALA
Committee on Professional
Ethics I
3:00 pm
LVCC-N101
*ALA
Branching Out: Adventures in
Non-Traditional Libraries and
New Emerging Roles
3:00 pm
BALLY-Bronze 3
Intellectual Freedom Round
Table I
3:00 pm
IFRT
LVCC-N238
RUSA
Executive Committee Meeting
4:00 pm
LVCC-N216
RUSA,
RUSA_HS
Tour of National Atomic
Testing Museum
4:00 pm
OS-National
Atomic Testing
Museum
New Board Member Training
3:30 pm
YALSA
LVCC-N223
friday daily schedule
2:00 pm Start Time
124
ALA
Emerging Leaders Poster
Session and Reception
4:00 pm
LVH-Pavilion 01
*ALA-APA
Certified Public Library
Administrator Certification
Reveiw Committee
4:00 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 03
ALCTS
Transforming Collections Task
Force
4:00 pm
LVCC-N225
GODORT
All Committee Meeting
4:00 pm
FLAM-Valley of
Fire I
GODORT
Bylaws Committee Meeting
4:00 pm
FLAM-Valley of
Fire I
GODORT
Nominating Committee
Meeting
4:00 pm
FLAM-Valley of
Fire I
GODORT
Membership Committee
Meeting
4:00 pm
FLAM-Valley of
Fire I
GODORT
Web Managers Committee
Meeting
4:00 pm
FLAM-Valley of
Fire I
LITA
LITA Open House
4:00 pm
LVCC-S224
LLAMA
LLAMA Program Committee
4:00 pm
LVCC-N201
LLAMA
LLAMA Board of Directors I
4:00 pm
LVCC-N240
*ACRL
Scholarly Communication Road
Show Presenters
4:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 5
RUSA
RUSA 101: Network, Get
Oriented, Get Involved
4:00 pm
LVCC-S222
ACRL
Leadership Council
4:00 pm
PARIS-Versailles
3&4
UNO
LYRASIS Repository Services
Demo
4:00 pm
LVCC-N212
ACRL
Assessment in Action: Year
One Project Posters, I
4:00 pm
BALLY-Gold
Room
4:00 pm Start Time
5:15 pm
ACRL_
RBMS
Bibliographic Standards
Committee—Controlled
Vocabularies Group I
4:00 pm
CAP-Livorno
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall C1
AFLBCALA
BCALA International Relations
Committee Meeting
3:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 7
AFL-RE
FORMA
Executive Committee
Meeting I
4:00 pm
LVCC-N209
ALA
International Relations
Committee I
4:00 pm
ALA
ALA Accreditation Appeal
Process Training
UNO
UNO
Opening General Session—
Featuring: Jane McGonigal
7:00 pm Start Time
AASL
Affiliate Assembly Meeting I
9:00 pm
CAP-Roman
I & III
AASL_ISS
Independent School Section
Social
8:30 pm
OS-Off Site
LVCC-N214
ACRL_
ANSS
ANSS Social
9:00 pm
OS-Off Site
3:30 pm
CAP-Anzio
ACRL_
RBMS
Bibliographic Standards
Committee—Controlled
Vocabularies Group II
9:00 pm
CAP-Livorno
LYRASIS ArchivesSpace
Hosting Demo
3:00 pm
LVCC-N212
ACRL_
STS
Council I
9:00 pm
BALLY-Bronze 4
Taiga Forum Meeting
4:00 pm
LVCC-N116
*AFLCALA
CALA Board Meeting
9:00 pm
LVH-Ballroom F
ALCTS
ALCTS 101
9:30 pm
LVH-Pavilion 10
ALSC
2015 Award/Notable Chair
Orientation
9:00 pm
PARIS-Bordeaux
ASCLA
Library Services for People
with Visual or Physical
Disabilities that Prevent Them
from Reading Standard Print
Interest Group Meeting
8:00 pm
CAP-Siena
NMRT
NMRT Mentoring Social
9:00 pm
CAP-Sorrento
2:30 pm Start Time
ACRL_
EBSS
Education Research Libraries
Forum
4:00 pm
BALLY-Bronze 1
AFLOLAC
Online Audiovisual Catalogers
Membership Meeting
4:00 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 01 & 02
ALACOUNCIL
Council Orientation
Committee
3:30 pm
LVH-Paradise
North
IRRT
International Librarians
Orientation
4:00 pm
LVCC-S223
UNO
Program for Cooperative
Cataloging Program Training
4:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 3
American Indian Library
Association Executive Board
Meeting
4:00 pm
FLAM-Bryce
Board Room
ALA
OITP—AL21C Subcommittee
Meeting
4:00 pm
ALA
OITP—Copyright
Subcommittee Meeting I
4:00 pm
3:00 pm Start Time
*AFL-AILA
ALA
7:30 pm Start Time
AFLAPALA
APALA Executive Board
Meeting
9:00 pm
FLAM-Carson
City II
AFLOLAC
Cataloging Policy Committee
Meeting
9:30 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 01 & 02
LVCC-N101
ALCTS_
CMMS
Executive Committee I
(CaMMS)
9:30 pm
LVCC-N216
LVCC-N215
ALCTS_
CMMS
SAC RDA Subcommittee
9:30 pm
LVCC-N215
GAMERT
ALAplay 2014
10:00 pm
CAP-Florentine
SRRT
Feminist Task Force
9:00 pm
CAP-Pisa
* Closed meeting
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Don’t miss
in Las Vegas!
Michael L. Printz Program and Reception
In addition to its new time slot, formerly held by the Booklist Books for Youth Forum, this year’s Printz program
introduces a new format: Marcus Sedgwick, 2014 Michael L. Printz winner for Midwinterblood, and Printz Honor
Book authors Rainbow Rowell, Susann Cokal, Sally Gardner, and Clare Vanderpool will respond to questions submitted
by teens and librarians. Friday, June 27, 8:00–10:00 p.m., Paris Las Vegas Hotel, Versailles Ballroom
She Reads . . . Tarot!
Kaite Mediatore Stover, celebrated readers’ advisor and author of Booklist’s popular She Reads column, has another
trick up her sleeve—reading Tarot! Stop by the booth to see if the cards hold 50% off a new Booklist subscription for you!
Saturday, June 28, 1:00–3:00 p.m., Booklist booth #617
Booklist
Andrew Carnegie Medals for Excellence
Award Ceremony
Join bestselling author Karin Slaughter, committee chair Nancy Pearl, and the 2014 winners for the announcement
10:00 p.m.,
of the fiction and nonfiction winner. A raffle, drinks, and dessert will follow. Saturday, June 28, 8:00–10:00
Caesar’s Palace, Octavius Room 5 & 6
“Discovery: The New Name for Readers’ Advisory?”
Join readers’ advisory expert Kaite Mediatore Stover, Bibliocommons CEO Beth
Jefferson, and Booklist Reference and Collection Management editor Rebecca Vnuk
as they discuss new and best practices for leading patrons to their next great read.
Monday, June 30, 10:30–11:30 a.m., LVCC-S219
2014 Odyssey Awards Presentation
The free program will celebrate this year’s winner—Scowler, written by Daniel
Kraus, narrated by Kirby Heyborne, and produced by Listening Library—as
well as the 2014 Honor titles.
Monday, June 30, 3:30–5:30 p.m., LVCC-N256
Print subscribers and Booklist fans:
Stop by the booth to unlock your free access to Booklist Online!
Not yet a subscriber? Subscribe at the special conference price of just $119!
Love FREE stuff?
Enter a raffle to win tickets to the Andrew Carnegie Medals for Excellence
award ceremony; pick up complimentary issues of the June Booklist and
April Book Links print magazines; talk to our expert editors; get a tour of
Booklist Online—all this and more from your friends at Booklist!
Booth #617
booklistonline.com
SRRT
International Responsibilities
Task Force Meeting
9:00 pm
CAP-Pisa
ACRL
Value of Academic Libraries
Committee Meeting, Part I
10:00 am
BALLY-Palace 2
ACRL
Library and Information
Science Education Interest
Group
10:00 am
BALLY-Palace 3
ACRL
Health Sciences Interest Group
Membership Meeting
10:00 am
BALLY-Palace 7
SRRT
All Task Force Meeting
9:00 pm
CAP-Pisa
SRRT
Hunger, Homelessness and
Poverty Task Force Meeting
9:00 pm
CAP-Pisa
SRRT
Martin Luther King, Jr. Holiday
Task Force Meeting
9:00 pm
CAP-Pisa
8:00 pm Start Time
ALA,
YALSA
YALSA and Booklist Present:
The Michael L. Printz Program
and Reception
10:00 pm
PARIS-Versailles
Ballroom
Saturday, June 28
*ACRL
Standards Presenter Team
5:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 1
ACRL
First Year Experience
Discussion Group
10:00 am
LVCC-N263C
ACRL
President’s Program Planning
2015 Committee Meeting
10:00 am
BALLY-Palace 4
ACRL
ACRL 75th Anniversary
Celebration Task Force
Meeting
10:00 am
BALLY-Las
Vegas 1
ACRL_
AAMES
Executive Committee Meeting
10:00 am
BALLY-Palace 5
*ACRL_
AFAS
Executive Board Committee
Meeting
10:00 am
PARIS-Loire
ACRL_
ANSS
Executive Committee Meeting I
10:00 am
LVCC-N202
ACRL_
ARTS
Executive Committee and
Membership and Outreach
Committee Meeting
10:00 am
FLAM-Bryce
Board Room
ACRL_
CLS
Executive Committee Meeting
10:00 am
BALLY-Director’s
Room
ACRL_
EBSS
All-Committees Meeting, Part I
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 11
ACRL_IS
Executive Committee I
Meeting
10:00 am
FLAM-Zion
Board Room
*ACRL_
LES
Executive Committee Meeting I
10:00 am
LVCC-N216
ACRL_
LPSS
All-Committees Meeting
10:00 am
BALLY-Palace 6
ACRL_
RBMS
Exhibition Awards Committee I
10:00 am
LVCC-N214
ACRL_
RBMS
Security Committee I
10:00 am
LVCC-N220
ACRL_
RBMS
Membership and Professional
Development Committee
10:00 am
PARISChampagne 2
ACRL_
RBMS
Bibliographic Standards
Committee Meeting I
10:00 am
BALLY-Las
Vegas 2
ACRL_
STS
All-Committees Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 09
ACRL_
STS
Organization and Planning
Committee Meeting (part of
All-Committees Meeting)
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 09
ACRL_
STS
Membership and Recruitment
Committee Meeting (part of
All-Committees Meeting)
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 09
ACRL_
STS
Conference Program
Planning—Las Vegas 2014
Committee Meeting (part of
All Committees Meeting)
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 09
ACRL_
STS
Liaison Committee Meeting
(part of All-Committees
Meeting)
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 09
6:30 am Start Time
*ALACOUNCIL
ALA Prompt Book Meeting l
7:30 am
LVH-Barbara
Stripling Suite
7:00 am Start Time
*ALSC
Priority Group Consultant
Meeting
8:30 am
CAP-Genoa
UNO
OCLC Dewey Update
Breakfast and ALCTS PL
Technical Services Interest
Group
10:00 am
BALLY-Skyview
2
State Librarians Breakfast
9:00 am
LVH-Conference
Room 08
*UNO
friday daily schedule
8:00 am Start Time
126
*AASL
Awards Green Room
9:00 am
CAP-Octavius
12
AFL-RE
FORMA
All Committees Meeting
10:00 am
CAP-Neopolitan
II
ALA
Conversation Starter:
Storytime: Not Just Reading
Out Loud
8:45 am
LVCC-N239/241
*ALA
The ALA “Kitchen Table”
Conversations
5:00 pm
LVH-Executive
Boardroom
*ALA
Committee on Accreditation
Meeting
5:30 pm
CAP-Senate
Boardroom
ALA
Now Showing @ ALA: Mr.
Conservative: Goldwater on
Goldwater
10:00 am
LVCC-N242
ALACOUNCIL
ALA Council Orientation
Session for New and
Reelected Councilors
10:30 am
LVH-Paradise
North
EMIERT
Set-up room for Coretta Scott
King Book Awards Breakfast
8:00 pm
CAP-Salerno
RUSA
Notable Books Council
1:00 pm
CAP-Turin
UNO
Project MUSE User Group
Breakfast
10:00 am
LVH-Ballroom F
8:30 am Start Time
ACRL
Professional Development
Committee Meeting
10:00 am
BALLY-Las
Vegas 5
*ACRL
Immersion Faculty Interviews I
5:00 pm
CAP-Octavius
15
ACRL
Assessment in Action: Year
One Project Posters, II
10:30 am
BALLY-Skyview
6
ACRL
Using Instructional Design
Applications to Effectively Flip
Library Instruction
10:00 am
LVCC-S225
ACRL_
STS
Information Literacy
Committee Meeting (part of
All-Committees Meeting)
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 09
ACRL
ACRL 101 & Membership
Meeting
10:00 am
BALLY-Gold
Room
ACRL_
STS
Research Committee Meeting
(part of All-Committees
Meeting)
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 09
* Closed meeting
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
ACRL_
STS
Discussion Group Chairs
Meeting (part of AllCommittees Meeting)
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 09
Copy Cataloging Interest
Group
10:00 am
LVCC-N260
ACRL_
STS
Government Information
Committee Meeting (part of
All-Committees Meeting)
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 09
ALCTS_
CMMS
SAC Subcommittee on Genre/
Form LCGFT Terms
10:00 am
LVCC-N204
ALCTS_
CMS
Chief Collection Development
Officers of Large Research
Libraries Interest Group
11:30 am
FLAM-Virginia
City I & II
ACRL_
STS
Science Resources: Discovery
& Access Committee Meeting
(part of All-Committees
Meeting)
10:00 am
ALCTS_
CRS
All Committee and Executive
Committee Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm B
ACRL_
STS
Continuing Education
Committee Meeting (part of
All-Committees Meeting)
10:00 am
ALCTS_
PARS
Preservation Administrators
Interest Group
11:30 am
PARISChampagne 1
ALSC
The Apps are All Right!
Exploring the Role of Apps in
Children’s and Teen Services
10:00 am
LVCC-S230
ACRL_
STS
Scholarly Communications
Committee Meeting (part of
All-Committees Meeting)
10:00 am
ACRL_
STS
Publications Committee
Meeting (part of AllCommittees Meeting)
10:00 am
ALSC
Every Child Ready to Read
2—Does it Really Work?
Evaluating the Program
10:00 am
LVCC-S228
LVH-Pavilion 09
ACRL_
STS
Assessment Committee
Meeting (part of AllCommittees Meeting)
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 09
*ALSC
2015 Wilder Award Committee
Meeting I
11:30 am
LVCC-N212
*ALSC
2015 Geisel Award Committee
Meeting I
10:00 am
LVCC-N211
ACRL_
ULS
Executive Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N226
ALSC
Leadership & ALSC
11:30 am
CAP-Roman
I & III
ACRL_
WESS
Cataloging Issues Discussion
Group
10:00 am
LVCC-N234
*ALSC
2015 Caldecott Award
Committee Meeting I
11:30 am
HIL-Diamond
ACRL_
WGSS
All-Committees Meeting
10:00 am
BALLY-Las
Vegas 3
ASCLA,
SRRT
10:00 am
LVCC-N237
Nevada Library Association
Annual Board Meeting
11:30 am
LVH-Conference
Room 01 & 02
Accessible eBooks: Ensuring
that Your Library’s eContent is
Universally Accessible to All
*AFL
EMIERT
10:00 am
LVCC-N231/233
ALA
Intellectual Freedom
Committee III
10:00 am
LVCC-N117
Get HIP: Highly Interactive
Programs for Multicultural
Communities
ALA
Auditorium Speaker Series
featuring Jane Fonda
9:30 am
LVCC-N249
EMIERT
Coretta Scott King Book
Awards Executive Board
Meeting
10:00 am
CAP-Messina
ALA
IRC/IRRT All Subcommittee
Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N112
ERT, UNO
10:00 am
LVCC-N243
ALA
OLOS Advisory Committee
Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N215
How To Convince
Management to Approve Your
New ILS
ALA
Making a Mentorship Match:
What Works, What Doesn’t,
and What Can ALA Offer?
10:00 am
LVCC-N252
ALA
Committee on Education
10:00 am
LVCC-N209
ALA
Placement Center Orientation
9:00 am
LVCC-Hall N
Placement
Center
ALA
Washington Update—2014
Congressional Election and its
Impact on Libraries
10:00 am
LVCC-N259/261
ALA
Turning Outward to Lead
Change in Your Community:
Aspirations
10:00 am
LVCC-S223
LVH-Pavilion 09
LVH-Pavilion 09
LVH-Pavilion 09
ALA
ALA Award Committee
10:00 am
LVCC-N201
ALA
The New Library Imprint:
Libraries and Self-Publishing
10:00 am
LVCC-S227
ALCTS
Technical Services Managers
in Academic Libraries Interest
Group
10:00 am
CAP-Octavius
20
ALCTS
Program Committee
11:30 am
LVCC-N222
ALCTS
International Developments
in Library Linked Data: Think
Globally, Act Globally
10:00 am
LVCC-N264
LVCC: Las Vegas Convention Center
BALLY: Bally’s Las Vegas
CAP: Caesars Palace Las Vegas
FLAM: Flamingo Las Vegas
GLBTRT
Executive Board Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N229
LIRT
Steering Committee Meeting I
10:00 am
LVCC-N110
LITA
Experimenting with Animation:
Lehman College’s Animated
Information Literacy Advocate
10:00 am
LVCC-S224
LITA
Joint Interest Groups and
Committees Chairs
10:00 am
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm A
LITA
Electronic Lab Notebooks:
Managing Research from Data
Collection to Publication
10:00 am
LVCC-N232
LITA
Collaborate to Innovate
@ Chicago Public Library:
Engaging the Community to
Design the Future
10:00 am
LVCC-N254
LLAMA
LLAMA All sections/all
committees (LLAMA_BES,
LLAMA_SASS, LLAMA_PRMS,
LLAMA_NPS, LLAMA_MAES,
LLAMA_LOMS, LLAMA_HRS,
LLAMA_FRFDS)
10:00 am
LVH-Ballroom A
LLAMA_
FRFDS
Ask the Experts: Discover
Key Strategies for Successful
Academic Library Fundraising
10:00 am
CAP-Pompeian I
LLAMA_
LOMS
Middle Managers Discussion
Group
10:00 am
LVCC-N217
LVH: Las Vegas Hotel
PARIS: Paris Las Vegas
daily schedule saturday
ALCTS_
CMMS
For more detailed hotel information
see page 43.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
127
saturday daily schedule
128
LLAMA_
MAES
Building Holistic Library
Assessment: Space +
Collections = Effective
Services
10:00 am
LVCC-N258
RUSA_
RSS
Evaluation of Reference and
User Services Committee
Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N113
LRRT
Data-Driven Decision-Making:
LRRT Research Forum
10:00 am
RUSA_
RSS
Job & Career Reference
Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N113
LVCC-N235
LSSIRT
Steering Committee/
Membership Meeting
Discovery Services Committee
Meeting
LVCC-N113
LVCC-N210
RUSA_
RSS
10:00 am
11:30 am
MAGIRT
GIS Discussion Group
Virtual Reference Tutorial SubCommittee Meeting
LVCC-N113
LVCC-N101
RUSA_
RSS
10:00 am
10:00 am
RUSA_
RSS
Library Services to an Aging
Population Committee
Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N113
RUSA_
RSS
Education & Professional
Development for Reference
Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N113
RUSA_
STARS
Membership Committee
Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Ballroom G
RUSA_
STARS
Vendor Relations Committee
Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Ballroom G
RUSA_
STARS
Interlibrary Loan Committee
Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Ballroom G
RUSA_
STARS
Education and Training
Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Ballroom G
RUSA_
STARS
Research and Assessment
Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Ballroom G
RUSA_
STARS
Organization Committee
Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Ballroom G
RUSA_
STARS
International Interlibrary Loan
Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Ballroom G
RUSA_
STARS
STARS—Atlas Systems
Mentoring Award Committee
Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Ballroom G
RUSA_
STARS
All Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Ballroom G
RUSA_
STARS
Legislation and Licensing
Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Ballroom G
RUSA_
STARS
Boucher Award Committee
Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Ballroom G
RUSA_
STARS
Codes, Guidelines, and
Technical Standards
Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Ballroom G
NMRT
NMRT 101
10:00 am
LVH-Ballroom E
PLA
Intellectual Freedom
Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 06
PLA
Is That a Penguin on Your
Desktop?
10:00 am
LVCC-S231
PLA
Technology Committee
Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 06
PLA
Boba Fett at the Circ Desk:
Library Leadership Lessons
from The Empire Strikes Back
10:00 am
LVCC-N256
PLA
All Committees Meeting
11:30 am
LVH-Pavilion 06
PLA
Membership Advisory Group
Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 06
PLA
Annual Conference 2014 &
2015 Program Subcommittees
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 06
PLA
Budget and Finance
Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 06
RUSA
Guideline Development for
Financial Literacy Education in
Libraries
10:00 am
LVCC-N218
RUSA
RUSA Access to Information
Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N227
RUSA
RUSA Professional
Development Committee
10:00 am
LVH-Boardroom
*RUSA_
BRASS
Executive Committee Planning
Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N102
RUSA_HS
All Committee Meeting and
Open House
10:00 am
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm C
RUSA_
MARS
Professional Development
Committee
10:00 am
BALLY-Skyview
4
RUSA_
MARS
All Committee Meeting
10:00 am
BALLY-Skyview
4
SRRT
Action Council I Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N219
RUSA_
MARS
Conference Program Planning
Committee
10:00 am
BALLY-Skyview
4
SRRT
Amelia Bloomer Project and
Rainbow Project Author Panel
10:00 am
CAP-Neopolitan
IV
RUSA_
MARS
Local Systems and Services
Committee
10:00 am
BALLY-Skyview
4
UNITED
Isn’t it Romantic
10:00 am
LVCC-N263
RUSA_
MARS
Best Free Web Sites
10:00 am
BALLY-Skyview
4
UNITED
Public Library Trustee
Discussion Group
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 04
RUSA_
MARS
User Experience Design
Committee
10:00 am
BALLY-Skyview
4
UNITED
Library Friends Discussion
Group
10:00 am
LVCC-N115
RUSA_
MARS
Outreach Committee
10:00 am
BALLY-Skyview
4
UNO
Digital Oral Histories with
Full Text Searching via Open
Source Software
10:00 am
LVCC-N225
RUSA_
MARS
Products and Services
Committee
10:00 am
BALLY-Skyview
4
UNO
10:00 am
PARIS-Bordeaux
RUSA_
RSS
Open House and AllCommittee Meeting
10:00 am
FLAM-Laughlin II
RUSA_
RSS
Young Adult Reference
Services Committee
10:00 am
LVCC-N113
OCLC WorldShare
Management Services: New
Ways Libraries are Efficiently
Managing Cataloging and
E-resources Workflows
*UNO
CAP-Capri
Health and Medical Reference
Committee Meeting
10:00 am
OverDrive’s Roadmap
Breakfast
10:00 am
RUSA_
RSS
*UNO
The Journal of Academic
Librarianship Board Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Conference
Room 13
UNO
EBSCO What is New from
EBSCO?
10:00 am
LVCC-N116
LVCC-N113
* Closed meeting
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
UNO
MARC Advisory Committee I
10:00 am
LVCC-N203
*UNO
WT Cox Integrated Services
5:30 pm
CAP-Trevi
UNO
CIFNAL Steering Committee
10:00 am
LVCC-N238
*UNO
AAP/LibraryReads Book-aLicious Breakfast
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 10
UNO
EBSCO The Power of
Integration
10:00 am
CAP-Pompeian
III
YALSA
YALSA 101
10:00 am
CAP-Florentine
IV
YALSA
Selection Committee Chair
Leadership Development
10:00 am
CAP-Florentine
III
YALSA
Sci Fi for Librarians Who Don’t
Like Sci Fi
10:00 am
LVCC-S221
9:00 am Start Time
ACRL
ACRL President’s Program:
Financial Literacy at Your
Library
12:00 pm
LVCC-N255/257
ACRL
Libraries in the Publishing
Game: New Roles from
Content to Access
11:30 am
LVCC-N262
ACRL
ACRL 75th Anniversary
Celebration Task Force
Component Committees
11:30 am
BALLY-Las
Vegas 1
ACRL
Modern Language Association
International Bibliography
Discussion Group
11:30 am
LVCC-N115
ACRL
Copyright Discussion Group
11:30 am
LVCC-N101
ACRL
Virtual Worlds Interest Group
11:30 am
LVCC-N226
ACRL
Making Tenure: A Model for
Collaborative Publishing
11:30 am
LVCC-S227
ACRL
ACRL Metrics User Group
Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N116
ACRL
New Members Discussion
Group
11:30 am
BALLY-Palace 3
Awards Ceremony
10:30 am
CAP-Octavius
09-11
AFLBCALA
BCALA Professional
Development and Recruitment
Committee
10:00 am
PARIS-Burgundy
*AFLBCALA
BCALA Health Information
Project Taskforce
10:30 am
PARIS-Chablis
ACRL
11:30 am
LVCC-N102
ALA
Placement Center & Career
Counseling
5:00 pm
LVCC-Hall N
Placement
Center
Personnel Administrators &
Staff Development Discussion
Group I
ACRL
11:30 am
BALLY-Skyview
5
ALA
Career Development
Workshop: HR Confidential:
Insider Tips from Library HR
Directors
10:30 am
LVCC-Hall N
Placement
Center
Hearing on Framework for
Information Literacy in Higher
Education
ACRL
11:30 am
BALLY-Director’s
Room
ALA
Resume Critiquing Service
5:00 pm
LVCC-Hall N
Placement
Center
Student Learning and
Information Literacy
Coordinating Committee
Meeting I
ACRL_
ANSS
Sociology Librarians Discussion
Group
11:30 am
LVCC-N202
LEARNRT
Executive Board Meeting I
11:00 am
LVCC-N223
ACRL_
ANSS
Subject and Bibliographic
Access Committee Meeting
11:30 am
CAP-Genoa
10:00 am
LVCC-N239/241
ACRL_
ANSS
Conference Program
Planning—Las Vegas, 2014
Committee Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N204
ACRL_
ARTS
Presentation Meeting of the
Publications and Research
Committee Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N119
ACRL_
DLS,
ACRL_
ULS
Leading from the Side: On, Off
and Within Your Campus
11:30 am
LVCC-S220
ACRL_
EBSS
All-Committees Meeting,
Part II
11:30 am
LVH-Pavilion 11
ACRL_
LPSS
General Membership Meeting
11:30 am
BALLY-Palace 6
9:15 am Start Time
ALA
Conversation Starter: Practical
Outreach: Best Practices for
Engaging Your Community
9:30 am Start Time
*ALA
Booklist Editorial Advisory
Board Meeting
12:30 pm
LVCC-N221
10:00 am Start Time
AFL-AILA
Celebrating 35 Years of AILA
11:30 am
FLAM-Carson
City II
*UNO
LYRASIS/ARL Licensing
Initiative Task Force
11:30 am
LVH-Boardroom
10:30 am Start Time
AASL
President’s Program
12:00 pm
CAP-Octavius
09-11
ACRL_
RBMS
Security Committee II
11:30 am
LVCC-N220
ACRL
Librarians as Digital Leaders:
Collaborating on the
Development and Use of
Digitized Collections
11:30 am
LVCC-N252
ACRL_
RBMS
Bibliographic Standards
Committee Meeting II
11:30 am
BALLY-Las
Vegas 2
ACRL_
RBMS
Collection Development
Discussion Group
11:30 am
LVCC-N234
ACRL
Value of Academic Libraries
Committee Meeting, Part II
11:30 am
BALLY-Palace 2
ACRL_
RBMS
Exhibition Awards Committee
II
11:30 am
LVCC-N214
*ACRL
Assessment in Action Focus
Group II
12:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 4
ACRL_
STS
College Science Librarians
Discussion Group
11:30 am
LVH-Pavilion 09
ACRL
Membership Committee
Meeting
11:30 am
BALLY-Palace 5
ACRL_
WESS
Joint Committees Meeting
11:30 am
LVH-Ballroom G
ACRL
Health Sciences Interest Group
Continuing Education Meeting
11:30 am
BALLY-Palace 7
AFL
Literacy Outcomes in Fabulous
Las Vegas, Nevada
11:30 am
LVCC-S228
LVCC: Las Vegas Convention Center
BALLY: Bally’s Las Vegas
CAP: Caesars Palace Las Vegas
FLAM: Flamingo Las Vegas
LVH: Las Vegas Hotel
PARIS: Paris Las Vegas
daily schedule saturday
AASL
For more detailed hotel information
see page 43.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
129
AFL-RE
FORMA
ALSC
2015 Notable Children’s
Books Committee Meeting
I—Procedural
11:30 am
LVCC-N114
ALSC
What No Tchotskes? Creating
an Experience Based Summer
Program
11:30 am
LVCC-S231
LVCC-N225
*ALSC
2015 Sibert Award Committee
Meeting I
11:30 am
LVCC-N215
11:30 am
LVCC-N228
ASCLA
Creating Fun, Accessible
Programming for Youth with
Disabilities
11:30 am
LVCC-N237
Emerging Leaders 2014
Wrap-Up
11:30 am
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm C
ASCLA
ASCLA 101
11:30 am
LVH-Ballroom E
Managing Challenges,
Maximizing Impact: Policies
and Practices for Controversial
Programming
11:30 am
LVCC-N240
Public and Cultural Programs
Advisory Committee Meeting
I (PCPAC)
11:30 am
ALA
Auditorium Speaker Series
featuring Azar Nafisi
11:30 am
LVCC-N249
ALA
Committee on Organization
Meeting I
11:30 am
LVCC-N216
ALA
Conversation Starter: Virtual
Passport: Connecting Teens
Through YouTube
11:15 am
LVCC-N239/241
ALA
Intellectual Freedom
Committee IV
11:30 am
LVCC-N117
ALA
WO BO Session I: Information
Manipulation Part I: Net
Neutrality
11:30 am
LVCC-N259/261
ALA
WO Breakout Session III:
Libraries and E-government
11:30 am
LVCC-N260
ALA
WO Breakout Session IV:
Making an Impact: Proven
Grassroots Strategies for
Friends, Trustees, Advocates,
and Foundations
11:30 am
LVCC-N263
ALA
Bookmobiles 101
11:30 am
LVCC-S222
ALA
ALA Graphic Novels & Comics
in Libraries Member Interest
Group Business Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N238
ALA
IFLA Update
11:30 am
ALA
Leaders Wanted/LIS Doctoral
Program Options Fair:
Cultivating Diversity in LIS
Education
1:00 pm
ALA
Now Showing @ ALA: The
Whole Gritty City
12:00 pm
LVCC-N242
ALA, ERT
Batman: A Celebration of 75
Years
11:30 am
LVCC-S224
ALCTS
International Developments
in Library Linked Data: Think
Globally, Act Globally—Part
Two
11:30 am
LVCC-S230
ALCTS
Metadata and Indicators for
Discovery and Open Access
11:30 am
LVCC-N253
ALCTS
Role of the Professional in
Technical Services Interest
Group
11:30 am
LVCC-N109
Cataloging Norms Interest
Group
11:30 am
Library Power to the People:
Facing Up to the Climate
Crisis with Information &
Action (REFORMA President’s
Program)
12:00 pm
ALA
Education Assembly
11:30 am
LVCC-N209
ALA
ALA Conference Program
Coordinating Team
11:30 am
ALA
Committee on Literacy, All
Subcommittee Planning
Meeting
*ALA
ALA
saturday daily schedule
ALA
ALCTS_
CMMS
130
LVCC-N235
ASCLA
Whither Library Consortia?
11:30 am
LVCC-N264
ASCLA
Consulting After Retirement:
Is It Right For You?
11:30 am
LVCC-N231/233
EMIERT
EMIERT Membership Meeting
11:30 am
CAP-Octavius
12
EMIERT
Coretta Scott King Book
Awards General Committee
Meeting
11:30 am
CAP-Messina
ERT, UNO
Implementing an IL
Curriculum, with a Little Help
from My Friends
11:30 am
LVCC-N243
LVCC-N227
LIRT
All Committee Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N110
LITA
Lightning Presentations
11:30 am
LVCC-S225
LITA
Assessment and Research
Committee
11:30 am
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm A
LITA
Program Planning Committee
11:30 am
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm A
LITA
Bylaws and Organization
Committee
11:30 am
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm A
*LITA
Nominating Committee
11:30 am
FLAM-Bryce
Board Room
LITA
Electronic Resources
Management Interest Group
11:30 am
LVCC-N203
LITA
Education Committee
11:30 am
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm A
LITA
Membership Development
Committee
11:30 am
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm A
LITA
Forum Planning 2014
Committee
11:30 am
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm A
LVCC-N218
LITA
Technology and Access
Committee
11:30 am
LVH-Paradise
South
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm A
LITA
International Relations
Committee
11:30 am
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm A
LITA
Top Technology Trends
Committee
11:30 am
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm A
LITA
All Committees Meetings
11:30 am
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm A
LITA
Open Source Interest Group
11:30 am
LVCC-N224
LITA
Imagineering Interest Group
11:30 am
LVH-Conference
Room 09
LITA
Web Coordinating Committee
11:30 am
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm A
LITA
Forum Planning 2015
Commiittee
11:30 am
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm A
LITA
LITA Instructional Technologies
Interest Group
11:30 am
CAP-Octavius
14
LLAMA
LLAMA President’s Program
12:00 pm
LVCC-S229
MAGIRT
Map and Geospatial Data
Collection Managers
Discussion Group
11:30 am
LVCC-N120
CAP-Pompeian
II
* Closed meeting
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
PLA
Public Library Archives/Special
Collections Roundtable Society
of American Archivists (PLASC)
Meeting
11:30 am
LVH-Pavilion 06
ALA
PLA
Is the Public Library the New
Education Institution of the
Future?
11:30 am
LVCC-S221
11:30 am Start Time
PLA
Every Child Ready to Read
Oversight Committee Meeting
(ALSC/PLA)
11:30 am
LVH-Pavilion 06
PLA
Continuing Education Advisory
Group Meeting
11:30 am
PLA
The Strategic Plan is Dead;
Long Live Strategy
RMRT
RUSA
Career Development
Workshop: Answering Tough
Questions As You Improve
Your Interviewing Skills
12:30 pm
LVCC-Hall N
Placement
Center
ALA
Ignite Saturday Session: Not
the Same Old Story
12:00 pm
LVCC-N239/241
ALA
Ignite Saturday Session: Play,
Baby, Play!
12:00 pm
LVCC-N239/241
LVH-Pavilion 06
ALA
Ignite Saturday Session: Secret
Shopping @your library
12:00 pm
LVCC-N239/241
11:30 am
LVCC-S223
ALA
12:00 pm
LVCC-N239/241
Retired Members Round Table
Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N211
Ignite Saturday Session: A
New Approach to Summer
Reading
ALA
12:00 pm
LVCC-N239/241
Smart investing @your
library®: Adding Value In Your
Community
11:30 am
LVCC-N232
Ignite Saturday Session: What
oral history can do for your
library!
ALA
12:00 pm
LVCC-N239/241
RUSA
AFL-CIO/ALA Joint
Committee on Library Service
to Labor Groups
11:30 am
LVH-Conference
Room 13
Ignite Saturday Session: Don’t
Sweat That Presentation!
IFRT
Intellectual Freedom Round
Table Reception
12:30 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 08
RUSA_
BRASS
Conference Program Planning
Committee Meeting I
11:30 am
LVCC-N201
12:00 pm Start Time
RUSA_
CODES
CODES Hot Topics Discussion
Group
11:30 am
LVCC-N219
RUSA_
MARS
Libraries in the Course
Management System: Best
Practices and New Directions
11:30 am
LVCC-N263C
RUSA_
RSS
RUSA RSS Board Meeting
11:30 am
FLAM-Red
Rock III
RUSA_
STARS
ILL Discussion Group
11:30 am
LVCC-N258
RUSA,
RUSA_
CODES
Turning Books Into A Cool
New Tool: RA Marketing in the
Age of Makerspaces
11:30 am
LVCC-S233
UNITED
Board of Directors Meeting
12:00 pm
LVCC-N217
UNO
CIP Advisory Group
11:30 am
CAP-Pompeian
III
UNO
AAP Children’s Author Speed
Dating
11:30 am
LVCC-N112
UNO
OCLC From FirstSearch
to WorldCat Discovery:
Cooperative Discovery that
Puts You Where Your Users
Are
11:30 am
LVCC-N111
UNO
RIPM Focus Group—
Sponsored by EBSCO
11:30 am
LVCC-S226
UNO
Analytics, Simplified: A
Unified, Data-driven Approach
to Decision Support
11:30 am
CAP-Verona
UNO
EBSCO Revisiting Discovery
for Public Library Patrons
11:30 am
CAP-Pompeian
IV
YALSA
Joint Youth Legislation
Committee (AASL, ALSC,
YALSA)
11:30 am
LVH-Conference
Room 03
YALSA
Margaret A. Edwards Brunch
12:00 pm
LVH-Ballroom B
1:30 pm
LVH-Ballroom D
LVCC: Las Vegas Convention Center
BALLY: Bally’s Las Vegas
1:00 pm
LVCC-N249
*UNO
DK Publishing Luncheon
1:00 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 07
*UNO
Springer Innovations for
Academic Libraries Lunch and
Learn Session
2:00 pm
CAP-Anzio
12:30 pm Start Time
*AASL
Past-President’s Luncheon
2:00 pm
OS-Off Site
ALA
Bookmobile Saturday: Author
Lunch
1:30 pm
LVH-Ballroom G
CAP: Caesars Palace Las Vegas
FLAM: Flamingo Las Vegas
ACRL
Common Core State Standards
and General Education:
Information Literacy Connects
the Dots
2:30 pm
LVCC-N253
ACRL
Assessment Discussion Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N110
ACRL
Image Resources Interest
Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N101
ACRL
Information Commons
Discussion Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N113
ACRL
Liaisons Assembly Committee
Meeting
2:30 pm
BALLY-Director’s
Room
*ACRL
Leadership Recruitment
and Nomination Committee
Meeting
2:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 2
ACRL_
AAMES
Forum Migration 1914–2014:
Asia and the World
2:30 pm
BALLY-Bronze 1
ACRL_
AFAS
General Membership Meeting
2:30 pm
LVCC-N102
ACRL_
ANSS
Membership Committee
Meeting
2:30 pm
BALLY-Bronze 2
ACRL_
ANSS
Publications Committee
2:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 4
ACRL_
ANSS,
ACRL_
EBSS
Supporting Community
Transformation: Becoming
a Community-Engaged
Academic Library
2:30 pm
LVCC-S229
LVH: Las Vegas Hotel
PARIS: Paris Las Vegas
daily schedule saturday
Finance & Audit Committee of
the ALA Executive Board
Auditorium Speaker Series
featuring Stan Lee
1:00 pm Start Time
11:00 am Start Time
ALA
ALA
For more detailed hotel information
see page 43.
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131
saturday daily schedule
132
ACRL_
CLS
Science + Form = Function:
The Impact of Neuroscience
on Architecture & Design
2:30 pm
LVCC-S220
ALA
ALA Membership Committee
Meeting
2:30 pm
LVCC-N222
ACRL_IS
Executive Committee II
Meeting
2:30 pm
FLAM-Zion
Board Room
ALA
Guide to Reference Editorial
Meeting
2:30 pm
LVCC-N201
ACRL_
LES,
ACRL_
WESS,
ACRL_
SEES
“Embedded” Cultural
Communities in Europe and
the Americas: Challenges for
Librarians
2:30 pm
LVCC-S232
ALA
COL Government Information
Subcommittee (Joint meeting
with GODORT)
2:30 pm
LVCC-N117
ALA
OITP—ALA and Moving Ahead
with Digital Content
2:30 pm
LVCC-N255/257
ACRL_
LPSS
Discussion Forum on Water
Politics
2:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 3
ALA
OITP—Copyright Hot Topics
and Big Ideas
2:30 pm
LVCC-N256
ALA
Europe Subcommittee
Program
2:30 pm
LVCC-N263
ACRL_
RBMS
Budget and Development
Committee
2:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 5
ACRL_
RBMS
Manuscripts and Other
Formats Discussion Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N215
ALA-APA
Certification Program
Committee
2:30 pm
LVCC-N211
ALCTS
Real Leaders in a Virtual
World: Tools and Strategies for
Success
2:30 pm
LVCC-N252
ACRL_
RBMS
Bibliographic Standards
Committee—DCRM/RDA
Revision Group II, Part 1
2:30 pm
LVCC-N221
ALCTS
Scholarly Communications
Interest Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N260
ACRL_
RBMS
Seminars Committee
2:30 pm
LVCC-N238
ACRL_
STS
Federal Science Agencies
Update
2:30 pm
LVH-Pavilion 09
ALCTS_
AS
All Committee and Executive
Committee
5:30 pm
LVCC-N112
ALCTS_
AS
Technical Services
Collaboration Through
Technology
2:30 pm
LVCC-S231
ACRL_
ULS
Current Topics Discussion
Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N115
AFLBCALA
BCALA Affiliates Committee
Meeting
2:30 pm
PARIS-Burgundy
ALCTS_
CMMS
Catalog Management Interest
Group
2:30 pm
LVH-Pavilion 06
AFLBCALA
NCAAL 9 Committee/Team
Meetings
2:30 pm
PARIS-Chablis
ALCTS_
CMMS
Committee on Cataloging:
Description and Access I
5:30 pm
FLAM-Virginia
City I & II
*AFLBETA
PHIMU
Beta Phi Mu Executive Board
Meeting
2:30 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 03
ALCTS_
CMMS
Recruiting and Mentoring
Committee
2:30 pm
LVCC-N227
LVCC-N228
2:30 pm
CAP-Verona
SAC Subcommittee on Genre/
Form Implementation I
2:30 pm
Performing Vegas:
Documenting Music and Stage
in Sin City
ALCTS_
CMMS
AFL
Library Code Year Interest
Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N119
ALA
ALA Constitution & Bylaws
Committee Meeting
2:30 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 01 & 02
ALCTS_
CMMS,
LITA
2:30 pm
LVCC-N220
Collection Development Issues
for the Practitioner Interest
Group
LVCC-N203
Chapter Relations Committee I
ALCTS_
CMS
2:30 pm
ALA
ALA
COL Grassroots Subcommittee
2:30 pm
LVCC-N224
2:30 pm
LVCC-S219
Digital Conversion Interest
Group
LVCC-N109
Grow Forward: Professional
Education Needs in the 21st
Century
ALCTS_
PARS
2:30 pm
ALA
Electronic Resources Interest
Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-S226
ALA
Committee on Library
Advocacy (COLA) Meeting
2:30 pm
LVCC-N212
ALCTS,
ALCTS_
CRS
ALSC
Board Orientation
4:00 pm
LVCC-N202
*ALA
American Libraries Advisory
Board Meeting
2:30 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 04
*ALSC
2015 Newbery Award
Committee Meeting I
5:30 pm
LVCC-N229
ALA
Turning Outward to Lead
Change in Your Community:
Turn Quiz
2:30 pm
LVCC-S223
ALSC
2015 Notable Children’s
Recordings Committee
Meeting I
5:30 pm
FLAM-Reno I
ALA
Introduction to Women’s
Issues: The Staff Potluck
2:30 pm
LVH-Ballroom E
*ALSC
2015 Nominating Committee I
2:30 pm
FLAM-Bryce
Board Room
ALA
Promotion, Advocacy, and
Creative Funding Ideas for
Rural or Tribal Libraries
2:30 pm
LVCC-N236
ALSC
2015 Notable Children’s Books
Committee Meeting II
4:00 pm
LVCC-N114
ALA
ALA Conference Committee
2:30 pm
LVCC-N225
ASCLA
Embedding Librarians in
Virtual Communities
2:30 pm
LVCC-N231/233
ASCLA
Creative Collaborations:
Successful Partnerships That
Serve Children With Autism
2:30 pm
LVCC-S227
ASCLA
Online Inside: Justification,
Issues and Solutions for
Digital Literacy in Correctional
Settings
2:30 pm
LVCC-N235
ALA
COL Telecom Subcommittee
2:30 pm
LVCC-N226
ALA
OITP—Cutting-edge
Technology in Library Services
2:30 pm
LVCC-N259/261
ALA
Campaign for America’s
Libraries Subcommittee
Meeting
2:30 pm
LVH-Boardroom
* Closed meeting
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
ASCLA
Free and Affordable Apps for
Accessibility
2:30 pm
LVCC-N264
ERT, UNO
Developing Collaborative
Spaces that Encourage
Community Engagement
2:30 pm
LVCC-N243
GODORT
Government Information for
Children Committee Meeting
2:30 pm
LVCC-N216
IFRT
The Comic Book Legal
Defense Fund—Intellectual
Freedom and the Defense of
Graphic Novels and Comic
Books
2:30 pm
LVCC-N240
E-Books and E-Readers:
Leveling the Playing Field or
Widening the Digital Gap?
2:30 pm
LVCC-S233
LITA
Taking Action: Linked Data for
Digital Collection Managers
2:30 pm
LVCC-S222
LITA
Drupal4Lib Interest Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N230
LITA
Mobile Computing Interest
Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N204
LITA
3D Printing at the Reference
Desk & Library Makerspaces
Without the Space
2:30 pm
LVCC-N258
LLAMA
LLAMA all division-level
committees
2:30 pm
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm B
LLAMA_
BES
Library Interiors Discussion
Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N209
LLAMA_
BES
A New Campus Library: Vision,
Design, and Assessing Usage
2:30 pm
LVCC-N254
LLAMA
LLAMA section executive
committees (BES, SASS, PRMS,
MAES, LOMS, HRS, FRFDS)
2:30 pm
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm C
LLAMA_
HRS
Emerging Trends Discussion
Group
2:30 pm
CAP-Siena
LLAMA_
NPS
New Professionals Section
Planning Meeting
2:30 pm
LVH-Ballroom F
LRRT
Mentorship Program Forum:
Library Research Round Table
Initiative
2:30 pm
CAP-Pompeian
IV
MAGIRT
MAGIRT Program: The
Accidental Map Librarian
2:30 pm
LVCC-N232
PLA
Board of Directors Meeting
5:30 pm
LVCC-N219
PLA
ECRR 2.0: Using Apps and
eBooks in Early Literacy
Programs
2:30 pm
LVCC-S230
PLA
More than Fun in the Sun!
Building Collaborative
Relationships and Using Real
Data to Increase Summer
Learning
2:30 pm
LVCC-N262
Board of Directors Meeting I
2:30 pm
RUSA
2:30 pm
LVCC-S224
RUSA,
RUSA_
STARS
Code4ILL: How to Grow Your
Own Innovation for Resource
Sharing
2:30 pm
LVCC-S228
SRRT
Librarians and Archivists to
Palestine
2:30 pm
LVCC-N116
SUSTAIN
RT
SustainRT Board Meeting
2:30 pm
LVCC-N214
UNITED
3D Printers and Library Policies
2:30 pm
LVCC-N237
UNO
Powering Reading Clubs to a
New Level
2:30 pm
CAP-Sorrento
UNO
Wikipedia and Libraries:
Increasing Your Library’s
Visibility
2:30 pm
CAP-Milano I
UNO
Facilitating Teaching and
Learning through the
Integration of Library Services
and Course Management
2:30 pm
CAP-Pompeian I
VRT
Leading Successful Media
Production Services in
Academic and Public
Libraries: Different
Models, Perspectives, and
Recommendations
2:30 pm
LVCC-S225
YALSA
Teaching Teens How to Fail:
Library Spaces and the Maker
Movement
2:30 pm
LVCC-S221
YALSA
Best Fiction for Young Adults
Teen Feedback Session
2:30 pm
LVCC-N205-208
*YALSA
2015 Alex Awards
5:30 pm
FLAM-Lake
Mead I
*YALSA
2015 Excellence in Nonfiction
5:30 pm
FLAM-Virginia
City III
*YALSA
2015 William C. Morris
Committee
5:30 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 13
YALSA
Great Graphic Novels for
Teens
5:30 pm
FLAM-Valley of
Fire I
YALSA
Board of Directors Meeting I
5:30 pm
LVCC-N223
*YALSA
2015 Michael L. Printz
Committee
5:30 pm
CAP-Imperial
Boardroom
YALSA
Quick Picks for Reluctant
Young Adult Readers
5:30 pm
FLAM-Red Rock
VIII
*YALSA
2015 Odyssey Committee
5:30 pm
FLAM-Lake
Mead II
*YALSA
Amazing Audiobooks for
Young Adults
5:30 pm
FLAM-Valley of
Fire II
1:30 pm Start Time
LVCC-N234
AASL
Board of Directors Meeting II
4:30 pm
LVCC-N120
ACRL
Board of Directors Meeting I
5:30 pm
BALLY-Skyview 1
ALA
Career Development
Workshop: The Ins and Outs
of Job Hunting for Library
Positions—An Insider’s
Perspective
2:30 pm
LVCC-Hall N
Placement
Center
ALA
Conversation Starter: People
Experiencing Homelessness:
How Libraries Can Be
Community Collaborators &
Catalysts for Positive Action
2:15 pm
LVCC-N239/241
RUSA_
BRASS
Business Reference in
Academic Libraries Forum
2:30 pm
LVCC-N111
RUSA_HS
History Librarians Discussion
Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N263C
RUSA_
RSS
Community Needs, Reference,
& Assessment in Job &
Career Reference: RSS Job &
Career Reference Committee
Discussion Forum
2:30 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 09
LVCC: Las Vegas Convention Center
BALLY: Bally’s Las Vegas
New Directions for Data
Visualization in Library Public
Services
CAP: Caesars Palace Las Vegas
FLAM: Flamingo Las Vegas
LVH: Las Vegas Hotel
PARIS: Paris Las Vegas
daily schedule saturday
IRRT
RUSA,
RUSA_
MARS
For more detailed hotel information
see page 43.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
133
ALA
Now Showing @ ALA: Defiant
Requiem
3:30 pm
LVCC-N242
ALACOUNCIL
ALA Council Resolutions
Committee
2:30 pm
LVH-Paradise
North
LITA
Board of Directors
4:30 pm
LVCC-N217
3:30 pm
PARIS-Loire
2:00 pm Start Time
AFLBCALA
BCALA Membership
Committee Meeting
2:45 pm Start Time
ALA
Conversation Starter: Igniting
the Conversation: Bringing
inspiration home
3:30 pm
LVCC-N239/241
saturday daily schedule
3:00 pm Start Time
134
ACRL_
RBMS
Bibliographic Standards
Committee—DCRM/RDA
Revision Group II, Part 2
4:00 pm
LVCC-N221
ACRL_
RBMS
Preconference Program
Planning—Oakland, 2015
Committee I
4:00 pm
LVCC-N117
ACRL_
SEES
All-Committee Meeting
4:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 2
ACRL_
STS
Conference Program
Planning—San Francisco 2015
Committee Meeting
4:00 pm
LVH-Pavilion 09
ACRL_
ULS
Campus Administration and
Leadership Discussion Group
4:00 pm
LVCC-N214
ACRL_
WESS
Conference Program
Planning—San Francisco, 2015
Committee Meeting
4:00 pm
LVCC-N220
AFL
ALA Diversity and Outreach
Fair & Parade of Bookmobiles
5:30 pm
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Special
Events Area
AFLBETA
PHIMU
Beta Phi Mu General
Assembly G-ALA
5:00 pm
LVH-Ballroom G
ALA
Emerging Leaders Interest
Group World Cafe
4:00 pm
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm C
ALA
Career Development
Workshop: Become a Social
Media GURU in Your Job
Search
4:30 pm
LVCC-Hall N
Placement
Center
ALA
ALA Membership Promotion
Task Force
4:00 pm
LVCC-N222
AASL
AASL 101
4:00 pm
LVCC-N110
AASL
AASL Best Apps for Teaching
and Learning
4:00 pm
LVCC-N264
AASL
“TC Reads!” Breathing New
Life into Book Program
4:00 pm
LVCC-S225
ACRL
Library Support for Massive
Open Online Courses
(MOOCs) Discussion Group
4:00 pm
ACRL
Continuing Education/
Professional Development
Discussion Group
4:00 pm
ACRL
Section Membership
Committee Meeting
4:00 pm
BALLY-Director’s
Room
ACRL
Update on the National Center
for Education Statistics (NCES)
Academic Library Survey
4:00 pm
LVCC-S231
ALA
LVCC-N210
Leadership Discussion group
4:00 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 3
COL e-Government
Subcommittee
4:00 pm
ACRL
ALA
LVCC-N204
Marketing Discussion Group
4:00 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 4
Digital Inclusion Survey
Advisory Committee Meeting
4:00 pm
ACRL
ALA
LVCC-N109
Residency Interest Group
Meeting
4:00 pm
BALLY-Bronze 1
IFC/FTRF Issues Briefing
Session
4:00 pm
ACRL
ALA
4:00 pm
LVCC-S227
ACRL
Student Retention Discussion
Group
4:00 pm
LVCC-N102
IRC Americas Subcommittee
Program
ALA
LVCC-N236
Academic Library Services to
International Students Interest
Group
4:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 3
Time to Reskill: An Action Plan
for Literacy
4:00 pm
ACRL
ALA
Bringing the Comic Festival to
YOUR Library!
5:30 pm
LVCC-N263
ACRL
ACRL/SPARC Forum
4:30 pm
BALLY-Skyview
5
ALA
Public Awareness Committee
Meeting
4:30 pm
LVH-Boardroom
ACRL_
ANSS
Liaison Committee Meeting
4:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 5
ALA-APA
Promotions & Fundraising
Committee
4:00 pm
LVCC-N211
ACRL_
ANSS
Resource Review and
Bibliography Committee
Meeting
4:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 4
ALACOUNCIL
ALA Council/Executive Board/
Membership Information
Session
4:30 pm
LVH-Paradise
North
ACRL_
ANSS
Criminal Justice/Criminology
Discussion Group
4:00 pm
LVCC-N203
ALA,
RMRT
Retirement Fundamentals: Are
You Ready to Retire?
4:30 pm
LVCC-N258
ACRL_
CJCLS
Hot Topics Discussion Group
4:00 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 1
ALCTS_
CMMS
Continuing Education
Committee
4:00 pm
LVCC-N212
ACRL_
EBSS
Research Committee Poster
Forum
4:00 pm
LVCC-S220
ALCTS_
CMMS
Catalog Form and Function
Interest Group
4:00 pm
LVCC-N262
ACRL_IS
Executive Committee III
Meeting
4:00 pm
FLAM-Zion
Board Room
ALCTS_
CMS
4:00 pm
LVCC-N260
ACRL_
RBMS
Digital Special Collections
Discussion Group
4:00 pm
LVCC-N115
Collection Development
Librarians of Academic
Libraries Interest Group
4:00 pm
LVCC-S229
Bibliographic Standards
Committee—Standard
Citations Forms Working
Group I
4:00 pm
LVCC-N209
ALCTS_
CRS
Holdings Information Forum
ACRL_
RBMS
ALCTS_
CRS
Discovering Open Access
Articles: Maximum Access,
Maximum Visibility!
4:00 pm
LVCC-S228
BALLY-Las
Vegas 2
LVCC-N201
* Closed meeting
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
ALCTS_
PARS
Intellectual Access to
Preservation Metadata Interest
Group
4:00 pm
LVCC-S232
ALCTS,
LITA,
ALCTS_
CMMS
MARC Formats Transition
Interest Group
4:00 pm
LVCC-N111
ASCLA
Teen Reading Lounge:
Engaging Teens Through
Interactive humanities Based
Programming
4:00 pm
Library Services for Youth in
Custody Meeting
4:00 pm
ASCLA
YALSA
Teens, Turntables, and TaterTots: Lunchroom Outreach
with CLP—BAM! (Books and
More)
4:00 pm
LVCC-S221
YALSA
Best Fiction for Young Adults
5:30 pm
LVCC-N205-208
4:00 pm Start Time
LVCC-N231/233
LVCC-N119
ALA
Now Showing @ ALA: Lost
Rivers
5:30 pm
LVCC-N242
ALA
Conversation Starter: From
Fired to Fired Up!
4:45 pm
LVCC-N239/241
RUSA
Our Values, Ourselves:
Examining Our Values and
What Others Value About Us
(RUSA President’s Program)
5:30 pm
LVCC-N255/257
ASCLA
Board of Directors Meeting I
5:30 pm
LVCC-N234
ERT, UNO
I’m a Librarian! NO! I’m an
Author! NO! I’m a Librarian
and an Author!
4:30 pm
LVCC-N243
AASL
Project Connect Panel
6:00 pm
LVCC-N259/261
GAMERT
Come Make a Game: Library
Game Jams
4:00 pm
LVCC-S222
AASL
Best Websites for Teaching
and Learning
5:30 pm
LVCC-N264
GLBTRT
Creating a Safe Library Space
for All Youth
5:30 pm
LVCC-N256
AASL
The Pros and Cons of Coming
in 3rd Place
5:30 pm
LVCC-S224
GODORT
Publications Committee
Meeting
4:00 pm
LVCC-N215
ACRL
Heads of Public Services
Discussion Group
5:30 pm
LVCC-N101
GODORT
Development Committee
Meeting
4:00 pm
LVCC-N216
ACRL
Technical Services Interest
Group Meeting
5:30 pm
LVCC-N236
LEARNRT
The Good, the Bad, and the
Ugly
4:00 pm
LVCC-N254
ACRL
5:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 3
LITA
The Other Content: Creating
Accessible Documents and
Presentations
4:00 pm
LVCC-N235
Numeric and Geospatial Data
Services in Academic Libraries
Interest Group Meeting
ACRL
5:30 pm
LVCC-N230
LITA
Technology Priorities for the
New Library Reality
4:00 pm
LVCC-S230
Informal Meet-up for
Academic Librarians Interested
in Library Marketing and
Outreach
MAGIRT
MAGIRT Education Committee
Meeting
4:00 pm
LVCC-N238
ACRL
5:30 pm
BALLY-Bronze 1
PLA
Continuing Education
for Libraries: A National
Conversation
4:00 pm
LVCC-S224
Dr. E. J. Josey Spectrum
Scholar Mentor Committee
Meeting
ACRL_
AFAS
6:00 pm
LVCC-N235
RUSA_
BRASS
Business Reference in
Academic Libraries Committee
Meeting
4:00 pm
LVCC-N101
Forum for Research and
Scholarship in African
American Studies
ACRL_
ANSS
Instruction and Information
Literacy Committee Meeting
5:30 pm
BALLY-Director’s
Room
*RUSA_
MARS
Nominating Committee
4:00 pm
FLAM-Bryce
Board Room
ACRL_
CJCLS
Membership/Communications
Committee Meeting
5:30 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 1
RUSA_
RSS
Library Services to an Aging
Population Committee
Meeting II
4:00 pm
LVCC-N224
RUSA,
RUSA_
STARS
Finding Dead People:
Genealogy and Local History
Resources for the ILL
Practitioner
4:00 pm
SRRT
Intellectual Freedom in the
Surveillance State
4:00 pm
LVCC-N240
UNITED
An Hour of Power: United for
Libraries Leaders Orientation
4:00 pm
UNITED
Quirky Books for Quirky
Librarians
4:30 pm
Current Topics Discussion
5:30 pm
LVCC-N110
New Members Discussion
Group
5:30 pm
LVCC-N201
ACRL_
RBMS
Workshops Committee
5:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 4
ACRL_
RBMS
Conference Program
Planning—San Francisco, 2015
Committee
5:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 5
LVCC-N263C
ACRL_
RBMS
Curators and Conservators
Discussion Group
5:30 pm
LVCC-N238
LVCC-N252
ACRL_
RBMS
Bibliographic Standards
Committee—Standard
Citations Forms Working
Group II
5:30 pm
LVCC-N209
ACRL_
RBMS
Preconference Program
Planning—Oakland, 2015
Committee II
5:30 pm
LVCC-N117
ACRL_
RBMS
Bibliographic Standards
Committee—DCRM/RDA
Revision Group II, Part 3
5:30 pm
LVCC-N221
LVCC-N232
UNO
EBSCO Altmetrics in Practice
4:00 pm
LVCC-N237
OCLC The Power of Shared
Data: What’s New and What’s
Next?
4:00 pm
LVCC-N116
CAP: Caesars Palace Las Vegas
FLAM: Flamingo Las Vegas
LVH: Las Vegas Hotel
PARIS: Paris Las Vegas
daily schedule saturday
ACRL_IS
ACRL_
LES
UNO
LVCC: Las Vegas Convention Center
BALLY: Bally’s Las Vegas
4:30 pm Start Time
For more detailed hotel information
see page 43.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
135
saturday daily schedule
ACRL_
SEES
Executive Committee Meeting
5:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 2
ACRL_
STS
Demonstrating Success
through Assessment: Don’t
Leave Outcomes to Chance
5:30 pm
LVCC-S228
ACRL_
WESS
Research and Planning
Committee Meeting
5:30 pm
LVCC-N102
ACRL_
WGSS
General Membership Forum
5:30 pm
LVCC-N115
ALA
COL Copyright Subcommittee
Meeting
5:30 pm
LVCC-N215
ALA
Programming Librarian
Interest Group Meeting
5:30 pm
LVCC-N119
ALA
Library Services in Multibranch Networks in China
5:30 pm
LVCC-S225
ALA
Diversity Success Stories
5:30 pm
LVCC-N240
ALA
ALA Membership Meeting
5:30 pm
LVH-Paradise
North
ALA
Graphic Novel Petting Zoo
5:30 pm
LVCC-N116
ALA
Committee on the Status of
Women In Librarianship
5:30 pm
LVCC-N211
ALA
Library Communicators’
Network
5:30 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 09
ALA
DCWG Subgroup Meeting
5:30 pm
LVCC-N120
ALCTS
Newspaper Interest Group
5:30 pm
CAP-Neopolitan
III
ALCTS
Publisher/Vendor/Library
Relations Interest Group
5:30 pm
LVCC-N228
*ALCTS
ALCTS Monographs Editorial
Board
5:30 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 01 & 02
ALCTS
ALCTS Affiliates Showcase
5:30 pm
LVCC-S226
ALCTS
Metadata Beyond the
Library: Consultation and
Collaboration with Faculty,
Staff and Students
5:30 pm
LVCC-N253
ALCTS_
CMMS
Research and Publication
Committee
5:30 pm
ALCTS_
CMMS
Committee on Cataloging:
Asian and African Materials
ALCTS_
CMMS
ASCLA
Temporary Staffing Solutions
for Libraries: A Consortial
Approach in Massachusetts
5:30 pm
LVCC-N231/233
EMIERT
Coretta Scott King Book
Awards 2015 Jury Meeting
5:30 pm
FLAM-Reno II
EMIERT
Coretta Scott King—Virginia
Hamilton Award for Lifetime
Achievement Committee
Meeting
5:30 pm
FLAM-Bryce
Board Room
ERT, UNO
You Shouldn’t Have to Find a
Book By Its Cover
5:30 pm
LVCC-N243
GAMERT
Board Meeting (GameRT)
5:30 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 04
GODORT
Cataloging Committee
Meeting
5:30 pm
LVCC-N216
GODORT
State and Local Documents
Task Force
5:30 pm
LVCC-N210
LITA
Publications Committee
5:30 pm
LVH-Boardroom
LITA
Redefining Humans from the
Past to the Future
5:30 pm
LVCC-S233
LLAMA
LLAMA Mentoring Program
Open House
6:30 pm
OS-LLAMA
President’s Suite
LLAMA_
FRFDS
FRFDS Discussion Group
5:30 pm
LVCC-N203
LLAMA_
LOMS
LOMS Organizational
Development Discussion
Group
5:30 pm
LVCC-N204
MAGIRT
GeoTech Committee
5:30 pm
LVCC-N113
RUSA_
BRASS
Business Reference Sources
Committee Meeting
5:30 pm
LVCC-N220
RUSA_
BRASS
Publications &
Communications Committee
Meeting
5:30 pm
LVCC-N202
RUSA_
BRASS
Business Reference in Public
Libraries Committee Meeting
5:30 pm
LVCC-N217
RUSA_
BRASS
Education Committee Meeting
5:30 pm
LVCC-N227
LVCC-N214
LVCC-N212
RUSA_
CODES
Reference Publishing
Discussion Forum
5:30 pm
5:30 pm
CAP-Neopolitan
II
RUSA_HS
LVCC-N263C
5:30 pm
LVCC-N218
Genealogy & Local History
Discussion Group
5:30 pm
Faceted Subject Access
Interest Group
5:30 pm
LVCC-N237
Administration of Collection
Management Interest Group
5:30 pm
CAP-Neopolitan
IV
RUSA_
STARS
Hot Topics Discussion Group
ALCTS_
CMS
YALSA
LVCC-S219
2015 Batchelder Award
Committee Meeting I
6:00 pm
LVCC-N225
Dynamic Duos: Collaboration
between School and Public
Library Systems
5:30 pm
*ALSC
*ALSC
2015 Belpré Award Committee
Meeting I
6:00 pm
LVCC-N222
5:00 pm Start Time
2015 Sibert Award Committee
Meeting II
6:00 pm
LVCC-N224
AASL,
YALSA,
ALSC
USBBY Meeting
7:00 pm
CAP-Milano I
*ALSC
*ALSC
2015 Geisel Award Committee
Meeting II
6:00 pm
CAP-Siena
EMIERT
Let Our Rejoicing Rise—45
Years of the Coretta Scott King
Book Award: A Conversation
With Past and Present Winners
7:00 pm
PARISChampagne 4
UNO
Atlas Systems Users Group
7:00 pm
BALLY-Skyview 4
ALSC
ALSC 101
6:00 pm
FLAM-Laughlin II
ASCLA
Collaborative Digitization
Interest Group Meeting
5:30 pm
CAP-Octavius
14
5:30 pm Start Time
Liberace, who at the height of his fame during
the 1950s to the 1970s was one of the world’s
highest earning entertainers, made his first Las
Vegas appearance in 1944.
ALA
The Will Eisner Graphic Novel
Grant Celebration
7:30 pm
CAP-Milano II
ALCTS
Awards Ceremony
7:00 pm
PARISChampagne 1
7:15 pm
LVH-Pavilion 04
5:45 pm Start Time
ASCLA
136
ASCLA/COSLA Reception and
Awards
* Closed meeting
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
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6:00 pm Start Time
ACRL
New Publications Advisory
Board Meeting (part of the
Publications Coordinating
Committee Meeting)
10:00 am
BALLY-Skyview 4
ACRL_IS
Soiree
7:30 pm
OS-Off Site
ACRL_
RBMS
Task Force to Review
Competencies for Special
Collections Professionals
7:30 pm
BALLY-Director’s
Room
ACRL
Research Planning and Review
Committee Meeting
10:00 am
BALLY-Palace 7
ACRL_
WGSS
WGSS Social
8:00 pm
OS-Off Site
ACRL
Library and Information
Science Collections Discussion
Group
10:00 am
BALLY-Director’s
Room
10:00 pm
FLAM-Red
Rock III
*ACRL
Immersion Faculty Interviews II
12:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 6
ACRL
10:00 am
BALLY-Skyview 4
OS-Bahama
Breeze Island
Grill
C&RL Editorial Board (part of
the Publications Coordinating
Committee Meeting)
ACRL
Resources for College Libraries
Editorial Board Meeting
(part fo the Publications
Coordinating Committee
Meeting)
10:00 am
BALLY-Skyview 4
ACRL
Academic Library Trends and
Statistics Survey Editorial
Board (part of the Publications
Coordinating Committee
Meeting)
10:00 am
BALLY-Skyview 4
ACRL
Research and Scholarly
Environment Committee
Meeting, Part I
10:00 am
LVH-Conference
Room 13
ACRL
C&RL News Editorial Board
(part of the Publications
Coordinating Committee
Meeting)
10:00 am
BALLY-Skyview 4
ACRL
CHOICE Editorial Board
Meeting (part of the
Publications Coordinating
Committee Meeting)
10:00 am
BALLY-Skyview 4
ACRL
Publications in Librarianship
Editorial Board Meeting (part
of Publications Coordinating
Committee Meeting)
10:00 am
BALLY-Skyview 4
ACRL
RBM Editorial Board Meeting
(part of the Publications
Coordinating Committee
Meeting)
10:00 am
BALLY-Skyview 4
ACRL
Chapters Council Meeting
10:00 am
BALLY-Las
Vegas 1
ACRL_
ANSS
Nominating 2015 Committee
Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N228
ACRL_
ANSS
Conference Program
Planning—San Francisco, 2015
Committee
10:00 am
LVCC-N223
ACRL_
CJCLS
Executive Committee Meeting
10:00 am
BALLY-Las
Vegas 3
ACRL_
CLS
Medium-Sized Academic
Libraries Discussion Group
10:00 am
BALLY-Las
Vegas 5
ACRL_
CLS
CLIPP Committee Meeting
(part of Publications
Coordinating Committee
Meeting)
10:00 am
BALLY-Skyview
4
ACRL_
EBSS
Social Work/Social Welfare
Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N238
ACRL_
EBSS
Curriculum Materials
Committee
10:00 am
LVCC-N230
ACRL_
RBMS
Bibliographic Standards
Committee—DCRM/RDA
Revision Group III, Part 1
10:00 am
BALLY-Bronze 1
ACRL_
RBMS
Conference Development
Committee
10:00 am
BALLY-Palace 2
7:00 pm Start Time
*AFLCALA
CALA Board Meeting
SRRT
SRRT Membership Meeting/
Dinner
9:00 pm
8:00 pm Start Time
RUSA
Andrew Carnegie Medals
for Excellence in Fiction and
Nonfiction Announcement
10:00 pm
CAP-Octavius
05-08
Sunday, June 29
5:00 am Start Time
EMIERT
Green Room for Coretta Scott
King Book Awards Breakfast
12:00 pm
CAP-Salerno
7:00 am Start Time
ALA
Divisions’ Leadership Breakfast
8:30 am
LVCC-N263C
ALA
Think Fit Yoga
8:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 09
EMIERT
The Coretta Scott King Book
Awards Breakfast
9:30 am
CAP-Milano
Ballroom
ERT
ERT Board Meeting
9:00 am
LVCC-N117
7:30 am Start Time
*UNO
Alexander Street Press
Breakfast
9:00 am
LVH-Ballroom A
*UNO
ICOLC Consortia Breakfast
9:30 am
LVH-Conference
Room 09
saturday daily schedule
8:00 am Start Time
138
AASL
Affiliate Assembly Meeting II
12:00 pm
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm B
ALA
Now Showing @ ALA: Far Out
Isn’t Far Enough
10:00 am
LVCC-N242
*ALA
The ALA “Kitchen Table”
Conversations
5:00 pm
LVH-Executive
Boardroom
ALA
Conversation Starter:
Professionalism Is Killing the
Profession
8:45 am
LVCC-N239/241
ALA
PR Forum: Stories Matter—13
tips and One Cautionary Note
for Powerful Narratives That
Drive Social Impact
10:00 am
LVCC-S219
*ALA
Committee on Accreditation
Meeting
5:30 pm
CAP-Senate
Boardroom
RUSA,
RUSA_
CODES
Literary Tastes: Celebrating
the Best Reading of the Year
10:00 am
LVCC-N258
8:30 am Start Time
AASL
Designing Effective Library
Experiences for AfricanAmerican Male Youth
10:00 am
LVCC-S231
ACRL
Popular Cultures Discussion
Group
10:00 am
BALLY-Bronze 2
* Closed meeting
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
ACRL_
RBMS
Diversity Committee
10:00 am
BALLY-Palace 1
*ALSC
ACRL_
STS
General Membership Meeting
& Breakfast
10:00 am
LVCC-N113
ALSC
All Committee II
11:30 am
LVCC-N112
LVCC-N224
Evidence-Based Practices
Discussion Group
10:00 am
LVCC-N101
Pura Belpré Award 20th
Anniversary Celebration Task
Force
11:30 am
ACRL_
ULS
ALSC,
AFL-RE
FORMA
ACRL_
WESS
Classical, Medieval, and
Renaissance and Special Topics
Discussion Groups
10:00 am
BALLY-Bronze 3
FAFLRT
10:00 am
LVH-Ballroom E
AFLAPALA
APALA Membership Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N119
Innovative Talent Management
Practices in Federal Libraries:
Responding to the Challenges
of Recruitment, Retention, and
Succession
ALA
E-Rate Task Force Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N202
IRRT
IRRT Executive Commitee
Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N212
ALA
COL Government Information
Subcommittee
10:00 am
LVCC-N215
LHRT
ALA Library History Round
Table Executive Board Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N225
ALA
Intellectual Freedom
Committee Privacy
Subcommittee
10:00 am
LVCC-N210
LITA
10:00 am
LVCC-S225
*ALA
Scholarships & Study Grants
Committee
10:00 am
LVCC-N209
Let’s Play in the Sandbox!
Creating a Digital Literacies
Program for Faculty and
Students
LITA
LVCC-S227
COL Grassroots Subcommittee
10:00 am
LVCC-N204
Building Gorgeous Responsive
Web Sites Fast with Twitter
Bootstrap
10:00 am
ALA
LITA
Linked Library Data Interest
Group
10:00 am
LVCC-N237
2015 Caldecott Award
Committee Meeting II
11:30 am
HIL-Diamond
ALA
What is an RDA “Record”?
10:00 am
LVCC-S220
ALA
Turning Outward to Lead
Change in Your Community:
Intentionality
10:00 am
LVCC-S223
LITA
Game Making Interest Group
10:00 am
LVCC-N219
ALA
ALA Center for Civic Life
Advisory Committee
10:00 am
LVCC-N115
LLAMA
Women Administrators
Discussion Group
10:00 am
LVCC-N217
LLAMA
Diversity Officers Discussion
Group
10:00 am
LVCC-N203
LLAMA_
BES
Safety and Security Discussion
Group
10:00 am
LVCC-N201
LLAMA_
BES
Space Planning Primer
10:00 am
LVCC-S222
IMLS Update
10:00 am
LVCC-N243
Librarians take SXSW by
storm!
10:00 am
LVCC-N254
OLOS Outreach Panel I:
Library Services to the
Underserved
10:00 am
ALA
Citizenship Programs and
Resources at the Library
10:00 am
LVCC-N236
LLAMA_
BES
Community Driven Design
10:00 am
LVCC-N231/233
ALA-APA
Certification Update
10:00 am
LVCC-N252
LVCC-N226
ALA Council I
11:00 am
LVH-Paradise
North
Union Relations for Managers
Discussion Group
10:00 am
ALACOUNCIL
LLAMA_
HRS
10:00 am
LVCC-S228
Create, Transform and Sustain:
Managing for Edgy New
Technology Services
LVCC-S230
Care of Borrowed Special
Collections: Playing Nice with
Other People’s Toys
LLAMA_
SASS
10:00 am
ALCTS
LSSIRT
LVCC-N240
Subject Analysis Committee I
11:30 am
FLAM-Virginia
City I & II
Best Practice—Support Staff
Edition
10:00 am
ALCTS_
CMMS
MAGIRT
10:00 am
LVCC-N234
ALCTS_
CMS
All Committee and Executive
Committee
11:30 am
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm A
ALCTS CaMMS / MAGIRT
Cartographic Resources
Cataloging Interest Group
ALCTS_
CRS
College and Research Libraries
Interest Group
10:00 am
LVCC-N116
PLA
Legislation and Advocacy
Committee Meeting (PLA
10:00 am
LVH-Conference
Room 04
ALCTS_
PARS
Digital Preservation Interest
Group
10:00 am
LVCC-S226
PLA
PLA 2014 & 2016 Conference
Committee and Program
Subcommittee Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N222
ALCTS
Metadata Interest Group
(ALCTS CRS, ALCTS CMMS)
10:00 am
LVCC-N263
PLA
Going Beyond Job Search
Help at Queens Library
10:00 am
LVCC-S224
ALSC
All Committee I
11:30 am
LVCC-N110
2015 Newbery Award
Committee Meeting II
11:30 am
CAP-Octavius
08
RUSA_
BRASS
Business Reference Services
Discussion Group
10:00 am
*ALSC
CAP-Octavius
05-06
10:00 am
LVH-Boardroom
Budget Meeting I
10:00 am
LVCC-N216
RUSA_
MARS
Planning Committee
ALSC
*ALSC
2015 Belpre Award Committee
Meeting II
11:30 am
CAP-Octavius
07
RUSA_
STARS
Leadership Orientation
10:00 am
CAP-Capri
*ALSC
2015 Sibert Award Committee
Meeting III
11:30 am
CAP-Octavius
15
RUSA_
STARS
Rethinking Resource Sharing
Policies Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Conference
Room 03
ALA
LVCC: Las Vegas Convention Center
BALLY: Bally’s Las Vegas
LVCC-N235
CAP: Caesars Palace Las Vegas
FLAM: Flamingo Las Vegas
LVH: Las Vegas Hotel
PARIS: Paris Las Vegas
daily schedule sunday
ALA
ALA
For more detailed hotel information
see page 43.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
139
UNITED
First Author, First Book:
Veteran & Rookies
10:00 am
LVCC-N220
ACRL
11:30 am
LVH-Conference
Room 13
UNO
ALA Scholarship Award
Winners’ Breakfast sponsored
by EBSCO
10:00 am
LVH-Conference
Room 12
Research and Scholarly
Environment Committee
Meeting, Part II
ACRL
Budget & Finance
Commmittee Meeting I
1:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 2
UNO
HarperCollins Adult Book Buzz
10:00 am
LVCC-N111
ACRL
11:30 am
UNO
CONSER/BIBCO/
SACO-at-Large
11:30 am
LVCC-N253
Chapters Council Work
Session
BALLY-Director’s
Room
ACRL
American Psychological
Association Librarian
Roundtable Breakfast
10:00 am
LVH-Conference
Room 10
Publications Coordinating
Committee Meeting
11:30 am
UNO
BALLY-Skyview
4
ACRL_
ANSS
Review and Planning
Committee Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N221
UNO
EBSCO What Makes an
E-book Bestseller?
10:00 am
LVCC-N264
ACRL_
CJCLS
11:30 am
BALLY-Las
Vegas 2
UNO
Random House Librarians Fall
Book Preview
11:30 am
LVCC-N109
Conference Program
Planning—San Francisco, 2015
Committee Meeting
German-North American
Resources Partnership
11:30 am
LVCC-N211
ACRL_
CJCLS
Nominating 2015 Committee
Meeting
11:30 am
UNO
BALLY-Las
Vegas 2
Video Librarianship 101 (Public
Libraries)
10:00 am
LVCC-N232
ACRL_
CJCLS
Library Technical Assistance
Education Committee Meeting
11:30 am
VRT
BALLY-Las
Vegas 2
All-Committees Meeting
11:30 am
2015 Odyssey Committee
4:00 pm
ACRL_
CJCLS
BALLY-Las
Vegas 2
ACRL_
CJCLS
Awards Committee Meeting
11:30 am
BALLY-Las
Vegas 2
ACRL_
DLS
All-Committees Meeting
11:30 am
BALLY-Las
Vegas 1
ACRL_
EBSS
Conference Program
Planning—San Francisco 2015
Committee Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N223
ACRL_
LES
Reference Discussion Group
11:30 am
LVCC-N203
ACRL_
RBMS
Technical Services Discussion
Group
11:30 am
BALLY-Las
Vegas 4
ACRL_
RBMS
Bibliographic Standards
Committee—DCRM/RDA
Revision Group III, Part 2
11:30 am
BALLY-Bronze 1
ACRL_
RBMS
Task Force to Review
Guidelines on the Selection of
General Collection Materials
for Transfer To Special
Collections
11:30 am
BALLY-Palace 1
ACRL_
STS
Hot Topics Discussion Group
11:30 am
LVCC-N113
AFLBCALA
Librarians of Color: The
Challenges of “Movin’ On Up”
11:30 am
PARISChampagne
3&4
ALA
OLOS Outreach Panel II:
Library Services to the
Underserved
11:30 am
LVCC-N235
ALA
Conversation Starter: Connect
and Create @your library
11:15 am
LVCC-N239/241
*YALSA
FLAM-Lake
Mead II
9:00 am Start Time
ALA
Career Development
Workshop: Getting a Library
Job in a Foreign Country: How
(and why) to do it and How to
Thrive Once You Do
10:30 am
ALA
Placement Center & Career
Counseling
5:00 pm
LVCC-Hall N
Placement
Center
ALA
Resume Critiquing Service
5:00 pm
LVCC-Hall N
Placement
Center
YALSA
YA Author Coffee Klatch
10:00 am
LVCC-Hall N
Placement
Center
LVH-Ballroom C
9:15 am Start Time
ALA
Conversation Starter: Pinterest
and Digital Archives
10:00 am
LVCC-N239/241
11:30 am
BALLY-Skyview 2
9:30 am Start Time
sunday daily schedule
AFL-RE
FORMA
140
Board Meeting (REFORMA)
10:00 am Start Time
ACRL
Intersections of Scholarly
Communication and
Information Literacy Task
Force Meeting
11:30 am
AFLBCALA
BCALA Professional
Development and Recruitment
Committee Open Session
11:00 am
BALLY-Palace 5
UNO
Penguin Donut Sketch-Off
11:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 11
LVH-Boardroom
10:15 am Start Time
GLBTRT
Membership Meeting
ALA
Best and Worst Manga
11:30 am
LVCC-N116
ALA
DCWG Subgroup Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N102
ALA
OITP—Copyright
Subcommittee Meeting II
11:30 am
LVCC-N209
ALA
Emerging Leaders
Subcommittee
11:30 am
LVCC-N217
ALA
Libraries Fostering Civic
Engagement Member Interest
Group
11:30 am
LVCC-N115
11:15 am
LVCC-N218
Makerspace and Digital
Badging: New Avenues To
Help Students Show What
They Know
11:30 am
LVCC-N252
AASL
Common Core IRL: In Real
Libraries
11:30 am
LVCC-S228
ALA
International Council of Library
Association Executives (ICLAE)
11:30 am
LVCC-N210
ACRL
Personnel Administrators &
Staff Development Discussion
Group II
11:30 am
LVCC-N120
ALA
Auditorium Speaker Series
featuring Ilyasah Shabazz
11:30 am
LVCC-N249
ALA
COL/IFC Joint Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N101
10:30 am Start Time
AASL
* Closed meeting
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
ALA
Placement Center Open House
12:00 pm
LVCC-Hall N
Placement
Center
LITA
Library Consortia and Systems
Interest Group
11:30 am
FLAM-Red
Rock II
ALA
Now Showing @ ALA: The
Speaker
12:00 pm
LVCC-N242
LITA
Search Engine Optimization
Interest Group
11:30 am
FLAM-Red
Rock V
ALA
Rebranding Librarianship—
Building a Knowledge Alliance
11:30 am
LVCC-S225
LITA
Next Generation Catalog
Interest Group
11:30 am
FLAM-Reno II
ALA
CALM Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N204
LITA
The Role of Libraries In Data
Management and Curation
11:30 am
LVCC-S222
ALA
Panel: Public Libraries and
Digital Inclusion
11:30 am
LVCC-N258
LITA
Distance Learning Interest
Group
11:30 am
FLAM-Carson
City I
LITA
Evidence Based Decision
Making in Library Technology
11:30 am
LVCC-S232
LRTS Editorial Board
11:30 am
LVCC-N215
E-Books: Discovering the
Virtual Backlog
11:30 am
LVCC-N231/233
ALCTS
Understanding Schema.org
11:30 am
LVCC-S230
ALCTS
Division Committee Chairs
11:30 am
LVCC-N216
ALCTS_
CMMS
Executive Committee II
11:30 am
LVCC-N212
ALCTS_
CMMS
Cataloging and Classification
Research Interest Group
11:30 am
LVCC-S226
ALCTS_
CRS
Continuing Resources
Standards Forum
11:30 am
LVCC-N111
ALCTS_
PARS
Promoting Preservation
Interest Group
11:30 am
LVCC-S219
*ALSC
2015 Nominating Committee II
11:30 am
LVCC-N225
ALSC
So Long, Drive-By Storytimes;
Hello, Focus and Impact!
11:30 am
LVCC-N262
ALSC
Children’s Librarians in the
Lead: Managing Change,
Inspiring Innovation &
Empowering the Next
Generation
11:30 am
LVCC-N232
ASCLA
Library Services to the
Incarcerated and Detained
11:30 am
LVCC-N234
ASCLA
Connected Learning and
Libraries: At the Intersection
of the Arts, Media, New
Technologies, and Informal
Learning (ASCLA President’s
Program)
12:00 pm
LVCC-N255/257
ASCLA
Physical Delivery Interest
Group
11:30 am
LVCC-N222
EMIERT
EMIERT Executive and All
Committee Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N238
FAFLRT
Leveraging Librarian Expertise
in Customer Resource
Management
11:30 am
LVH-Ballroom E
GODORT
Rare and Endangered
Government Documents
Committee Meeting
11:30 am
CAP-Palermo
*GODORT
Awards Committee Meeting
11:30 am
CAP-Livorno
GODORT
Legislative Committee
Meeting II
11:30 am
CAP-Modena
LEARNRT
That Was Great, Now What?
11:30 am
LVCC-S227
LHRT
LHRT Edward G. Holley
Memorial Lecture: The
Business of Lectures
11:30 am
LVCC-N237
Going All In: Library
Instruction for Students in
Online Education Programs
11:30 am
LIRT
LVCC: Las Vegas Convention Center
BALLY: Bally’s Las Vegas
LVCC-N264
CAP: Caesars Palace Las Vegas
FLAM: Flamingo Las Vegas
LITA
ITAL Editorial Board
11:30 am
LVCC-N226
LLAMA_
BES
Moving Libraries Discussion
Group
11:30 am
LVCC-N201
LLAMA,
NMRT
LLAMA/NMRT Discussion
Group
11:30 am
LVCC-N219
LRRT
Creativity and Innovation:
LRRT Research Forum
11:30 am
LVCC-N263
MAGIRT
Cataloging and Classification
Committee (CCC) Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N202
NMRT
Executive Board Meeting
12:30 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 03
PLA
Data Driven Collections:
Integrating Evidence Into Your
Collection Maintenance and
Development Procedures
11:30 am
LVCC-S229
PLA
Leveraging National Data to
Advocate Locally
11:30 am
LVCC-S224
PLA
We Got Your Back: Community
Answers to the Digital Divide
11:30 am
LVCC-N119
PLA
The Unstaffed Library:
Challenges and Opportunities
11:30 am
LVCC-N254
PLA
Building a Learning Culture
From the Inside Out
11:30 am
LVCC-S231
PLA
PLDS Advisory Committee
Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N214
RUSA
RUSA Standards & Guidelines
Committee
11:30 am
LVCC-N228
RUSA
Budget and Finance Meeting
(RUSA)
2:30 pm
CAP-Capri
RUSA_
BRASS
Core Competencies Ad Hoc
Committee Meeting
11:30 am
CAP-Siena
RUSA_
CODES
Reference Publishing Advisory
Committee Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N230
RUSA_
MARS
Virtual Reference Discussion
Group
11:30 am
PARIS-Chablis
RUSA_
RSS
The Soft Sell: Sales Skills for
Librarians
11:30 am
LVCC-N220
RUSA_
RSS
Of *Course* It’s Due
Tomorrow: What is the
Appropriate Level of
Homework Assistance in
Libraries?
11:30 am
LVH-Ballroom G
RUSA,
RUSA_
RSS
Creative Aging @your library
11:30 am
LVCC-N243
RUSA,
RUSA_
RSS
20th Annual Reference
Research Forum
11:30 am
LVCC-N260
LVH: Las Vegas Hotel
PARIS: Paris Las Vegas
daily schedule sunday
*ALCTS
ALCTS
For more detailed hotel information
see page 43.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
141
SRRT
Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday
Multicultural Exchange
12:00 pm
LVCC-N240
UNITED
Academic Friends and
Development Officers
Discussion Group
11:30 am
LVCC-N117
UNITED
Hot Picks for Book Clubs
11:30 am
LVCC-N236
UNO
OCLC QuestionPoint Users
Group Meeting
11:30 am
PARIS-Loire
UNO
OCLC WorldShare Metadata
Users Group Meeting
(Cataloging)
11:30 am
UNO
Setting New Standard
for Openness—The Alma
Developer Network
UNO
Library of Congress BIBFRAME
Update Forum
1:00 pm Start Time
AASL
The Best of the Best from the
American University Presses
2:30 pm
LVCC-N263
AASL
College Readiness Dialogues:
Together We Succeed!
2:30 pm
LVCC-N264
AASL
No More Eye-Candy! Inspiring
Visual Imagination, Assessing
Visual Creativity
2:30 pm
LVCC-N231/233
LVH-Ballroom F
AASL
National Conference
Committee Meeting
4:00 pm
LVCC-N215
11:30 am
LVH-Pavilion 06
AASL,
YALSA,
ALSC
Joint Intellectual Freedom
Committee Meeting
2:30 pm
LVH-Pavilion 10
11:30 am
LVCC-S220
ACRL
Information Literacy
Competency Standards for
Higher Education Task Force I
2:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 6
ACRL
Information Literacy Web Site
Committee (part of Student
Learning and Information
Literacy Component
Committees Meeting)
2:30 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 1
ACRL
Professional Values Committee
Meeting
2:30 pm
BALLY-Director’s
Room
ACRL
Digital Curation Interest Group
Meeting
2:30 pm
LVCC-N236
YALSA
The 2014 Alex Awards
11:30 am
LVCC-S221
YALSA
The Future of Library Services
for and with Teens
11:30 am
LVCC-S223
YALSA
Best Fiction for Young Adults
5:30 pm
LVCC-N205-208
11:00 am Start Time
*ALA
Spectrum Institute Closing
Luncheon
1:30 pm
BALLY-Skyview
1
LLAMA_
PRMS
PR X-change
3:00 pm
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Special
Events Area
ACRL
Diversity Committee Meeting
2:30 pm
LVCC-N214
ACRL
Update on Value of Academic
Libraries Initiative
2:30 pm
LVCC-N255/257
11:15 am Start Time
YALSA
Youth Council Caucus
Committee Meeting
12:15 pm
LVH-Paradise
North
ACRL
Standards Committee Meeting
2:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 1
ACRL
Government Relations
Committee Meeting
2:30 pm
LVCC-N219
ACRL
Stop Dreaming and Do It!
Best Practices for Gaining
Momentum, Developing and
Maintaining a Successful
Residency Program
2:30 pm
LVCC-S229
ACRL
Student Learning and
Information Literacy
Component Committees
Meeting
2:30 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 1
ACRL
Immersion Program
Committee Meeting
2:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 4
ACRL
ACRL 2015 Coordinating
Committee Meeting
2:30 pm
BALLY-Bronze 2
ACRL
Surveillance
2:30 pm
LVCC-S232
ACRL
Information Literacy Standards
Committee (part of Student
Learning and Information
Literacy Component
Committees Meeting)
2:30 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 1
ACRL
Information Literacy
Professional Development
Committee (part of Student
Learning and Information
Literacy Component
Committees Meeting)
2:30 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 1
ACRL
AASL/ACRL Interdivisional
Committee on Information
Literacy (part of the Student
Learning and Information
Literacy Committee Meeting)
2:30 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 1
ACRL_
ARTS
ArtsVegas: Everything You
Wanted to Know and More
2:30 pm
LVCC-N116
ACRL_
CLS
Leadership and Management
Issues in College Libraries
Discussion Group
2:30 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 5
sunday daily schedule
11:30 am Start Time
ACRL_
DLS
DLS Award Luncheon
1:00 pm
BALLY-Bronze 4
ALA
Ignite Sunday Session: Five
Minute Activities
12:00 pm
LVCC-N239/241
ALA
Ignite Sunday Session: Online
Post-Its; Library collaboration
and assessment using Padlet
12:00 pm
LVCC-N239/241
ALA
Ignite Sunday Session: Human
Libraries: Bringing Personal
Stories to Research and
Learning
12:00 pm
LVCC-N239/241
ALA
Ignite Sunday Session: The
Ally-brarian
12:00 pm
LVCC-N239/241
ALA
Ignite Sunday Session: SMART
enough to collaborate
12:00 pm
LVCC-N239/241
12:00 pm Start Time
AASL
Retiree SIG Meeting
1:00 pm
LVH-Ballroom G
ALA
Career Development
Workshop: Open Cover
Letters Revealed! Job Search
Stories and Advice from Newly
Hired Librarians
1:15 pm
LVCC-Hall N
Placement
Center
FAFLRT
FAFLRT Awards Reception
1:00 pm
LVH-Ballroom E
*UNO
Springer Innovations for
Academic Libraries Lunch and
Learn Session
2:00 pm
LVCC-N263C
1:30 pm
LVH-Paradise
North
12:30 pm Start Time
ALACOUNCIL
142
ALA Council Policy Monitoring
Committee
* Closed meeting
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
ACRL_
DLS
Discussion Group
2:30 pm
BALLY-Bronze 1
ALA
Eurasia and Central Asia
Subcommittee Program
2:30 pm
LVCC-S231
ACRL_
EBSS
ERIC Presentation
2:30 pm
PARIS-Burgundy
ALA
Out-of-the-Box Book Clubs to
Banish the Boring
2:30 pm
LVCC-S220
ACRL_IS
From Stumbling Blocks
to Building Blocks: Using
Threshold Concepts to Teach
Information Literacy
2:30 pm
LVCC-S219
ALA
Money Smart Week @your
library
2:30 pm
LVCC-S230
ALA
Emerging Leaders Interest
Group Steering Committee
2:30 pm
LVCC-N216
ACRL_
LES
General Membership Forum
2:30 pm
BALLY-Bronze 3
ALA
ALA Planning & Budget
Assembly (PBA)
2:30 pm
LVH-Pavilion 04
ACRL_
RBMS
Sin and Vice in Special
Collections: Working with
Provocative Primary Sources
2:30 pm
LVCC-N256
ACRL_
STS
Science and Technology
Library Research Forum
2:30 pm
BALLY-Skyview
3
ACRL_
ULS
Committee on the Future of
University Libraries
2:30 pm
LVCC-N101
ACRL_
ULS
Mid-Level Managers
Discussion Group
2:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 3
ACRL_
WESS
Germanists and Romance
Languages Discussion Groups
2:30 pm
LVCC-N102
ACRL_
WGSS
Executive Committee Meeting
2:30 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 3
ACRL,
LLAMA
ACRL/LLAMA Interdivisional
Committee on Building
Resources Meeting
2:30 pm
LVCC-N224
AFL
GPA—Crafting a Successful
Grant Proposal: Tips & Tricks
to Win Every point
2:30 pm
LVCC-N253
AFL-AILA
American Indian Library
Association Business Meeting
2:30 pm
FLAM-Red
Rock III
AFLAPALA
Immigration Reform, Asian
Americans and Librarianship
2:30 pm
LVCC-N258
AFL-CALA
CALA Annual Program
2:30 pm
FLAM-Laughlin II
ALA
Rural, Native, and Tribal
Libraries of All Kinds
Committee (RNTLOAK)
2:30 pm
LVCC-N201
COL Business Meeting II
2:30 pm
LVCC-N115
Advocacy Coordinating Group
(ACG) Meeting
2:30 pm
LVCC-N119
ALA
Stories from the Field—The
American Dream Starts @your
library
2:30 pm
LVCC-N235
ALA
The Role and Limitations of
Social Media as an Information
Source in the Middle East
2:30 pm
LVCC-S227
ALA
What Would You Do? Ethics
in Action: Libraries and Law
Enforcement
2:30 pm
LVCC-S225
ALA
Committee on Research and
Statistics Meeting
2:30 pm
LVCC-N221
ALA
Turning Outward to Lead
Change in Your Community:
Sustaining Yourself
2:30 pm
LVCC-S223
ALA
OITP—Libraries as Leaders for
Community Broadband Access
2:30 pm
LVCC-N243
ALA
Growing Libraries, Growing
Librarians: Partnerships with
Libraries and Library Schools
in Africa
2:30 pm
LVCC-N254
LVCC: Las Vegas Convention Center
BALLY: Bally’s Las Vegas
CAP: Caesars Palace Las Vegas
FLAM: Flamingo Las Vegas
LSSC Review Committee
2:30 pm
LVCC-N217
Continuing Education
Committee
2:30 pm
LVCC-N202
ALCTS
Division All Committee
Meeting
5:30 pm
LVH-Pavilion 09
ALCTS_
AS
Acquisitions Managers &
Vendors Interest Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N260
ALCTS_
CMMS
Cataloging of Children’s
Materials
2:30 pm
LVCC-N203
ALCTS_
CMMS
CaMMS Forum
2:30 pm
LVCC-N111
ALCTS_
CMMS
Committee on Continuing
Education Training Materials
2:30 pm
LVCC-N222
ALCTS_
CMS
Collection Evaluation and
Assessment Interest Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N112
ALCTS_
PARS
Book and Paper Interest
Group
2:30 pm
CAP-Trevi
ALCTS_
PARS
Successful Outreach:
Celebrating 5 Years of
Preservation Week
2:30 pm
LVCC-S224
ALCTS,
LITA,
ALCTS_
CMMS
Authority Control Interest
Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N109
ALCTS
Metadata Standards
Committee (LITA, ALCTS_
PARS, ALCTS_CRS, ALCTS_
CMMS, ALCTS_AS)
2:30 pm
LVCC-N234
ALSC
2014 Pura Belpré Award
Celebración
3:00 pm
CAP-Octavius
01-04
ALSC
All Discussion Meeting
2:30 pm
LVCC-N220
ALSC
2015 Notable Children’s Books
Committee Meeting III
4:00 pm
LVCC-N114
ALSC
Collection Management
Discussion Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N218
ALSC
2015 Notable Children’s
Recordings Committee
Meeting II
4:00 pm
FLAM-Reno I
ALSC
Whet Your APPetite: Rapid
Reviews of Apps for Children
from Preschool to Tweens
2:30 pm
LVH-Pavilion 11
ASCLA
ASCLA LSTA Coordinators’
Interest Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N204
FAFLRT
Rebranding Yourself for a
Career Change/Transition into
Information Services
2:30 pm
LVH-Ballroom E
GODORT
Federal Documents Task Force
Meeting
2:30 pm
CAP-Messina
LITA
Top Technology Trends
2:30 pm
LVCC-S233
LITA
Dive into Digital Badges! A
Badge Curriculum Workshop
2:30 pm
LVCC-N252
LVH: Las Vegas Hotel
PARIS: Paris Las Vegas
daily schedule sunday
ALA
ALA
*ALA-APA
ALCTS
For more detailed hotel information
see page 43.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
143
sunday daily schedule
144
LITA
Public Libraries Interest Group
2:30 pm
FLAM-Red
Rock II
ALA
Career Development
Workshop: The Interview—
Getting Ready for the Show
2:30 pm
LVCC-Hall N
Placement
Center
LITA
Heads of Library Technology
Interest Group
2:30 pm
FLAM-Red
Rock V
LLAMA_
BES
ALA/IIDA Library Interior
Design Awards
2:30 pm
LVCC-N110
LEARNRT
Learning Round Table Training
Showcase (LearnRT)
3:30 pm
LVH-Paradise
South
LLAMA_
BES
BES Library Facilities Planning
Discussion Group
2:30 pm
CAP-Pompeian
II
3:30 pm
LVH-Pavilion 04
LLAMA_
BES
Environments by Design:
Creating—and Re-creating—
Spaces for Both Quiet and
Collaboration
2:30 pm
LVCC-S228
3:15 pm
LVCC-N239/241
LLAMA_
SASS
Circulation/Access Services
Discussion Group
2:30 pm
CAP-Neopolitan
I
3:00 pm Start Time
MAGIRT
MAGIRT Program Planning
Meeting
2:30 pm
LVCC-N212
AASL
Stepping Up: Providing
Effective Library and
Information Services,
Programs and Resources to
Students With Disabilities
4:00 pm
LVCC-S224
PLA
PLA President’s Program and
Awards Presentation
2:30 pm
LVCC-N249
RUSA
Just Ask Task Force
2:30 pm
LVCC-N211
RUSA_
BRASS
Business Reference Sources
Committee Publishers’ Forum
2:30 pm
LVH-Ballroom F
AASL
CLASS Research Report
4:00 pm
LVCC-N109
AASL_
SPVS
Leading the Way-Strategies
for Moving School Library
Programs Forward
4:00 pm
LVCC-N235
RUSA_
CODES
Cooperative Collection
Development Committee
Meeting (CODES/STARS)
2:30 pm
LVCC-N223
ACRL
Liaisons Training and
Development Committee
Meeting, Part I (part of
Liaisons Coordinating
Component Committee
Meeting)
4:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 4
RUSA_
MARS
Hot Topics Discussion Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm C
RUSA_
RSS
Reference Trends & Issues I
2:30 pm
LVCC-N117
SUSTAIN
RT
Lightning Rounds:
Sustainability at Your Library
2:30 pm
LVCC-N237
ACRL
Information Literacy
Competency Standards for
Higher Education Task Force II
4:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 6
UNITED
Getting a Bigger Piece of the
Pie: Effective Communication
with Funders & Policy Makers
2:30 pm
LVCC-N240
ACRL
Scholarly Communication
Discussion Group
4:00 pm
LVCC-N256
UNO
Web Apps for Enhancing
Customer & Staff Experiences
2:30 pm
LVCC-N209
ACRL
Liaisons Grants Committee
Meeting, Part I (part of
Liaisons Coordinating
Component Committee
Meeting)
4:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 4
*UNO
GWLA Student Learning
Outcomes Committee
2:30 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 04
UNO
Finding the Right Needle In
the Haystack—Relevance
Ranking In the Context of
Library Discovery Systems and
Big Data
2:30 pm
LVCC-S226
ACRL
Tenure-track Support Systems:
Perceptions of Academic
Librarians
4:00 pm
LVCC-S228
*ACRL
Liaisons Coordinating
Committee Meeting, Part I
4:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 4
VRT
Video Librarianship 101
(Academic Libraries)
2:30 pm
LVCC-N232
ACRL
4:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 3
5:30 pm
FLAM-Valley of
Fire I
Librarianship in For-Profit
Educational Institutions
Interest Group
YALSA
Great Graphic Novels for
Teens
YALSA
ACRL
5:30 pm
FLAM-Red Rock
VIII
BALLY-Director’s
Room
*YALSA
2015 Alex Awards
5:30 pm
FLAM-Lake
Mead I
Student Learning and
Information Literacy
Coordinating Committee
Meeting II, Part I
4:00 pm
Quick Picks for Reluctant
Young Adult Readers
All-Committees Meeting
4:00 pm
LVCC-N219
YALSA
The Art of the Author Visit:
Connecting Teens with Their
Favorite Authors
2:30 pm
LVCC-S221
ACRL_
ARTS
ACRL_
DLS
Executive Committee Meeting
4:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 7
*YALSA
2015 Excellence in Nonfiction
5:30 pm
FLAM-Virginia
City III
ACRL_
EBSS
Advisory Council
4:00 pm
BALLY-Palace 1
*YALSA
2015 Michael L. Printz
Committee
5:30 pm
CAP-Imperial
Boardroom
ACRL_
LES
Collections Discussion Group
4:00 pm
LVCC-N202
ACRL_
RBMS
Leab Awards & RBMS
Information Exchange I
4:00 pm
LVCC-N111
ACRL_
STS
Oberly Award Task Force
Meeting (part of All Task
Forces Meeting)
4:00 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 1
2:30 pm Start Time
ALA
Division Leaders and the
Budget Analysis & Review
Committee
2:45 pm Start Time
ALA
1:30 pm Start Time
ALA
Now Showing @ ALA: 16 Acres
3:30 pm
LVCC-N242
ALA
Conversation Starter: StudentCentered Library Design
2:15 pm
LVCC-N239/241
Conversation Starter: Stand
Up and Shout
* Closed meeting
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
ACRL_
STS
Innovation Award Task Force
Meeting (part of All Task
Forces Meeting)
4:00 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 1
Expanding the School Library:
Connecting Students with
Students, Across International
Boundaries, Using Modern
Technology—IRRT Chair’s
Program
4:00 pm
LVCC-S227
ACRL_
STS
All Task Forces Meeting
4:00 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 1
ACRL_
STS
Research Agenda Task Force
(part of All Task Forces
Meeting)
4:00 pm
BALLY-Las
Vegas 1
LHRT
LHRT Research Forum:
The Library and the City—
Historical Perspectives
4:00 pm
LVCC-N240
ACRL_
ULS
All-Committees Meeting
4:00 pm
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm C
LITA
4:00 pm
LVCC-S233
Social Sciences and History
and College and MediumSized Libraries Discussion
Groups
4:00 pm
LVCC-N102
LITA Awards Presentation &
President’s Program featuring
Kimberly Bryant
ACRL_
WESS
LLAMA
Library Storage Discussion
group
4:00 pm
LVCC-N201
ACRL,
LITA,
ASCLA
Universal Accessibility Interest
Group Meeting
4:00 pm
LLAMA_
LOMS
Fiscal and Business Officers
Discussion Group
4:00 pm
LVCC-N210
LVCC-N254
CALA Membership Meeting
FEAST: Future & Emerging
Access Services Trends
4:00 pm
*AFLCALA
LLAMA_
SASS
Committee on Organization
Meeting II
4:00 pm
LVCC-N216
Consortial Borrowing
Committee Meeting
4:00 pm
ALA
LLAMA_
SASS,
RUSA_
STARS
LVH-Conference
Room 04
ALA
Career Development
Workshop: Alternate Career
Paths: Federal Opportunities
4:30 pm
LVCC-Hall N
Placement
Center
MAGIRT
MAGIRT Exec Board &
Membership Meeting A
4:00 pm
LVCC-N212
ALA
DCWG Subgroup
4:00 pm
LVCC-N119
PLA
Ideas and Practices in STEAM
Learning
4:00 pm
LVCC-N243
ALA
Korean Libraries Today and
Tomorrow
4:00 pm
LVCC-S225
PLA
4:00 pm
LVCC-N232
ALA
Website Advisory Committee
Meeting
5:00 pm
LVCC-N209
Every Child Ready to Eat:
Nutrition Education for
Families Using Early Literacy
Practices
*ALA
Leading with Ebooks: New
Strategies for Librarians and
Publishers
5:00 pm
LVCC-N252
PLA
Smart Marketing Using Big (or
Little) Data
4:00 pm
LVCC-N264
RUSA
COL Business Meeting II
4:00 pm
LVCC-N115
RUSA Organization and
Planning Committee Meeting
4:00 pm
ALA
LVH-Conference
Room 03
ALA
OITP—Digital Stuff and
Copyright
4:00 pm
LVCC-S219
RUSA_
BRASS
Membership Committee
Meeting
4:00 pm
LVCC-N217
ALA
Power, Privilege, and
Positionality: Applying a
Critical Lens to LIS Education
4:00 pm
LVCC-N116
RUSA_
BRASS
Conference Program Planning
Committee Meeting II
4:00 pm
LVCC-N214
4:00 pm
LVCC-N221
Earn What You’re Worth:
Salary Negotiation for Library
Workers
4:00 pm
LVCC-N263
*RUSA_
MARS
Publications Committee I
ALA-APA
RUSA_
RSS
4:00 pm
LVCC-N110
ALCTS
Creative Ideas in Technical
Services
4:00 pm
LVCC-N112
Discussing Discovery Services:
What’s Working, What’s Not
and What’s Next?
4:00 pm
LVCC-S226
The Nevada Test Site Project:
Bringing Primary Resources to
Researchers
LVCC-N231/233
Collection Management and
Electronic Resources Interest
Group
RUSA,
RUSA_HS
4:00 pm
ALCTS_
CMS
SRRT
Action Council Meeting II
4:00 pm
LVCC-N211
ALCTS_
CRS
Access to Continuing
Resources Interest Group
4:00 pm
LVCC-N117
ALSC
ASCLA
4:00 pm
Dynamic Digital Dia:
Promoting Cultural
Competence in Digital
Storytimes
4:00 pm
Universal Accessibility Interest
Group
4:00 pm
LVCC-N101
FLAM-Laughlin I
LVH-Pavilion 11
UNITED
Hot Books from Small Press
4:00 pm
LVCC-N218
UNITED
Library Foundation Discussion
Group
4:00 pm
CAP-Neopolitan
III
UNO
MARC Advisory Committee II
5:30 pm
LVCC-N203
UNO
TRAIL (Technical Report
Archive & Image Library)
Information and Updates
4:00 pm
LVCC-N204
LVCC-N120
FAFLRT
FAFLRT Membership Meeting
4:00 pm
LVH-Ballroom E
UNO
AAP Library Family Feud
4:00 pm
LVH-Pavilion 06
GODORT
Education Committee Meeting
4:00 pm
CAP-Siena
UNO
4:00 pm
LVCC-N237
GODORT
Program Committee Meeting
4:00 pm
LVCC-N223
EBSCO The EDS API—Faculty
Ease of Use and Bringing
Library Materials into Student
Reading Assignments
YALSA
A New Vision for Teen Read
Week
4:00 pm
LVCC-S222
LVCC: Las Vegas Convention Center
BALLY: Bally’s Las Vegas
CAP: Caesars Palace Las Vegas
FLAM: Flamingo Las Vegas
LVH: Las Vegas Hotel
PARIS: Paris Las Vegas
daily schedule sunday
IRRT
For more detailed hotel information
see page 43.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
145
3:30 pm Start Time
ALA
ALA Award Presentation and
President’s Program
5:30 pm
AASL
Student SIG Meeting
5:30 pm
LVCC-N113
ALA
Conversation Starter: Change
Does Not Suck
4:45 pm
LVCC-N239/241
ALA
Now Showing @ ALA: The
Pleasure of Being Out of Step
5:30 pm
LVCC-N242
4:30 pm Start Time
5:30 pm
LVCC-N218
ALA
International Relations
Program
5:30 pm
LVCC-S224
ALA
COL/OITP Joint Telecom
Meeting
5:30 pm
LVCC-N115
ALA-APA
Salaries & Status of Library
Workers
5:30 pm
LVCC-N215
ALCTS
LMPI
5:30 pm
LVCC-N202
Collection Management and
Development Research Forum
5:30 pm
LVCC-N237
AASL
AASL/ALSC/YALSA School/
Public Library Cooperation
5:30 pm
LVCC-N216
ALCTS_
CMS
5:30 pm
LVCC-S228
What We Need Around
Here is a Little More Chaos:
Embracing Disorganization
and Discruption
5:30 pm
LVCC-S222
ALCTS_
PARS
PARS Forum
AASL
*ALSC
2015 Geisel Award Committee
Meeting III
6:00 pm
CAP-Livorno
Philosophical, Religious, and
Theological Studies Discussion
Group Meeting
5:30 pm
*ALSC
2015 Batchelder Award
Committee Meeting II
6:00 pm
CAP-Siena
ASCLA
5:30 pm
LVCC-N101
*ACRL
Liaisons Coordinating
Committee Meeting, Part II
5:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 4
Consortium Management
Discussion Special Interest
Group
ACRL
Liaisons Training and
Development Committee
Meeting, Part II (part of
Liaisons Coordinating
Component Committee
Meeting)
5:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 4
ASCLA
All-Committee Meeting
5:30 pm
CAP-Neopolitan
IV
GODORT
International Documents Task
Force Meeting
5:30 pm
CAP-Messina
LEARNRT
Down and Dirty Quick and
Brilliant Training Ideas
5:30 pm
LVCC-N231/233
ACRL
Digital Humanities Interest
Group
5:30 pm
LVCC-N263
LITA
5:30 pm
LVCC-N243
ACRL
Balancing Baby and Book
Discussion Group Meeting
5:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 1
Focusing on the Big Picture:
Re-imagining the Library
Website
Liaisons Grants Committee
Meeting, Part II (part of
Liaisons Coordinating
Component Committee
Meeting)
5:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 4
LLAMA_
PRMS
John Cotton Dana Library
Public Relations Awards
6:00 pm
ACRL
BALLY-Skyview
5&6
MAGIRT
MAGIRT Exec Board &
Membership Meeting B
5:30 pm
LVCC-N212
Publications Committee II
5:30 pm
LVCC-N210
ACRL
Student Learning and
Information Literacy
Coordinating Committee
Meeting II, Part II
5:30 pm
*RUSA_
MARS
UNO
OCLC WorldShare ILL and
ILLiad Users Group
6:00 pm
CAP-Milano
II & III
UNO
TBD3
5:30 pm
LVCC-N235
ACRL_
ANSS
Anthropology Librarians
Discussion Group
5:30 pm
ACRL_
ARTS
Dance Librarians Discussion
Group
5:30 pm
LVCC-N234
ACRL_
RBMS
Leab Awards & RBMS
Information Exchange II
5:30 pm
LVCC-N111
ACRL_
STS
STS Unconference II
5:30 pm
BALLY-Skyview
3
ACRL
sunday daily schedule
Draft revised Standards for
Accreditation of LIS Master’s
Programs
LVCC-N249
4:00 pm Start Time
LVCC-N204
BALLY-Director’s
Room
LVCC-N201
ACRL_
ULS
Public Service Directors of
Large Research Libraries
Discussion Group (ACRL ULS)
6:30 pm
BALLY-Bronze 4
ACRL_
WESS
Scandinavian Discussion Group
5:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 2
AFL-AILA
American Indian Youth
Literature Awards
5:30 pm
FLAM-Laughlin
III
Camels were used as pack animals in
Nevada as late as 1870.
146
ALA
UNO
PCC Participants Meeting
5:30 pm
LVCC-S230
YALSA
Board of Directors Meeting II
5:30 pm
LVCC-N223
YALSA
We F’ed Up, But We Fixed
It: Thriving When Things Go
Wrong
5:30 pm
LVCC-S223
5:00 pm Start Time
LEARNRT
LearnRT Happy Hour
7:00 pm
OS-Off Site
RUSA
RUSA Awards Reception and
Volunteer Appreciation Party
6:30 pm
CAP-Florentine
II-IV
5:30 pm Start Time
*ALA
ALA Awards/President’s
Reception
7:00 pm
LVCC-N263C
ALSC
2014 Newbery-Caldecott
Awards Banquet
11:00 pm
PARIS-Paris
Ballroom
LITA
LITA Happy Hour
8:00 pm
OS-Off Site
UNITED
The Laugh’s On Us! Sponsored
by Sage (Ticketed event)
7:30 pm
PARIS-Versailles
Ballroom
UNO
ALISE Cooperative Library and
Information Studies Alumni
Reunion
7:30 pm
LVH-Ballroom A
UNO
Indiana University Alumni
Reception
7:30 pm
CAP-Neopolitan
II
* Closed meeting
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
6:00 pm Start Time
*UNO
GLBTRT
Social
8:00 pm
OS-Off Site
UNO
Midwest Library Service
Reception
8:00 pm
CAP-Milano I
UNO
UIUC GSLIS LSAA Annual
Board Meeting and Alumni
Reception
8:00 pm
BALLY-Skyview
2
6:30 pm Start Time
My Librarian: Personalization
and The Future of Reader
Services
10:30 am
LVCC-N237
8:30 am Start Time
ACRL
Crash Course in Evaluation
Research
10:00 am
LVCC-N111
*ACRL
ACRL 2015 Panel Sessions
Committee
11:30 am
LVCC-N223
ACRL
Executive Committee Meeting
II
10:00 am
LVCC-N203
LLAMA
LLAMA Happy Hour!
7:30 pm
OS-Off Site
NMRT
Student Reception
7:30 pm
LVH-Ballroom G
ACRL
ACRL 2015 Component
Committees Meeting, Part I
10:00 am
LVCC-N113
10:00 pm
BALLY-Bronze 3
*ACRL
ACRL 2015 Preconference
Committee
11:30 am
LVCC-N224
*ACRL
ACRL 2015 Contributed Paper
Committees
11:30 am
LVCC-N222
ACRL
Undergraduate Librarians
Discussion Group
10:00 am
BALLY-Bronze 4
7:00 pm Start Time
AFLBCALA
BCALA Membership Meeting
& Literary Awards
7:30 pm Start Time
NMRT
Awards Reception
8:30 pm
LVH-Ballroom G
10:00 pm
CAP-Trevi
*ACRL
ACRL 2015 Workshops
Committee
11:30 am
LVCC-N225
10:00 pm
LVH-Ballroom F
ACRL_
ANSS
Executive Committee Meeting
II
10:00 am
LVCC-N217
ACRL_
EBSS
Executive Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N221
ACRL_
LES
Membership Committee
Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N219
ACRL_
LES
Publications Committee
Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N219
ACRL_
LES
Nominating 2015 Committee
Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N219
8:00 pm Start Time
SRRT
Feminists’ Night at the Movies
8:30 pm Start Time
ALACOUNCIL
ALA Council Forum I
Monday, June 30
7:00 am Start Time
*ALACOUNCIL
ALA Prompt Book Meeting II
8:00 am
LVH-Barbara
Stripling Suite
7:30 am Start Time
ISS Meeting
9:00 am
LVCC-N102
AASL_
SPVS
SPVS Meeting
9:00 am
LVCC-N115
ACRL_
LES
Planning Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N219
UNO
Fellowship of Christian
Librarians and Information
Specialists
9:30 am
LVCC-N213
ACRL_
LES
Virtual Participation
Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N219
ACRL_
LES
Conference Program
Planning—San Francisco, 2015
Committee
10:00 am
LVCC-N219
ACRL_
LES
All-Committees Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N219
ACRL_
RBMS
Executive Committee I
10:00 am
LVCC-N119
ACRL_
WESS
General Membership
Discussion Group
10:00 am
LVCC-N117
ACRL_
WGSS
Digital Humanities and
Academic Libraries: Practice
and Theory, Power and
Privilege
10:00 am
LVCC-N252
ACRL,
ACRL_
STS
Sticking with STEM: How the
Academic Library Can Help to
Retain Successful Students
10:00 am
LVCC-S220
CALA Board Meeting
10:00 am
FLAM-Red
Rock III
8:00 am Start Time
ACRL
Budget & Finance
Commmittee Meeting II
11:30 am
BALLY-Bronze
3-4
AFL-RE
FORMA
REFORMA National
Conference All Committees
Meeting
9:30 am
LVH-Pavilion 09
ALA
Conversation Starter: Where
Does My Money Come From
and How Can I Get More?
8:45 am
LVCC-N239/241
*ALA
The ALA “Kitchen Table”
Conversations
5:00 pm
LVH-Executive
Boardroom
ALA
Now Showing @ ALA: The
Speaker
10:00 am
LVCC-N242
ALSC
2014 ALSC Awards
Presentation
10:30 am
LVCC-N255/257
ASCLA
Facility Tour of Summit View
Juvenile Correctional Center
Library
12:30 pm
OS-Off Site
*AFLCALA
ALA
Legislation Assembly
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 04
ERT
ERT Membership Meeting
9:00 am
LVCC-N116
ALA
10:00 am
LVCC-N231/233
LEARNRT
Executive Board Meeting II
(LearnRT)
10:00 am
LVCC-N209
RUSA,
RUSA_
BRASS
Mad Men: The Business of
Advertising
10:00 am
LVCC-S230
Jean E. Coleman Memorial
Outreach Lecture: Equality…
Equity…Diversity: Libraries,
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and
the Mission
ALA
Committee on Professional
Ethics II
10:00 am
LVCC-N234
LVCC: Las Vegas Convention Center
BALLY: Bally’s Las Vegas
CAP: Caesars Palace Las Vegas
FLAM: Flamingo Las Vegas
LVH: Las Vegas Hotel
PARIS: Paris Las Vegas
daily schedule monday
AASL_ISS
For more detailed hotel information
see page 43.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
147
monday daily schedule
ALA
Information Manipulation Part
Ii: Surveillance
10:00 am
LVCC-N243
ALA
OITP Advisory Committee
Meeting II
10:00 am
LVH-Ballroom G
ALACOUNCIL
ALA Council II
11:30 am
LVH-Paradise
North
ALA
Conversation Starter:
TumblarianTalk
10:00 am
LVCC-N239/241
10:00 am Start Time
*AFL-ARL
ARL Liaison Supervisor Group
12:00 pm
LVCC-N260
General Membership Meeting
12:00 pm
LVCC-N235
ALCTS
Publisher/Vendor/Library
Relations Interest Group
10:00 am
LVCC-N263
AFL-RE
FORMA
ALCTS_
CMMS
Committee on Cataloging:
Description and Access II
11:30 am
LVH-Pavilion 01
PLA
Performance Measurement
Task Force Meeting
4:00 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 01 & 02
ALCTS_
CMMS
SAC Subcommittee on Genre/
Form Implementation II
10:00 am
LVCC-N215
RMRT
2:00 pm
ALCTS_
CMMS
Heads of Cataloging Interest
Group
10:00 am
LVCC-N256
Discover the Osher Lifelong
Learning Institute: Where
Mature Minds Bloom
OS-OLLI
Institute, Univ of
Nevada, Room
133
ALCTS_
PARS
All Committee and Executive
Committee Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm C
GODORT
Legislation Committee
Meeting III
10:00 am
LVCC-N216
IFRT
Intellectual Freedom Round
Table II
10:00 am
LVCC-N201
IRRT
The Many Facets of
Volunteerism—ISLD Program
10:00 am
LVCC-N264
LIRT
Steering Committee Meeting
II (LIRT)
10:00 am
LVCC-N109
LITA
The Library Technology
Prototyping Service at Illinois:
Products and Initiatives
10:00 am
LVCC-N232
LLAMA
Dialogue with directors discussion group
10:00 am
LLAMA_
BES
The New Central: Reimagining
the Future of Flagship
Libraries
LLAMA_
MAES
10:30 am Start Time
AASL
Learning4Life Coordinators
Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N202
ACRL
Are You Taking a Gamble on
Your Academic Library Career
by Having a Baby (or Two)?
11:30 am
LVCC-N258
ACRL
Virtual Reference with JoinMe
11:30 am
LVCC-S220
ACRL
ACRL 2015 Component
Committees Meeting, Part II
11:30 am
LVCC-N113
*ACRL_
LES
Executive Committee
Meeting II
11:30 am
LVCC-N216
ACRL_
RBMS
Executive Committee II
11:30 am
LVCC-N119
LVCC-N210
ACRL_
STS
STS Program Poster Session
11:30 am
LVH-Pavilion 06
10:00 am
LVCC-S219
ACRL_
WESS
Executive Committee
11:30 am
LVCC-N215
ALA
LVCC-N243
10:00 am
LVH-Pavilion 11
Who Uses Libraries and Who
Doesn’t: A Special Typology
11:30 am
Say-it-in-Six Lightning Rounds:
Case Studies on Using Data to
Improve Library Services
ALA
Let’s talk comics: A roundtable
discussion
11:30 am
LVCC-N263
*PLA
Past Presidents Breakfast (PLA)
10:00 am
CAP-Siena
ALA
LVCC-N239/241
RUSA Access to Information
Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N214
RUSA_HS
Executive Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N211
Conversation Starter:
Convincing the DecisionMakers: Turning Skeptics into
Champions
11:15 am
RUSA
RUSA_
MARS
Executive Committee Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N202
ALA
11:30 am
LVCC-N111
RUSA_
RSS
Reference Trends & Issues II
10:00 am
LVCC-N120
Singapore Libraries-Trend
Setters in Community
Engagement and
Collaboration
ALA
LVCC-N242
Board Meeting
10:00 am
LVCC-N204
Now Showing @ ALA: Man
on Wire
12:00 pm
RUSA_
STARS
ALA
LVCC-S219
United for Libraries President’s
Program with Author and High
Wire Artist Philippe Petit
9:30 am
LVCC-N249
Discovery: The New Name for
Reader’s Advisory?
11:30 am
UNITED
UNO
OCLC CONTENTdm Users
Group Meeting
10:00 am
LVH-Ballroom E
VRT
Membership and Executive
Board Meeting
12:30 pm
LVCC-N212
YALSA
Care and Feeding of Teen
Volunteers
10:00 am
LVCC-N259/261
YALSA
Best Fiction for Young Adults
5:30 pm
LVCC-N205-208
9:00 am Start Time
AASL
AASL
148
9:15 am Start Time
Knowledge Quest Editorial
Board Meeting
All Committee Meeting
11:00 am
10:30 am
BALLY-Palace 4
LVCC-Exhibit
Hall, Mtg Rm B
ALA
Recruitment Assembly
11:30 am
LVCC-N203
ALCTS
The Quiet Strengths of
Introverts: ALCTS President’s
Program with Jennifer
Kahnweiler
11:45 am
LVCC-N249
ALCTS_
CMMS
Policy and Planning
Committee
11:30 am
LVCC-N209
ALSC
2014 ALSC Membership
Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N252
GLBTRT
Stonewall Book Awards Brunch
2:00 pm
PARISChampagne 1
LVCC-N116
GODORT
Membership Meeting
11:30 am
LEARNRT
Best Practices in Training
11:30 am
LVCC-N264
LIRT
Executive Board Meeting II
11:30 am
LVCC-N109
* Closed meeting
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
LITA
Rebranding the Library:
Generating Visibility in the
Virtual Age
11:30 am
LVCC-N262
LLAMA
LLAMA Kitchen Table
Conversation: What do you
want from LLAMA?
11:30 am
LVCC-N201
PLA
Leaning Your Library’s
Materials Handling Workflows
11:30 am
LVCC-N231/233
PLA
The HIP Film Fest: How to
Plan, Partner and Execute!
11:30 am
LVCC-N256
RUSA
Labor Solidarity in a “Right-toWork” State
11:30 am
LVCC-N236
RUSA
Conference Program
Coordinating Committee
Meeting
11:30 am
LVCC-N210
RUSA_
BRASS
New Committee Chair
Orientation Meeting
11:30 am
RUSA_
CODES
CODES Executive Committee
Meeting
RUSA_
MARS
ALA
Ignite Monday Session:
Everyone Lives in the Greatest
Place on Earth: Librarian
as Local Area Guide and
Advocate
12:00 pm
LVCC-N239/241
2:00 pm
LVCC-N219
12:00 pm Start Time
*UNO
Springer Innovations for
Academic Libraries Lunch and
Learn Session
1:00 pm Start Time
AASL
Teach Me SUCCESS: Teaching
Success and Strong Character
through Characters Kids Love
2:30 pm
LVCC-N231/233
AASL
Play, Play, Learn: Games and
the Common Core Library
2:30 pm
LVCC-N243
LVCC-N211
ACRL
Board of Directors Meeting II
4:00 pm
BALLY-Bronze
3-4
11:30 am
LVCC-N238
ACRL
2:30 pm
LVCC-N258
Joint Executive Committee
(RUSA MARS/RSS)
11:30 am
LVCC-N102
Get Writing! Overcome
Procrastination, Remove
Roadblocks and Create a Map
for Success
RUSA_
RSS
State of Reference Education:
What We Have Learned And
What Would You Like To Find
Out?
11:30 am
LVCC-N263C
ACRL_
RBMS
Bibliographic Standards
Committee—DCRM/RDA
Revision Group IV, Part 1
2:30 pm
LVCC-N216
RUSA Chairs Orientation
(RUSA_STARS, RUSA_RSS,
RUSA_MARS, RUSA_HS,
RUSA_CODES, RUSA_BRASS)
11:30 am
LVCC-N115
AFL-RE
FORMA
Executive Committee Meeting
II (REFORMA)
3:00 pm
RUSA
LVH-Conference
Room 03
ALA
HRDR Advisory Committee
2:30 pm
LVCC-N204
UNITED
Annual Conference Program
Committee
12:00 pm
LVCC-N217
UNO
OCLC Research Update
11:30 am
LVH-Pavilion 10
YALSA
Energizing Teen Creativity by
Letting Go
11:30 am
LVCC-N259/261
YALSA
Deciding What’s Next for
YALSA
11:30 am
LVCC-N112
YALSA
Teen Spaces 201: What’s Next
for Teen Spaces in Libraries
11:30 am
LVCC-N253
Speaking about The Speaker
2:30 pm
LVCC-N253
COL Business Meeting III
2:30 pm
LVCC-N203
ALA
ALA Award Committee
2:30 pm
LVCC-N202
ALA
Chapter Relations
Committee II
2:30 pm
LVCC-N201
ALA
International Relations
Committee II
2:30 pm
LVCC-N215
ALA
Leaning International…Recipes
from the field
2:30 pm
LVCC-N263
ALA
Public and Cultural Programs
Advisory Committee Meeting
II (PCPAC)
2:30 pm
LVCC-N211
ALA-EC
Executive Board Meeting II
(ALA)
4:30 pm
LVH-Ballroom D
11:00 am Start Time
ASCLA
Board of Directors Meeting II
1:30 pm
LVCC-N234
11:30 am Start Time
AASL
Board of Directors Meeting III
2:00 pm
LVCC-N101
ALCTS
Program Committee
4:00 pm
LVCC-N209
*ALA
Schneider Family Book Award
Luncheon
1:00 pm
LVCC-N204
ALCTS
Technical Services Workflow
Efficiency Interest Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N240
ALA
Ignite Monday Session: The
Learning Theater: Radical
Space Design in an Urban
Academic Library
12:00 pm
LVCC-N239/241
ALA
Ignite Monday Session:
Campus Collaborations!
12:00 pm
LVCC-N239/241
ALA
Ignite Monday Session: What’s
Popping Up?
12:00 pm
LVCC-N239/241
ALA
Ignite Monday Session:
Blurring the Lines of Books
12:00 pm
LVCC-N239/241
ALA
Ignite Monday Session: Soon
to be Famous Illinois Author
Needs to Cross State Lines
12:00 pm
LVCC-N239/241
LVCC: Las Vegas Convention Center
BALLY: Bally’s Las Vegas
CAP: Caesars Palace Las Vegas
FLAM: Flamingo Las Vegas
ALCTS
Board of Directors
5:30 pm
LVCC-N117
ALCTS
Creating Sustainable AV
Preservation in Academic
Libraries
2:30 pm
LVCC-N252
ALCTS_
CMMS
Subject Analysis Committee II
5:30 pm
LVH-Pavilion 01
ALCTS_
CMS
Collection Management in
Public Libraries Interest Group
2:30 pm
LVCC-N102
ALCTS_
CRS
Continuing Resources
Cataloging Forum
2:30 pm
LVCC-N256
ALCTS_
CRS
Articles on Demand: Library
Perspectives
2:30 pm
LVCC-N262
ALSC
2015 Notable Children’s Books
Committee Meeting IV
4:00 pm
LVCC-N114
LVH: Las Vegas Hotel
PARIS: Paris Las Vegas
daily schedule monday
ALA
ALA
For more detailed hotel information
see page 43.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
149
ALSC
ALSC Charlemae Rollins
President’s Program—The
Ripple Effect: Library
Partnerships that Positively
Impact Children, Families,
Communities, and Beyond
2:30 pm
Tribes and Scribes: A Double
Feature Highlighting Native
American and WPA Historical
Research
2:30 pm
Disaster Preparedness in the
21st Century: Preserving
Library Collections and
Services
2:30 pm
LLAMA
LLAMA Board of Directors
Meeting II
3:00 pm
LVCC-N237
LLAMA_
BES
Top Library Building Trends
2:30 pm
LVCC-N259/261
LLAMA_
LOMS
Looking Clearly into the
Crystal Ball: Using Innovative
Assessment Strategies to
Predict the Future Needs of
Users in Academic Libraries
2:30 pm
LVCC-S219
LRRT
Library Research Round Table
Committee Meeting
2:30 pm
LVCC-N210
RUSA
Board of Directors Meeting II
4:00 pm
LVCC-N238
*UNO
American Psychological
Association Lunch and Learn
2:30 pm
GODORT
LITA
LVCC-N254
LVCC-N232
LVCC-N264
4:00 pm
LVCC-N223
4:00 pm
LVCC-N253
5:30 pm
LVCC-N256
3:30 pm Start Time
4:00 pm Start Time
ALA
Conversation Starter: What I
Really Want to Do is Direct:
First-Time Library Directors
Discuss Their Experiences.
4:45 pm
LVCC-N239/241
ALACOUNCIL
Chapter Councilors Forum
5:30 pm
LVH-Pavilion 04
4:30 pm Start Time
Executive Committee Meeting
5:30 pm
BALLY-Palace 4
*ALA
ALA Nominating Committee
Meeting
5:30 pm
LVH-Conference
Room 03
LVCC-N110
ASCLA
ASCLA Youth Services
Consultants Interest Group
5:30 pm
LVCC-N215
RUSA_
BRASS
Executive Committee Meeting
5:30 pm
LVCC-N101
YALSA
Executive II
5:30 pm
LVCC-N223
7:00 pm
LVH-Ballroom G
8:00 pm
OS-Off Site
9:00 pm
BALLY-Bronze 2
10:00 pm
LVH-Ballroom F
LVCC-N235
YALSA
LVCC-N255/257
5:30 pm Start Time
Conversation Starter: We
Make Everyday: How you’re
(most likely) already doing the
makerspace thing
2:15 pm
Board of Directors
4:30 pm
LVCC-N217
LVCC-N239/241
ALA
The Library Games
6:00 pm Start Time
IRRT
AASL
Executive Committee
Meeting II
4:00 pm
LVCC-N212
UNITED
Gala Author Tea Sponsored by
ReferenceUSA (Ticketed event)
4:00 pm
LVH-Pavilion 02
& 03
2:45 pm Start Time
3:30 pm
International Librarians
Reception
7:00 pm Start Time
2:00 pm Start Time
LVCC-N239/241
ACRL_
STS
Council II
8:30 pm Start Time
ALACOUNCIL
ALA Council Forum II
Tuesday, July 1
6:30 am Start Time
3:00 pm Start Time
Teaching Digital Citizenship to
Youth with Autism Spectrum
Disorders
4:00 pm
ACRL_
RBMS
Bibliographic Standards
Committee—DCRM/RDA
Revision Group IV, Part 2
4:00 pm
LVCC-N216
ALA
Annual Library Camp
4:00 pm
LVCC-N258
ALA
COL Business Meeting III
4:00 pm
LVCC-N203
ALA
Intellectual Freedom
Committee V
4:00 pm
LVCC-N120
LVCC-N231/233
*ALACOUNCIL
 Happy Canada Day!
ALA Prompt Book Meeting III
7:15 am
LVH-Barbara
Stripling Suite
9:15 am
LVH-Paradise
North
11:00 am
LVCC-N249
1:30 pm
LVH-Ballroom A
4:30 pm
LVH-Ballroom D
5:30 pm
LVH-Ballroom E
7:45 am Start Time
ALACOUNCIL
ALA Council III
9:30 am Start Time
ALA
Closing General Session
featuring B.J. Novak
11:00 am Start Time
ALA
Inaugural Brunch
1:00 pm Start Time
ALA-EC
O Canada! Celebrate with your fellow
librarians from the Great White North the
confederation of Canada in 1867.
150
2014 Odyssey Award
Ceremony
ACRL_
STS
1:30 pm Start Time
Tuesday daily schedule
Board of Directors Meeting III
Stranger than Fiction: Reader’s
Advisory for Nonfiction
LVCC-N216
2:30 pm
AASL
YALSA
YALSA
5:30 pm
3:30 pm
Conversation Starter: Data for
Librarians
LVCC-N215
LVCC-N201
Bibliographic Standards
Committee—DCRM/RDA
Revision Group IV, Part 3
EBSCO Panel
ALA
4:00 pm
4:00 pm
ACRL_
RBMS
YALSA’s President’s Program
and Membership Meeting
LITA
Budget Meeting II
Steering Committee Meeting II
ALSC
UNO
ALA
ALSC
GODORT
Executive Board Meeting III
1:00 pm Start Time
ALSC
Board of Directors Meeting II
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
APA JOURNALS®
Publishing on the Forefront of Psychology
New to the APA Journals Program
Launching in 2015
BEHAVIOR
ANALYSIS:
RESEARCH AND PRACTICE
www.apa.org/pubs/journals/bar
Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
in Psychology
Quarterly • ISSN 2332-2101
www.apa.org/pubs/journals/stl
Translational Issues in Psychological Science
Co-sponsored by the American Psychological Association and APAGS
(the American Psychological Association of Graduate Students)
Quarterly • ISSN 2332-2136
Behavior Analysis: Research and Practice
Quarterly • eISSN 2372-9414
www.apa.org/pubs/journals/bar
Motivation Science
An Official Journal of the Society for the Study of Motivation
Quarterly • ISSN 2333-8113
www.apa.org/pubs/journals/mot
www.apa.org/pubs/journals/tps
New Additions in 2014
American Journal of Orthopsychiatry
An Official Journal of the American Orthopsychiatric Association
www.apa.org/pubs/journals/ort
Psychology of Sexual Orientation
and Gender Diversity
Decision
An Official Journal of the Society for Psychological
Study of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Issues
(APA Division 44)
www.apa.org/pubs/journals/dec
www.apa.org/pubs/journals/sgd
Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences
Qualitative Psychology
www.apa.org/pubs/journals/ebs
www.apa.org/pubs/journals/qua
Journal of Threat Assessment and Management
Spirituality in Clinical Practice
Psychology of Consciousness:
Theory, Research, and Practice
Traumatology: An International Journal
The Official Journal of the NorthEastern Evolutionary
Psychology Society
www.apa.org/pubs/journals/tam
www.apa.org/pubs/journals/cns
The Official Journal of the Society for Qualitative Inquiry
in Psychology (a Section of APA Division 5)
www.apa.org/pubs/journals/scp
The Official Journal of the Green Cross Academy of Traumatology
www.apa.org/pubs/journals/trm
VISIT BOOTH 763 TO OBTAIN FREE SAMPLE
ISSUES OF APA JOURNALS ON DISPLAY.
Visit www.apa.org/pubs/journals for complete information. All articles published in all
APA journals are available electronically as part of APA’s full-text article database, PsycARTICLES®.
Candlewick Press
Meet our authors and illustrators in booth 602!
SUNDAY, JUNE 29
SATURDAY, JUNE 28
PHOTO BY DENISE ROCCO-ZILBER
PHOTO BY CATHERINE SMITH
9:00–10:30 AM
KATE DICAMILLO
AND K. G. CAMPBELL
Signing 2014 Newbery Medal Winner
Flora & Ulysses: The Illuminated Adventures
PHOTO BY MAX KNIGHT
11:30 AM –12:30 PM
SALLY GARDNER
Signing 2014 Printz Honor Book
Maggot Moon
12:30–1:30 PM
SUSANN COKAL
Signing 2014 Printz Honor Book
The Kingdom of Little Wounds
PHOTO BY CATHERINE SMITH
KATE DICAMILLO
AND K. G. CAMPBELL
Signing 2014 Newbery Medal Winner
Flora & Ulysses: The Illuminated Adventures
PHOTO BY HOWARD WELLS III
MEG MEDINA
Signing 2014 Pura Belpré Author
Award Winner Yaqui Delgado Wants to
Kick Your Ass
3:00–4:00 PM
STEPHAN PASTIS
Signing advance reading copies of
Timmy Failure: We Meet Again
4:00–5:00 PM
MELISSA SWEET
Signing Firefly July: A Year of
Very Short Poems
SUNDAY, JUNE 29
9:00–10:00 AM
ROSEMARY WELLS
Signing Stella’s Starliner
PHOTO BY DARCI PALMQUIST
10:00–11:00 AM
AARON BECKER
Signing 2014 Caldecott Honor
Book Journey
PHOTO BY SONYA SONES
PHOTO BY SONYA SONES
Signing advance materials of
Sam & Dave Dig a Hole
1:00–2:00 PM
e. E. CHARLTON-TRUJILLO
Signing 2014 Stonewall Book
Award Winner Fat Angie
2:00–3:00 PM
JON KLASSEN
Signing 2013 Caldecott Medal
Winner This Is Not My Hat
3:00–4:00 PM
1:30–3:00 PM
MAC BARNETT AND
JON KLASSEN
JOHN ROCCO
Signing Swim That Rock
12:00 NOON –1:00 PM
PHOTO BY AUTUMN LÉ BRANNON
10:30–11:30 AM
11:00 AM–12:00 NOON
MAC BARNETT
Signing President Taft Is Stuck
in the Bath
4:00–5:00 PM
ANNETTE LEBLANC-CATE
Signing 2014 Sibert Honor Book
Look Up!
MONDAY, JUNE 30
9:00–10:00 AM
FRANK CAMMUSO
Signing 2014 Eisner Award Nominee
Otto’s Backwards Day
10:00–11:00 AM
PAUL FLEISCHMAN
Signing advanced reading copies of
Eyes Wide Open
Learn more about Candlewick’s books at
www.candlewick.com
INTUITIVE + ELEGANT
Introducing the all-new 3MTM Cloud Library app
Audiobooks
First-time user hints
for more ways to enjoy reading.
for hands-off help.
Fewer clicks
Favorite categories
for a faster way to get things done.
for better browsing.
FREE BOOK* WITH DEMO
STOP BY 3M BOOTH #753
www.3m.com/cloud
3MTM SELFCHECKTM QUICKCONNECT INTERFACE
Give your patrons over
**
reasons to
keep reading.
FREE BOOK* WITH DEMO AT 3M BOOTH #753
Recommendations
powered by:
*One book per person. While supplies last.
**Recommended Read impressions based on one million SelfCheck events at two recommendations per book.
3M system for providing recommendations based on the library catalog through 3M SelfCheck Systems is patent pending.
© 3M 2014. All rights reserved. 3M and SelfCheck are trademarks of 3M. Used under license in Canada. NoveList is a registered trademark of EBSCO Industries, Inc.
exhibition
www.3m.com/quickconnect
OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Illuminating the Research World
Visit our booth #1135 to learn
more about our latest products,
attend one of our product demos,
or play our Oxford Scratch off
Ticket for a chance to win a free
trial to any of our online products,
a copy of Game Theory: A Very
Short Introduction, or an iPad2!
FRIDAY
Join us on Friday for a special reception celebrating the new journals available in
the Oxford Journals Collection with our special guest speaker Alison Denby, OUP
Editorial Director. While you’re there, feel free to take part in the wine and light
hors d’oeuvres we’ll be serving, and remember to enter our raffle for a chance to
win a Kindle Fire HD!
Demo en Español – Sábado, 28 de Junio a las 3:00 PM
Visite nuestro exhibidor para ver una presentación de los productos en línea de
Oxford que son relevantes para las instituciones en Latinoamérica. Además, le
enseñaremos las herramientas y los recursos que se encuentran disponibles para
ayudarle a promover estos productos. Serviremos galletas, brownies, papitas y
bebidas.
Common Core product Demo—Sunday, June 29 at 3:00 PM
Stop by to learn which Oxford online products can be used to reach Common
Core curriculum goals. Drinks, pita chips, cookies, and brownies will be served.
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
9:30
Oxford Reference
Oxford Islamic
Studies Online
10:00
University Press
Scholarship Online
10:30
Oxford Bibliographies
11:00
Grove Art Online, Benezit
Dictionary of Artists, and Berg
Fashion Library
11:30
Oxford Handbooks Online
Sign up for a
one-on-one demo
Oxford Reference
Sign up for a one-on-one demo
2:30
DEMO EN ESPAÑOL
3:00
4:00
Sign up for a one-on-one demo
4:30
5:30
BOOTH #1135
Opening Night Reception—Friday, June 27 at 5:30 PM
2:00
exhibition
VISIT
OPENING NIGHT
RECEPTION
1
global.oup.com/academic/ala2014
University Press
Scholarship Online
COMMON CORE DEMO
Oxford Handbooks Online
Oxford Bibliographies
MONDAY
Sign up for
a one-onone demo
Order through www.igi-global.com and Receive a 20% Discount
with Free Standard Shipping on Select Encyclopedias**
Institutions Receive Free Lifetime Online eAccess with Print Purchase*
Encyclopedia of Information Science
and Technology, Third Edition (10 Vols.)
Mehdi Khosrow-Pour, D.B.A. (Information Resources Management Association, USA)
ISBN: 978-1-4666-5888-2; EISBN: 978-1-4666-5889-9; © 2015; 5,000 pages.
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Highlights
Welcome to the ALA Exhibits!
With more to see and do, the ALA exhibit hall provides you with the opportunity to see the
latest in products, services, titles, authors, and technologies. Set aside plenty of time to
meet with exhibitors, get the latest books autographed, and hear from over 100 authors
and illustrators on the live stages in the hall. In addition to specialty pavilions and theme
exhibit areas, the range of exhibitors will give you an insight into the hottest products for your
library. There are plenty of hands-on opportunities for you to extend the learning experiences
started in the conference sessions. Detailed schedules and locations are outlined on the
following pages, but be sure to look for updates in your daily edition of Cognotes and on the
official Conference Scheduler at ala14.ala.org/scheduler.
Exhibit Hours
Friday, June 27 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
Exhibits Opening Reception
Saturday, June 28 9:00 am – 5:00 pm
Sunday, June 29
9:00 am – 5:00 pm
Monday, June 30
9:00 am – 2:00 pm
Wrap Up/Rev Up
Celebrate the Wrap Up of Annual Conference and Rev Up for Midwinter on the exhibit floor on Monday.
Take advantage of exhibitor discounts and deals waiting for you throughout the last day of exhibits.
Don’t forget to participate in the ALA drawings held at the Book Buzz Theater (behind booth 2245) at
12:30, 1:00, and 1:30 pm. We will be giving away tech devices, conference registrations, and more! Get
your badge scanned at the stage starting at 12:00 pm.
highlights & Wrap up/Rev up
Monday, June 30
LVCC
Gambling was illegal in Las Vegas from 1910
until 1931 when the Nevada Legislature
approved legalized gambling bill.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
155
Book Buzz Theater
Your favorite publishers entertain and inform you about their hottest new titles, including fiction
and nonfiction for young readers and adults alike, from manga to the Common Core! Visit the
participating publishers in their booths on the Exhibit Floor to see the full range of their new and
most popular titles and to continue the conversations.
LVCC-Exhibit Floor Hall N3 behind Booth 2245
Saturday, June 28
9:30 am – 10:00 am
Random House: Diaries, Patchworks, Pushcarts and
more…
10:15 am – 10:45 am
Lerner Publishing Group’s Hottest Fall 2014 Titles!
11:00 am – 11:30 am
National Geographic Books
11:45 am – 12:00 pm
Hachette Book Group’s Fall Book Buzz
1:00 pm – 1:30 pmBloomsbury Children’s Books and Macmillan
Children’s Publishing Group Fall 2014 Book Buzz
1:45 pm – 2:15 pm
2:30 pm – 3:00 pmAbrams/Amulet Book Buzz: Get to Know Our MiddleGrade Authors!
3:30 pm – 3:45 pm
New Holiday House Books and the Common Core
4:00 pm – 4:30 pm
Penguin’s Book Buzz Casino
Buzz into Fall with Scholastic!
Sunday, June 29
9:30 am – 10:00 amDouble Down with Sterling. What’s new with Sterling
Adult & Children’s Books
10:15 am – 10:30 am
Disney-Hyperion Fall Preview
Book Buzz theater
11:00 am – 11:30 amCharlesbridge—Early Ears: Choosing the Best Books
for Early Childhood Patrons
156
11:45 am – 12:00 pmThe Future According to Tor: New Titles for Young
Readers and Teens
1:00 pm – 1:30 pmUnruly unicorns, high-stakes football games and a car
crash—What’s happening at Blink and Zonderkidz?
1:45 pm – 2:15 pmHit the Jackpot with the HarperCollins Adult Library
Marketing Team!
2:30 pm – 3:00 pmViz Media and Kodansha Comics: Manga Highlights
from the Davids
3:30 pm – 4:00 pmMoving the Needle: Lee & Low Books on Diversity in
Children’s Books and How to Move Forward
Monday, June 30
9:30 am – 10:00 am
Simon & Schuster Fall 2014 Book Buzz
10:30 am – 10:45 am
DK Publishing 2014: What’s New in Nonfiction
11:00 am – 11:30 am
Open Road Integrated Media Book Buzz
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Specialty Pavilions
Specialty Pavilions in the Exhibit Hall
The ALA Exhibition showcases the latest publications, products, services, and technologies for libraries. Many will be featured in special
showcase pavilions offering an in-depth look at what’s new and innovative in various library-related specialties. The Pavilions are open
throughout exhibit hours, including the opening reception on Friday evening. Specialty Pavilions include:
Artist Alley
Mobile Applications Pavilion
Middle of 2100 Aisle
The place to meet many of today’s leading artists, illustrators, and creators
of comics, games, graphic novels, and books for young readers and adults
alike, and enjoy original artwork.
Booth 1568
If you need “an app for that,” you’ll find the latest mobile apps and technology to manage your library, improve service to patrons, and help readers
of all ages.
DVD/Video Pavilion
Small Press/Product Area
End of 1200 Aisle
Showcasing recorded materials for every type of library.
Middle of 1900 & 2000 Aisles, and back of 1500 Aisle
New and independent presses often launch their newest titles in this pavilion, which also serves as a jumping off point where new vendors introduce
themselves to the library community.
Gaming/Graphic Novel Pavilion
Front of 2000 Aisle
A fun area linking suppliers of educational and recreational games and
graphic novels with librarians and industry professionals looking to
implement related programs and materials. Many libraries have reported
increased use after implementing gaming programs.
Technology/Library 2.0 Pavilion
Government Information Pavilion
University Press Pavilion
Front of 1500 Aisle
The latest information from featured government agencies.
Front of 1400 Aisle
Offering a wide variety of academic and trade titles in print and digital formats, and database products.
International Pavilion
Middle of 1500 Aisle
The perfect place to find multilingual and multicultural publications and
library materials. With suppliers from around the world, one stop at this
pavilion helps you build your collection.
Library School and Instruction Pavilion
Middle of 1100 Aisle
Featuring the latest products and services designed to increase efficiency,
effectiveness, and creativity in your library.
Zine Pavilion
Booth 1731
Showcasing these handmade publications that often represent perspectives rarely covered in other print media and offer a range of programming
opportunities for youth and adults alike. Find Zine creators, librarians who
manage zine collections, and a display of topical zines which will be raffled
off at the close of the exhibits.
specialty pavilions
Front of 1900 Aisle
ALISE institutional members and other schools showcase their LIS educational programs
Tennis player Andre Agassi was born
in Las Vegas as were NASCAR drivers
Kurt and Kyle Busch.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
157
The Poetic Species
A Conversation with
Edward O. Wilson and
Robert Hass
Edward O. Wilson and
Robert Hass
Foreword by Lee Briccetti
Bellevue Literary Press
Trade Cloth $16.95
978-1-934137-72-7*
The Old
Neighborhood
A Novel
Bill Hillmann
Zero Fade
Chris L. Terry
Curbside Splendor Publishing
Trade Paper $12.00
978-0-9884804-3-8*
Aimee Parkison
Dzanc Books/
Starcherone Books
Trade Paper $14.00
978-1-938603-20-4
Help Wanted: Female
Sara Pritchard
Etruscan Press
Trade Paper $15.00
978-0-9832944-8-1*
Nancy Furstinger
Illustrated by Nancy
Lane
The Gryphon Press
Trade Cloth $16.95
978-0-940719-19-4*
Aquaponic Gardening
Men Explain Things
to Me
Rebecca Solnit
Haymarket Books
Trade Paper $11.95
978-1-60846-386-2*
Worth Fighting For
An Army Ranger’s
Journey Out of the
Military and Across
America
Rory Fanning
Haymarket Books
Trade Paper $16.95
978-1-60846-391-6*
Five Years in the Middle
East
Nathan Deuel
Dzanc Books/DISQUIET
Trade Paper $14.95
978-1-938604-90-4
Curbside Splendor Publishing
Trade Paper $15.95
978-1-940430-00-3*
The Forgotten Rabbit
The Petals of Your
Eyes
Friday Was the Bomb
A Step-By-Step Guide to
Raising Vegetables and
Fish Together
Sylvia Bernstein
New Society Publishers
Trade Paper $29.95
978-0-86571-701-5*
It’s Raining Pups and
Dogs!
Jeanne Prevost
Illustrated by Amelia
Hansen
The Gryphon Press
Trade Cloth $16.95
978-0-940719-16-3*
Grow a Sustainable
Diet
Planning and Growing to
Feed Ourselves and the
Earth
Cindy Conner
New Society Publishers
Trade Paper $24.95
978-0-86571-756-5*
*eBook available
Where
Indepdendent
Where
Indepdendent
Publishers
LiveLive
Publishers
SigningSigning
June 29,June 29,
4:00–4:30
4:00–4:30
p.m. p.m.
The Market
The Market
Gardener
Gardener
A Successful
A Successful
Grower’s
Grower’s
Handbook
Handbook
for Smallfor Smallscale Organic
scale Organic
Farming
Farming
Jean-Martin
Jean-Martin
FortierFortier
Foreword
Foreword
by Severine
by Severine
von Tscharner
von Tscharner
Fleming,
Fleming,
The Greenhorns
The Greenhorns
Illustrated
Illustrated
by Marie
by Marie
Bilodeau
Bilodeau
New Society
New Society
Publishers
Publishers
Trade Paper
Trade$24.95
Paper $24.95
978-0-86571-765-7*
978-0-86571-765-7*
Forming
Forming
II
II
HildaHilda
and the
andBlack
the Black
Hound
Hound
Jesse Jesse
Moynihan
Moynihan
Slow Slow
Train Train
to to
Switzerland
Switzerland
One Tour,
OneTwo
Tour,Trips,
Two 150
Trips, 150
Years—and
Years—and
a World
a World
of
of
Change
Change
Apart Apart
DicconDiccon
BewesBewes
NobrowNobrow
Press Press
Paper over
Paper
Board
over$30.00
Board $30.00
978-1-907704-76-5
978-1-907704-76-5
Luke Pearson
Luke Pearson
NobrowNobrow
Press/Flying
Press/Flying
Eye Books
Eye Books
Paper over
Paper
Board
over$24.00
Board $24.00
978-1-909263-18-5
978-1-909263-18-5
NicholasNicholas
BrealeyBrealey
Publishing
Publishing
Trade Paper
Trade$19.95
Paper $19.95
978-1-85788-625-2
978-1-85788-625-2
SigningSigning
June 28,June 28,
1:30–2:00
1:30–2:00
p.m. p.m.
Giveaway
Giveaway
June 28,June 28,
2:30–3:00
2:30–3:00
p.m. p.m.
Giveaway
Giveaway
June 28,June 28,
9:00–9:30
9:00–9:30
a.m. a.m.
Mr. Tweed’s
Mr. Tweed’s
GoodGood
Deeds
Deeds
Jim Stoten
Jim Stoten
NobrowNobrow
Press/Flying
Press/Flying
Eye Books
Eye Books
Paper over
Paper
Board
over$19.95
Board $19.95
978-1-909263-35-2
978-1-909263-35-2
Thrown
Thrown
Kerry Howley
Kerry Howley
’ r ee ’ r e
WeW
th th
at B
a to oB o o
#34
#33!4 3 !
Sarabande
Sarabande
Books Books
Trade Paper
Trade$15.95
Paper $15.95
978-1-936747-92-4*
978-1-936747-92-4*
Sherwood
Sherwood
Nation
Nation
Benjamin
Benjamin
Parzybok
Parzybok
Small Beer
Small
Press
Beer Press
Trade Paper
Trade$16.00
Paper $16.00
978-1-61873-086-2*
978-1-61873-086-2*
The Inspector
The Inspector
NikolaiNikolai
Gogol;Gogol;
Translated
Translated
by Richard
by Richard
Nelson,
Nelson,
Richard
Richard
Pevear,
Pevear,
and and
Larissa
Larissa
Volokhonsky
Volokhonsky
TheatreTheatre
Communications
Communications
Group Group
Trade Paper
Trade$15.95
Paper $15.95
978-1-55936-455-3*
978-1-55936-455-3*
Visit
Visit
us for
us for
these
these
author
author
signings!
signings!
Giveaway
Giveaway
Times
Times
Saturday,
Saturday,
June 28
June 28
Sunday,
Sunday,
June 29,
June
cont’d
29, cont’d
LaurieLaurie
Gardner
Gardner 10:00–10:30
10:00–10:30
a.m. a.m.
Matt Dembicki
Matt Dembicki 11:30–12:00
11:30–12:00
p.m. p.m.
Jennifer
Jennifer
Kunst Kunst
1:00–1:30
1:00–1:30
p.m. p.m.
Ana Castillo
Ana Castillo
12:30–1:00
12:30–1:00
p.m. p.m.
Benjamin
Benjamin
Parzybok
Parzybok 1:30–2:00
1:30–2:00
p.m. p.m.
Gregory
Gregory
Pergament
Pergament 1:00–1:30
1:00–1:30
p.m. p.m.
Hilary Hilary
Sloin Sloin
2:00–2:30
2:00–2:30
p.m. p.m.
Suzanne
Suzanne
Greenberg
Greenberg 3:00–3:30
3:00–3:30
p.m. p.m.
Jesse Jesse
Moynihan
Moynihan
4:00–4:30
4:00–4:30
p.m. p.m.
Sunday,
Sunday,
June 29
June 29
Monday,
Monday,
June 30
June 30
Greg McBride
Greg McBride
10:00–10:30
10:00–10:30
a.m. a.m.
Joel C.Joel
Gill C. Gill
10:30–11:00
10:30–11:00
a.m. a.m.
Dan Mager
Dan Mager
10:00–10:30
10:00–10:30
a.m. a.m.
Jason Jason
Rodriguez
Rodriguez 11:00–11:30
11:00–11:30
a.m. a.m.
Saturday,
Saturday,
June 28
June 28
Thrown
Thrown
9:00–9:30
9:00–9:30
a.m. a.m.
CloserCloser
Together,
Together,
Further
Further
Apart Apart
11:00–11:30
11:00–11:30
a.m. a.m.
Looking
Looking
for Jack
forKerouac
Jack Kerouac
(YA) (YA)
11:30–12:00
11:30–12:00
p.m. p.m.
Mr. Tweed’s
Mr. Tweed’s
Good Deeds
Good Deeds
(JV) (JV) 2:30–3:00
2:30–3:00
p.m. p.m.
*eBook *eBook
availableavailable
Sunday,
Sunday,
June 29
June 29
Edge of
Edge
Nowhere
of Nowhere
(YA) (YA)
9:00–9:30
9:00–9:30
a.m. a.m.
www.cbsd.com
www.cbsd.com
Mobile App Pavilion
Zine Pavilion
Booth 1731
Zine Swap
Friday, June 27 • 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
If you make zines, bring a stack to ALA to trade
with other zinester librarians. Special treats for
everyone who trades.
Booth 1568
Saturday, June 28
11:00 am – 11:20 am
PressReader
Raffle Winners Announced
11:30 am – 11:50 am
OneClickdigital eAudio
Monday, June 30 • 12:00 pm
The winners for the zine raffle will be selected and announced.
1:00 pm – 1:20 pmEnvisionWare
1:30 pm – 1:50 pm
OneClikckdigital eBook
Tablers
2:00 pm – 2:20 pm
Zinio For Libraries
TableSubject
2:30 pm – 2:50 pm
Auryn, Inc
a
3:00 pm – 3:20 pm
Library Bureau Steel
bElliott Junkyard
Sunday, June 29
9:30 am – 9:50 amERIC
mobile app pavilion/zine pavilion
10:00 am – 10:20 amEnvisionWare
Laura-Marie Taylor
c
Anna Bongiovanni
d
Maggie Lynn Negrete
e
Chloe Eudaly
11:00 am – 11:20 am
PressReader
fJeff Grindley & Stephanie Seiler
11:30 am – 11:50 am
OneClickdigital eBooks
g
1:00 pm – 1:20 pm Rittenhouse Book Distributors
1:30 pm – 1:50 pm
OneClickdigital eAudio
hTravis Jackson (Avantarded) Filthy Little Hands
& Marc Pacifici
Press
2:00 pm – 2:20 pm
Zinio For Libraries
i
Ryan Tino
2:30 pm – 2:50 pm
Auryn, Inc.
j
Rick Quemado
3:00 pm – 3:20 pm
Library Bureau Steel
k
Spencer Olsen
l
Tyson Monday, June 30
Pamela Las Vegas Zine Library
Zombie Squad
m Jonas Cannon
Cheer the Eff Up
9:30 am – 9:50 am
ERIC
n
Tomas Moniz
Rad Dad, etc.
10:00 am – 10:20 am Rittenhouse Book Distributors
o
Celia PerezI Dreamed I Was
Assertive
In Spanish the word Nevada means “Snow
Capped,” and Las Vegas means “The
Meadows.” Las Vegas was so named by a
young Mexican scout named Rafael Rivera.
160
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
What’s Cooking @ ALA Stage
Exhibit Floor, Hall N1, end of the 600 aisle
The What’s Cooking stage will be heating up the exhibit floor with fantastic displays of the latest
cookbooks. Chefs will be there to prepare the hottest recipes on the demonstration stage and
to autograph their latest books.
Saturday, June 28
10:30 am – 11:30 am
Six Sisters
A Year With Six Sisters
11:30 am – 12:30 pm Claudia Lucero One Hour Cheese
1:30 pm – 2:30 pm Russell van Kraayenburg Haute Dogs: Recipes for Delicious Hot Dogs, Buns and Condiments
2:30 pm – 3:30 pm Barton Seaver N
ational Geographic Kids Cookbook: A Year-Round
Fun Foods Adventure
3:30 pm – 4:30 pm Kelly Cooper Cookies for Grown-Ups
9:30 am – 10:30 am Jeffrey Weiss Charcuteria: The Soul of Spain
10:30 am – 11:30 am Julie Morris Superfood Juices
11:30 am – 12:30 pm Cantor Mitch
Kosher Cuisine for a New Generation
1:30 pm – 2:30 pm Marlene Koch
Eat What You Love Everyday
Sunday, June 29
2:30 pm – 3:30 pmYing Chang Compestine
Secrets of the Terra-Cotta Soldier
Barton Seaver
One-Hour Cheese
National Geographic Kids Cookbook: A Year-Round Fun Foods Adventure
Feast your eyes on National Geographic Fellow and
acclaimed chef Barton Seaver’s first cookbook for kids,
serving up a plateful of fun for kids who are just learning to cook. Accompanied by a side of sustainability,
this year-round adventure invites kids to try 50 yummy
and health-conscious recipes, cool celebrations, and
kitchen challenges. It’s garnished with profiles about
real people, cool food facts, plus content about culture,
geography, and family. With so much on the table, this
book belongs in every family’s kitchen.
Claudia Lucero is the entrepreneur behind
UrbanCheesecraft.com and DIY Cheese Kits,
which she sells through
Etsy,
specialty
food
shops, and select Whole
Foods stores. She also
developed the home
cheesemaking kits for
Williams-Sonoma’s Agrarian product line. She
lives in Portland, Oregon.
Sponsored by Workman Publishing
Russell van Kraayenburg
Haute Dogs: Recipes for Delicious Hot Dogs, Buns, and
Condiments
Haute Dogs gives the classic cookout staple a fresh
and tasty twist, with recipes
inspired by everything from
south-of-the-border BBQ to
Japanese fusion to modern
food-cart cuisine. Handcraft your own top-notch
dogs, buns, and condiments with step-by-step
from-scratch instructions, and brush up on your
hot dog history with an in-depth look at tasty
traditions from the U.S. and beyond. Just in time
for summer, this indispensable guide will make your grilling extraordinary.
Washington, D.C. chef Seaver is an influential
voice in the culinary world, especially for his strong
take on seafood and sustainability. In his first
book, For Cod and Country, Seaver introduced
an entirely new kind of casual cooking featuring
seafood that isn’t overfished or harvested using
destructive methods. Now he’s taking on a whole
new audience: KIDS.
Sponsored by National Geographic Children’s
Books
what’s cooking @ ala stage
Claudia Lucero
Sponsored by Quirk Books
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161
Kelly Cooper
Cantor Mitch
Cookies for Grown-Ups
Kelly Cooper’s novel flavor combos are rooted in
California’s rich Santa Clara Valley, once known for
its bounteous fruits and nuts, now celebrated as
Silicon Valley. Kelly bakes using what’s fresh-picked,
just as her grandmother taught her, but she is as
innovative in her recipes as her new neighbors are
in their work. When Kelly is not teaching or baking
In San Jose, she’s inventing sophisticated cookies
in the Nevada home she
shares with her husband,
or hiking or traveling the southwest to give baking
lessons in cookware stores or to appear in guestchef TV slots from Denver to Santa Fe.
Kosher Cuisine for a New Generation
Cantor Mitch is a lover of great food and great
music. He lives to entertain, and his life is a recipe
of spirituality, music, friends, family, and tantalizing
feasts. Mitch learned from his mother how to appreciate every dish set upon the table. A self-taught
chef, he has done everything from working in kitchens to taking to the road
with a singing telegram
company. He eventually
found his way to the synagogue, and after 25 years in the Cantorate, he is
taking on a new challenge as the Singing Chef.
As a born entertainer, his enthusiasm and musical
spirit show through during every cooking event.
In Cookies for Grown-Ups, she pairs each
brunch, coffee break, tea time, cocktail hour or
après dinner cookie with an adult drink.
Sponsored by Red Rock Press
Jeffrey Weiss
Charcuteria: The Soul of Spain
California-based professional chef Jeffrey Weiss has
more than 15 years’ experience, including cooking
with James Beard award-winning chef Jose Andres
and Spanish-based chefs
Dani Garcia and Adolfo
Munoz. He is one of a select
few Americans to earn the
prestigious ICEX culinary
scholarship that allowed him to live in Spain, learn
the regional cuisines and cook in the kitchens of
top Spanish chefs.
Sponsored by Scarletta Press.
Marlene Koch
Eat What You Love Everyday
Marlene Koch, a New York Times bestselling author
with more than a million books sold, a regular guest
on QVC, a registered dietitian and culinary expert,
and media personality is
known for her amazing ability to deliver good health,
with great taste! Her incredible recipes have appeared
everywhere from Cooking
Light, Woman’s World, and
Diabetes Health to The Today Show and the Food
Network. Visit her at marlenekoch.com.
Sponsored by Perseus Books
Sponsored by Agate Publishing
Ying Chang Compestine
Julie Morris
what’s cooking @ ala stage
Superfood Juices
Julie Morris is a Los Angeles-based author, natural food chef, and advocate of whole, plant-based
foods and superfoods. She has worked in the
natural food industry for close to a decade as a
recipe developer, writer, cooking show host, and
spokesperson, and is the executive chef for Navitas
Naturals, a fair-trade company that specializes in
100% organic superfoods.
Her mission is simple: to share recipes and nutrition tips that make a vibrantly healthy lifestyle
both easy to achieve and delicious to follow. To
learn more about Morris and superfoods, visit
juliemorris.net.
Sponsored by Sterling Publishing
More than 60,000 pounds of shrimp are
consumed in Las Vegas every year—almost as
much as the rest of US put together.
162
Secrets of the Terra-Cotta Soldier
Ying Chang Compestine,
a popular author of
children’s books, cookbooks, and novels, grew
up in China and now
lives in California. Ying’s
Revolution Is Not a Dinner
Party received numerous
awards including being
named an ALA Best Book for Young Adults and
an ALA Notable Children’s Book.
Sponsored by Abrams Books
Six Sisters
A Year With Six Sisters
The Six Sisters—Camille, Kristen,
Elyse, Stephanie, Lauren, and
Kendra—grew up in Utah, but a few
of them moved away as they grew
up. The sisters started the blog in
February 2011 to keep in touch while
they were
apart, but
it has since
g a i n e d
popularity, garnering more than 11 million views
per month and more than 316,000 followers on
Pinterest. Sisters Stephanie and Camille will be
onsite for the signing.
Sponsored by Shadow Mountain
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
PopTop Stage
Exhibit Floor, Hall N1, behind booth 354
A perennial favorite in the Exhibit Hall, the PopTop Stage offers readings, panel
discussions, and presentations on topics popular in libraries and among librarians—from crime fiction and poetry to trivia and vampires, and more.
Friday, June 27
5:30 pm – 7:00 pm Foreword Reviews Awards
Saturday, June 28
10:00 am – 11:00 am Mob Panel: Geoff Schumacher, Morgan St. James, Frank Cullotta, Tony Montana, and Geno
Munari
11:00 am – 12:00 pm Marissa Moss: Tales of a 6th Grade Vampire
1:00 pm – 2:00 pm Stephan Pastis w/ Teri Lesesne: Timmy Failure
2:00 pm – 3:00 pm Len Vlahos w/Guitar: The Scar Boys
3:00 pm – 4:30 pm Kelli Stanley, Rachel Howzell Hall, Hannah Dennison, Jane Cleland: Women in Mystery Panel
Sunday, June 29
10:00 – 11:00 am Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan: International Crime Fiction
11:00 am – 12:30 pm Jay Asher and Josephine Angelini: The Class of 2k14’s YA vs. MG Trivia Showdown
1:00 pm – 2:00 pm Congressman John Lewis and Andrew Aydin: March: Book One and preview of Book Two
2:00 pm – 3:00 pm Daniel Kraus, Kelly Gildea, and Kirby Heyborne: Team Panel for Scowler
3:00 pm – 4:30 pm Poetry Blast: Including The Lightning Dreamer, Words with Wings, Rhyme Schemer, Rutherford B.,
Who Was He?, and Brown Girl Dreaming
Monday, June 30
10:00 am – 11:00 am Deborah Coonts and Hank Phillippi Ryan Panel: Seedy Criminal Underbellies
11:00 am – 12:00 pm Lydia Millet: Pills and Starships
1:00 pm – 2:00 pm Brian Francis Slattery: The Family Hightower
eoff Schumacher, Morgan St. James, Frank
G
Cullotta, Tony Montana, and Geno Munari
Sponsored by Las Vegas Clark County Library
Marissa Moss
Moderating is Geoff Schumacher, an author, editor and Mob Museum
executive in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Morgan St. James is an author who co-wrote La Bella Mafia, the story of
Bella Capo, the daughter of a cruel mob figure, who married a mobster and
received death threats when she tried to divorce him.
Frank Cullotta,nicknamed “The Las Vegas Boss,” is a former enforcer for
the Chicago Outfit, leader of the “Hole in the Wall” gang, and was a friend
of notorious mobster Tony Spilotro.
Tony Montana was one of the Chicago Outfit’s silent associates who was
called in when the Mob needed a job done quick, clean and quietly. His
memoir will be released this summer.
Tales of a 6th Grade Vampire
Moss has written more than 50 children’s books, from
picture books to middle-grade and young adult novels.
Her most recent novel, A Soldier’s Secret: the Incredible
True Story of Sarah Emma
Edmonds, a Civil War Hero, won
the California Silver Book Award.
Barbed Wire Baseball, her latest
picture book was named an ALA Notable Book
and a Notable Book for Social Studies this year.
Last year she started her own small children’s
book press, with four books now out by a mix of
debut and established authors.
poptop stage
Mob Panel
Geno Munari is the publisher/owner of Houdini Publishing; Morgan, Frank
and Tony all have books with Houdini. Geno is a world-class magician
who performed at several Mob-run casinos back in the day and has many
stories to share about that time.
Sponsored by Creston Books
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
163
Stephan Pastis w/ Teri Lesesne
Timmy Failure
This session will feature a presentation by author-illustrator
cartoonist Stephan Pastis,
including a Q&A with YA literature expert Teri Lesesne. Pastis
is the author-illustrator of Timmy
Failure: Mistakes Were Made,
a New York Times bestseller. He is also the creator of the devoutly followed comic strip “Pearls
Before Swine,” which appears in more than 600
newspapers. His compilation Larry in Wonderland
debuted at #1 on the New York Times bestseller
list for paperback graphic novels.
Sponsored by Candlewick Press
Len Vlahos
The Scar Boys
Len Vlahos is the Executive
Director
of
BISG
(Book
Industry Study Group), and the
former COO of the American
Booksellers
Association,
where he worked for the past
20 years. So he knows booksellers and booksellers know him. Len has also
worked in indie, chain, and university bookstores,
was an on-air personality for a commercial radio
station in Atlantic City, and worked for a time for
Internet marketing guru Seth Godin. He was in a
punk rock band in the mid-1980s—The Woofing
Cookies—that toured and had their music played on dozens of college
radio stations coast to coast. You can visit him online at www.lenvlahos.
com and on Twitter @LenVlahos. Join Len during his presentation and
book signing while he plays songs from the book and looks for a brave
attendee in the audience to join him on stage.
Sponsored by Egmont USA
Kelli Stanley, Rachel Howzell Hall, Hannah
Dennison, Jane Cleland
poptop stage
Women in Mystery
Join these top women mystery authors as they discuss how and why the
mystery genre brought out the best in their talents.
Rachel Howzell Hall’s first novel, A Quiet Storm, received
a starred review from Library Journal and was a featured
selection for Borders’ Original Voices program, as well as
an alternate selection for Black Expressions book club.
Hall is the Foundation and Corporate Grants Manager
at Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) of Los
Angeles, which mobilizes community volunteers to
advocate for abused and neglected children.
“Rachel Howzell Hall is the best pure storyteller you’ll read this year.” —Lee
Child, New York Times bestselling author
Sponsored by Tor Books
Hannah Dennison began her writing career in 1977 as a
trainee reporter for a small West Country newspaper in
Devon, England. Hannah is a member of Sisters in Crime,
Mystery Writers of America, the Willamette Writers,
British Crime Writers’ Association and Toastmasters
International. She is the author of the Vicky Hill mysteries, published by Berkley Prime Crime; this is her first
hardcover publication!
Sponsored by Macmillan
164
Jane K. Cleland’s multiple award-nominated and IMBA
best-selling Josie Prescott Antiques Mystery series (St.
Martin’s Minotaur) has been reviewed as an Antiques
Roadshow for mystery fans. Library Journal named
Consigned to Death a “core title” for librarians looking to
build a cozy collection, one of only 22 titles listed, along
with books by Agatha Christie and Dorothy L. Sayers.
“Josie” stories have also appeared in Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine.
Sponsored by Macmillan
Kelli Stanley is a critically acclaimed, multiple awardwinning author of crime fiction (novels and short stories).
She is best known for the Miranda Corbie series of
historical noir novels and short stories set in 1940 San
Francisco. The first novel of the series, City of Dragons,
introduced Miranda, the unforgettable protagonist. It
won the Macavity Award for Best Historical Novel, and
was nominated for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize,
a Shamus Award, a Bruce Alexander Award and an RT Book Reviews
Award, was a Mystery Guild selection of the month, and placed on many
“best of the year” lists. City of Ghosts, the third in the series, will be published in 2014 by Minotaur Books.
Sponsored by Macmillan
Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan
International Crime Fiction
Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan is the New York–based author of A
Tiger in the Kitchen: A Memoir of Food and Family. A
native of Singapore, she is now working on a novel. A
former staff writer at the Wall Street Journal, her work
has also appeared in the New York Times and the
Washington Post, among other publications. She has
been an artist in residence at Yaddo and the Djerassi
Resident Artists Program. She is a contributor to The Marijuana Chronicles
and is editor of Singapore Noir.
Sponsored by Akashic Books
Jay Asher, Josephine Angelini
The Class of 2k14’s YA vs. MG Trivia Showdown, hosted by Jay Asher &
Josephine Angelini
Join THE CLASS OF 2K14 for a MG vs YA smackdown trivia game! We’ll split attendees into teams
and each team will have a Class of 2k14 member
as a helper. Teams will rotate after a set number
of questions so that the attendees will get to meet
as many authors as possible. A short Q&A will
follow the game. Bestselling authors Jay Asher and Josephine Angelini will
emcee this lively and fun-filled event!
Congressman John Lewis, Andrew Aydin
March
Congressman John Lewis’s new
graphic novel memoir March: Book
One, co-written by Andrew Aydin and
drawn by Nate Powell, is a #1 New
York Times bestseller, a Coretta Scott
King Honor Book, and one of YALSA’s
Outstanding
Books for the College Bound. Andrew Aydin,
an Atlanta native, currently serves in Rep. John
Lewis’ congressional office handling telecommunications and technology policy as well as new
media. The session will highlight March: Book
One and preview its sequel.
Sponsored by Top Shelf Comics
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Daniel Kraus with Kelly Gildea, and Kirby
Heyborne
Team Panel for Scowler
Kraus is a Chicago-based writer
and filmmaker, and an editor at
ALA’s Booklist. His debut novel,
The Monster Variations, was
selected for New York Public
Library’s “100 Best Stuff for
Teens.” Fangoria called his
Bram Stoker-finalist, Odyssey Award-winning
second novel, Rotters, “a new horror classic.”
Upcoming novels include the Junior Library
Guild selection Scowler (2013) and Trollhunters
(2014), co-written with Oscar-winning filmmaker
Guillermo del Toro.
We will have the Odyssey Awardwinning Scowler Team on hand for
a panel featuring Kelly Gildea (producer), Daniel Kraus (author) and Kirby
Heyborne (narrator).
Sponsored by Random House
Margarita Engle, Joan Bransfield Graham,
Nikki Grimes, K.A. Holt, Marilyn Nelson,
Marilyn Singer, Jacqueline Woodson
Poetry Blast
A reading featuring: The Lightening Dreamer, The Poem That Will
Not End, Words With Wings, Rhyme Schemer, How I Discovered
Poetry, Rutherford B. Who Was He?, The Superheroes Employment
Agency, and Brown Girl Dreaming.
Poets onsite include: Margarita Engle, Joan Bransfield Graham, Nikki
Grimes, K.A. Holt, Marilyn Nelson, Marilyn Singer, and Jacqueline
Woodson.
Margarita Engle is a Cuban American poet and novelist whose work
includes The Surrender Tree, a Newbery Honor book and winner of
the Jane Addams Children’s Book Award.
Joan Bransfield Graham’s award-winning books, Splish Splash and
Flicker Flash—shape poems about water and light—inspire students to write their own poetry.
New York Times bestselling author Nikki Grimes is the recipient of
the 2006 NCTE Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children; including her distinguished and ALA Notable book What is Goodbye?
Seedy Criminal Underbellies
Deborah Coonts has built her own business, practiced law, flown airplanes, written a humor column for
a national magazine, and survived a teenager. Lucky
Bastard is the latest adventure in a series of Vegas-set
mysteries that are funny, sexy, and thrilling. It was an
Agatha Award nominee and received a starred review
from Kirkus Reviews.
Hank Phillippi Ryan is the investigative reporter for
Boston’s NBC affiliate. She has won 30 Emmys and 10
Edward R. Murrow awards for her groundbreaking journalism. Ryan’s previous title, The Wrong Girl, received
a starred review in Booklist and was a 2013 Romantic
Times Book Reviews Award for Best Suspense/Thriller
nominee.
Sponsored by Tor Books
Lydia Millet
Pills and Starships
Lydia is the author of seven
novels for adults, as well as
a story collection called Love
in Infant Monkeys, a Pulitzer
Prize finalist. Her first book for
middle-grade readers, The Fires
Beneath the Sea, was one of
Kirkus Reviews’ Best Children’s Books of 2011,
as well as a Junior Library Guild selection. Pills
and Starships is her first young adult novel.
Sponsored by
Distribution
Consortium
Book
Sales
&
Brian Francis Slattery
The Family Hightower
Slattery’s Spaceman Blues was nominated for the
Connecticut Book Award and was awarded an A- by
Entertainment Weekly. His stories have been published
in Glimmer Train, McSweeney’s, and The Revelator. An
editor and co-founder of the
New Haven Review, he also
co-hosts Paper Trails, a show
on WNPR about books. The
Family Hightower takes a close look at capitalism and organized crime in the 20th century, and
how increasingly, the former is starting to look a
lot like the latter. It’s about the legend of the selfmade man, and what money can do to people,
the problem of never knowing when you have
enough.
Sponsored by Seven Stories
poptop stage
K.A. Holt is an active and connected member of the vibrant Texas
writing community. Her previous books include Brains for Lunch:
A Zombie Novel in Haiku. Rhyme Schemer will be published in
October.
Deborah Coonts, Hank Phillippi Ryan
Marilyn Nelson is one of America’s most acclaimed poets and a
three-time National Book Award Finalist for her poetry including A
Wreath for Emmett Till and A Life in Poems.
Marilyn Singer writes in many genres. Her poetry, such as Mirror
Mirror for which she created a new poetry form, the “reverso,” has
received six starred reviews, made many “year’s best” lists, and has
been nominated for a myriad of state, city, and international awards.
Jacqueline Woodson, winner of the Margaret A. Edwards Award
for lifetime achievement in writing for young adults, is the author of
many classic books, including The Other Side and Show Way.
Nevada is the largest gold-producing state
in the nation. It is second in the world behind
South Africa.
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SIMON & SCHUSTER invites you to
Meet Your Favorite Authors & Illustrators at Booth 302–303!
FRIDAY, JUNE 27
Holly Black | Doll Bones
Signing: 11:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
Deborah Wiles | Freedom Summer
Signing: 1:30–2:00 p.m.
Tim Federle | Five, Six, Seven, Nate!
Signing: 11:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
Ellen Hopkins | Rumble
Signing: 2:00–3:00 p.m.
Jonathan Maberry | Fire & Ash
Signing: 12:00–1:00 p.m.
Cassandra Clare
The Mortal Instruments:
City of Heavenly Fire
Signing: 3:00–4:00 p.m.
Becca Fitzpatrick | Black Ice
Signing: 6:00–7:00 p.m.
Scott Westerfeld | Afterworlds
Signing: 6:00–7:00 p.m.
SATURDAY, JUNE 28
Jenny Han
To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before
Signing: 9:00–10:00 a.m.
Dorothy Hearst | Secrets of the Wolves
Signing: 12:30–1:00 p.m.
Neal Shusterman
The Unwind Dystology: UnDivided
Signing: 9:00–10:00 a.m.
Brian Floca | Locomotive
Signing: 10:00–11:00 a.m.
Judith Viorst
Lulu’s Mysterious Mission
Signing: 4:00–5:00 p.m.
Ben Mezrich
Bringing Down the Mouse
Signing: 1:30–2:00 p.m.
@SSEdLib
/SSEdLib
SUNDAY, JUNE 29
Jason Reynolds
When I Was the Greatest
Signing: 11:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
Jon Scieszka and Mac Barnett
Battle Bunny
Signing: 4:00–5:00 p.m.
Carter Goodrich
Mister Bud Wears the Cone
Signing: 2:00–3:00 p.m.
Evan Turk | Grandfather Gandhi
Signing: 4:30–5:00 p.m.
Marla Frazee | The Farmer and the Clown
Signing: 9:00–10:00 a.m.
Tom Lichtenheld
One Big Pair of Underwear
Signing: 9:00–10:00 a.m.
MONDAY, JUNE 30
Jorey Hurley | Nest
Signing: 2:30–3:00 p.m.
Raúl Colón | Baseball Is…
Signing: 9:00–10:00 a.m.
Scott Campbell | Hug Machine
Signing: 10:00–11:00 a.m.
Elizabeth Rose Stanton | Henny
Signing: 2:30–3:00 p.m.
Avi | Sophia’s War
Signing: 10:00–11:00 a.m.
Cynthia Kadohata | Half a World Away
Signing: 11:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
Judy Blume
Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret
Signing: 3:00–4:00 p.m.
E. B. Lewis | All Different Now:
Juneteenth, the First Day of Freedom
Signing: 9:00–10:00 a.m.
Brian Floca | Locomotive
Signing: 11:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage
Exhibit Floor, Hall N3, behind booth 2223
Here’s your chance to hear from authors, illustrators, and creators of the hottest games and graphic
novels. Learn more about the art of graphic novels and illustration, how games and gaming inspire creativity and social engagement, and how comics in the library and in the classroom can help you inspire
and reach reluctant readers. Supplement your Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage experiences with visits to
the Graphic Novel & Gaming Pavilion, the Zine Pavilion, and Artist Alley, also on the Exhibit Floor.
Friday, June 27
5:30 pm – 7:00 pm Comics Quickfire
Saturday, June 28
9:00 am – 10:00 am Mayfair Games: Settlers of Cantan
10:00 am – 11:00 am Matt Dembicki, Jason Rodriguez, and Joel Christian Gill: Teaching with Comics
11:00 am – 12:00 pm Zine Presentation
12:00 pm – 1:00 pm Will Eisner Graphic Novel Grants
1:00 pm – 2:00 pm Alf Seegert
2:00 pm – 3:00 pm Stacy King, Erik Ko: Manga Classics: Les Miserables & The Pride and Prejudice
3:00 pm – 4:00 pm Frank Cammuso: Otto’s Backwards Day
4:00 pm – 5:00 pm Nick Dragotta: Howtoons
Sunday, June 29
9:00 am – 10:00 am T Publications: How Comics Can Increase Library Readership
10:00 am – 11:00 am Nathan Hale: Hazardous Tales: Treaties, Trenches, Mud and Blood
graphic novel/gaming stage
11:00 am – 12:00 pm Eric Wight: Beastie Bash
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12:00 pm – 1:00 pm Josh Elder, Gene Luen Yang, Nathan Hale, Tracy Edmunds and Jim McClain: Reading with
Pictures: Comics That Make Kids Smarter
1:00 pm – 2:00 pm Anya Ulinich: Lena Finkle’s Magic Barrel
2:00 pm – 3:00 pm Jesse Moynihan: Forming 2
3:00 pm – 4:00 pm Brian Bucellato, Francis Manapul, Patrick Gleason, and Peter Tomasi: What does it take to
create a new comic book?
4:00 pm – 5:00 pm Cosmo Eisele, Pierce Watters: Pathfinder Roleplaying Game
Monday, June 30
10:00 am – 11:00 am Raina Telgemeier, Tom Angleberger, Cece Bell: Graphic Novel Author Panel
1:00 pm – 2:00 pm Raina Telgemeier, Dave Roman, Jerzy Drozd: Comics Bakery
Mayfair Games
Settlers of Catan
Mayfair Games, award winning publisher of the Settlers of Catan series
of games, will speak about the importance of after school programs and
game leagues, using board games to promote social gaming among adolescents and teens. We look forward to meeting you at the show and discussing the ways in which games can assist libraries around the nation in
their important work developing and molding the minds of America’s youth.
Matt Dembicki, Jason Rodriguez, Joel
Christian Gill
Teaching with Comics
A panel discussion with three graphic illustrators and writers exploring
the benefits of teaching with comics. The panelists have published books
about history, culture
and nature, all of which
have been successful
teaching and learning
tools in the classroom
and in libraries.
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Zine Presentation
problem-solving skills, pushing kids to think beyond the information that is
given and inspiring them to learn through experimentation.
Lights! Cameras! Zines! Join zinesters from the Zine Pavilion as they read
from their amazing and personal works. Hear stories from the heart that
entertain, make you laugh or cry, or inspire you to create your own zine!
Zinesters will also be available for further discussion at the Zine Pavilion.
Nick Dragotta is the acclaimed artist of East of West as well as Howtoons
and will be presenting the Howtoons comics and one of the projects from
its pages.
Alf Seegert
Nathan Hale
Alf is a life-longlover of board games, video games, and role-playing
games. He grew up on games like Dark Tower, Dungeons & Dragons,
Tunnels & Trolls, Talisman, and the Ultima series. Alf went on to code a version of Dark Tower into the high school mainframe computer and has since
designed half a dozen-or-so board games themed on everything from trolls
to the Canterbury Tales: Bridge Troll, Trollhalla, and three games so far with
Gryphon Games—The Road to Canterbury, Fantastiqa, and most recently,
a co-design with Steven Poelzing, CUBIST.
Hazardous Tales: Treaties, Trenches, Mud and Blood
Nathan Hale is the author/illustrator of Nathan Hale’s
Hazardous Tales series, a YALSA Great Graphic Novel
pick. He is also the illustrator of the graphic novel
Rapunzel’s Revenge, as an Al Roker Book Club for Kids
selection, an ALA Notable Book, and a YALSA Great
Graphic Novel for Teens, as well as the recipient of three
starred reviews. He is also illustrator of the picture book
The Dinosaurs’ Night Before Christmas.
Will Eisner Graphic Novel Grants
For his new book in the series, Treaties, Trenches,
Mud, and Blood (A World War 1 Tale), Nathan has
gathered some of the most fascinating true-life
tales from the war and given them his inimitable
Hazardous Tales twist. Easy to understand, funny,
informative, and lively, this series is the best way to
be introduced to some of the most well-known battles (and little known secrets) of the infamous war.
Join authors Gene Luen Yang and Phil
Yeh, and graphic novel librarians who
will discuss the history and importance
of graphic novels in education and
libraries. This will be followed by the
presentation of the 2014 Will Eisner Graphic Novel Grants to the two winning libraries. PLUS: Learn how your library can apply for the 2015 Will
Eisner Graphic Novel Grants.
Eric Wight
Beastie Bash
Stacy King, Erik Ko
Award-winning author/illustrator Eric Wight will be debuting
his newest creation, Beastie
Bash!, a wacky, mix-andmatch card game for children.
He will also be demonstrating
how you can use this game in your classroom or
library to inspire creative writing.
Josh Elder, Gene Luen Yang,
Nathan Hale, Tracy Edmunds,
Jim McClain
Frank Cammuso
Reading with Pictures: Comics That Make Kids
Smarter
With comics becoming more common in classrooms across the nation, how do we make
sure those comics are actually good? Reading
With Pictures presents an all-star lineup of creators and educators to share their insights in a
roundtable moderated by Josh Elder (president,
Reading With Pictures).
Otto’s Backwards Day
Someone stole Otto’s birthday! When Otto and
his robot sidekick, Toot, follow the crook, they discover a topsy-turvy world where rats chase cats
and people wear underpants over their clothes. To
get his presents back, Otto needs to solve a slew
of backwards puzzles—but his greatest challenge
comes at the journey’s very end. On this special
day, will Otto discover something even better than
cake or gifts?
Nick Dragotta
Howtoons
What happens when you take
a comic book artist, an inventor, and a toy designer? You
get Howtoons. A Howtoon is
an educational, entertaining,
and beautifully illustrated adventure comic strip
for kids that integrates instructions seamlessly
into the story telling, teaching kids how to make
toys and projects with everyday household objects. Introducing the science and engineering behind the projects, Howtoons encourage creative
Anya Ulinich
Photo by Jason Merrell
Frank Cammuso, who wrote and drew Otto’s adventure, is the author of the
graphic novel series Knights of the Lunch Table, a middle-school version of
King Arthur and his knights. His forthcoming series is The Misadventures
of Salem Hyde. His writing has appeared in The New Yorker, the New York
Times, The Village Voice, and Slate.
Lena Finkle’s Magic Barrel
Lena Finkle’s Magic Barrel evokes Louis C.K.’s sensibilities and Amy
Winehouse’s longing and anguish—often in the same frame—as Ulinich
turns her sharp eye toward the strange, sometimes unmooring world of
“grown-up” dating. After 15 years of marriage, 37-yearold Lena embarks on a string of online dates and
receives a brutally eye-opening education in love, sex,
and loss while raising her two teenage daughters. With
references to Bernard Malamud and Chekhov along the
way, this is a smart, funny story told beautifully through
Ulinich’s text and drawings.
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graphic novel/gaming stage
Manga Classics
What makes a great graphic novel adaptation of a literary classic? In this panel,
author Stacy King and editorial producer
Erik Ko will discuss the process of
adapting classic literature for the manga
generation, with a focus on the first two
titles in UDON Entertainment’s upcoming “Manga Classics” line. Topics
will include working with the artist to develop a period-appropriate art style
with contemporary appeal, maintaining faithfulness to the original work,
and finding the right adaptation to suit your core curriculum needs.
169
Jesse Moynihan
Cosmo Eisele, Pierce Watters
Forming 2
Pathfinder Roleplaying Game
The Pathfinder Roleplaying Game is the number
one fantasy roleplaying game in the world, and
this presentation focuses on how to run the game
in your library, concentrating on the Pathfinder
Beginner Box. It is a tabletop fantasy game which
teaches cooperative play, where players must work
together to solve problems and achieve goals.
Jesse Moynihan is an American artist, composer, and
director best known for being a writer and storyboard
artist on the animated television series Adventure Time as
well as creator of the graphic
novel Forming, serialized online
and published by Nobrow. The
second collection of Forming
was published in May 2014. He is working with
his brother Justin on an animated series, Manly,
that will be available exclusively through Cartoon
Hangover.
Brian Buccellato, Francis Manapul, Patrick
Gleason, and Peter Tomasi
What does it take to create a new comic book?
What does it take to create a new comic book? Find out at this amazing panel, where DC has assembled the entire creative team of a comic
book, including the writer, penciller, and colorist! Learn how a new project
is developed before the script is even written, and the many steps that
happen after the artwork is complete, with the creative team behind Flash,
Batman and Robin and Detective Comics—Brian Buccellato, Francis
Manapul, Patrick Gleason, and Peter Tomasi.
Raina Telgemeier, Tom Angleberger, and
Cece Bell
Graphic Novel Author Panel
Tom Angleberger is a master chronicler and doodler of
middle school antics. His New York Times bestselling
series Origami Yoda has over five million copies in print
and will be coming to an end in the fall of 2014 with the
sixth and final book. He launched a new series in May
titled The Qwikpick Papers.
Cece Bell has written and illustrated several books for
children, including the Geisel Honor book Rabbit &
Robot: The Sleepover. Her new book out in the fall, El
Deafo, is a funny, deeply honest graphic novel memoir for
middle graders about growing up deaf.
Raina Telgemeier is the creator of the graphic memoir
Smile, a #1 New York Times bestseller, winner of the
Will Eisner Award for Best Publication for Teens, and a
Boston Globe-Hornbook Honor Book. She also created
Drama, a #1 New York Times bestseller that received
a Stonewall Book Award Honor and adapted and illustrated The Baby-Sitters Club graphic novels. Raina will
be talking about the companion volume to Smile.
graphic novel/gaming stage
Brian Buccellato has worked on several high-profile
books, including Uncanny X-Men, Generation X, and
Astro City, before striking out on his own as a freelance
colorist. His most recent work includes writing and coloring The Flash as a part of DC Comics: The New 52. Brian
has worked as a freelance colorist since 1996, working
for Marvel, DC, Vertigo, Top Cow, Image and Dynamite Entertainment. His
recent coloring credits include Adventure Comics, Hellblazer, Superman,
and The Flash.
Francis Manapul is the artist and co-writer of The Flash,
which is part of DC Comics: The New 52. His previous
work for DC Comics includes books such as Adventure
Comics, Superman/Batman, and The Legion of Super
Heroes. His work has been published in various publications including Aspen Comics, Editions Delcourt, Top
Cow Productions, and Devils Due.
Formerly an editor at DC Comics, Peter Tomasi proudly
helped usher in new eras for Green Lantern, Batman,
and JSA along with special projects like Kingdom Come
and JSA All-Stars, Peter J. Tomasi now devotes his time
to writing comics and screenplays. Having worked on
many DC titles, along with critically acclaimed creatorowned projects Light Brigade and The Mighty, Peter’s current projects
include Batman and Robin and Green Lantern Corps.
Raina Telgemeier, Dave Roman, and Jerzy
Drozd
Comics Bakery
A live performance graphic novel theater involving
lots of audience participation and silliness. Raina
Telgemeier (Drama), Dave Roman (Astronaut
Academy), and Jerzy Drozd (Cap’n Cat) will perform chapters from some of their latest comics.
Patrick Gleason loves to create fantastic characters and
worlds. His focus on character development and powerful storytelling can be seen in DC’s Batman and Robin,
Green Lantern Corps, Aquaman, JLA, Hawkman, and
JSA. His ground-laying work alongside Geoff Johns and
Dave Gibbons on the miniseries Green Lantern Corps:
Recharge made way for the acclaimed ongoing series. The Sinestro Corps
War followed, and then the explosive Blackest Night with Peter Tomasi.
And now, as part of DC Comics: The New 52, Patrick continues to lend his
artistic vision to the dynamic duo of Batman and Robin.
Paul Anka made his first Las Vegas
appearance (at the Sahara) in 1961 when he
was 20—underage for going into a casino.
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Meet the Authors
Exhibit Floor, Hall N3, Booth numbers listed
Friday, June 27
Abrams Books
Booth 628
Nikki McClure
May the Stars Drip Down
5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
Macmillan - Adult
528
Sourcebooks
662
Jane Cleland
Nancy J. Cavanaugh
5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Hannah Dennison
Thomas Nelson
511
Blood Rubies
Murder at Honeychurch Hall
5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
ALA Store
Betsy Diamant-Cohen
Transforming Preschool Storytime:
A Modern Vision and a Year of
Programs
4:30 pm – 5:30 pm
Saroj Nadkarni Ghoting & Kathy
Fling Klatt
Jane Cleland
Blood Rubies
5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
Macmillan Children’s
Publishing Group
522 & 523
STEP into Storytime: Using
StoryTime Effective Practice to
Strengthen the Development of
Newborns to Five-Year-Olds
Toni Yuly
4:30 pm – 5:30 pm
How It Went Down
Early Bird
6:00 pm – 6:30 pm
Kekla Magoon
6:00 pm – 6:30 pm
Linda L. Ernst
Baby Rhyming Time
4:30 pm – 5:30 pm
A Year in the Story Room: Readyto-Use Programs for Children
4:30 pm – 5:30 pm
East West Discovery
Press
2059
Icy Smith
Three Years and Eight Months
5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
The Shadow Hero
6:30 pm – 7:00 pm
Orca Book Publishers
654
Ken Setterington
Branded by the Pink Triangle
6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Daddy, My Favorite Guy
5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
Goosebottom Books /
PGW
322
Storm Siren
5:30 pm – 6:30 pm
W. W. Norton & Company
616
Caitlin Doughty
Smoke Gets In Your Eyes: And
Other Lessons From the Crematory
6:00 pm – 6:45 PM
Saturday, June 28
Penguin Group
449
3:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Kate Boorman
Winterkill
4:00 pm – 5:00 pm
ALA Store
Hilda K. Weisburg
School Librarian’s Career Planner
2:00 pm – 3 :00 pm
Heidi E. Buchanan & Beth A.
McDonough
The One-Shot Library Instruction
Survival Guide
3:30 pm – 4:30 pm
3:30 pm – 4:30 pm
Introducing Abdo Kids!
11:00 am – 12:00 pm
Grace Hansen
Introducing Abdo Kids!
1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Teddy Borth
3:00 pm – 4:00 pm
5:30 pm – 6:30 pm
Jon Scieszka
5:30 pm – 6:30 pm
West of the Moon
Grace Hansen
Abrams Books
628
Dear Daughter
Margi Preus
Richard Moniz
Laura Lane McNeal
Elizabeth Little
2:00 pm – 3:00 pm
ABDO
1071
Introducing Abdo Kids!
Dollbaby
Crystal Smith
Mary Weber
Separate Is Never Equal: Sylvia
Mendez and Her Family’s Fight for
Desegregation
Frank Einstein and the Antimatter
Motor
9:00 am – 10:00 am
Amy Schwartz
Fundamentals for the Academic
Liaison
Albert Whitman &
Company
517
Ian Hoffman
Jacob’s New Dress
10:00 am – 11:00 am
Linda Joy Singleton
Snow Dog, Sand Dog
11:30 am – 12:30 pm
Alison Formento
These Rocks Count
2:00 pm – 3:00 pm
Andrews McMeel
Publishing
309
Simon & Schuster, Inc.
302-303
100 Things That Make Me Happy
Agrippina “Atrocious and
Ferocious”
Scott Westerfeld
Jonathan Auxier
Reading With Pictures: Comics That
Make Kids Smarter
6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
11:00 am – 12:00 pm
2:00 pm – 3:00 pm
KO Kids / Publishers
Group West
322
Becca Fitzpatrick
Rebecca Petruck
6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
12:00 pm – 1:00 pm
Arte Público Press
225
Kathryn Otoshi
Sleeping Bear Press
224
Corinne Duyvis
Shirin Yim Bridges
Two
5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
Afterworlds
Black Ice
10:00 am – 11:00 am
The Night Gardener
Steering Toward Normal
Otherbound
1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Josh Elder
Mara Price
meet the authors friday–saturday
Dawn R. Roginski
Gene Luen Yang
Always, Abigail
Duncan Tonatiuh
Grandma’s Chocolate / El chocolate
de Abuelita
10:00 am – 11:00 am
Helen Foster James
Grandma Loves You!
6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
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171
Mara Price
Grandma’s Chocolate / El chocolate
de Abuelita
11:00 am – 12:00 pm
René Colato Laínez
René Has Two Last Names / René
tiene dos apellidos
1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Bloomsbury Children’s
Books
529
Brian Conaghan
When Mr. Dog Bites
10:00 am – 11:00 am
CBAY Books
477
Claribel Ortega
The Skinwalker’s Apprentice
2:00 pm – 3:00 pm
Consortium Book Sales &
Distribution
343
Laurie Gardner
The Road to Shine
10:00 am – 12:00 pm
Jennifer Kunst
Wisdom from the Couch
1:00 pm – 3:00 pm
Benjamin Parzybok
Neal Shusterman
Jon Scieszka
2:00 pm – 2:30 pm
2:00 pm – 3:00 pm
East West Discovery
Press
2059
Kadir Nelson
Edison’s Alley ARC’s
Michael Smith
Thomas the T. rex
9:00 am – 3:00 pm
Icy Smith
Three Years and Eight Months
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
Guys Read: True Stories
Nelson Mandela
3:30 pm – 4:30 pm
HarperCollins Publishers
502
Andrew Mayne
Angel Killer
1:30 pm – 2:30 pm
Crystal Smith
Holiday House
415
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
Susan Goldman Rubin
Daddy, My Favorite Guy
Freedom Summer: The 1964
Struggle for Civil Rights in America
PJ Hoover
1:30 pm – 2:00 pm
Flux/Llewellyn
235
2:00 pm – 3:00 pm
Hilary Sloin
Whitney A Miller
René Colato Laínez
Charlesbridge
557
2:00 pm – 2:30 pm
9:30 am – 10:30 am
4:00 pm – 4:30 pm
The Emerald Tablet
Sherwood Nation
Art on Fire
The Violet Hour
2:00 pm – 3:00 pm
Señor Pancho Had A Rancho
Craigmore Creations
2016
J.R. Johansson
Don Tate
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
403
11:00 am – 12:00 pm
Christopher Herndon
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442-443
Seedfolks
11:00 am – 12:00 pm
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
403
Elizabeth Wein
Rose Under Fire
Crystal Smith
9:00 am – 10:00 am
Simon & Schuster, Inc.
302-303
Raúl Colón
Baseball Is...
9:00 am – 10:00 am
E.B. Lewis
All Different Now: Juneteenth, the
First Day of Freedom
Skippyjon Jones Snow What
9:30 am – 10:30 am
Mary Sullivan
Ball!
9:00 am – 10:00 am
David Adler
10:30 am – 11:30 am
Brian Floca & Brian Floca
Cam Jansen and the Spaghetti Max
Mystery
Icy Smith
Susan L. Roth & Cindy Trumbore
9:00 am – 2:00 pm
10:00 am – 11:00 am
Judy Schachner
Lee & Low Books
656
Three Years and Eight Months
Never Forgotten
9:30 am – 10:30 am
9:00 am – 2:00 pm
Daddy, My Favorite Guy
Patricia McKissack
How I Discovered Poetry
Mr. Wuffles
East West Discovery
Press
2059
10:00 am – 11:00 am
Marilyn Nelson
David Wiesner
9:30 am – 10:30 am
A Splash of Red: The Life and Art of
Horace Pippin
The Mad Potter
Penny and Her Marble
Disney-Hyperion
603
Jen Bryant & Melissa Sweet
Locomotive
11:00 am – 12:00 pm
10:30 am – 11:30 am
Sourcebooks
662
Random House Children’s
Books
543
Parrots Over Puerto Rico
10:00 am – 10:45 AM
Kenn Nesbitt
Tighty, Whitey Spider
Christopher Paul Curtis
Michael Smith
9:30 am – 10:30 am
The Watsons Go to Birmingham
Thomas the T. rex
9:00 am – 10:00 am
9:00 am – 2:00 pm
Meet the Authors
Don Tate
Saturday, June 28
11:00AM–12:00PM
Rafael López
Saturday, June 28
3:00PM–4:00PM
Book Buzz at the Book Buzz Theater near Booth 1815
Sunday, June 29 11:00AM–11:30AM
“Early Ears: Choosing the Best Books for Early Childhood Patrons”
Join a panel discussion on what makes a good book
selection for the youngest library visitors. With a
focus on why picture books are so important for this
growing group of pre-reading patrons, with tips for
successful story-hour programming. Discussion led
by Anna McQuinn, UK librarian and best-selling
author of the Lola at the Library series.
•
Anna McQuinn
Sunday, June 29
11:30AM–12:30PM
Anna McQuinn will be
a featured speaker
at this year’s
ALSC Charlemae Rollins
President’s Program.
Monday, June 30 1:00PM
meet the authors monday
Booth 557
www.charlesbridge.com
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
177
Poster Sessions
Saturday, June 28 and Sunday, June 29
Exhibit Floor, Hall N3, Front of the 2200 aisle
Poster Sessions take place in the Exhibit Hall at the Las Vegas Convention Center. An abstract booklet with descriptions of all the sessions
will be available in the Poster Session area. Abstracts can also be found on the conference scheduler, online, and on the mobile app.
2014 Poster Session Committee:
Melanie Griffin
Chair, University of South Florida
griffin@usf.edu
Michael Witt
Purdue University
mwitt@purdue.edu
Candace Benefiel
Review Panel Chair,
Texas A&M University
cbenefie@lib-gw.tamu.edu
Jennifer Ventling
Greene County (Ohio) Public
Library
Jventling@gcpl.lib.oh.us
Sarah McHone-Chase
Abstracts Editor,
Northern Illinois University
Mchonechase@niu.edu
Blake Doherty
Brookdale Community College
blakedoherty@gmail.com
Luke Vilelle
Hollins University
lvilelle@hollins.edu
Session I: The
Collectors
Posters on Acquisitions,
Cataloging and Classification,
Collection Develoment and
Management, History, Serials, and
Special Collections
Saturday, June 28
10:30 am – 12:00 pm
I-1
Kathleen Degyansky
White Plains Public Library
kdegyansky@whiteplainslibrary.org
2015 Annual Poster Session Application
Information
2015 Annual Conference, San Francisco, CA
Application for presenting poster sessions at the 2015 American
Library Association Annual Conference in San Francisco, CA, will be
accepted online via the ALA Annual website.
Applications will be accepted between November 2014 and January
2015. Exact dates will be announced in the fall 2014.
An application form, guidelines for applying, helpful hints, and photos
of sample poster sessions will be found on the website.
I-7
I-14
A Demand-Driven-Preferred
Approval Plan: One Year Later
Taking the Journey Together:
Implementing RDA for Digital
Libraries
I-8
Work Smarter, Not Harder:
Training Students and Volunteers
to Provide Professional-Level
Metadata for Digital Collections
I-9
I-15
MARC 583: The Journey to
Recording Conservation Actions
I-16
Session II: The
Educators
Posters on Distance Learning,
Continuing Education, Library
Education, Literacy, and Research
Methodology
Saturday, June 28
12:30 pm – 2:00 pm
II-1
Practice Makes Perfect: Updating
borrowing policies and practices
at a small academic library
Partners in Preservation:
Documenting the Nation’s Oldest
City
Staying Afloat with RDA:
Implementation Strategies and
Tips for Mid-sized Academic
Libraries
I-2
I-10
I-17
From Discovery to Delivery:
Successful Systems Integration
Integrating Usability into Collection
Development
Beyond the Classroom:
Developing Soft Skills through
Student Organizations
I-11
I-18
Collaborating to Build a Teacher
Resources Collection using
Primary Sources
Implementing Patron-Driven
Acquisition (PDA) for Ebook
Acquisition that Fits Your Library
II-3
I-12
I-19
Free and good for you! Open
Refine, a valuable tool for digital
collections managers
Somewhere There’s a PLACE
for Us: Linking Fedora Digital
Collections and Open Geoportal
I-13
I-20
You Want to Change What?!
Diplomacy in Cataloging
Procedure Change
Rejuvenate ebook Acquisitions!
The DataONE Toolkit for Librarians
Deep In The Heart of Texzines
I-4
Get the Facts! Nonfiction,
Informational Reading, and
Literature for Youth
I-5
Rusty Reels & Fragile Floppies:
Surveying Audiovisual and Digital
Materials in Special Collections
I-6
II-2
Digital Natives Tech Skills:
Correlating Student Confidence
and Outcomes
II-4
Bridging the skills gap: enhancing
the student employee experience
II-5
poster sessions
I-3
Study Psychology Researchers’
Citing Behavior for Collection
Development
READ-ing Our Way To Student
Training Success
Pick. Spin. Win: Recycling History
with Archival Photographs
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
179
II-6
II-18
III-9
IV-1
From Distance Education to Online
Learning: Practical Approaches
to Information Literacy Instruction
and Collaborative Learning in
Online Environment
Collective Engagement: What
Aspiring, New and Seasoned
Professionals Bring to the Table
Connecting First Year Students
with Library Web Portal via
Information Literacy Course
Middle East and North Africa
Disaster Planning in Time of War
II-19
III-10
Design thinking and LibQUAL+:
The changing needs and expectations of faculty and undergraduates in ARL libraries — Trends
2003–2011
Integrating Information Literacy
into the First-Year Experience of
International Students
Assemble Autonomatronic Arduino
and Feel Fake Fur: Innovative New
Media and Materials Enhance the
Curriculum in Qatar
III-11
IV-3
II-20
A Tale of Two Classes: Embedded
Librarianship vs. the One-Shot
Parents’ Night Out!
Get Involved: Powered by Your
Library
Making MOOCs Work for Work:
A Corporate Library Approach to
Professional Development
III-12
II-9
Session III: Outreach
II-7
“Race is a social construct and
does not exist”: What Academic
Librarians Have to Say about
Racism in the Profession
II-8
Financial Know-How and YOU!
The Library as a Gateway to
Financial Literacy
II-10
InfoSkills2Go: Bridging the
Information Literacy Gap between
High School and College
II-11
Know when to hold ‘em, know
when to scaf-fold ‘em: The case of
sustaining an information literacy
instruction program at Cascadia
Community College
II-12
Viva Virtual Reference: Using
Mixed Methods to Understand
Chat and Email Reference
Services
Posters on Interlibrary
Cooperation, Library Services to
Special Groups, and Reference
and Information Services
Saturday, June 28
2:30 pm – 4:00 pm
III-1
Block by Block: Computational
Thinking for Tweens & Teens
III-2
What’s the Problem?: Student
Centered Learning in Social
Sciences Library Instruction
III-3
Inclusive Instruction: Information
Literacy for Adult Learners
III-4
II-13
poster sessions
Landing Your First Academic
Library Job: A Cohort Study
of Recent Graduates from the
UNC at Chapel Hill’s School of
Information and Library Science
II-14
In Their Own Voices: The Study
Habits of Distance Education
Students
II-15
What America Thinks: Using
the General Social Survey as a
Reference Tool
II-16
Should Libraries Promote Citation
Managers to Undergraduates?:
Tracking the Use of RefWorks by
Undergraduate Students
II-17
Librarian Design Share: Inspiration
for Library Creatives
180
Tailor it to their needs and they
will come: Designing information
literacy instruction for large class
settings
III-5
Curriculum Crunch: How to
Develop and Evaluate Curriculum
Materials Collections
III-6
No Bluffing - The New Nursing
Information Literacy Competency
Standards are on the Table!
III-7
HackHealth: Engaging Tweens
in Seeking and Utilizing Health
Information
III-8
Gearing Up for College: Library
Support for Outreach and Early
Recruitment for Middle School
Students
IV-2
IV-4
“S.T.E.M.”-ulating Young
Minds: Creating Science-Based
Programming @ Your Library
Lights! Camera! Education!:
A Library & Nurse Educator
Collaborative “Movie” Program for
Continuing Competencies
III-13
IV-5
Don’t Let Your Kids Slip and Slide
Going Global: Library as a Crucial
Player for Internationalizing a
University
III-14
Reach Out in a New Direction:
Applying Public Relations Best
Practices to Academic Outreach
III-15
A Diversity Project: A Poster Series
Connecting Core Values to Library
Materials and Expertise
III-16
Know Your Neighborhood:
Engaging Communities in Local
History
III-17
So You Think You are Information
Literate?: Assessing Pre-Service
Teachers Information Literacy
Skills
III-18
Student to Superhero: Freshmen
Tell Their Research Stories
III-19
You are teaching, but are
they learning? An assessment of Bachelor of Business
Administration students
III-20
IV-6
M & M: M-Generation and
M-Libraries
IV-7
Building the Capacity of Librarians
from Nine African Universities
(CARTA Institutions).
IV-8
Nicaraguan Library Partners with
Award-Winning Designers and
Rotary International: Renovating/
Redesigning to Serve a
Multipurpose Library
IV-9
Public libraries in a postsoviet state: Challenges and
opportunities
IV-10
Patron Driven Acquisition – Is it
good for Video?
IV-11
The world is at our doorstep. Are
we inviting them in? Assessing
library services to international
students
Targeting Grad students: Creating
a Web Guide for Thesis Writers in
the Construction Industry Fields
IV-12
Session IV: Global
Solutions
IV-13
International Projects in Libraries
Sunday, June 29
10:30 am – 12:00 pm
Library best practices: fresh
innovations from Southeast Asia
Women Studies and Human
Books: A Valuable Information
Literacy Experiment
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
IV-14
V-4
V-18
VI-9
Cooperate, Preserve, Share:
Improving access to primary
source materials from Africa
To Display or Not to Display? The
Question of Juvenile Literature
Displays in an Academic Library
Calling All Library Donors!: Using
an Undergraduate Research
Award to Engage Potential Donors
Are you ready? Developing a
disaster preparedness plan for
libraries
IV-15
V-5
V-19
VI-10
From Research Supporters to
Research Partners: Librarians and
Islamic Bioethics
Sycamore Things: A Visual
Literacy Game
Library Support of Undergraduate
Research Programs: Perceptions,
Value and Opportunity
Teaching Information Literacy
Through Graphic Novels and
Animation
IV-16
V-6
Transforming Biomedical Research
and Practice: Promoting Research
and Awareness of Sex and
Gender Differences in Health
V-20
VI-11
Library as Place: Experiences of
Homeless Men in Public Libraries
in Vancouver, Canada
From pages to people: Organizing
Human Libraries in academic
library settings
Is the library really open if the
building is closed? Student survey
panel results
IV-17
V-7
Sprouting Green Librarians Among
the Weeds
Session VI:
Infrastructure
VI-12
Finance Your Future - The
university Finance Lab as a venue
for information literacy & student
engagement
Posters on Buildings and
Equipment, Management, and
Technology
VI-13
V-8
IV-18
Who Am I?: Incorporating Identity
Play to Boost Teen Engagement
Puerto Rico and Colombia:
Enhancing the library to empower
communities in the digital age
V-9
IV-19
How do YOU Día?: An Interactive
Showcase of Culturally Diverse
Children’s Library Programs
First Steps for Aboriginal Students:
The Library’s Partnership with the
Aboriginal Centre
V-10
IV-20
youryongestreet: Connecting
Communities through Local
History
Session V:
Connections
Posters on Cooperation with NonLibrary Institutions and Agencies,
Interlibrary Loan, Library Use
Instruction, and Public Awareness
Sunday, June 29
12:30 pm – 2:00 pm
V-1
V-2
Something to Talk About: Creating
Dialogue and Transforming
Viewpoints through Library and
Community Collaboration
V-11
You Don’t Have to Fake It
Sunday, June 29
2:30 pm – 4:00 pm
VI-1
A Class-Sourced Bibliography:
Tapping the Web and Social Media
Tools to Develop an Evolving
Annotated Bibliography
VI-14
Going Analog & Getting Artsy:
Transforming the Academic Library
through Creative Programming
VI-2
VI-15
The Last Space of Democracy—
Libraries and Urban
Transformation
VI-16
Connecting Arizona Tribal Libraries
What is your ALTernate Reality?
VI-3
V-12
From Here to Discovery
VI-17
The Librarian Will See You Now:
Mandatory Research Conferences
for Composition Students
VI-4
CAREful Change: Supporting
Users and Each Other Through
Times of Significant Change
Preparing for Candidates to
Interview Us
V-13
Funky Fundraising – How We
Used a Literary Pub Crawl to
Raise Money for Literacy
V-14
VI-18
VI-5
Library Annual Reports Made Easy
VI-6
To Tweet or Not to Tweet?
Accessibility: Opening Windows to
Digital Collections
V-15
VI-7
Problem Assignments: An
Opportunity for Faculty to
Collaborate with Librarians
V-16
Dropping a Few Balls: Juggling for
Relevancy
V-3
Re:Purpose Your Event: How the
RE:BOOK Altered Book Contest
Became a Signature Event at The
Claremont Colleges Library
Fixing Future Managers: Librarian
Recommendations for Improving
Library School Management
Education
Engaging Learners through
Interface, Interactivity, and Instant
Feedback
Managing Against Change:
Transactional Leadership and the
Experienced Library Leader
VI-19
Lead and Inspire: The Effect of
Transformational Leadership on
Organizational Outcomes
VI-20
Library Outreach through Digital
Exhibits
VI-8
Design it! Developing a Graphic
Design Process for Diversity
Resources
V-17
From the Ground Up Promoting
Sustainability in Academic
Libraries
poster sessions
Taking Our Show on the Road:
Salt Lake County Library Services’
Road Home Shelter Outreach
Project
Guitars, Amps, & iPads: Music
Libraries as Makerspaces
Plug-in Wall
On any random night, there is an estimated
$30–60 million in the larger casino vaults. On
holiday weekends, those estimates double.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
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Friday, June 27
Kekla Magoon
6:00-6:30pm
Toni Yuly
6:00-6:30pm
Gene Luen Yang
6:30-7:00pm
th
8
2
ne
Ju
y,
da
ur
at
S
PRINTZ AWARD
Marcus Sedgwick
10:00-11:00am
SCOTT O’DELL
AWARD
Kirkpatrick Hill
3:00-4:00pm
Ann M. Martin
2:00-3:00pm
Sally Gardner
4:00-4:30pm
Eugene Yelchin
2:00-3:00pm
Claire Rudolf Murphy &
Bryan Collier
4:00-4:30pm
th
Sunday, June 29
Nick Bruel
with Bad Kitty
9:00-10:00am
PURA BELPRÉ
ILLUSTRATOR
HONOR
Angela Dominguez
11:00-12:00pm
Peter Sís
9:00-10:00am
PURA BELPRÉ
ILLUSTRATOR
AWARD
Yuyi Morales
11:00-12:00pm
CSK/ JOHN STEPTOE
AWARD FOR NEW
TALENT
Theodore Taylor III
10:00-10:30am
Josephine Angelini
3:00-4:00pm
Caragh O’Brien
10:30-11:30am
Leigh Bardugo
3:00-4:00pm
Mary E. Pearson
10:30-11:30am
Jessica Brody
3:00-4:00pm
th
Monday, June 30
Stop By and
Pick Up Galleys
of Our Latest
Titles
SIBERT HONOR
ra Jordan
Jan Greenberg and Sand
10:30-11:30am
MEET OUR AUTHORS
AND ILLUSTRATORS
ALA Annual 2014, Las Vegas, NV | Disney•Hyperion Booth #603
SATURDAY, June 28
MARILYN
SINGER
9:30 a.m.–10:30 a.m.
VICTORIA
SCHWAB
ADAM
REX
JOHN
ROCCO
NEAL
Smek for President!
Super Hair-O and the
Barber of Doom and
Blizzard poster
Tesla’s Attic and
Edison’s Alley Sneak
10:30 a.m.–11:30 a.m. 11:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m.–2:00 p.m.
Rutherford B., Who Was He? The Unbound
Sneak
Peek
SUNDAY, June 29
MO
WILLEMS
9:30 a.m.–10:30 a.m.
GREG
PIZZOLI
SUNDAY, June 29 (cont’d)
MELISSA
LANDERS
R. C.
LEWIS
Invaded
Stitching Snow
2:00 p.m.–2:30 p.m.
Peek
BARETT SMITH
AMI
JI-LI
POLONSKY JIANG
Magic Delivery
Gracefully Grayson
11:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m.–2:00 p.m.
A Big Guy Took My Ball! and The Watermelon Seed and
The Pigeon Needs a Bath!
Number One Sam
3:00 p.m.–3:30 p.m.
CLETE
SHUSTERMAN
Sneak
Peek
1:00 p.m.–2:00 p.m.
Sneak
Peek
2:00 p.m.–2:30 p.m.
Red Kite, Blue Kite
MONDAY, June 30
3:00 p.m.–3:30 p.m.
Sneak
Peek
ELIZABETH
WEIN
9:30 a.m.–10:30 a.m.
Rose Under Fire
BOOTH #603
STAN LEE
Wristbands for the signing will
be given out Friday ONLY.
Limited quantity.
Exhibitor Listings (as of May 12, 2014)
3Branch Products
Booth 1869
1945 Techny Rd., Ste. 10
Northbrook, IL 60062
Phone: 847-291-3900
Fax: 847-291-3901
3branch.com
Manufacturer of the “mag|box”,
“mag|browz”, “mag|stak” acrylic
display products and the children’s
Discovery activity tables. Stop in
and see what’s new!
3M Library Systems
753
3M Center Bldg. 225-4N-14
St. Paul, MN 55144-1000
Phone: 651-736-1163
Fax: 651-733-0728
www.3m.com/us/library
3M is committed to helping libraries meet the needs of the communities they serve. 3M’s security,
productivity and digital lending
services help librarians have the
flexibility to spend more time doing
what they do best—helping their
patrons. Visit www.3M.com/us/
library and follow us on Twitter
(@3MLibrary), Facebook.
AAAS/Science
1719
1200 New York Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20005
Phone: 202-326-6730
Fax: 202-371-9849
www.scienceonline.org
ABC-CLIO/
Greenwood
1343
130 Cremona Dr., Ste. C
Santa Barbara, CA 93117
Phone: 800-368-6868
Fax: 805-685-9685
www.abc-clio.com
Presented in unique formats that
are accessible and engaging,
ABC-CLIO/Greenwood publishes
authoritative reference content
produced to stimulate inquiry
and build knowledge across a
variety of academic disciplines.
ABC-CLIO/Greenwood is an
imprint of ABC-CLIO, LLC. For
more information, visit www.
abc-clio.com.
ABDO
1071
8000 W. 78th St., Ste. 310
Edina, MN 55439
Phone: 952-698-2403
Fax: 952-831-1632
www.abdopublishing.com
ABDO has been an educational
publisher of quality children’s
and YA titles for 30 years, with
nonfiction & fiction titles for
grades PreK–12 in reinforced
library bindings as well as digital
products including hosted
eBooks, databases, and eBoosts.
Company divisions include Abdo
Publishing, Abdo Kids, Magic
Wagon, Spotlight, and Abdo
Digital.
ABC-CLIO, LLC
Abingdon Press
1343
130 Cremona Dr., Ste. C
Santa Barbara, CA 93117
Phone: 800-368-6868
Fax: 805-685-9685
www.abc-clio.com
Since 1955, ABC-CLIO, LLC has
been publishing award-winning
print and digital resources focusing
on curriculum and reference, as
well as professional development
for teachers and librarians. We
proudly support educators and
librarians in fostering 21st century
skills, independent critical thinking,
312
201 Eighth Ave. S.
Nashville, TN 37203
Phone: 800-251-3320
Fax: 800-836-7802
www.abingdonpress.com
For more than 200 years,
Abingdon Press has continued a
tradition in religious publishing for
crossing denominational boundaries with thought-provoking and
enjoyable books. Abingdon
Press is an imprint of The United
Methodist Publishing House,
in operation since 1789. In the
early 1920s, Abingdon began
publishing a wide array of highcaliber academic, professional,
inspirational, and life-affirming
religious literature to enrich church
communities across the globe.
Now beginning its ninth decade,
Abingdon Press has a commitment to providing the best, most
effective religious publications
available.
Able Card, LLC
1478
1300 W. Optical Dr., Ste. 600
Azusa, CA 91702-3285
Phone: 626-969-1888
Fax: 626-969-9888
www.ablecard.com
Able Card is a plastic card
manufacturer and we supply credit
card quality product to hundred
of libraries across the country for
eighteen years. We print and make
all the cards right here in Southern
California and therefore we can
maintain a high quality and great
turnaround time for our customers. Let us give you a quote next
time when you are ready for
reorder.
ABRAMS Books
628
115 W. 18th St., 6th Fl.
New York, NY 10011
Phone: 212-229-7110
Fax: 212-366-0809
www.abramsbooks.com
ABRAMS, The Art of Books Since
1949, was the first company in
the United States to specialize
in the creation and distribution
of art and illustrated books. Now
a subsidiary of La Martinière
Groupe, the company publishes
visually stunning illustrated books
in the areas of art, photography,
cooking, craft, fashion, and pop
culture, as well as children’s
books. The company’s imprints
include Abrams, Abrams
ComicArts, Abrams Image,
Abrams Books for Young Readers,
Amulet Books, and Abrams
Appleseed.
Accessible Archives,
Inc.
1738
5 Great Valley Pkwy., Ste. 216
Malvern, PA 19355
Phone: 610-296-7441
Fax: 610-725-1745
www.accessible-archives.com
Founded in 1990, Accessible
Archives utilizes computer technology to provide vast quantities
of archived historical information previously available only in
microformat. Diverse primary
source materials reflecting broad
views across American history
and culture have been assembled
into comprehensive databases.
Developed by dedicated instructors and students of Americana,
these databases allow access to
the rich store of materials from
leading books and periodicals
then current. Accessible Archives
will continue to add titles covering
important topics and time periods
to assist scholars and students at
all academic levels.
Adam Matthew
849
Pelhams House, London Rd.
Marlborough, Wiltshire, SN8 2A9
United Kingdom
Phone: 44167-251-1663
www.amdigital.co.uk
Adam Matthew is an award-winning publisher of unique primary
source collections. Working with
leading libraries, archives and
scholars from around the world,
we produce creative resources
that offer powerful research and
dynamic teaching opportunities for
universities, colleges and libraries.
Visit booth 947 for our latest titles
such as American Indian Histories
and Cultures and China, America
and the Pacific. Free trials are
available: www.amdigital.co.uk/
trial-request/.
Afinia 3D Printer
1868
8150 Mallory Ct., PO Box 846
Chanhassen, MN 55317
Phone: 952-556-1615
Fax: 952-556-1620
www.afinia.com
exhibitor listings A
Science is a world-leading
scientific journal. Science Signaling
publishes research pertaining to
cell biology. Science Translational
Medicine advances medicine into
science to improve patient care
worldwide.
and the exploration and understanding of complex issues. The
company, headquartered in Santa
Barbara, Calif., publishes under
four well-respected imprints: ABCCLIO, Greenwood, Praeger, and
Libraries Unlimited/Linworth.
Our H-Series desktop 3D Printer
is the affordable, portable “Out
of the Box 3D Printing package”
and was voted “Best Overall
Experience” in the recent make
magazine 3D printer shootout
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185
among 15 global competitors
Afinia will be showing it’s award
winning 3D printer, and full line
of ABS filament. Our H series 3D
printer was voted “Best Overall
Experience” in the recent make
magazine 3D printer shootout.
Live 3D printing demonstrations
will be held continuously during
the day.
2153
101 N. Brand Blvd., Ste. 870
Glendale, CA 91203
Phone: 818-246-2223
Fax: 818-246-2227
www.abcmouse.com
Agate Publishing
ABCmouse.com is a leading and
comprehensive online learning
resource for children ages 2–6
and is now free to libraries.
Available on computers, tablets
and smartphones, ABCmouse.
com is highly engaging and helps
young learners build a strong
foundation for future academic
success. 100% educational with
no advertising or links to 3rd-party
sites. Easy-to-use and sets up in
minutes. Go to www.abcmouse.
com/libraries for more information
and to set up your free account.
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
ALA Affiliates
322
1546
AFL-CIO/ALA Joint
Committee on
Library Service to
Labor Groups
1911
815 16th St. NW, 7th Fl.
Washington, DC 20006
Phone: 202-638-0320
1328 Greenleaf
Chicago, IL 60202
Phone: 812-877-9488
www.agatepublishing.com
Agate has five imprints: B2 Books,
business-related nonfiction;
Bolden Books, fiction and nonfiction by African-American writers;
Surrey Books, food, nutrition,
and entertaining; Agate Digital,
eBooks; and Midway Books,
Midwestern topics.
AGATI Furniture
643
1219 W. Lake St.
Chicago, IL 60607
Phone: 312-829-1977
Fax: 312-829-8249
www.agati.com
a exhibitor listings
Age of Learning,
Inc./ABCmouse.com
AGATI designs and engineers
quality furniture tailored to meet
the functional and technological
needs of a library and its patrons.
Joe Agati, an award winning
product designer, launched his
library division in the 1980’s.
Through word of mouth, personalized service and an unparalleled
commitment to its product, AGATI
Furniture has grown to be an
innovator and leader in the library
industry today.
50 E. Huron St.
Chicago, IL 60611
Phone: 312-280-3247
Fax: 312-280-5014
The American Library Association
(ALA) is the oldest and largest
library association in the world,
providing association information,
news, events, and advocacy
resources for members, librarians, and library users. Founded
on October 6, 1876, during
the Centennial Exposition in
Philadelphia, the mission of
ALA is to provide leadership for
the development, promotion,
and improvement of library and
information services and the
profession of librarianship in
order to enhance learning and
ensure access to information for
all. Affiliate organizations of the
American Library Association are
groups having purpose or interests
similar to those of the Association.
Some of these societies meet
annually at the time and place of
ALA meetings. ALA recommends
membership also in these organizations to those of its members
for whom such connection is
appropriate.
ALA Games &
Gaming Round Table
2010
50 E. Huron St.
Chicago, IL 60611
Phone: 312-280-2461
http://ala.org/gamert
Stop by and visit the GameRT
and our guests: Eagle/Gryphon
Games, publishers of Fleet, Triassic
Terror and Railways of the World
186
and Mayfair Games, publishers of
Pillars of the Earth, Steam and the
Award Winning Settlers of Catan!
The Games and Gaming Round
Table gives you access to information and resources to help you
build and maintain your collection
and helps you grow professionally.
This group has several committees
for members to participate on as
well as a space to network and
share ideas related to games and
gaming in libraries. Our goal is to
set standards and best practices
that can be used around the world.
Hollywood Life, and new books by
Bill Roorbach & Brock Clarke.
Algonquin Young
Readers: A member of
the Workman Family of
Imprints
414
225 Varick St.
New York, NY 10014-4381
Phone: 212-614-7572
Fax: 800-344-3482
www.workman.com
250 S. Northwest Hwy., Ste. 320
Park Ridge, IL 60068
Phone: 847-232-2808
Fax: 847-381-0033
www.albertwhitman.com
Publishers of the much lauded
Somebody Up There Hates You,
If You Could Be Mine (We’ll have
ARCs of Sara’s new title Tell Me
Again How a Crush Should Feel),
James McMullen’s Leaving China,
& Kate and Sarah Klise’s Three
Ring Rascals books… Look for
ARCs of Witch’s Boy (a BEA
featured title).
Albert Whitman & Company has
been publishing award winning
children’s books since 1919.
Alibris
Albert Whitman &
Company
517
1178
Alexander Street
Press
912
3212 Duke St.
Alexandria, VA 22314
Phone: 703-212-8520
Fax: 703-940-6584
www.alexanderstreet.com
Alexander Street Press is diversifying rapidly in 2014, with new and
growing resources in tons of
areas—international business,
human resources, nutrition, respiratory health, film, world literature,
music, education, area studies,
psychology, human rights, and
more. Stop by booth 912 to demo
what’s new, get a look at the latest
features on our new interface,
and learn more about our growing
evidence-based acquisition and
media hosting services.
Algonquin Books of
Chapel Hill: A member
of the Workman Family of
Imprints
414
PO Box 2225
Chapel Hill, NC 27510
Phone: 919-967-0108
Fax: 919-933-0272
www.algonquin.com
Algonquin Books, publishers of
the #1 April Library Reads title, will
be featuring ARCs of exciting fall
titles such as Pandemonium (Just
ask us… It’s a hoot!). Also in the
booth will be: Of All the Gin Joints:
A Cocktail Drinker’s Guide to the
1250 45th St., Ste. 100
Emeryville, CA 94608
Phone: 877-254-2747
Fax: 510-550-6052
www.alibris.com/library
Alibris for Libraries is a leading
library supplier of used and hardto-find books, movies and music.
Alibris has millions of out-of-print,
older in-print and otherwise
unavailable titles in stock. We offer
flexible payment options, consolidated shipping and custom tools
for managing replacement and
collection development projects.
ALISE
1922
65 E. Wacker Pl., Ste. 1900
Chicago, IL 60601
Phone: 312-419-9094
Fax: 312-419-8950
www.alise.org
The Association for Library and
Information Science Education
(ALISE) booth will host materials
and information from a variety of
schools of library and information
science, including materials for
doctorate and master’s degree
programs.
Altarama Information
Systems
1848
1111 East 1100 North
Orem, UT 84097
Phone: 888-982-9997
Fax: 801-226-7866
www.altarama.com
Library reference and information request specialists receive
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
requests from many sources.
Altarama’s products provide
technology that helps manage the
intake, assignment and response
development of requests, as well
as enables the construction of
a more useful work product and
provides a richer gathering of
reports and statistics.
program or the whole catalog.
110 new programs, copyrighted
in the last year, not old product
released again to the marketplace.
Produced for universities with the
unbiased position and professional
involvement your professors need
in their curriculum supplements. At
an affordable cost!
Amalivre
American Collective
Stand
1553
62, Avenue de Suffren
Paris 75015 France
Phone: 33014-567-1838
Fax: 33014-566-5070
www.auxam.fr
The combined bookshops of Aux
Amateurs de Livres and Touzot
Librairie Internationale will be
known as Amalivre effective July
1, 2014. Our expanded team of
book specialists supplies print as
well as other formats of materials
published in France and Frenchspeaking countries worldwide.
We also provide academic and
public libraries with a variety of
acquisitions services including
approval plans, EDI/MARC21
record delivery, full cataloging and
shelf-ready physical processing.
Ambassador
Education Solutions
1718
445 Broadhollow Rd., Ste. 206
Melville, NY 11747
Phone: 631-770-1010
Fax: 631-770-1015
www.ambassadored.com
Ambrose Video
Publishing
1273
145 W. 45th St., Ste. 1115
New York, NY 10036
Phone: 702-655-3532
Fax: 212-768-9282
www.ambrosevideo.com
Ambrosedigital.com provides
the highest quality streams
in educational video streaming. 100% closed captioned.
Searchable transcripts. Free
MARC records. Easy access by
all mobile devices. Choose one
277 White Street
Buchanan, NY 10511
Phone: 914-739-7500
Fax: 914-739-7575
www.americancollectivestand.com
International Book Fairs done
easy! Collective of Independent
publishers, distributors, agents
and packagers from the United
States. ACS (known as the USA
Pavilion) provides complete
turnkey exhibit options at the
Frankfurt, London, Beijing,
Bologna, Guadalajara and Sharjah
Book Fairs as well as BookExpo
America.
American Psychiatric
Publishing
2232
1000 Wilson Blvd., Ste. 1825
Arlington, VA 22209
Phone: 703-907-7883
Fax: 703-907-1091
www.appi.org
American Psychiatric Publishing
(APP), a division of American
Psychiatric Association, is a world
premier publisher of books and
journals on psychiatry, mental
health and behavioral science.
We offer authoritative, up-to-date
and affordable information geared
toward psychiatrists, other mental
health professionals, psychiatric
residents, medical students and
the general public.
American
Psychological
Association
763
750 First St. NE
Washington, DC 20002-4241
Phone: 202-336-5500
Fax: 202-336-6191
www.apa.org
American Psychological
Association is the premier source
for information in psychology. APA
delivers this information through
its expansive collection of books,
journals, newsletters, electronic
products and its website, www.
apa.org.
631
2655 Le Jeune Road, Ste. 1114
Coral Gables, FL 33134
Phone: 305-446-4387
Fax: 305-446-2602
www.americareadsspanish.com
Official institution that develops
and promotes the Spanish Book
Publishing Industries and channels
inquiries and activities related to
this industry.
Andrews McMeel
Publishing
309
1130 Walnut St.
Kansas City, MO 64106
Phone: 816-581-7500
Fax: 816-581-7486
www.andrewsmcmeel.com
Andrews McMeel Publishing is a
leader in humor, cookbook, gift,
trade and children’s books. Our
AMP! Comics for Kids books for
the middle grade include reader
favorites Big Nate, Peanuts, and
Pearls Before Swine and new
releases The Ice Cream Kid,
Desmond Pucket, and Dragon
Girl.
Annick Press
325
15 Patricia Ave.
Toronto, ON M2M 1H9 Canada
Phone: 416-221-4802
Fax: 416-221-8400
www.annickpress.com
Annick Press is recognized as
one of the most innovative and
cutting-edge publishers of fiction
and nonfiction for children and
young adults. With editorial offices
in Toronto and Vancouver, Annick
publishes over 20 titles a year,
which are distributed by Firefly
Books. Annick also publishes
e-book editions of most of its
titles. Among its most notable
titles are Chanda’s Secrets, Bite of
the Mango, Fatty Legs, and The
Man with the Violin.
Archelon Enclosures
2173
2200 Cleveland Ave.
San Diego, CA 91950
Phone: 619-742-2062
www.archelonenclosures.com
Archelon Enclosures provides the
perfect solution to protect your
iPad® or computer tablet. Whether
you’re using tablets for a Tutoring
Center, Book Directory, Children’s
Library or Electronic Check-out,
the Archelon protects the tablet
without detracting from the
experience. Archelon Enclosures
are made in the USA and feature
a variety of product designs
including secure mounts for a
countertop, wall, floor-stand kiosk
or a charging base with detachable enclosure for mobility.
Arte Publico Press
225
University of Houston, 452 Cullen,
Performance Hall
Houston, TX 77204-2004
Phone: 713-743-2846
Fax: 713-743-2847
www.artepublicopress.com
Arte Público Press and its imprint
for children and young adults,
Piñata Books, will display books—
in English, Spanish, and bilingual
formats—by U.S. Hispanic
authors. Featured will be new
bilingual picture books by Laura
Lacámara (Dalia’s Wondrous Hair/
El maravilloso cabellos de Dalia),
René Saldaña (Dale, dale, dale:
Una fiesta de números/Hit It, Hit
It, Hit It: A Fiesta of Numbers), and
Judith Ortiz Cofer (La poeta del
piso de arriba).
Artisan: A member of
the Workman Family of
Imprints
414
225 Varick St.
New York, NY 10014-4381
Phone: 212-614-7572
Fax: 800-344-3482
www.workman.com
Artisan publishes illustrated
lifestyle books, including titles
on cooking, gardening, interiors,
sports, nature, art and photography. Ask us about Sean Brock:
My Food, My Mission and Be
Well: Health Rules for Mind, Body,
Spirit.
Artstor
1379
151 E. 61st St.
New York, NY 10065
Phone: 212-500-2400
Fax: 212-500-2401
www.artstor.org
Artstor is a nonprofit with a
mission to use digital images and
media to enhance scholarship
and education. We bring together
more than 1.8 million high-quality
images for education and research
and offer the tools to catalog,
manage, and distribute digital
media collections. Learn more at
artstor.org.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
exhibitor listings A
Since 1973, Ambassador has
supported higher education institutions in simplifying the adoption,
management and delivery of all
student course materials and
learning resources, resulting in
an optimized student learning
experience and extensive student
and faculty support, while enabling
institutions to maintain control
and streamline costs. For more
information, please visit www.
ambassadored.com.
639
America Reads
Spanish
187
ASM International
2111
9639 Kinsman Rd.
Materials Park, OH 44073-0002
Phone: 440-338-5409
Fax: 440-338-8629
www.asminternational.org
ASM International was founded
in 1913 and became known as
the American Society for Metals.
A member and volunteer based
organization, ASM International
serves as a central resource
that gathers the latest applied
information from the field and
disseminates it back to industry,
academia, and government
through published content,
classes, conferences, expositions,
and local chapter engagement.
Association
for Computing
Machinery
2171
2 Penn Plaza, Ste. 701
New York, NY 10121
Phone: 212-626-0659
Fax: 212-944-1318
www.acm.org/dl
The ACM Digital Library (DL) is a
complete collection of all of ACM’s
publications, including ACM
journals, conference proceedings,
magazines, newsletters, and
multimedia titles. The ACM Guide
to Computing Literature is the
most comprehensive bibliographic
database in existence today
focused exclusively on the field of
computing.
Atiz Innovation, Inc.
a exhibitor listings
1916
188
1680 Vine St., Ste. 1208
Los Angeles, CA 90028
Phone: 800-501-6035
Fax: 866-895-2691
www.atiz.com
We manufacture an inexpensive
solution for scanning bound
content.
Atlas Systems
1023
244 Clearfield Ave., Ste. 407
Virginia Beach, VA 23462-1816
Phone: 757-467-7872
Fax: 757-467-7875
www.atlas-sys.com
Atlas Systems, a software
development company, brings
the benefits of automation to
library processes not addressed
by other software services. Ares,
an electronic reserves solution,
offers flexible copyright tracking,
Unicode support, add-ons to save
time populating the bib record,
and rapid class cloning. Aeon,
an online request and workflow
management system designed
for special collections libraries
and archives, improves customer
service and staff efficiency while
providing unparalleled item
tracking, security, and statistics.
French-speaking countries worldwide. We also provide academic
and public libraries with a variety
of acquisitions services including
approval plans, EDI/MARC21
record delivery, full cataloging and
shelf-ready physical processing.
AWE, Inc.
1755
AtoZdatabases
2245
11211 John Galt Blvd.
Omaha, NE 68137-0757
Phone: 402-690-2080
Fax: 402-255-9099
www.atozdatabases.com
Auryn, Inc.
1568I
6033 West Century Blvd #808
Los Angeles, CA 90045
www.stories-alive.com
STORIESALIVE—Children’s digital
library of interactive and award
winning stories and creator apps
for learning and fun. It is a evergrowing library with a collection
of work by renowned children’s
authors and illustrators.
Auto-Graphics, Inc.
1111
430 Vineyard Ave., Ste. 100
Ontario, CA 91764
Phone: 909-569-1505
Fax: 909-595-3506
www.auto-graphics.com
For over 50 years, Auto-Graphics
has helped libraries of all sizes
become more efficient and
patron-centric. Auto-Graphics’
Library Management Platform™—
currently used by more than 5,500
libraries in North America—is comprised of VERSO® an integrated
library system; SHAREit™ an
interlibrary loan and consortial borrowing solution; and SEARCHit™
a federated search module. For
more information, please visit
www.auto-graphics.com.
Aux Amateurs De
Livres-Touzot
1553
62, Ave. de Suffren
Paris, 75015 France
Phone: 33-01-45-67-18-38
Fax: 33-01-45-66-50-70
www.auxam.fr
The combined bookshops of Aux
Amateurs de Livres and Touzot
Librairie Internationale will be
known as Amalivre effective July
1, 2014. Our expanded team
of book specialists supplies
print as well as other formats of
materials published in France and
2501 Seaport Dr., Ste. 410-SH
Chester, PA 19013
Phone: 610-833-6400
www.awelearning.com
AWE is the leading provider of
all-in-one digital learning solutions
for young children in public
libraries. Our computer products
include over 60 educational
programs featuring thousands
of activities across all subjects.
AWE’s flagship solution, the Early
Literacy Station™, is found in over
40% of U.S. library systems. Now
available on a tablet!
B & H Publishing
Group
1864
127 Ninth Ave. N.
Nashville, TN 37234-0143
Phone: 615-251-2647
Fax: 615-501-9151
www.bhpublishinggroup.com
B&H Publishing Group is a nonprofit publisher passionate about
taking God’s Word to the world.
Because we believe Every Word
Matters™, we seek to provide
intentional, Bible-centered content
that positively impacts the hearts
and minds of people, inspiring
them to build a lifelong relationship
with Jesus Christ. Our print and
digital releases for trade, church
and academic markets include
New York Times No. 1 bestsellers
The Love Dare and The Vow as
well as the award-winning HCSB
Study Bible.
Babalu, Inc.
202
1018 Garden St., Ste. 206
Santa Barbara, CA 93101
Phone: 805-963-8180
Fax: 805-456-3613
www.babaluinc.com
Backstage Library
Works
1112
25 East 1700 South
Provo, UT 84606
Phone: 800-288-1265
Fax: 801-356-8220
www.bslw.com
cost-effective professional services
backed by a lifetime quality
guarantee. Describe, preserve, and
access your collections with
Backstage cataloging, authority
control, digitization, microfilm, RDA
enrichment, reclassification, and
on-site RFID tagging services. To
find out how we can help with your
project, call 1.801.356.1852,
check us out online at www.BSLW.
com or visit us at booth 1112.
Baker & Taylor
1333
2550 W. Tyvola Rd,
Ste. 300
Charlotte, NC 28217
Phone: 704-998-3231
Fax: 704-998-3316
www.baker-taylor.com
Baker & Taylor is a premier
worldwide distributor of digital and
print books and entertainment
products. The company leverages its unsurpassed worldwide
distribution network to deliver
rich content in multiple formats
anytime and anywhere. Baker &
Taylor offers cutting-edge digital
media services and innovative
technology platforms to thousands
of libraries, schools, publishers
and retailers worldwide.
Barron’s
2144
250 Wireless Blvd.
Hauppauge, NY 11788
Phone: 800-645-3476
Fax: 631-434-3217
www.barronseduc.com
Offering a wide array of test prep
and guidance, children’s, art/craft,
hobby, business, foreign language,
ESL/ELL, cookbooks, and pet
books.
Basch Subscriptions,
Inc., A Prenax Inc.
2061
10 Ferry St., Ste. 429
Concord, NH 03301
Phone: 603-229-0662
Fax: 603-226-9443
www.basch.com
BSI and Prenax, Inc. provide
responsive, customer-oriented
print and electronic subscription
management. BSI services and
systems are shaped by the needs
of medical, government, academic
and public libraries; those of
Prenax mesh with corporate fulfillment systems and the desk-top
ordering and approval processes
common among legal, financial,
and industrial clients.
Streamlining workflows for satisfied
clients, Backstage provides
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Baum USA
2268
13 Branch St., Ste. 205
Methuen, MA 01844
Phone: 855-620-7985
www.baumusa.com
BAUM Retec, Inc. (BAUM USA) is
a provider of technology solutions
for people who are blind or visually
impaired. We are attending the
ALA Annual Conference this year
to introduce two products: Poet, a
talking reading machine for people
who are blind, and VisioBook S, a
portable, battery-powered video
magnification system for people
with low vision. If you are looking
for innovative ways to support
your visually impaired patrons, we
invite you to visit booth 2268, or
www.baumusa.com.
BayScan
Technologies
1865
33549 E. Royalton Rd., Unit 3
Columbia Station, OH 44028-9307
Phone: 877-229-7226
www.bayscan.com
BayScan Technologies is known
for its innovative and custom
solutions for libraries. From Self
Checkout and RFID to Digital
Signage and Time and Print
Management. BayScan has also
implemented custom print solutions for Hold Slips, Transfer labels
and Spine Label Printing.
Bearport Publishing
Co.
563
Bearport Publishing is dedicated
to building enthusiasm for
reading with K–8 students. Our
curriculum-aligned, high-interest
nonfiction books are written
in a compelling narrative style
to engage children in well-told
stories.
Beijing International
Book Fair
639
802, No. 16 Gongti East Road
Chaoyang District, Beijing 100020
Peoples Republic of China
Phone 86-106-586-6995
Fax: 86-106-508-9188
www.bibf.com
The 21st Beijing International Book
Fair, August 27–31, 2014, will be
held at the “New” CIEC exhibition
Bella & Harry
312
15057 Sweetgum St.
Delray Beach, FL 33446
Phone: 561-495-2200
Fax: 561-637-3235
www.BellaAndHarry.com
We like to refer to our genre as
“children’s educational fiction.”
As such, our “Adventures of Bella
& Harry” series is intended to be
an informative, interactive and
exciting way to introduce children
to travel, different countries,
customs, history and landmarks.
The educational value of our
books is cleverly disguised amidst
dozens of illustrated pages which
are sure to win the hearts of young
readers.
Bentham Science
Publishers
2234
117 S. Euclid Ave.
Oak Park, IL 60302
Phone: 312-413-5867
Fax: 312-275-7530
www.benthamscience.com
Bentham Science Publisher is a
major STM journal publisher of
130 online and print journals, 150
plus open access journals, and
related print/online book series,
Bentham Science Publisher
answers the informational needs
of the pharmaceutical, biomedical
and medical research community.
Better World Books
Bibliotheca
1277
663
Better World Books is a social
venture organization that collects
new and used books and resells
them online in order to fund
organizations and support nonprofit literacy groups. Our Library
Discards & Donations Program
offers a no cost solution for your
library’s unwanted books and
we are working with over 4000
libraries across the US, Canada
and the UK. Free shipping and
materials are only a couple of
the benefits of this free program.
Please stop by to hear more!
Bibliotheca is one of the world’s
largest companies dedicated to
the development, deployment
and support of library technology
solutions, with particular focus
on public, private and academic
library markets. We create scalable
and customizable self-checkout,
RFID, security and AMH solutions,
offering unparalleled integration
with ILS systems as well as easyto-use, intuitive user interfaces for
both patrons and staff.
11560 Great Oaks Way, Ste. 100
Alpharetta, GA 30022-2454
Phone: 800-894-0242
www.betterworldbooks.com
BiblioCommons Inc.
1743
119 Spadina Ave., Ste. 1000
Toronto, ON M5V 2L1 Canada
Phone: 647-436-6381
Fax: 647-435-8715
www.bibliocommons.com
Live with over 200 public libraries,
BiblioCommons offers an exceptional online patron experience.
The BiblioCore catalog works with
all major ILSs and features intuitive
search, community engagement,
eBook integration and more.
BiblioCMS is a hosted solution for
content and website management
that is fully integrated with the
BiblioCore catalog. Also available are a full suite of services
including BiblioMobile, Suggest for
Purchase module, BiblioEvents,
Summer Reading, BiblioDigital,
and more.
BiblioLabs
1055
Bernan
813
15200 NBN Way, Bldg. C
Blue Ridge Summit, PA 17214
Phone: 717-794-3800
Fax: 717-794-3857
www.bernan.com
Bernan is a leading distributor of
essential publications from the
U.S. government and international
organizations. We have access
to more than 45,000 publications
from around the world so you can
have a one-stop source to a world
of authoritative information.
100 Calhoun St., Ste. 220
Charleston, SC 29401
Phone: 843-696-0416
Fax: 803-454-9419
www.biblioboard.com
BiblioLabs is a media-technology
company working with libraries
and cultural organizations, like
the British Library and National
Library of Colombia, to make
historical content universally
accessible through BiblioBoard.
Featuring multimedia Anthologies
on a range of topics from Science
and Literature to Punk Music and
Pirates, BiblioBoard has been
named the best new mobile app
for libraries by the Charleston
Advisor. BiblioBoard is now available by subscription to all libraries.
3169 Holcomb Bridge Rd.,
Jefferson Plaza, Ste. 200
Norcross, GA 30071
Phone: 877-207-3127
Fax: 877-207-3129
www.bibliotheca.com
Bi-Folkal
Productions, Inc.
2043
514 Dunning St.
Madison, WI 53704
Phone: 608-251-2818
Fax: 608-251-2874
www.bifolkal.org
TALK ABOUT KITS! Since 1976
we have packaged multi-media,
multi-sensory resources to prompt
discussion of broad universal
themes. Talk about times and
topics past at adult programs
or in intergenerational groups.
Use the kits at your library or
check them out to be used
anywhere in your community.
Now updated with subtitled DVDs
and CD sing-alongs. Ask us for
a progress report on our bilingual
English/Spanish Remembering
Recuerdos/Recordando Memories
kit. These are kits to talk about!
Big Cozy Books
1862
2374 Research Dr.
Livermore, CA 94550
Phone: 925-447-1582
Fax: 925-447-1589
www.bigcozybooks.com
Unique and whimsical, we build
giant size book-themed furniture
to delight all ages and gladly customize to fit your needs. Create a
comfy, colorful reading area and
curl up on a good book.
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exhibitor listings B
45 W. 21st St., Ste. 3B
New York, NY 10010
Phone: 212-337-8577
Fax: 212-337-8557
www.bearportpublishing.com
center and features: 1,800 exhibitors from 60 countries in 53,600
sqms with a 5,000 square meter
Digital Publishing Zone, giving
overseas exhibitors a chance
to learn about Chinese digital
publishing first hand. Country of
Honor: Republic of Turkey.
189
The Bilingual
Publications
Company
1557
270 Lafayette St.
New York, NY 10012
Phone: 212-431-3500
Fax: 212-431-3567
We are a leading independent
distributor of books in Spanish to
libraries in the USA. We represent
only publishers whose standards
of excellence, creativity and reliability meet ours. With more than
30 years of expertise in collection
development, we are the ideal
resource for libraries seeking to
initiate or expand their Spanishlanguage collections. Please visit
and chat with Linda Goodman,
President.
BioMed Central
1667
414
225 Varick St.
New York, NY 10014-4381
Phone: 212-614-7572
Fax: 800-344-3482
www.workman.com
Whether you’re talking about The
Louvre: All the Paintings, The
Elements, by Theo Gray (new title
alert!), or the Knit Your Own series,
Black Dog & Leventhal books
represent hours of reading and
visual pleasure for book lovers of
all types… strikingly original books
of light reference, humor, cooking,
sports, music, film and entertainment, mysteries, history and
biography and much, much more.
Blackstone Audio
1915
Birchard Company/
EZDROP
Blackstone Audio is your one stop
shop for audiobooks. Imprints
include: AudioGO, Hachette and
HarperCollins. Authors include
James Patterson, Ian Fleming,
Karin Slaughter, Gabriel Garcia
Marquez, Chuck Palahniuk, and
many more. Available on CD,
MP3CD, Playaway and download.
Every month, a selection of
bestselling titles are sole source.
These titles can only be purchased
directly from Blackstone Audio.
We offer flat rate plans, discounts
to fit every budget and responsive
customer service.
PO Box 1438
Claremont, CA 91711-8438
Phone: 909-625-2260
Fax: 909-625-2208
www.ezdrop.biz
b exhibitor listings
Distributed by Workman
Publishing Company
236 Gray’s Inn Rd., Fl. 6
London, WC1X 8HB United Kingdom
Phone: 44203-192-2102
Fax: 44203-192-2010
www.biomedcentral.com
936
190
Black Dog &
Leventhal:
EZDrop, the innovative library
book drop (book return) with
the features your staff has been
waiting for; STAINLESS STEELNOT ALUMINUM! No-Key, 5
button lock! Light weight and
quiet molded carts! EZDrop is
repairable! EZMT, the only real
HARDWOOD indoor book drop!
Since 2002 Birchard Co. has
hosted tours to visit libraries in
CHINA, contact us about the 2014
group!
31 Mistletoe Rd.
Ashland, OR 97520
Phone: 541-488-6035
Fax: 541-482-9294
www.blackstonelibrary.com
Blocks Rock LLC
2118
733 S. West St.
Indianapolis, IN 46225
Phone: 317-972-6846
Fax: 317-602-6720
www.blocksrockgame.com
Bloomsbury
Academic
479
1385 Broadway
New York, NY 10018
Phone: 212-419-5411
www.bloomsbury.com
Bloomsbury Academic serves
research and scholarly communities worldwide in the humanities,
social sciences and visual arts.
We publish about 1100 products
each year encompassing books,
major reference works, eBooks,
journals and online libraries. Stop
by our booth to demo our new
online eBook platform Bloomsbury
Collections.
Bloomsbury
Children’s Books
529
1385 Broadway, 5th Fl.
New York, NY 10018
Phone: 646-438-6102
Fax: 646-219-1140
www.bloomsburyusa.com
Bloomsbury Children’s Books
publishes a full range of trade
books from picture book through
teen, including informational texts.
Blue Apple Books
456
515 Valley St., Ste. 170
Maplewood, NJ 07040
Phone: 973-763-8191
Fax: 973-763-5944
www.blueapplebooks.com
Publisher of award-winning,
innovative and age-appropriate
books for children.
Bologna Children’s
Book Fair
639
Piazza Constituzione, 6
Bologna 40128 Italy
Phone: 3905-128-2242
Fax: 39051-637-4011
www.bolognachildrensbookfair.com
One of the world’s leading
children’s publishing events, held
each spring in Bologna, Italy, with
more than 1,300 exhibitors from
more than 70 countries. March
2015.
BookExpo America
(BEA)
537
383 Main Avenue
Norwalk, CT 06851
Phone: 203-840-5614
Fax: 203-850-9614
www.bookexpoamerica.com
BookExpo America (BEA) is a #1
book & author event in the U.S.
and best place to discover new
titles, meet authors, and learn
trends shaping publishing. With
hundreds of books and 500+
authors, BEA truly is a librarian’s
heaven. Join us at BEA 2015,
Thursday, May 28 – Saturday, May
30, 2015, at the Javits Center in
NYC.
The Book House Inc.
1751
208 W. Chicago St.
Jonesville, MI 49250
Phone: 800-248-1146
Fax: 800-858-9716
www.thebookhouse.com
Book vendor providing ANY
BOOK IN PRINT from publishers
and distributors from the United
States and Canada for over 50
years. Online order database Online order status - Standing
orders - firm orders.
Booklist
617
50 E. Huron St.
Chicago, IL 60611
Phone: 800-545-2433
Fax: 312-337-6787
www.booklistonline.com
Booklist is your steady source for
the best readers’ advisory and
collection development guidance.
With more than 8,000+ annual
reviews of children’s, YA, and adult
books and media from the trusted
ALA experts, Booklist helps
make your job easier. An annual
subscription includes 22 Booklist
and 4 Book Links print issues, plus
24/7 password-access to Booklist
Online—a database of more than
160,000 reviews, as well as top 10
lists, read-alikes, author interviews,
and more.
Books24x7, a
product line of
Skillsoft
1754
300 Innovative Way
Nashua, NH 03062
Phone: 603-821-3681
Fax: 603-821-5643
www.books24x7.com
Skillsoft Books24x7 delivers
differentiating collections of
premium reference content in a
fully searchable database. Patrons
have full access to the complete,
unabridged content of more than
42,000 titles spanning a wide
variety of subjects, including IT/
computers, desktop applications,
business, engineering, finance
and government administration.
In addition, Skillsoft Books24x7
offers more than 9,000 exclusive
IT, desktop, leadership and
business videos, as well as
complimentary MARC records.
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Booksite
Boopsie for Libraries
429
2032
For 18 years, Booksite has been
providing public libraries with
simple yet effective technology
tools to promote stronger community relationships. Booksite has
recently expanded its product line
to introduce POCA, a systemindependent overlay product that
offers a streamlined approach
to discovery, enhanced content,
e-resource integration, and more.
Boopsie, Inc. is a industry-leading
mobile platform-as-a-service
(PaaS) provider for over 2,500
library locations worldwide.
Boopsie’s custom-branded native
mobile apps for libraries are
affordable, easy to deploy and
maintain, and enable libraries of all
types and sizes to quickly acquire
new users and increase circulation. We build native library apps
for Android, Apple iOS, Windows,
Kindle Fire and BlackBerry
platforms. For more information,
visit our website at www.boopsie.
com.
4041 N. High St., Ste. 401
Columbus, OH 43214
Phone: 614-232-9006
www.booksite.com
Books on Tape
542
Attn: Library and School Services,
400 Hahn Road
Westminster, MD 21157
Phone: 800-733-3000
Fax: 800-940-7046
www.booksontape.com
For over 35 years, BOT has been
a premier publisher of bestselling, award-winning unabridged
audiobooks, including popular
Fiction, Romance, Mysteries, and
Non-Fiction. BOT offers Library
Edition CDs @ Retail Prices. Also,
Listening Library, Living Language,
Large Print, and a Popular
Standing Order Plan with extra
discounting.
157 S. Murphy Ave.
Sunnyvale, CA 94086
Phone: 650-619-4882
www.boopsie.com
Bound to Stay
Bound Books
516
1880 W. Morton Ave.
Jacksonville, IL 62650
Phone: 217-245-5191
Fax: 800-747-2872
www.btsb.com
For over 90 years Bound To Stay
Bound has supplied the finest children’s and young adult literature in
the most durable binding available.
Boyds Mills Press
Book Systems, Inc.
1519
4901 University Square, Ste. 3
Huntsville, AL 35816
Phone: 256-319-6720
Fax: 256-536-1175
www.booksys.com
815 Church St.
Honesdale, PA 18431
Phone: 877-512-8366
Fax: 800-874-8817
www.boydsmillspress.com
Highlights Press is the trade book
publishing division of Highlights.
Under the imprint of Boyds
Mills Press; Calkins Creek and
WordSong publishes award-winning children’s books for preschool
through the middle grades. These
books feature imaginative, socially
conscious, educational picture
books and chapter books. Plus
lively non-fiction and poetry and
science titles. In addition, we have
a full-line of activity books, crafts
and the original Hidden Pictures
books for children of all ages.
Brill
Brockhaus/German
Books
1861
637
153 Milk St., 6th Fl.
Boston, MA 02109
Phone: 617-263-2323
Fax: 617-263-2324
www.brill.nl; www.brillonline.com
Brill is a leading scholarly publisher
with a rich history and strong
international focus publishing over
200 journals and 700 new books
and reference works each year,
concentrating on the Humanities
and Social Sciences, International
and Human Rights Law, and the
History of Science and Natural
Sciences. New products include
the Cold War Intelligence and
U.S. Intelligence on the Middle
East Online, the Prize Papers, the
Japan Chronicle Online, and more.
Brilliance Publishing
228
1704 Eaton Dr., PO Box 887
Grand Haven, MI 49417
Phone: 616-935-1759
Fax: 616-935-1859
library.brillianceaudio.com
Brilliance Publishing (part of the
Amazon.com group of companies)
does audiobook publishing in all
formats and all genres through
Brilliance Audio, print publishing
through Grand Harbor Press and
Waterfall Press and distributes all
Amazon Publishing book imprints
through Brilliance Publishing
Book Distribution Services. Grand
Harbor Press publishes books
for customers seeking inspiration, self-help, and spirituality.
Waterfall Press publishes books
for Christians.
Brainfuse
Britannica Digital
Learning
463
1817
271 Madison Ave., 4th Fl.
New York, NY 10016
Phone: 866-272-4638
Fax: 212-504-8184
www.brainfuse.com
Brainfuse is America’s leading
provider of live online tutoring
and job search support for your
transform teaching and learning in
grades PreK–16. Aligned to state
curriculum standards and built
upon Britannica’s long-standing
reputation for trustworthy, upto-date information, innovative
development, and state-of-the-art
delivery, the company’s products
inspire educators and students
via highly engaging, interactive
content with a clear instructional
purpose.
331 N. LaSalle St.
Chicago, IL 60610
Phone: 800-621-3900
Fax: 800-344-9624
www.info.eb.com
Britannica Digital Learning offers
high-quality online resources
and instructional solutions that
Kreidlerstr. 9, Kornwestheim
Baden-Wuerttemberg 70806
Germany
Phone: 49-7154-1327-49
Fax: 49-7154-1327-90
www.brockhaus-germanbooks.com
Brockhaus/German Books is your
supplier for all publications from
continental Europe. We offer a full
range of services for libraries and
bookshops: From monographic
orders to journals, from standing
orders to approval plans, from
selection-slip programs to
antiquarian searches-we provide
the services your library needs.
Brodart Co.
723
500 Arch St.
Williamsport, PA 17701
Phone: 570-326-2461
Fax: 570-651-1635
www.brodart.com
Brodart celebrates 75 years of
dedication to quality services,
products, and relations throughout
the world. As a leader of library
needs, we faithfully devote ourselves to your service for books,
furniture, and supplies along with
the unparalleled support you
deserve. We share your commitment to education and the
satisfaction of your patrons as our
sole focus.
Brookhaven Press
1665
2004 Kramer St.
La Crosse, WI 54603
Phone: 608-781-0850
Fax: 608-781-3883
www.normicro.com
Brookhaven Press digitizes and
reprints public domain state
and county histories and other
genealogy titles, including Civil
War regimental histories. Available
as hardbound books or searchable CDs, our titles are page for
page duplications of the original
material. Many of our titles are also
available as on-line digital books
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
exhibitor listings b
Book Systems is a progressive
Library Automation and Asset
Management provider. Atriuum,
our ultimate centralized library
management solution, has
advanced features like quick
cataloging, configurable user interface, customizable reporting and
federated searching. Booktracks
meets the challenge of managing
your textbooks and other assets
by readily providing you the tools
and information necessary so
you’ll know exactly what you have,
where it is located and who is
responsible for it.
567
patrons. With HelpNow, JobNow,
and the new SkillSurfer, plus
Leap Testing, patrons of all ages
receive comprehensive one-to-one
tutoring, test prep, job coaching,
access to both the writing lab
and resume lab, and MS Office
help—from any computer with an
internet connection. Learn how to
enhance your patron support with
HelpNow and JobNow. Visit our
booth to learn about our newest
innovations!
191
that we can host for you. We
also offer microfilm and fiche on a
range of topics.
Bureau of Economic
Analysis (BEA)
1524
1441 L St.
Washington, DC 20230
Phone: 202-606-9633
Fax: 202-606-5313
www.bea.gov
Bureau of Labor
Statistics
2229
2 Massachusetts Ave. NE, Rm. 2850
Washington, DC 20212
Phone: 202-691-5200
Fax: 202-606-7890
www.bls.gov
The Bureau of Labor Statistics
of the U.S. Department of Labor
is the principal Federal agency
responsible for measuring labor
market activity, working conditions and price changes in the
economy. Its mission is to collect,
analyze and disseminate essential
economic information to support
public and private decisionmaking. As an independent
statistical agency, BLS serves
its diverse user communities by
providing products and services
that are objective, timely, accurate
and relevant.
Burgeon Group LLC
1515
b exhibitor listings
707 W Buchannon St
Phoenix, AZ 85006
Phone: 602-451-7285
Fax: 866-571-3476
www.burgeongroup.com
192
Interactive learning destinations
exclusively for public libraries to
meet ECRR, STEM, STEAM, and
even Maker Lab initiatives. Our
toys and green environments are
designed to museum standards
for tough play. We provide a range
of services, from toys with no
small parts, to custom design/
build environments branded as
Librainium Spaces. Our libraries
Play Fully!
ByWater Solutions
2225
106 Topstone Rd.
Redding, CT 06896-1817
Phone: 888-900-8944
www.bywatersolutions.com
CAIRN INFO
2274
5 rue De Charonne
Paris 75011 France
Phone: 3368-352-6159
Fax: 3315-528-3533
www.cairn.info
Cambridge
University Press
1443
32 Ave. of the Americas
New York, NY 10013-2473
Phone: 212-337-5983
Fax: 212-691-3239
Cambridge University Press publishes over 1,500 academic titles
and 300+ research journals every
year in a wide range of disciplines,
making them available in multiple
electronic, print and hybrid
formats. For institutions, we offer
a suite of unique digital products,
such as Cambridge Books Online,
Cambridge Journals Online,
and Cambridge Journals Digital
Archive, providing users a new
dimension of access and usability
to our extensive scholarly and
educational content.
Cameron + Company,
Inc. (dist. by Publishers
Group West)
322
6 Petaluma Blvd. N., Ste. B6
Petaluma, CA 94952
Phone: 707-769-1617
www.cameronbooks.com/
Founded in 1964, Cameron +
Company is a boutique publishing
house, creating and distributing
high quality books and calendars
with a focus on photography, art
and publications of regional
interest.
Candlewick
Press
602
99 Dover St.
Somerville, MA 02144
Phone: 617-661-3330
Fax: 617-661-0565
www.candlewick.com
Candlewick Press publishes
award-winning hardcover and
paperback children’s books for
readers of all ages, including board
books, picture books, beginning
readers, chapter books, novels
for middle grade and young adult
readers, and e-books. Our imprints
include Templar, TOON Books,
Nosy Crow and Big Picture Press.
Capira Technologies,
LLC
package workshops for Libraries
outside of southern California.
2255
Carrick Enterprises,
Inc.
PO Box 173
Medford, NY 11763
Phone: 631-780-4883
www.capiratech.com
Capira Technologies, LLC is an
emerging leader in the mobile
marketplace. Our experience
and professionalism provide the
tools necessary to establish your
library’s digital extension.
Capstone
462
1710 Roe Crest Dr.
North Mankato, MN 56003
Phone: 800-747-4992
Fax: 888-262-0705
www.capstonepub.com
Capstone, a leading publisher
of children’s books and media,
offers nonfiction/fiction books in
print and digital formats. Home
to K–3 database PebbleGo and
your largest selection of interactive
eBooks. More @ CapstonePub.
com.
Career Cruising
1079
1867 Yonge St., Ste. 1002
Toronto, ON M4 S 1Y5 Canada
Phone: 800-965-8541
Fax: 416-463-0938
www.careercruising.com
CareerOneStop
2149
30 7th St. E., Ste. 350
St. Paul, MN 55101
Phone: 651-556-0665
www.careeronestop.org
CareerOneStop.org, sponsored
by the U.S. Department of
Labor, Employment and Training
Administration, offers free
electronic tools and resources
to help users explore careers,
education, training and jobs.
Check out mySkillsmyFuture,
Certification Finder, Short-term
Training Finder, Salary Finder, and
more. Audiences served include
job seekers, students, workforce
development professionals, and
businesses.
Carlos Nieto III—
Artist Alley
2126
www.carlosnietollart.com
I will be highlighting my comic
book making program, showing
examples of completed comics
that I have created with library
patrons over the years. I will have
2142
362 N. Ash St.
Orange, CA 92868
Phone: 330-730-7210
www.carrickenterprises.com
Casalini Libri—
Fiesole, Italy
1656
Via Benedetto da Maiano 3
50014 Fiesole, Italy
Phone: 39-055-501-1
Fax: 39-055-5018-201
www.casalini.it
Casalini Libri is a European library
supplier specializing in Italian,
Spanish, French, Portuguese and
Greek publications. Our services
include cataloguing, shelf-ready
processing, approval plans, serial
and subscription services, new
title updates and free access
to our online bibliographical
databases at www.casalini.it for
online selection and ordering. We
also produce the full text platform
Torrossa, www.torrossa.it featuring
scholarly electronic content from
Italy, Spain and Portugal.
CASSIE
1362
14683 Midway Rd., Ste. 232
Addison, TX 75001
Phone: 469-688-7492
Fax: 972-248-4002
www.librarica.com
Librarica is known for easy-to-use,
stable software that simply works.
Our CASSIE System offers the
innovative, fresh approach to
computer and printer management. Features include session
time control, computer reservations and waiting lists, print cost
recovery, patron authentication,
our exclusive visual management,
web filter control, thin client
support, and statistics reporting.
Our SPOT System automates
your wireless printing, wireless
usage and printing statistics and
authentication.
Cato Institute
1530
1000 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC 20001
Phone: 202-789-5266
Fax: 202-842-3490
www.cato.org
The Cato Institute is a public policy
research organization dedicated to
the principles of individual liberty,
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
limited government, free markets
and peace. Its scholars and
analysts conduct independent,
nonpartisan research on a wide
range of policy issues. In an era
of sound bites and partisanship, Cato remains dedicated to
providing clear, thoughtful, and
independent analysis on vital
public policy issues.
Cavendish Square
1046
303 Park Ave. S., Ste. 1247
New York, NY 10010
Phone: 646-205-7482
Cavendish Square is a leading
American publisher of circulating
nonfiction, and early readers
ranging from kindergarten to
college. Our books are available in
library-bound print and beautiful, user-friendly eBooks. Our
acclaimed digital databases are
excellent resources for reports and
general interest. Our commitment
is clearly seen in our strong list
of 100+ new titles for Fall in both
print and digital form—stop by our
booth and see what all the buzz
is about!
CBAY Books
477
PO Box 670296
Dallas, TX 75367
Phone: 512-789-1004
Fax: 512-473-8413
www.cbaybooks.com
Children’s Brains are Yummy
Books (CBAY Books) is a micropress dedicated to producing high
quality fantasy and science fiction
for the middle grade and young
adult markets.
557
85 Main St.
Watertown, MA 02472
Phone: 617-926-0329
Fax: 617-926-5720
www.charlesbridge.com
Charlesbridge publishes fiction
and nonfiction picture books and
middle grade books that enhance
a child’s reading experience
across the curriculum and encourage a love of literature, language,
and learning. Charlesbridge’s
imprint, Imagine, publishes
books for adult readers, including
cookbooks, puzzles, and gift
books. Visit us at booth #557 to
see what’s new and enter a raffle
to win the Fall 2014 list of books.
Meet the author of Lola At The
Library, Anna McQuinn, Sunday,
June 29.
CHOICE Magazine
Clavis Publishing
1126
224
575 Main St., Ste. 300
Middletown, CT 06457
Phone: 860-347-6933
Fax: 860-346-8586
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
315 E. Eisenhower Pkwy., Ste. 200
Ann Arbor, MI 48108
Phone: 734-619-6217
Fax: 734-475-0787
www.cherrylakepublishing.com
Cherry Lake Publishing features
books designed to help students
meet achievement standards,
prepare them for life and work
in the century ahead, and ignite
their imagination. Sleeping Bear
Press is dedicated to producing
distinctive books with rich content
that will spark children’s interest
and encourage them to be lifelong
readers.
Chicago One Stop/
Browser Display
803
329 W. 18th St., Ste. 715
Chicago, IL 60616
Phone: 312-822-0822
Fax: 312-642-7880
Exclusive manufacturer of
patented, space saving, “Browser*
Display Systems” for DVD, BluRay,
Video, CD, CD ROM, and a variety
of multimedia display fixtures. Our
products are sold to libraries by
the major library distributors.
Children’s Plus, Inc.
342
1387 Dutch American Way
Beecher, IL 60401
Phone: 708-946-4100
Fax: 800-896-7213
www.childrensplusinc.com
Selection, quality, durability—Children’s Plus offers you
superior customer service with
a 100% satisfaction guarantee.
With brightly reimaged covers,
rounded corners and an easy to
clean laminated finish, our superior
binding is hand stitched and glued
in our on-site bindery. In addition
to our web selections, our collection development department is
here to build customized lists for
your library.
ChiliFresh
Enterprises, Inc.
2022
13505 S Mur Len Rd
Olathe, KS 66062
Phone: 913-244-0244
Fax: 913-829-3235
www.chilifresh.com
At ChiliFresh our only goal is to
bring your catalog to life, make
it a rich environment with patron
interaction on a global scale.
CHOICE is a publishing unit of
the Association of College &
Research Libraries, a division of
the American Library Association.
Founded in 1964, CHOICE
magazine has been the premier
review journal for scholarly
publications for 50 years and is
the leading North American source
for reviews of new scholarly books
and electronic resources.
322
575 Madison Ave.
New York, NY 10022
Phone: 212-937-8492
www.clavisbooks.com
Clavis Publishing produces a wide
range of high-quality children’s
books, from picture books by
internationally renowned authors
and illustrators to entertaining and
literary middle-grade and young
adult fiction.
Christopher
Herndon—Artist
Alley
CLCD, LLC
(Children’s Literature
Comprehensive
Database)
2124
374
www.christopherherndon.com
Christopher Herndon will be
available for book signings and
commissions while at the show.
He will also have a wide range of
prints and original art for you to
sink your teeth into.
Chronicle Books
608
680 Second St.
San Francisco, CA 94107
Phone: 415-537-4200
Fax: 415-537-4470
www.chroniclebooks.com/educators
Chronicle Books publishes
bestselling, award-winning, innovative books for children and adults.
Children’s publishing includes
board books, picture books,
chapter books, middle grade, and
YA fiction and non-fiction. Adult
publishing includes art, cookbooks, home and pop culture. Visit
the Chronicle Books booth for free
ARCs, posters, teacher’s guides,
activity kits, and more. Visit us
online at Chroniclebooks.com.
Clarkson Potter
Publishing
543
1745 Broadway
New York, NY 10019
Phone: 212-782-9000
www.ClarksonPotter.com
The only dedicated lifestyle group
within Random House, Potter
invites readers to live well. We
seek tastemakers, visionaries, and
rising stars, and partner with them
to craft books and products that
define their brand while engaging,
entertaining, and instructing their
audience.
322 Shore Rd.
Somers Point, NJ 08244
Phone: 888-611-2523
Fax: 888-611-2524
www.clcd.com
Children’s Literature
Comprehensive Database (CLCD)
is a premier single-search,
single-source provider for
access to all significant content
related to Pre K–12 media. This
includes 500,000+ reviews from
42 respected publications, over
335,000 author/illustrator links,
reading metrics, and curriculum
tools—all full text searchable. Stop
by and sign-up for a free trial.
CoLibri Systems
North America, Inc.
308, 1630
925 Vista Park Dr.
Pittsburgh, PA 15205
Phone: 877-265-4274
Fax: 412-787-5138
www.colibriusa.com
collectionHQ
1332
2550 Tyvola Rd., Ste. 300
Charlotte, NC 28217
Phone: 704-998-3259
Fax: 704-998-3316
www.collectionhq.com
collectionHQ is a world leading collection performance improvement
solution which is revolutionizing the
way public libraries select, manage
and promote their collections.
Based on the proven Evidence
Based Stock Management methodology (EBSM), collectionHQ is
easy to implement, simple to use
and cost-effective. collectionHQ
delivers performance improvements for library collections
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exhibitor listings c
Charlesbridge
Publishing
Cherry Lake
Publishing
193
by providing evidence-based
analysis, advice and performance
monitoring of all collections across
all media.
Collective Eye Films
2057
2305 SE Yamhill St.
Portland, OR 97214
Phone: 503-232-5345
Fax: 503-296-5515
www.collectiveeye.org
Colleen Frakes—
Artist Alley
2130
www.tragicrelief.com
At the time of ALA I’ll have four
Graphic Novels in print (The
Graphic Canon vol 3., Tragic
Relief, The Trials of Sir Christopher
and a new collection of previously
published short comics). I’ll also
have a variety of zines and mini
comics, original art and readingthemed tote bags for sale. I’ll
have information on ordering from
comic distributor Tony Shenton,
and offer free sketches.
Combined Book
Exhibit
636
277 White St.
Buchanan, NY 10511
Phone: 914-739-7500
Fax: 914-739-7575
www.combinedbook.com
c exhibitor listings
A collective exhibit of books and
other materials from hundreds
of publishers. Also, learn about
many affiliated companies such
as Pubmatch.com and American
Collective Stand.
194
Combined eBook
Exhibit
636
277 White Street
Buchanan, NY 10511
Phone 914-739-7500
Fax: 914-739-7575
www.thebookcheckout.com/ebook_
shows.php
The Combined eBook exhibit
uses cutting edge programming
to allow the preview of e-books
that come in any format. The
large screen displays up to 50
titles per page of face out books
with complete previews available.
People previewing the exhibit can
also create custom catalogs that
will be emailed to the address they
provide by simply clicking on titles
they’d like to learn more about.
Promotes e-book discoverability.
Comic Book Legal
Defense Fund
Consortium Book
Sales & Distribution
Contex Americas
2014
343
6010 Executive Blvd., Ste. 702
Rockville, MD 20852
Phone: 703-964-9818
Fax: 703-547-3375
www.contex.com
Compendium Library
Services
Consortium Book Sales &
Distribution, home to a community
of award-winning publishers,
believes in the power of independent voices. We offer you a
window into the world of independent publishing with a wide range
of award-winning books, from
National Book Awards and Nobel
Prize winners, to ALA Notables.
We recognize that libraries serve
a diverse constituency, and we
want to help you find books from
independent publishers that can fill
gaps in your collections.
255 W. 36th St., Ste. 501
New York, NY 10018
Phone: 212-679-7151
www.cbldf.org
1027
PO Box 82
Bellvue, CO 80512
Phone: 970-472-7979
Fax: 970-797-4825
www.compendiumlib.com
Since 2005, librarians have
chosen Desk Tracker as their
public service statistics solution
because of its customizable
forms, powerful reporting, and full
support by Compendium. Desk
Tracker Plus and Desk Tracker
Live now bring statistics together
with patron request handling,
surveys and announcements, and
real-time monitoring and alerts,
for a comprehensive cloud-based
management solution. Visit our
booth or compendiumlib.com for a
demo or free trial account.
Comprise
Technologies
843
1041 Route 36 W.
Navesink, NJ 07752
Phone: 732-291-3600
Fax: 732-291-3699
www.comprisetechnologies.com
Bernan is a leading distributor of
essential publications from the
U.S. government and international
organizations. We have access
to more than 45,000 publications
from around the world so you can
have a one-stop source to a world
of authoritative information.
Conor McCreery—
Artist Alley
2122
www.killshakespeare.com
Kill Shakespeare is an award
winning action-adventure comic
that takes all of the Bard’s
greatest characters and pits them
against each other on a quest to
either save, or kill, a mysterious
wizard by the name of...William
Shakespeare.
34 Thirteenth Ave. NE, Ste. 101
Minneapolis, MN 55413
Phone: 612-746-2600
Fax: 612-746-2606
www.cbsd.com
Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau
2147
1700 G St. NW
Washington, DC 20006
Phone: 202-435-7937
www.consumerfinance.gov
We’re working to make banking
and borrowing fairer for everyone.
That means we write and
enforce rules, but it also means
looking for creative ways to
teach Americans how to save
and protect their money, and
what they should consider when
making financial decisions. We are
working to provide free materials
and program ideas to libraries
across the country. We’re also
sharing best practices, offering
staff training, and providing free
marketing resources. Visit with us
to learn more.
Contentra
Technologies
1251
Contex, the largest wide format
scanner manufacturer in the
world produces superior scanning
solutions for Engineers, Architects,
GIS professionals, Artists and
Archivists. Contex provides
solutions for Book scanning, scan
2 copy, scanning fragile documents, scanning newspapers or
thick originals, Automating the
document indexing process,
providing the fastest production
scanning available, to capturing
the highest color quality photo and
art work images. Scan with your
smart phone/device!
Cooperative Press
1348A
13000 Athens Ave. C288
Lakaewood, OH 44104
Phone: 216-269-4398
www.cooperativepress.com
Copyright Clearance
Center
1249
222 Rosewood Dr.
Danvers, MA 01923
Phone: 978-750-8400
Fax: 978-750-0347
www.copyright.com
Copyright Clearance Center is a
licensing broker between rights
holders and content users, providing businesses and academic
institutions with convenient and
cost effective ways to get permission to use copyright-protected
materials while compensating
authors, publishers and other
content creators for the use of
their works. For more information,
visit www.copyright.com.
2028
110 Boggs Ln., Ste. 100
Cincinnati, OH 45246
www.contentratechnologies.com
Counting Opinions
Contentra offers engaging and
captivating end-to-end digital
solutions and services. Trust us to
prepare digital and mobile content
with rich media features and
interactivity for the web, eReaders
and tablets.
29 Ladner Dr., Ste. 100
Toronto, ON M2J 3Z8 Canada
Phone: 416-454-2728
Fax: 416-499-0982
www.countingopinions.com
1627
Robust, evidence-based management platform built specifically
to support library management
with timely information to better
manage and respond to today’s
operational, funding and advocacy
challenges. Note: CO will be demonstrating some new integrated,
productivity enhancing solutions
at ALA.
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Crabtree Publishing
Company
Criterion Pictures
214
6300 Oakton St.
Morton Grove, IL 60053
Phone: 800-565-1996
Fax: 866-664-7545
www.criterionpicusa.com
PMB59051, 350 Fifth Ave., 59th Fl.
New York, NY 10118
Phone: 800-387-7650
Fax: 800-355-7166
www.crabtreebooks.com
2264
www.comicsbakery.com
2016
Craigmore Creations is an
independent publishing house
located in Portland, Oregon. Our
books celebrate the earth through
art and storytelling. We create
graphic novels, YA books, picture
books and educational tools that
all share a common thread of
natural history.
Credo
863
201 South St., 4th Fl.
Boston, MA 02111
Phone: 617-292-6118
Fax: 617-426-3103
www.credoreference.com/corp
Creston Books
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
The Crowley
Company
1154
5111 Pegasus Ct., Ste. M
Frederick, MD 21704
Phone: 240-215-0224
Fax: 240-215-0234
www.thecrowleycompany.com
Creston Books publishes quality
children’s books, allowing creators
more freedom and control than is
typical at a larger house. Our list
presents diverse voices from both
debut and established authors.
De Gruyter, Inc.
1626
Genthiner Str. 13
Berlin, 10785 Germany
Phone: 49302-600-5326
Fax: 857-284-7358
www.degruyter.com
Dewberry Architects,
Inc.
1077
7557 Rambler Rd., Ste. 670
Dallas, TX 75238
Phone: 847-841-0615
www.dewberry.com
Dewberry is a leading architectural, engineering and planning
firm specializing in the design of
library facilities that anchor and
create communities. We have
been involved in more than 220
public and academic libraries
nationwide. Our mission is to
improve the quality of life in the
communities and campuses in
which we work. Dewberry has
earned more than 250 design
awards throughout our history and
we strive to remain on the leading
edge of architectural and interior
design.
Today’s libraries require scanners
for patrons and for preservation.
As manufacturer, service bureau
and multi-vendor reseller, Crowley
fully understands digital and
analog imaging and provides only
equipment, software and services
that protect the original, produces
a high-quality image and delivers
user-friendly and efficient scanning
processes. Stop by to demo our
latest ILL-compatible offerings for
archivists, patrons and staff and
let us partner with you to find a
solution for every budget.
The independent academic publisher De Gruyter can look back at
an over 260 year history. The De
Gruyter Group, which includes the
publishing houses of De Gruyter
Akademie Forschung, Birkhäuser,
De Gruyter Mouton, De Gruyter
Oldenbourg, De Gruyter Open,
and De Gruyter Saur publishes
over 1,300 new titles each year in
the humanities, medicine, natural
sciences, and law, more than 650
journals, and a variety of digital
media. The company is headquartered in Berlin, Germany.
Cultural
Surroundings
Dematic
Diamond Book
Distributors
1669
2261
2855 S. James Dr.
New Berlin, WI 53151-3662
Phone: 262-860-6546
Fax: 262-860-7020
www.dematic.com/na
2015
5600 W. Lovers Ln., Ste. 116
Dallas, TX 75209
Phone: 800-327-7674
Fax: 241-742-2407
www.culturalsurroundings.com
Dan Mishkin
2027
www.danmishkin.com
Copies of books and related merchandise (stickers, bookmarks,
buttons) for sale at the table.
322
PO Box 9369
Berkeley, CA 94708
Phone: 510-524-5004
www.crestonbooks.com
Graphic Novels, handmade
mini-comics, T-shirts, buttons
and original art produced by Dave
Roman and Raina Telgemeier.
is evolving with you! We not only
offer the supplies you depend
on, but also essential resources
to transform your library. With
our innovative reading programs,
event management software,
interior design services and more
you connect with your community
in new ways. Get the support
you need at demco.com. View
free newsletter articles, attend
webinars and shop our comprehensive product offering.
Data-Planet
1937
4915 Saint Elmo Ave., Ste. 201
Bethesda, MD 20814-6089
Phone: 301-556-2451
Fax: 301-556-2454
www.data-planet.com
Data-Planet provides a huge
repository of statistical information. More than 5000 datasets
containing 2 billion tables, charts,
maps and graphs are made
searchable and usable in two
products: Statistical Datasets &
Statistical Ready Reference. All
Dematic is a premier supplier of
ultra high density automated
solutions for document and record
retrieval within library, medical
records, law enforcement, legal
and military institution environments. The Dematic solution,
referred to as the Automated
Library System (ALS), is a
cost-effective and space saving
alternative to common document
shelving technologies. Collection
evaluations can be done in a
matter of minutes.
10150 York Rd.
Huntvalley, MD 21030
Phone: 443-318-8364
Fax: 410-683-7082
www.diamondbookshelf.com
Diamond Comic Distributors—one
of the world’s largest distributor of
English-language comic books—
spun off its book trade efforts
into a new division: Diamond
Book Distributors (DBD). DBD is
dedicated to serving the needs
of the book trade, with a team
of seasoned professionals in
sales and marketing, as well as
the Diamond Comic Distributors
reputation and infrastructure in
selling graphic novels and related
pop-culture merchandise.
Demco
Digitalia
902
203
4810 Forest Run Rd.
Madison, WI 53704
Phone: 608-241-1201
Fax: 608-241-1799
www.demco.com
EVOLVE. TRANSFORM.
INNOVATE. CONNECT. Today’s
libraries are evolving and Demco
708 Third Ave., 6th Fl.
New York, NY 10017
Phone: 212-209-3980
Fax: 347-626-2388
www.digitaliapublishing.com
exhibitor listings d
Credo provides libraries with
scholarly reference content,
innovative technology and customizable services. Our instruction
and promotion services increase
understanding and engagement
while assessment measures
impact. Products like Literati
and the Information Literacy
Course Module utilize multimedia
technology to create meaningful
pathways of discovery, empowering learners to build the research
and information skills that will
enable success throughout their
education and beyond.
Dave Roman and
Raina Telgemeier/
Artist Alley
2120
Craigmore Creations
2900 SE Stark St., Ste. 1A
Portland, OR 97214
Phone: 503-477-9562
Fax: 503-512-5379
www.craigmorecreations.com
data is described using 37 fields
of metadata, citations and linkable
via DOIs.
Digitalia Ebooks brings you the
best e-book content from Spain,
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195
Colombia, Chile, Argentina,
Mexico, Peru, Dominican
Republic. etc. Each year we
include new publishers, increasing the titles and journals that
our clients request. Come to our
booth to learn more about our
Spanish collections for academic
and public libraries, as well as
our new platforms for French and
Portuguese e-books. Contact us
at info@digitalia.us.
Digital Science
924
The Macmillan Bldg., 4 Crinan St.
London, N19XW United Kingdom
Phone: 44207-418-5579
www.digital-science.com
Digital Science is a technology
company serving the needs of
scientific research. It offers a
range of scientific technology and
content solutions, from intelligent
knowledge discovery tools to
software applications for the
laboratory and decision support
systems for managers. Digital
Science combines world-class
technology with a resolute focus
on scientists and those who
support the research process.
We believe passionately that
tomorrow’s research will be different—and better—than today’s.
Visit www.digital-science.com.
Disney-Hyperion
Books
603
d exhibitor listings
125 West End Ave., 3rd Fl.
New York, NY 10023
Phone: 212-456-0740
Fax: 212-807-5881
www.disneybooks.com
196
Disney Book Group publishes
award-winning children’s books for
all ages, featuring several formats:
board books, picture books,
chapter books, novels, and paperback originals. Imprints include:
Disney-Hyperion, Disney-Jump at
the Sun, Disney Press, and Disney
Editions.
DK Publishing Inc.
448
345 Hudson St., 4th Fl.
New York, NY 10014
Phone: 646-674-4055
Fax: 646-474-4020
us.dk.com
DK is a bestselling and awardwinning publisher known for
informing, entertaining, and educating global audiences through
beautifully designed content. DK
also publishes the Eyewitness
series for children and Eyewitness
Travel Guides. BradyGames, Alpha
Books, and Rough Guides are
also available from DK, a division
of Penguin Random House.
DLSG at Image
Access
1953
543 NW 77th St.
Boca Raton, FL 33487
Phone: 561-886-2900
Fax: 561-431-2766
www.imageaccess.com/dlsg
Since being founded in 1993,
the focus of Image Access has
been to create capture workflow
solutions that maximize the speed,
quality of scanning and image
clean up. Our circle of expertise
has influenced many, including
some of the country’s most elite
public, private and academic
institutions. This experience led us
to create the DLSG, an organization whose sole responsibility is
the development of products that
exceed technology benchmarks
set by Colleges and Universities.
Dreamscape
1371
6950 Hall St.
Holland, OH 43528
Phone: 800-875-2785
Fax: 800-444-6645
www.midwesttapes.com
Dreamscape is an audiobook and
children’s video publisher to libraries and trade. We also specialize
in video distribution services (DVD
and Digital) for independent film
producers to help them reach
library patrons and traditional retail
markets.
Dreamtech—Golib.
TV
2233
1081 Camino Del Rio S., Ste. 119
San Diego, CA 92108
Phone: 619-208-8910
www.golib.tv
Drexel University
Online, College
of Computing &
Informatics
2238
3001 Market St., Ste. 300
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Phone: 215-571-4594
Fax: 215-895-0525
www.drexel.com
Drexel University’s College of
Computing & Informatics offers
innovative master’s programs to
prepare professionals to address
the opportunities and challenges
of the information age. Designed
for ultimate flexibility, classes are
offered on campus and online. The
College also features professional
development and certificate
opportunities and a doctoral
program in Information Studies.
ALA members receive up 20% off
tuition on online programs through
CCI. Visit drexel.com/ALA to learn
more.
D-Tech International
USA, LLC
1837
121 W. Morning Glory Rd.
Wildwood Crest, NJ 08260
Phone: 609-435-5846
www.d-techinternational.com
D-Tech International is one of
the top 4 RFID library solution
providers in the world. We offer a
full range of RFID products and
Self-Service kiosk for AV and IT
equipment. We provide unique
product offerings including our
24/7 self-contained library. D-Tech
designs and develops all of its
own products. We also provide
the best aftercare service of any
RFID provider, we will exceed
your expectations and give an
outstanding level of service. Great
Products-Great Support-Great
Value.
East View
Information Services
1547
10601 Wayzata Blvd.
Minneapolis, MN 55305
Phone: 952-252-1201
Fax: 952-252-1202
www.eastview.com
East View—Advancing
Scholarship in the Digital Age.
Whether from Russia, China,
Egypt, or anywhere in-between,
researchers need information
from countries where access is
by no means certain or easy. For
25 years East View has identified,
sourced and distributed materials in the sciences, humanities,
and social sciences. We offer all
formats, print or digital: books,
newspapers/journals, historical
archives, scientific publications,
and more, in vernacular and
English.
East West Discovery
Press
2059
PO Box 3585
Manhattan Beach, CA 90266
Phone: 310-545-3730
Fax: 310-545-3731
www.eastwestdiscovery.com
multicultural & bilingual books
in 50+ languages including
Arabic, Burmese, Chinese,
Farsi, Japanese, Korean, Nepali,
Russian, Somali, Spanish,
Tagalog, Vietnamese, etc. We can
customize book lists based on
thematic units and the Common
Core State Standards. Our booth
features book signing of many
award-winning titles including
Three Years and Eight Months, a
2014 Notable Social Studies Trade
Books for Young People, and
three book award gold medalists.
EasyBib.com
1823
6 W. 37th St., Fl. 2
New York, NY 10018
Phone: 212-675-6738
www.easybib.com
EasyBib.com is an information
literacy platform that provides
research, note taking and citation
tools used by more than 37 million
students. EasyBib’s institutional
service helps students avoid
plagiarism, evaluate websites and
use note taking to improve critical
thinking.
EBSCO
Information
Services
1323
10 Estes St.
Ipswich, MA 01938
Phone: 978-356-6500
Fax: 978-824-1075
www.ebsco.com
Established in 1944, EBSCO is a
world-leading information agent
providing consultative services
and cutting-edge technology for
managing and accessing quality
content, including print and
e-journals, e-packages, research
databases, e-books and more.
Now more than ever libraries
and research organizations are
looking for new ways to manage
their collections more efficiently.
EBSCO has developed the most
comprehensive “e’’ discovery and
management solutions, offering
unparalleled integration to help
librarians save time and money
while empowering their users.
EBSCO serves clients in more
than 200 countries through our 30
offices worldwide with more than
140 librarians on staff. To learn
more about EBSCO’s products
and services, visit www.ebsco.
com.
Publisher and distributor of K–12
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Edinburgh University
Press
EFI
1931
17250 N. Hartford Dr.
Scottsdale, AZ 85255
Phone: 480-538-5820
Fax: 480-538-5880
www.efi.com
The Tun - Holyrood Rd,
12 Jackson’s Entry - Fl. 2
Edinburgh, EH EH8 8PJ
United Kingdom
Phone: 44131-650-6220
www.eup.ed.ac.uk
Edinburgh University Press
(EUP) makes innovative, rigorous
scholarship available to the widest
possible readership through
publishing 38 journals and 120+
books across the humanities
and social sciences each year.
EUP Journals are available to
institutions through subscription,
as part of the Complete Collection,
or through specially tailored collections available on request. The
EUP Archive provides access to
450+ issues from 1936–99, and is
available through direct purchase
or subscription.
Editorial Oceano, Inc.
633
10843 NW 29th Street
Miami, FL 33172
Phone: 305-436-1008
Fax: 305-436-0502
www.oceanousa.com
Eerdmans Books for
Young Readers
402
2140 Oak Industrial Dr. NE
Grand Rapids, MI 49505-6014
Phone: 616-459-4591
Fax: 616-459-6540
www.eerdmans.com/youngreaders
From board books for babies
to picture books, nonfiction and
novels for children for young
adults, our goal is to produce
quality literature for a new generation of readers.
Egmont USA
454
443 Park Ave. S., Ste. 806
New York, NY 10016
Phone: 646-430-7385
Fax: 212-685-0612
www.egmontusa.com
Egmont USA is a division of
Egmont Publishing, which is part
of the Egmont Group, a global
publishing company founded in
Denmark in the 1880s. As we
approach our fifth anniversary,
we continue to publish highly
regarded titles for elementary,
middle grade and teen audiences.
We have enjoyed bestselling and
award-winning titles from Walter
Dean Myers and Christopher
Myers, Patrick Jennings, Len
Vlahos, Jon and Pamela Voelkel,
Ilsa J. Bick, Bree Despain, Myra
McEntire, and Tommy Hays.
e-ImageData Corp.
1639
340 Grant St.
Hartford, WI 53027
Phone: 262-673-3476
Fax: 262-673-3496
www.e-imagedata.com
e-ImageData is a leading manufacturer of microform scanners.
The popular ScanPro 2000 microform scanner is ultra compact,
versatile, uses a single zoom lens
and creates a high-resolution scan
in ONE second. The ScanPro
2000 is designed for the rigors
of public use, is easy-to-use and
works with all microforms.
Electronic Frontier
Foundation
2226
815 Eddy St.
San Francisco, CA 94109
Phone: 415-436-9333
Fax: 415-436-9993
www.eff.org
e-Libro Corporation
704
16699 Collins Rd
Miami, FL 33160
Phone: 305-466-0155
Fax: 305-466-0968
www.e-libro.com
e-Libro Premium, a robust
subscription database, has more
ELM USA
2077
701 N Green Valley Pkwy, Ste 200
Henderson, NV 89074
Phone: 244-409-8643
Elsevier Inc.
717
Radarweg 29
Amsterdam, 1043NX
Netherlands
Phone: 31-20-485-2328
Fax: 31-20-485-3228
www.elsevier.com
Elsevier is a world-leading
provider of information solutions
that enhance the performance of
science, health, and technology
professionals, empowering them
to make better decisions, deliver
better care, and sometimes make
groundbreaking discoveries,
that advance the boundaries of
knowledge and human progress.
Emerald Group
Publishing Inc.
948
84 Sherman St., Brickyard Office Park
Cambridge, MA 02140
Fax: 617-945-9130
www.emeraldinsight.com
Emerald is a global publisher
linking research and practice
to the benefit of society. The
company manages a portfolio of
more than 290 journals and over
2,000 books and book series
volumes, as well as providing an
extensive range of online products
and additional customer resources
and services.
Emery-Pratt
Company
1122
1966 W. M-21
Owosso, MI 48867
Phone: 989-723-5291
Fax: 989-723-4677
www.emery-pratt.com
Celebrating 140 years of service to
libraries and hospitals nationwide
distributing books, e-books and
AV products from more than
195,000 publishing sources. We
welcome your orders via PC, EDI,
phone, fax or mail.
Enrich Professional
Publishing
1917
PO Box 2124
Keller, TX 76244
Phone: 703-220-4072
www.enrichprofessional.com
EPP specializes in academic and
reference works on the economic
and financial changes taking
place in China. We promote a
better understanding of modern
China and the impact of the rise
of this new economic superpower.
Through our partnerships with
Chinese universities, we are a
leading publisher translating the
work into English of Chinese
economic and financial scholars.
In print or digitally, EPP provides
the essential tools to better
understand the economic policies
of New China.
Enslow Publishers
Inc.
204
PO Box 398, 40 Industrial Rd.
Berkely Heights, NJ 07922-0398
Phone: 908-771-9400
Fax: 908-771-0925
www.enslow.com
Enslow has published quality K-12
nonfiction books for over 35 years.
2010 marked our entry into the
PreK market. Our colorful Enslow
Elementary books are approved
by both reading and content
experts. Enslow’s Middle-High
School books have been brightly
redesigned to engage readers of
all levels.
Entangled Publishing
536
2614 S. Timberline Rd., Ste. 109
Fort Collins, CO 80525
Phone: 724-208-7888
www.entangledpublishing.com
Environmental
Protection Agency
2224
1301 Constitution Ave. NW,
MC-2843T
Washington, DC 20004
Phone: 202-566-0675
Fax: 202-566-0675
www.epa.gov
exhibitor listings e
Editorial Oceano is a publisher
of Spanish Language reference
material in print and on-line format
(as databases and e-books).
Our titles include works oriented
towards children (tales, stories,
encyclopedias, dictionaries) as
well as young adults, adults,
and professionals (Manuals,
Dictionaries and other Reference
Books) in all subjects (Health,
Business, General Reference).
Editorial Oceano is the Spanish
Language publisher with most
presence in the world, with offices
in every country in Latin America
as well as in the USA.
2231
than 56,000 titles from more than
200 publishers—with 95% of them
from Latin America and Spain.
e-Libro also offers 14,600 e-books
for perpetual archive ownership,
including more than 13,200
of which are written by Latin
American and Spanish authors.
Of those titles, 5,000 have a
focus in the Social Sciences and
Humanities. Customers can also
order these titles YBP’s GOBI³.
e-Libro is Powered by ebrary.®
The EPA National Library
Network is composed of libraries
and repositories located in the
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
197
Agency’s offices, research centers
and specialized laboratories,
as well as web-based access
to electronic collections. The
combined Network collections
contain a wide range of information
on environmental science, applied
sciences such as engineering and
toxicology, and legislative and
regulatory information. EPA librarians will be at the exhibit booth to
share information on obtaining EPA
materials and to demonstrate EPA
resources available for public use.
EnvisionWare
1568F
2855 Premiere Pkwy., Ste. A
Duluth, GA 30097-5201
Phone: 678-382-6500
Fax: 678-382-6501
www.envisionware.com
From printing on-the-go with our
MobilePrint Service™ to digitizing
with our Library Document
Station™, learn how EnvisionWare
can help you meet the needs of
your smartphone and tablet users.
EnvisionWare
963
2855 Premiere Pkwy., Ste. A
Duluth, GA 30097-5201
Phone: 678-382-6500
Fax: 678-382-6501
www.envisionware.com
e exhibitor listings
From self-service circulation
to public computer and print
management, to RFID, and our
24-Hour Library, EnvisionWare
serves more libraries with more
self-service and efficiency
solutions—with a commitment to
libraries that is second to none. To
find out why over 10,000 libraries
worldwide rely on EnvisionWare,
visit us at envisionware.com.
198
Equinox Software,
Inc.
1843
3850 Peachtree Industrial Blvd.
Duluth, GA 30096
Phone: 877-673-6457
Fax: 866-497-6390
www.esilibrary.com
Equinox was founded by the
original developers and designers
of the Evergreen ILS. We are
wholly devoted to the support
and development of open source
software in libraries, focusing
on Evergreen, Koha, and the
FulfILLment ILL system. We wrote
over 80% of the Evergreen code
base and continue to contribute
more new features, bug fixes, and
documentation than any other
organization. For more information
on Equinox, please visit
www.esilibrary.com
Erasmus Boekhandel
BV
Evanced Solutions,
LLC
1654
1103
PO Box 19140
1000 GC Amsterdam, Netherlands
Phone: 31-20-535-3433
Fax: 31-20-620-6799
www.erasmusbooks.nl
With offices located in Amsterdam
and Paris, we supply European
books and CD-ROMS to national,
university and public libraries.
Areas covered range from STM
and humanities to law and fine
arts. Firm orders, standing orders,
approval plans and new title
service.
ERIC
1568E
Institute of Education Sciences
555 New Jersey Ave. NW, Ste. 506f
Washington, DC 20208
Phone: 703-464-7030
Fax: 202-628-3205
www.eric.ed.gov
ERIC is one of the world’s
largest digital library of education
resources. Learn about exciting
changes in ERIC and see a demo
of the website being designed with
mobile searchers in mind.
Estey/Tennsco
1223
PO Box 1888
Dickson, TN 37056-1888
Phone: 615-446-8000
Fax: 800-722-0134
www.tennsco.com
ETS HiSET®
2115
660 Rosedale Rd.
Princeton, NJ 08541-0001
Phone: 609-683-2657
Fax: 609-683-2669
hiset.ets.org
701 E New York St
Indianapolis, IN 46202
Phone: 317-275-2700
Fax: 888-519-5770
www.evancedsolutions.com
For over a decade Evanced
Solutions (evancedsolutions.
com) has worked with libraries to
improve service to their communities with event-calendaring, roombooking, and summer reading
program management software.
Evanced, a Demco Company, has
also developed Wandoo Planet,
a new online reader engagement
platform that empowers kids ages
6 and up to discover their keenest
interests and find relevant books
and other content via a powerful
recommendation engine. Learn
more at wandooplanet.info.
Ex Libris North
America
1143
1350 E. Touhy Ave., Ste. 200E
Des Plaines, IL 60018
Phone: 847-296-2200
Fax: 847-296-5636
www.exlibrisgroup.com
Ex Libris is a leading provider
of automation solutions for
academic, national and research
libraries. Offering the only
comprehensive product suite for
electronic, digital and print materials, Ex Libris provides efficient,
user-friendly solutions that serve
the needs of libraries today and
will facilitate their transition into
the future. Ex Libris maintains
an impressive customer base
consisting of thousands of sites
in more than 80 countries on six
continents.
The Experiment:
Euromonitor
International
When we launched The
Experiment in early 2009, we
explained our name with this
thought: Because every book is
a test of new ideas. Since then,
we’ve been excited to see how
the new ideas in our books have
caught on. Most notably, Forks
Over Knives: The Plant-Based
Way to Health became our first
224 S. Michigan Ave., 15th Fl.
Chicago, IL 60604
Phone: 312-922-1115
Fax: 312-922-1157
www.euromonitor.com
FamilySearch
971
50 E. North Temple St., Rm. 599
Salt Lake City, UT 84150
Phone: 801-240-6382
Fax: 801-240-3715
www.familysearch.org
FamilySearch is the world’s
largest genealogy organization.
Millions use its free records and
resources to discover their family
history. Access is free through
FamilySearch.org and 4,600 family
history centers worldwide.
Farber Specialty
Vehicles
1366
The new ETS HiSET® program, a
national high school equivalency
test, includes elements critical to
providing out-of-school youth and
adults with the best opportunity
to demonstrate their high
school-level proficiency and their
readiness for higher education or
the workplace.
2181
#1 New York Times bestseller! Its
sequel, Forks Over Knives—The
Cookbook, is also a New York
Times bestseller.
Distributed by Workman
Publishing Company
414
PO Box 2225
Chapel Hill, NC 27510
Phone: 919-967-0108
Fax: 919-933-0272
www.algonquin.com
7052 Americana Pkwy.
Reynoldsburg, OH 43068
Phone: 614-863-6470
Fax: 614-759-2098
www.farberspecialty.com
Bookmobiles and cybermobiles
custom designed to your needs.
Models include the second- generation Farber Sprinter Van, the
extra wide aisle Farber Coach and
many others. Trade-in bookmobiles also available. We would be
happy to share with you what we
are seeing as the latest trends
in outreach. Family owned and
operated since 1920.
FarBeyond
Publishing
2065
PO Box 25613
Portland, OR 97298-0613
Phone: 503-683-3013
www.farbeyond.com
Financial literacy titles for Kids,
Teens and Adults, bringing
concepts to life, filling one of the
greatest gaps in America. Marvels
of Money (illustrated collection)—
five book series for K5, aligned
with common core financial
literacy targets. If Money Could
Shout: the brutal truths for teens
(graphic novel)—8 story anthology
to engage teens in financial topics.
No Time To Wander: the financial
compass for young Americans
(non-fiction)—honest portrayal of
America’s economy and practical
advice of what will be required for
young Americans to succeed. A
compass for life.
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Federal
Communications
Commision (FCC)
2266
CGB Consumer Affairs & Outreach
Division, 445 12th St. SW
Washington, DC 20554
Phone: 202-418-1035
Fax: 202-418-3890
The Federal Communications
Commission regulates interstate
and international communications
by radio, television, wire, satellite
and cable in all 50 states, the
District of Columbia and U.S.
territories. An independent U.S.
government agency overseen by
Congress, the Commission is the
United States’ primary authority
for communications law, regulation
and technological innovation.
Federal Deposit
Insurance
Corporation (FDIC)
1527
3501 Fairfax Dr., Rm. CH-11087B
Arlington, VA 22226
Phone: 703-562-6071
Fax: 703-562-6069
www.fdic.cgov
The Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation is an independent
government agency created by
Congress in 1933 to promote the
stability and public confidence in
the nation’s financial system. The
FDIC insures deposits in banks and
thrifts, examines and supervises
financial institutions, provides
compliance and consumer protection and manages receiverships.
The FDIC’s website, www.fdic.gov,
provides industry data and banker
resources. It also enables banks to
conduct regulatory services on-line.
1531
600 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, NJ-2267
Washington, DC 20580
Phone: 202-326-2933
Fax: 202-326-3574
www.ftc.gov
The Federal Trade Commission
works for consumers to prevent
fraudulent, deceptive and unfair
business practices and to provide
information to help spot, stop and
avoid fraud. To file a complaint,
visit ftc.gov, or call 1-877-FTCHELP (1-877-382-4357.) Go to
consumer.ftc.gov to get free information on a variety of consumer
topics. Like the FTC on Facebook,
follow us on Twitter and subscribe
to press releases for the latest FTC
news and resources.
2150
109 W. 27th St., Ste. 9B
New York, NY 10001
Phone: 212-941-7744
Fax: 212-941-7812
www.filmmovement.com
All of our films are available to
private and public libraries, educational institutions, and non-profit
organizations. Public Performance
Rights (PPR) can be acquired
through our subscription program
or individually by title. As a library
subscriber, your library will receive
our newest film, with or without
PPR, every month for 12 months.
Findaway World
875
31999 Aurora Rd.
Solon, OH 44139
Phone: 440-893-0808
Fax: 440-893-0809
www.findawayworld.com
Findaway World is ‘built to change
lives’ by creating products and
technology that deliver a world
of digital content in the simplest
and most innovative formats.
Playaway and Playaway View
are pre-loaded digital devices
that offer people of every age
simple to use audiobooks with
grab-and-go convenience and
Playaway Bookpacks are audio
and print packaged together for
an easy ready-a-long experience.
Findaway World is the place where
audio is for everyone.
Firefly Books
406
50 Staples Ave., Unit 1
Richmond Hill, ON L4B 0A7 Canada
Phone: 416-499-8412
Fax: 416-499-1142
www.fireflybooks.com
Fitzhenry &
Whiteside
1176
195 Allstate Pkwy.
Markham, ON L3R 4T8 Canada
Phone: 905-477-9700
Fax: 905-477-2834
www.fitzhenry.ca
The house was founded on April
1, 1966 by Robert I. Fitzhenry
and Cecil L. Whiteside. Fitzhenry
& Whiteside is a private limited
corporation owned by the
Fitzhenry family with over 1,500
titles in print. We publish or
reprint, through our group of
companies, about 100 titles per
annum. The house specializes in
history, biography, poetry, sports,
photographic books, reference,
photography, and children’s and
young adult titles.
Follett
1117
1340 Ridgeview Dr.
McHenry, IL 60050
Phone: 815-578-3672
Fax: 800-852-5458
www.titlewave.com
ForeWord Reviews
244
425 Boardman Ave.
Traverse City, MI 49684
Phone: 231-933-3699
Fax: 231-933-3899
www.forewordreviews.com
ForeWord Reviews is for those
who love great stories and yearn
to discover something new from
small and independent publishers and university presses. We
discover, curate, critique, and
share reviews of books to satisfy
the hunger and curiosity for new
literature and authors in our
quarterly magazine and website.
We celebrate the best of indie at
the annual IndieFab Awards and
we travel to international book
shows, helping authors establish
foreign rights relationships.
Francis Lincoln
Children’s Books
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
322
74-77 White Lion St.
Islington, London, N1 9PF
United Kingdom
Phone: 44-02072849300
www.franceslincoln.com
Founded in 1977, Frances Lincoln
Children’s Books—which includes
the Janetta Otter Barry imprint—
publishes award-winning picture
books, fiction, and nonfiction
for children and young adults
that celebrate cultural diversity
and address worldwide issues.
Frances Lincoln is part of the
Aurum Publishing Group, a
component of The Quarto Group.
Frank Cummuso—
Artist Alley
2138
www.cammuso.com
Frank Cammuso is the author/
illustrator of the graphic novel
series The Misadventures of Salem
Hyde from Amulet Books. He also
created the graphic novel series
Knights of the Lunch Table from
Graphix/Scholastic. Frank drew
the comic Otto’s Orange Day and
Otto’s Backwards Day for ToonBooks. He also wrote and drew
his self-published graphic novel
Max Hamm Fairy Tale Detective,
for which he received an Eisner
nomination.
Frankfurt Book
Fair—AusstellungsUnd Messe-GMBH
639
Braubachstrasse 16
Frankfurt am Main 60311 Germany
Phone: 49069-210-2276
Fax: 4906921-024-6276
www.book-fair.com
The Frankfurt Book Fair, October
8–12, 2014, is the international
publishing industry’s biggest trade
fair—with 7,300 exhibitors from
more than 100 countries and
around 280,000 visitors including
key players from other media
such as film and game industries.
The CONTEC and STORYDRIVE
conferences have both become
established meeting places
for the industry. The Frankfurt
Book Fair is a subsidiary of the
German Publishers & Booksellers
Association. Guest of Honor:
Finland.
Galaxy Press
1563
7051 Hollywood Blvd., Ste. 200
Hollywood, CA 90028
Phone: 323-466-7815
Fax: 323-466-7817
www.galaxypress.com
Publisher of the fiction works of L.
Ron Hubbard. Explore larger than
life and historically accurate tales
from an author who lived his
adventures. Let your reluctant
readers discover Stories from the
Golden Age audiobooks, so vivid
and realistic, they will find
themselves eager to finish stories
they start. Experience our If I Were
You Readers Theater Performance
Kit, which Library Journal calls “a
solid purchase for interested
schools and libraries. I’d buy it…if
I were you!’’
Gale, Cengage
Learning
1303
27500 Drake Rd.
Farmington Hills, MI 48331
Phone: 248-699-8988
Fax: 248-699-8094
www.gale.cengage.com
exhibitor listings g
Federal Trade
Commission
Film Movement
Gale, part of Cengage Learning,
serves the world’s information
and education needs through its
vast and dynamic content pools,
which are used by students and
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
199
consumers in libraries, schools
and online. Best known for the
accuracy and convenience of its
data, Gale addresses information
needs in a variety of formats. For
more information, visit www.gale.
cengage.com, www.facebook.
com/cengagegale and follow
us on Twitter, www.twitter.com/
galecengage.
Gareth Stevens
Publishing
943
111 E. 14th St., Ste. 349
New York, NY 10003
Phone: 212-777-3017
Fax: 212-614-7385
www.garethstevens.com
Gareth Stevens Publishing focuses
on high-interest nonfiction titles
aligned to meet curriculum
objectives. From an exciting line of
nonfiction books designed for
early-emergent to fluent readers,
to engaging, on-level nonfiction
books supporting the curriculum
at the elementary grades, and
curriculum-related topics for
middle and high school students,
our titles lead children to a lifetime
of learning through high-quality,
high-interest materials.
Gaylord
Brothers
1123
g exhibitor listings
7282 William Barry Blvd.
Syracuse, NY 13212
Phone: 315-634-8632
Fax: 800-595-7265
www.gaylord.com
200
Gaylord is the Trusted Source for
quality library supplies, furniture
and archival solutions. Come
visit us to find bright, functional
furniture to enliven any space in
your library or simply relax and
“get charged” with our courtesy
mobile device charging station.
Plus, find quality archival products
to preserve and display your collections. Visit us at Booth #1123
or online at www.gaylord.com.
Gene Luen Yang—
Artist Alley
2125
www.geneyang.com
Graphic novels and comic books
for sale; Free postcards and other
promotional items; Original art for
perusal.
Geographic
Research, Inc.
1271
244 5th Ave.
New York, NY 10001
Phone: 888-845-5064
Fax: 866-212-8001
www.geographicresearch.com
Geographic Research, Inc. (GRI)
is the developer of SimplyMap,
an award winning web-based
mapping and data analysis application that enables non-technical
and advanced users to quickly
create professional thematic maps
and reports. SimplyMap has all
the data you need to answer
key research questions, make
sound business decisions, and
understand the demographic and
economic conditions of any geographic area in the United States
or Canada. Explore SimplyMap
today!
George Washington
Carver Scholarship
Fund
2069
3535 W. Pipkin Rd.
Lakeland, FL 33811
Phone: 863-619-4611
www.geico.com/disc/ala
Take the GEICO challenge!
ALA members are eligible for a
discount Bring your most recent
auto insurance declarations page
to the GEICO booth. Compare
our rates on the spot. Or visit
http://www.geico.com/disc/ala to
get a quote, bring us the quote
reference number.
322
543 Trinidad Lane
Foster City, CA 94404
Phone: 650-204-4076
goosebottombooks.com/home/
Goosebottom Books is a small,
award-winning press dedicated to
“fun nonfiction,” founded by Shirin
Yim Bridges, author of Ruby’s
Wish. Its mission is to fascinate
and empower girls with intriguing
true stories about real women.
Grant Professionals
Association
1825
1333 Meadowlark Ln., Ste. 105
Kansas City, KS 66102
Phone: 913-788-3000
Fax: 913-788-3398
www.grantprofessionals.org
Grant Professionals Association,
a nonprofit membership association, builds and supports an
international community of grant
professionals committed to
serving the greater public good
by practicing the highest ethical
and professional standards. GPA
is THE place for any grant issues.
We provide a national conference,
professional certification (GPC),
webinars, member benefits &
more! Join today & save $25! Stop
by our booth & register to win a
FREE annual membership!
www.GrantProfessionals.org.
Green Kids Press
Glassdoor
23 T St. NW
Washington, DC 20001-1008
Phone: 202-270-6970
Fax: 202-588-0931
www.greenkidspress.com
2079
100 Shoreline Hwy., Bldg. A
Mill Valley, CA 94941
Phone: 415-275-7694
Fax: 415-236-6475
www.glassdoor.com
2152
1918
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
125 Logan St., Ste. 227
Atlanta, GA 30312
Phone: 404-343-2607
www.gwcsf.com
Global Financial Data
GEICO
Goosebottom Books
29122 Rancho Viejo Rd., Ste. 215
San Juan Capistrano, CA 92675
Fax: 949-542-4201
www.globalfinancialdata.com
638
Green Kids Press is an ecofriendly publishing company,
dedicated to nurturing the
imagination, creativity and inspiring
the social responsibility of children,
adults, parents, teachers, librarians, organizations and everyone
interested in improving, protecting
and saving our planet and the
human spirit through inspirational
books and other media.
Gregg Schigiel—
Artist Alley
2128
hatterentertainment.com
I will be presenting my original
graphic novel for middle-grade
readers, Pix: Teenage American
Fairy, as well as some posters/
prints, issues of SpongeBob
Comics, and some giveaways
(bookmarks/postcards, things of
that nature).
Grey House
Publishing
1211
4919 Route 22, PO Box 56
Amenia, NY 12501
Phone: 800-562-2139
Fax: 518-789-0556
www.greyhouse.com
Grey House publishes authoritative reference works in the fields
of business, health, general
reference, statistics, demographics and education. New 2013
titles cover the 1950s, Diabetes
& Obesity in America, the
Continental Congress and many
more. Titles are available in print,
in online databases and e-books.
New for 2013, Grey House now
publishes and distributes all Salem
Press and H.W. Wilson titles in
print. Grey House is also the
publisher of the print editions of
Weiss Ratings Guides, TheStreet
Ratings Guides and RR Bowker’s
Books In Print product line.
Groundwood Books
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
322
110 Spadina Ave., Ste. 801
Toronto, ON M5V 2K4 Canada
Phone: 416-363-4343
www.groundwoodbooks.com
Groundwood Books is an
independent Canadian publishing
house known for award-winning
books that reflect the experiences
of children both in North America
and around the world. Inspired
by the belief that children’s books
can be important and necessary without sacrificing warmth,
beauty, playfulness and humor,
Groundwood’s list is characterized
by its emphasis on fiction and
nonfiction about and for children
whose stories might not otherwise
be told.
Grove Atlantic, Inc.
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
322
154 W. 14th St., 12th Fl.
New York, NY 10011
Phone: 212-614-7850
www.groveatlantic.com
The acclaimed independent
literary publisher since 1917, who,
through the years have introduced
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
important works from authors
from Samuel Beckett to Sherman
Alexie to other well-loved authors.
Its imprints include Grove Press,
Atlantic Monthly Press, Black Cat,
The Mysterious Press, Open City,
Granta, and Atlantic Books, Ltd.
Grupo Difusión
Científica
635
Avenida Emiliano Zapata 285,
Colonia Santa Cruz Atoyac,
Delegación Benit
Juárez, C.P. 03310 Mexico
Phone: 52-55-50-90-28-00
Grupo Difusion Científica, a
Mexican company dedicated
to provide information products
and services to virtual libraries,
academic institutes, health sector,
pharmaceutical market and all
information units. GDC, leader in
the distribution of electronic and
printed information.
Guadalajara Int’l
Book Fair
1548
Div. Of Hum NAC 5225,
City College of New York
New York, NY 10031
Phone: 212-650-7925
Fax: 212-650-7912
www.fil.com.mx
The Guadalajara Intl. Book Fair
(FIL) is the largest Spanishlanguage book fair in the world.
Through a partnership with ALA,
FIL supports 175 Latin America
collection development librarians.
Hachette Book
Group USA
423
Hachette Book Group is a leading
trade publisher based in New York
and a division of Hachette Livre,
the third-largest trade and educational publisher in the world. HBG
publishes under the divisions of
Little, Brown and Company, Little
Brown Books for Young Readers,
Grand Central Publishing, Orbit,
Hachette Books, Hachette
Nashville, and Hachette Audio.
HarperCollins
Publishers
HighBridge
Company: A member
938
502
of the Workman Family of
Imprints
7535 W. 59th St.
Summit, IL 60501
Phone: 708-458-8600
Fax: 708-458-7116
www.hallettmovers.com
10 E. 53rd St.
New York, NY 10022-5244
Phone: 212-207-6938
Fax: 212-207-6998
www.harpercollins.com
Hallett Movers is a premier library
relocation company that has
enjoyed over 60 years of service
to academic and public libraries.
Hallett has moved some of the
largest and prestigious institutions including the Art Institute
of Chicago, Notre Dame, San
Diego Public, Newberry, Queens
University, Belfast. Hallett is a
family business, third generation
managed and woman owned.
Whether new building, renovations, re-carpeting, rearranging
collections or shelving—our
experience speaks volumes.
HarperCollins is a broad-based
publisher with strengths in
literary and commercial fiction,
business books, children’s books,
cookbooks, narrative nonfiction,
mystery, romance, reference, pop
culture, design, health, wellness,
and religious and spiritual books.
Harlequin
Enterprises
HARRASSOWITZ (www.harrassowitz.de) is a global full-service
subscription agent and bookseller
for the academic and research
library community. Headquartered
in Wiesbaden, Germany, the
company specializes in the distribution of scholarly e-resources,
periodicals, scholarly books and
music scores. HARRASSOWITZ
has been in continuous operation
since 1872.
363
225 Duncan Mill Rd.
Don Mills, ON M3B 3K9 Canada
Phone: 416-448-7189
Fax: 416-443-7132
www.harlequin.com
Harlequin is one of the world’s
leading publishers of books
for women, with titles issued
worldwide in 31 languages and
sold in 110 international markets.
The company publishes more
than 110 titles monthly and more
than 1,200 authors from around
the world. Harlequin has offices in
18 countries, including offices in
Toronto, New York and London.
HarperCollins
Children’s Books
503
10 E. 53rd St.
New York, NY 10022
Phone: 212-207-7000
www.harpercollinschildrens.com
HarperCollins Children’s Books
is one of the leading publishers
of children’s books. Respected
worldwide for its tradition of
publishing quality books for
children, HarperCollins is home to
many of the classics of children’s
literature, including Goodnight
Moon, Where the Wild Things Are,
The Giving Tree, Charlotte’s Web,
Ramona, Lilly’s Purple Plastic
Purse, the I Can Read beginning
reader series and countless
award-winning titles. HarperCollins
Children’s Books is a division of
HarperCollins Publishers, one
of the leading English-language
publishers in the world.
HARRASSOWITZ
1650
820 University Blvd. S., Ste. 2C
Mobile, AL 36609
Phone: 251-342-2929
Fax: 800-574-5732
www.harrassowitz.de
Harvard University
Press
1439
79 Garden St.
Cambridge, MA 02138
Phone: 617-495-2600
Fax: 617-496-4892
www.hup.harvard.edu
With “Scholarship Plus’’ as its
motto, Harvard University Press
publishes books that matter. From
ants to Zeus, HUP opens the
academy to the world.
Healthy Feet
Solutions
1964
3132 Tiger Run Ct., Ste. 105
Carlsbad, CA 92010
Phone: 858-602-9556
www.happyfeet.com
Henan USA
2246
12121 Little Rd., Ste. 323
Hudson, FL 34667
Phone: 352-397-2184
www.cnhc.en.alibaba.com
414
225 Varick St.
New York, NY 10014-4381
Phone: 212-614-7572
Fax: 800-344-3482
www.workman.com
A leading publisher of spoken
word audio, Highbridge was
started by Minnesota Public Radio
to produce and distribute recordings of Garrison Keillor’s A Prairie
Home Companion. HighBridge’s
catalog has expanded over the
years to include New York Times
best-selling fiction and nonfiction,
Oprah’s Book Club® titles, National
Public Radio compilations, and
more.
Highlights for
Children
569
1800 Watermark Dr.
Columbus, OH 43215
Phone: 614-324-7013
Fax: 614-324-7943
www.highlights.com
For almost 70 years, Highlights
has been providing Fun with a
Purpose™ to children at every age
and every stage. Today, Highlights
would like to introduce our newest
addition, Highlights Hello™
magazine. With read-aloud stories,
stitched bindings, and washable,
tear-proof pages, Hello is
designed for babies and toddlers
ages 0 to 2—and their parents!
Hello joins High Five magazine for
kids ages 2 to 6 and Highlights
magazine for kids ages 6 to 12.
The History Press
1946
645 Meeting St., Ste. 200
Charleston, SC 29403
Phone: 843-577-5971
Fax: 843-577-6912
www.historypress.net
The History Press brings a new
way of thinking to history publishing—preserving and enriching
community by empowering history
enthusiasts to write local stories
for local audiences. Our books
are useful resources for research
and preservation. Infused with
local color, our books are highly
readable, often brief and aimed
at a general readership. Since
starting in 2004, we have published nearly two thousand of the
highest quality local and regional
history titles from coast to coast.
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exhibitor listings h
237 Park Ave.
New York, NY 10017-0010
Phone: 212-364-1343
Fax: 212-364-0942
www.hachettebookgroup.com
Hallett & Sons Expert
Movers, Inc.
201
Holiday House
415
425 Madison Ave., 12th Fl.
New York, NY 10017
Phone: 212-688-0085
Fax: 212-421-6134
www.holidayhouse.com
Holiday House publishes children’s
and young adult trade books in
hardcover, paperback, and e-book
formats. Follow us on Facebook
at Holiday House Books for Young
People and Twitter
@HolidayHouseBks.
Horn Book
829
56 Roland St., Ste. 200
Boston, MA 02129
Phone: 888-628-0225
Fax: 617-628-0882
www.hbook.com
The Horn Book Magazine provides
its readership with in-depth
reviews of the best new books for
children and young adults as well
as features, articles and editorials
in each issue. The Horn Book
Guide, published twice annually,
gives a review and a numerical rating for every hardcover
children’s book published in the
U.S. during the previous publishing season.
Houghton Mifflin
Harcourt
403
h exhibitor listings
222 Berkeley St.
Boston, MA 02116-3748
Phone: 617-351-3668
Fax: 617-351-5922
www.hmhco.com
202
Quality, award-winning books for
children and young adults in a
variety of formats, including board
books, picture books, chapter
books, paperbacks and paperback originals. Includes Clarion
Books and Houghton Mifflin
Books for Young Readers.
Huggmee Chair Co.,
LLC
1427
4035 E. San Miguel Ave.
Phoenix, AZ 85018
Phone: 602-703-2497
www.huggmee.com
Inventor, manufacturer, and
sole distributor of the Huggmee
Reading Chair which is designed
for readers to drape a leg or two
over an arm of a chair in comfort,
while sitting in it. The Huggmee
will catch your attention immediately with its unique shape. It is
very unusual to encounter a truly
unique chair design any more,
and this is one. It is very popular
in TEEN LIBRARIES, and homes.
Made in Phoenix, AZ, USA.
H.W. Wilson
1211
4919 Route 22, PO Box 56
Amenia, NY 12501
Phone: 800-562-2139
www.hwwilsoninprint.com
From its foundation in 1898, H.W.
Wilson has dedicated itself to
providing its customers and their
patrons with the best possible
library experience. H.W. Wilson
products have become familiar to
generations of library patrons as
standard tools in college, public,
school, and special libraries
around the world. Visit the booth
to take a look at the latest editions
of Current Biography, Core
Collections, The Reference Shelf
and more.
Iberoamericana
2236
Amor de Dios, 1
Madrid E-28014 Spain
Phone: 34 91 429 5397
Fax: 34 91 429 3522
www.ibero-americana.net
Iberoamericana Vervuert, founded
in 1975, specializes in publications
of Spain, Portugal, Latin America.
our highly qualified staff offers
services for academic libraries,
approval plans, standing orders,
serials management, bibliographical services, MARC records, EDI
invoicing.
IBPA
1350
1020 Manhattan Beach Blvd.,
Ste. 204
Manhattan Beach, CA 90266
Phone: 310-546-1818
Fax: 310-546-3939
www.ibpa-online.org
IBPA is an association of more
than 3,000 independent publishers
all across the United States. Come
by our booth to see the latest and
greatest from the independent
publishing community.
IGI Global
1235
701 E. Chocolate Ave., Ste. 200
Hershey, PA 17033-1240
Phone: 717-533-8845
Fax: 717-533-7115
www.igi-global.com
Founded in 1988, IGI Global,
headquartered in Hershey,
Pennsylvania (USA), is a
leading international academic
publisher of more than 2,300+
reference books, 155+ journals,
encyclopedias, teaching cases,
proceedings, and databases
focusing on the areas of:
education, social science, library
science, healthcare, business,
environmental science, public
administration, computer science,
and engineering.
Indus International,
Inc.
IImage Retrieval, Inc.
Infobase Learning
2161
1322
3620 N. Josey Lane, Ste. 103
Carrollton, TX 75007
Phone: 972-492-0930
Fax: 972-492-5124
iiri.com
Illinois Library
Association
457
33 W. Grand, Ste. 401
Chicago, IL 60610
www.ila.org
Independent
Publishers Group
232
814 N. Franklin
Chicago, IL 60610
Phone: 312-568-5407
Fax: 312-337-1807
www.ipgbook.com
IPG represents a global range
of publishers and books in print
and e-book formats with content
covering all categories—among
them art, biography, cooking,
crafts, fiction, health, history,
parenting, pop culture, spirituality,
and sports—core curriculum, and
intellectual pursuits. We also have
a wide range of original Spanish
language titles and translations as
well as children’s books.
Index Data
1150
8 Faneuil Hall Marketplace, 3rd Fl.
Boston, MA 02109
Phone: 617-939-9623
www.indexdata.com
Index Data is a consulting and
software company specializing in
information retrieval. Our discovery
platform can be integrated
into your existing software, or
we provide turnkey solutions
freeing you to focus on your core
business & customer requirements. We have an extensive
toolbox developed over 20 years
including structured web harvesting, SOLR/Lucene integration,
screenscraping Connectors,
and a context-aware proxy for
single sign-on access. This is our
passion–let us be your search
partner.
1763
340 S. Oak St.
West Salem, WI 54669-0890
Phone: 608-786-0300
Fax: 608-786-0786
www.indususa.com
132 W. 31st St., 17th Fl.
New York, NY 10001
Phone: 212-896-4337
Fax: 212-967-8107
www.infobaselearning.com
Infobase Learning is an educational solutions company providing
award-winning digital reference
content to the school and library
community. Under such wellknown brands as Facts On File,
The World Almanac® and Films
Media Group, Infobase Learning is
highly regarded as a reliable,
authoritative resource for
supporting the middle school, high
school and academic curriculum.
InfogroupReferenceUSA
1429
1020 E. 1st St.
Papillion, NE 68046
Phone: 402-836-3720
www.infogroup.com
Informa Healthcare/
Primal Picutres
2166
10-15 Newgate St.
London, EC1A 7AZ United Kingdom
Phone: 207-017-5716
www.informahealthcare.com
Information Today,
Inc.
377
143 Old Marlton Pike
Medford, NJ 08055
Phone: 609-654-6266
Fax: 609-654-6760
www.infotoday.com
ITI is a leading publisher and
conference organizer in the
library, information and digital
content industries. ITI publishes
Information Today, Computers
in Libraries, Internet@Schools,
Online/Searcher, EContent and
sponsors conferences including Computers in Libraries and
Internet Librarian.
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Infovision Software,
Inc.
Inner Traditions
International
1255
514
PO Box 234
Carlsbad, CA 92018-0234
Phone: 800-849-1655
Fax: 815-642-8541
www.infovisionsoftware.com
The Evolve Library Management
System is a state-of-the-art
integrated library system that
saves you time and money while
making it easy to manage your
entire library collection and
circulation. Designed for use in
public, school and special libraries,
Evolve quickly and easily handles
your daily activities while freeing
up staff to serve your patrons.
Ingram
Content Group
611
One Ingram Blvd.
LaVergne, TN 37086
Phone: 615-793-5000
www.ingramcontent.com
Ingram Content Group Inc., is one
of the world’s largest and most
trusted distributor of books, music
and media content. Thousands
of publishers, retailers and
libraries worldwide use Ingram’s
fully integrated physical and
digital distribution, logistics, and
manufacturing solutions to access
global consumer demand, and
realize the full business potential of
book content.
Ingram Publisher
Services
313
Ingram Publisher Services is
Ingram’s full-service book distribution solution for publishers that
provides the broadest access to
customers worldwide through
comprehensive print and digital
solutions and sales and marketing
services. Through individualized
service and unparalleled connectivity, we are reinventing the future
of distribution.
Inhabit Media Inc
238
146A Orchard View Blvd.
Toronto, ON M4R 1C3 Canada
Phone: 647-344-3540
www.inhabitmedia.com
Celebrating over 35 years of
publishing, Inner Traditions is a
leading independent publisher of
Mind, Body, Spirit books. Please
visit our booth to learn more about
our publishing program.
Innovative
Interfaces
1035
5850 Shellmound Way
Emeryville, CA 94608
Phone: 510-496-3825
Fax: 510-450-6350
www.iii.com
Innovative creates cutting-edge
products that allow libraries to
succeed in a modern technology
environment. The company’s
market-leading solutions include:
the Sierra Services Platform,
the Millennium ILS, the Encore
Synergy discovery application,
Electronic Resource Management,
and INN-Reach resource sharing.
Innovative’s systems can be found
in more than 50 countries with
over 1,600 systems installed that
move tens of millions of items
each year.
Innovative Label
Technology
2049
26892 Windemere Cir.
Lake Forest, CA 92630
Phone: 949-235-8377
Fax: 949-203-2820
www.duraready.com
Manufacturer of DuraReady
no-fade or discolor labels for your
inexpensive desktop label printer.
Print your own durable spine
labels, tamper-evident asset tags,
outdoor labels, clear or colored
labels and more. Our patented
design is offered in a variety of
unique shapes, sizes, colors and
materials. Avoid the hassle and
waste of preprinted labels and
label sheets. Print 1 or hundreds
of labels at a time on-demand
with your own designs and special
features. Please come see for
yourself.
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
322
10 Paul Dr.
San Rafael, CA 94903
Phone: 415-526-1370
www.insighteditions.com/
Insight Editions is an illustrated
book publisher focused on
creating superlative books on
photography, music, popular
culture, and children’s books.
Imprints include Mandala
Publishing, which focuses on
the arts and philosophy of India,
and Earth Aware Editions, which
was founded on the principle that
the sustainability of life on Earth
depends on the spiritual heal and
wisdom of humanity.
Insignia Software
Corporation
2164
201 2544 Ellwood Dr. SW
Edmonton, AB T6X 0A9 Canada
Phone: 866-428-3997
Fax: 780-428-3009
www.insigniasoftware.com
Institute of Arabic
and Islamic Studies
2047
38713 Tierra Subida, Ste. 200-240
Palmdale, CA 93551
Phone: 661-917-1675
Fax: 661-269-1017
www.islamic-study.com; www.
legacyofpeace.net
The Institute of Arabic and
Islamic Studies, IAIS is non-profit
organization, dedicated to serving
peace and fraternity for all through
common grounds shared by the
faiths of Islam, Christianity and
Judaism. Together with Jewish
and Christian organizations, IAIS is
working to improve relations and
build bridges between Muslims,
Christians and Jews and other
communities. IAIS is also working
to improve the image of Islam in
its true nature and to bring about
a more conducive environment
for all.
Institute of Museum
& Library Services
1534
1800 M St. NW, 9th Fl.
Washington, DC 20036-5802
Phone: 202-653-4778
Fax: 202-653-4602
www.imls.gov
The Institute of Museum and
Library Services envisions
a democratic society where
communities and individuals
thrive with broad public access to
knowledge, cultural heritage and
lifelong learning. IMLS’s mission is
to inspire libraries and museums
to advance innovation, lifelong
learning and cultural and civic
engagement. The agency provides
leadership through research,
policy development and grant
making to the nation’s 123,000
libraries and 17,500 museums.
Instrument
Development Corp.
2250
355 E. 8th St.
Tucson, AZ 85705
Phone: 520-622-4199
Fax: 520-622-4155
www.lightingpowerstation.com
Intelex Corp
1617
114 E. Main St., Ste. 200
Charlottesville, VA 22902
Phone: 434-970-2286
Fax: 434-979-5371
www.nlx.com
International Latino
Book Awards (Latino
Literacy Now)
2110
3445 Catalina
Carlsbad, CA 92010
Phone: 760-434-1223
www.lbff.us
The Int’l Latino Book Awards, the
largest awards for books by and
about Latinos, will feature over
70 Latino authors presenting their
books. The 16th Awards featured
231 winners from around the
USA, Latin America and Spain.
Books are in English, Spanish &
Portuguese. Latino Literacy Now
has held 54 Latino Book & Family
Festivals around the USA with a
combined 800,000+ attendees.
Latinos in the USA will spend
over $500 million on books this
year. Come by 2110 & see some
exciting books.
International
Monetary Fund (IMF)
1526
700 19th St., NW, Rm. HQ1-7-124
Washington, DC 20431
Phone: 202-623-4824
Fax: 202-589-7427
www.imfbookstore.org
exhibitor listings i
One Ingram Blvd.
LaVergne, TN 37086
Phone: 615-793-5000
www.ingramcontent.com
One Park St.
Rochester, VT 05767
Phone: 802-767-3174
Fax: 802-767-3726
www.innertraditions.com
Insight Editions
The International Monetary Fund
(IMF) publishes a wide variety of
books, periodicals, and electronic
products covering global economics, international finance, monetary
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
203
issues, statistics, and exchange
rates, which are sold worldwide.
stories for Young Adults, Try
Looking Ahead.
Irish Newspaper
Archives
Jerzy and Anne
Drozd—Artist Alley
2143
2123
Unit 2 St, Kiernan’s Enterprise Centre,
Furze Rd.
Sandyford Industrial Estate, Dublin,
Ireland
Phone: 3531-294-2173
Fax: 3531-295-2173
www.irishnewspaperarchives.com
Jake Parker—Artist
Alley
2023
www.mrjakeparker.com
Jake Parker is an illustrator based
in Utah. For the last 15 years he
has worked on everything from
animated films to graphic novels
to picture books. He illustrated
the New York Times best-selling
book The Astonishing Secret of
Awesome Man, written by Michael
Chabon and writes and draws the
Missle Mouse graphic novel series,
published by Graphix.
James Lorimer &
Company
323
5502 Atlantic St.
Halifax, NS B3H 1G4 Canada
Phone: 416-362-4762
Fax: 416-362-3939
www.lorimer.ca
i exhibitor listings
Publishing high-quality books
for kids and teens, designed to
engage reluctant readers. Hi-lo
non-fiction and realistic, contemporary fiction. Series topics
include sports, conflict resolution,
true crime, edgy/urban teen, early
chapter books, diversity.
204
Janet Lee—Artist
Alley
2137
www.j-k-lee.com
Showcasing books illustrated by
Janet Lee. Also available, libraryfriendly prints.
Jason Rodriguez—
Artist Alley
2132
www.jasonrodriguez.com
Preview copies of Fulcrum
Publishing’s upcoming Colonial
Comics: New England, 1620-1750
as well as free Colonial Characters
trading cards and advanced
copies of my upcoming Twilight
Zone-inspired collection of short
www.comicsaregreat.com
Copies of books and related
merchandise for sale at the table.
Jesse Moynihan—
Artist Alley
2134
jessemoynihan.com
Jesse is the artist and writer of the
webcomic Forming, the second
collection of which will be debuting
in the US at ALA. He will have his
original art on display as well as
copies of Forming 1 and 2. (Jesse
is also a writer and artist for the
Adventure Time cartoon and while
have work from that as well.)
Joel Christian Gill—
Artist Alley
2133
www.joelchristiangill.com
I will be showing sample pages
and images from my upcoming
books: Strange Fruit vol I:
Uncelebrated Narratives from
Black History and Tales of the
Talented Tenth.
Jones eGlobal
Library
2172
academic journals, 16,000 books
and 2 million primary source
objects. JSTOR helps scholars
and students discover, use and
build upon a wide range of content
through a powerful research and
teaching platform. JSTOR is
part of ITHAKA, a not-for-profit
organization that also includes
Ithaka S+R and Portico.
Junior Library Guild
829
7858 Industrial Pkwy.
Plain City, OH 43064
Phone: 800-491-0714
Fax: 800-827-3080
www.juniorlibraryguild.com
Junior Library Guild is a collection
development service helping
school and public libraries acquire
the best new children’s and young
adult books. Season after season,
year after year, Junior Library
Guild book selections go on to win
awards, collet starred or favorable
reviews and earn industry honors.
Kane Miller/Usborne
Books
218
4901 Morena Blvd., Ste. 213
San Diego, CA 92117
Phone: 858-456-0540
www.kanemiller.com
Award-winning picture books,
board books and fiction from
countries around the world including the U.S.
Kanopy
9697 E. Mineral Ave.
Centennial, CO 80112
Phone: 303-784-8305
Fax: 303-784-8573
www.egloballibrary.com
1463
Jones eGlobal Library is your
online library solution. We appreciate accreditation requirements
and can help your institution
meet the standards associated
with implementing library learning
resources. We staff a team of
librarians with MLIS degrees to
provide consultation services
and support. Our well-developed
library can improve the quality of
a student’s research and learning
experience dramatically.
Kanopy is the “Destination of
Educational Film” and is a leading
distributor of online videos to
colleges and schools around the
world. Our three services include:
an extraordinary catalog of over
25,000 videos (many available
only on Kanopy), a Search &
Find service, and a cost effective
hosted video content service.
JSTOR/Portico
366
853
2 Rector St., Fl. 18
New York, NY 10006-1852
Phone: 212-358-6400
Fax: 212-358-6499
www.jstor.org
JSTOR (jstor.org) is a growing
digital library of more than 1,900
3230 Scott St.
San Francisco, CA 94123
Phone: 650-759-5538
www.kanopystreaming.com
Kapco Book
Protection
1000 Cherry St.
Kent, OH 44240
Phone: 800-791-8965
Fax: 800-451-3724
www.kapco.com
Since 1987, KAPCO has been
a manufacturer of unique book
repair and preservation products.
Turn your paperbacks into
hardbacks with our self-adhesive
paperback book covers-the only
proven paperback covers! Want
the best? Ask for them by Name—
and KAPCO your books! Contact
us at 800.791.8965 or book@
kapco.com or learn more online
at www.kapco.com. Stop by our
booth at the next trade show for a
free book and paperback covering
demonstration and tips or request
your own FREE In-Service
Program.
Kean Soo—Artist
Alley
2127
www.keaner.net
Kean Soo will be presenting the
reprint edition of Jellaby: The Lost
Monster (published by Capstone/
Stone Arch Books), and promoting
the forthcoming reprint edition of
Jellaby: Monster in the City (to be
released Aug. 1, 2014).
Kensington
Publishing
370
119 W. 40th St., 21st Fl.
New York, NY 10018
Phone: 615-383-1285
Fax: 615-383-1285
www.kensingtonbooks.com
KI
469
1330 Bellevue St.
Green Bay, WI 54308
Phone: 920-468-2252
Fax: 920-468-2618
www.kieducation.com
KI helps libraries create new-era
learning environments. Welldesigned libraries encourage
interactive learning, yet still
provide the necessary resources
to generate and disseminate
information. KI products further
support the technology rich,
user-driven spaces within the
21st century academic library. KI
provides furniture and movable
wall solutions for learning centers,
IT training spaces, multimedia
presentation rooms, project areas,
administrative areas, lounge areas
and more.
Kids Can Press
650
Corus Quay, 25 Dockside Dr.
Toronto, ON M5A 0B5 Canada
Phone: 416-479-7000
Fax: 416-960-5437
www.kidscanpress.com
For 40 years, Kids Can Press has
published an award-winning list
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of more than 600 picture books,
non-fiction and fiction titles for
toddlers to young adults. The Kids
Can Press list includes beloved
characters such as Franklin the
Turtle and Scaredy Squirrel.
Kiki Magazine/
B-books Ltd.
233
118 W. Pike St.
Covington, KY 41011
Phone: 859-491-5454
Fax: 513-672-0279
www.kikimag.com
Kirkus Reviews
Kong & Park, Inc.
1551
4F, 22, Samil-dacro15 - gil
Jongno-gu, Seoul, 110-111
Republic of Korea
Phone: 822-565-1531
Fax: 8223-445-1080
www.kongnpark.com
Konica Minolta
Business Solutions
USA, Inc.
2265
550 Marshall Phelps Rd.
Windsor, CT 06095
Phone: 860-697-2175
Fax: 860-902-7520
www.countonkonicaminolta.com
2262
6411 Burleson Rd.
Austin, TX 78744
Phone: 512-369-6174
www.kirkusreviews.com
Kodak Alaris
1374
343 State St.
Rochester, NY 14650
Phone: 585-726-5116
Fax: 585-726-7532
www.kodak.com/go/docimaging
Kodak Alaris’ Document Imaging
solutions enable customers to
capture and consolidate data from
digital and paper sources, automatically understand and extract
valuable insight from the contents,
and deliver the right information to
the right people at the right time.
Our offerings include award-winning scanners, including the new
KODAK Picture Saver Scanning
Systems PS50 and PS80, capture
and information management
software, and industry-leading
service and support.
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
322
1700 Fourth St.
San Rafael, CA 94710
Phone: 800-788-3123
www.kokidsbooks.com
Beautifully told and wonderfully
illustrated children’s books by
author/illustrator Kathryn Otoshi,
including the award-winning One
and Zero, and the Fall 2014 title
Two.
1155
17304 Preston Rd., Ste. 800
Dallas, TX 75252
Phone: 614-579-3053
Fax: 800-943-6488
www.laptopsanytime.com
LaptopsAnytime’s innovations
include configurable automated
checkout kiosks that dispense a
wide range of laptops and tablets
on demand to library patrons,
recharge devices, automatically
return devices back to pre-set
image, integration to/with Library
ILS and/or LDAP/Active Directory
databases, email notifications and
full suite of inventory management,
audit trail and management reporting functionality. Join us for demo
and in-depth discussion on how
your group can start an automated
program!
Las Vegas-Clark
County Library
District
1815
7060 W. Windmill Ln.
Las Vegas, NV 89113
Phone: 702-507-6295
Fax: 702-507-6291
www.lvccld.org
Learning A–Z
1962
1840 E. River Rd., Ste. 320
Tucson, AZ 85718
Phone: 520-232-5000
Fax: 520-618-3734
www.learninga-z.com
Learning A–Z’s affordable,
easy-to-use teacher and student
resources fill the gaps left by many
Reading, Writing, and Science
education programs. Explore our
site and see why Learning A–Z’s
printable books and worksheets,
and other projectable, online
LearningExpress,
LLC
730
80 Broad Street, 4th Floor
New York, NY 10004
Phone: 800-295-9556
Fax: 212-995-5512
www.learningexpressllc.com
LearningExpress, LLC is an
educational technology company
and leading provider of dynamic
eLearning solutions for the public,
college, school, and private library
markets. Our comprehensive
online solutions provide instant
access to powerful academic and
career resources, and help millions
of students and adults achieve
success annually. We invite you to
visit us at ALA Annual to see all of
our exciting products.
Learning Props
L.L.C.
1483
PO Box 774
Racine, WI 53401
Phone: 262-619-1119
Fax: 262-619-1119
www.learningprops.com
Educational games with books,
dice & movers enhance early
literacy. These fun, durable
“Props” support schoolreadiness skills and invite Family
Engagement. Colorful, zip-up
fabric bags are easy to store &
un-zip for play-filled learning.
Available in Eng. or Spanish/Eng.
(bilingual). Photo-based, concept
books also available separately:
11 English titles, 10 bilingual titles
in: Spanish/Eng., Chinese/Eng.,
Arabic/Eng. and labels for Hmong.
Potential for additional languages.
Lee & Low Books
626
95 Madison Ave., Ste. 1205
New York, NY 10016
Phone: 212-779-4400
Fax: 212-683-1894
www.leeandlow.com
An award-winning children’s book
publisher dedicated to diversity;
LEE & LOW’s books are “about
everyone, for everyone.” The
company publishes books for
beginning readers through young
adults, including science fiction
and fantasy under the TU BOOKS
imprint, bilingual English/Spanish
books under the CBP imprint, and
Asian interest books under the
SHEN’S BOOKS imprint.
Legato Publishers
Group
322
814 William St.
River Forest, IL 60305
Phone: 312-316-9618
www.legatopublishersgroup.com
Legato Publishers Group is a
boutique distribution service
designed to help publishers
achieve their growth potential,
through parent company Perseus
Books Group and affiliate
Publishers Group West.
LEGO
Education
2012
1005 E. Jefferson
Pittsburg, KS 66762
Phone: 855-580-5346
Fax: 620-231-4767
www.legoeducation.com
Language Arts and Literacy Focus
with LEGO Education: LEGO®
Education combines the unique
excitement of LEGO bricks with
hands-on classroom solutions for
science, technology, engineering,
math, and literacy. Learn how
products such as StoryStarter®
can bring innovation to your
classroom.
LEID Products
1256
2110 E. Walton Blvd., Ste. F
Auburn Hills, MI 48326
Phone: 888-884-5343
Fax: 248-364-3371
www.leidproducts.com
Often referred to as a “Library
Express,” the concept of a
self-service mini library branch
has grown in popularity across the
nation. Many public libraries are
faced with budget constraints and
yet have an increased demand for
services. If a traditional “brick and
mortar” library is not an option,
LEID’s iLibrary System offers a
compelling self-service solution.
Establish an innovative and affordable self-service mini branch using
LEID’s electronic book pickup
lockers and iLibrary PC Kiosk.
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exhibitor listings l
KO Kids Books
LaptopsAnytime
interactive and mobile teacher
resources, are already being used
in more than half of the school
districts in the U.S. and Canada
and 165+ countries worldwide.
205
Lenovo
1129
www.lenovo.com
1009 Think Place, Morrisville, NC
27560
805-798-3461
Lenovo offers solutions that fit the
needs of libraries. We offer rugged
workstations for public access
and convertible laptops for staff,
supporting our products with a full
range of services.
Lerner Publishing
Group
623
241 1st Ave. N.
Minneapolis, MN 55401
Phone: 612-332-3344
Fax: 612-215-6230
www.lernerbooks.com
Lerner Publishing Group creates
high-quality fiction & nonfiction for
children & young adults. Founded
in 1959, Lerner Publishing Group
is one of the nation’s largest independent children’s book publishers
with 13 imprints and divisions:
Lerner Publications, Millbrook
Press, Carolrhoda Books, TwentyFirst Century Books, Graphic
Universe™, Darby Creek, Kar-Ben
Publishing, Carolrhoda Lab™,
LernerClassroom, ediciones
Lerner, First Avenue Editions,
Lerner Digital™, and Lerner
Publisher Services.
Lexington Books
735
l exhibitor listings
4501 Forbes Blvd., Ste. 200
Lanham, MD 20706
Phone: 301-459-3366
www.rowman.com/Imprint/LEX
206
Lexington Books is Rowman &
Littlefield’s division for publishing
specialized work by established
and emerging scholars. Lexington,
an imprint with a longstanding
tradition of excellence, publishes
high-quality scholarly work that
makes a significant contribution to
education. Stop by the Rowman &
Littlefield booth to see our latest
accomplishments.
LexisNexis
815
9443 Springboro Pike
Miamisburg, OH 45342
www.lexisnexis.com/academic
LexisNexis offers high school,
college and public libraries
unparalleled online access to over
15,000 sources of credible news,
business and legal information.
We also provide online research
tools to help fundraisers identify
high-value donor prospects and
increase contributions.
LibLime, a division of
PTFS
Library Bureau Steel
1913
315 Poston Dr.
Crawfordsville, IN 47933
www.librarybureausteel.com
11501 Huff Ct.
Kensington, MD 20895
Phone: 301-654-8088
Fax: 301-654-5789
www.liblime.com
LibLime, a division of PTFS, is
a leader in technology solutions
for libraries. The PTFS-LibLime
division offers deployment and
development using the Koha ILS
platform. LibLime’s approach
offers libraries an alternative to
traditional commercial software
license costs/maintenance.
LibLime supports LibLime Koha,
for consortial union catalogs;
LibLime Academic Koha, an ILS
designed for academic environments, and GetIt, an integrated
acquisitions module. See http://
liblime.com or http://ptfs.com.
Librarica LLC
1362
14683 Midway Rd., Ste. 232
Addison, TX 75001
Phone: 888-802-2774
Fax: 972-248-4002
www.librarica.com
Librarica is known for easy-to-use,
stable software that simply works.
Our CASSIE System offers the
innovative, fresh approach to
computer and printer management. Features include session
time control, computer reservations and waiting lists, print cost
recovery, patron authentication,
our exclusive visual management,
web filter control, thin client
support, and statistics reporting.
Our SPOT System automates
your wireless printing, wireless
usage and printing statistics and
authentication.
Libraries Unlimited
1343
130 Cremona Dr., Ste. C
Santa Barbara, CA 93117
Phone: 800-368-6868
Fax: 805-685-9685
www.abc-clio.com
Libraries Unlimited, the professional development imprint of
ABC-CLIO, LLC, publishes in all
areas and topics that represent
core competencies of librarians.
Committed to supporting librarians
through every phase of their
career, Libraries Unlimited focuses
on the work of renowned and
highly visible practitioners who
are respected for their expertise
and passion for lifelong learning.
For more information, visit www.
abc-clio.com.
1568A
Library Bureau Steel set the
standard in steel cantilever
shelving and accessories called
SafeStak™, the strongest
bookstack available. LBS still
offers a low-cost, knock-down
frame. All systems meet all seismic
applications & are available in 48
standard colors & custom. LBS
also offers Space-Max II™, a high
density mobile system & all types
of units on casters. LBS added
Vistapanel™ a custom imaged
wood, steel & laminated end
panels & tops. SEE NEW CURVED
& ANGLED SHELVING UNITS.
LBS HAS IT ALL!
Library Ideas, LLC
1723
PO Box 9
Vienna, VA 22183
Phone: 571-730-4300
Fax: 571-730-4305
www.libraryideas.com
Library Ideas, LLC is a global
media company focused on
libraries, based in Virginia. The
company offers The Freegal Music
Service (with content from Sony
Music and 17,000 other labels),
The Freading e-book Service and
Rocket Languages as part of its
developing product suite.
Library Journal
829
160 Varick St., 11th Fl.
New York, NY 10013
Phone: 646-380-0700
Fax: 646-380-0756
www.libraryjournal.com
Library Journal is one of the oldest
and most respected publications
covering the library field. More
than 100,000 library directors,
administrators and staff in public,
academic and special libraries
read LJ. Library Journal reviews
more than 8,000 books, audiobooks, videos, databases and
Web sites annually, and covers
technology, management policy
and other professional concerns.
Library Juice
Academy
development workshops for
librarians and other library staff,
focusing on practical topics to
build new skills. Our publishing
arm is Library Juice Press, an
imprint of Litwin Books specializing in theoretical and practical
issues in librarianship from
a critical perspective, for an
audience of professional librarians
and students of library science.
Library Media
Connection
1343
130 Cremona Dr., Ste. C
Santa Barbara, CA 93117
Phone: 800-368-6868
Fax: 805-685-9685
www.abc-clio.com
Library Media Connection (LMC)
magazine delivers the insight,
answers and encouragement
school librarians need to transform
their libraries into thriving hubs for
21st century learning and teaching.
LMC covers technology, tackles
the tough issues of technology,
budgeting, leadership, and more.
LMC is an imprint of ABC-CLIO,
LLC’s library professional development program, Libraries Unlimited.
For more information, visit www.
librarymediaconnection.com.
Library of Congress
1709
101 Independence Ave. SE
Washington, DC 20540-1330
Phone: 202-707-7024
Fax: 202-707-9490
www.loc.gov
Library Resources
Group
1227
7823 Stratford Rd.
Bethesda, MD 20814
Phone: 240-354-1281
www.LibraryWorks.com
LRG produces and distributes
best practices, case studies,
white papers, grant and funding
opportunities, bid listings, buyer’s
guides, and research to help libraries prosper. Visit us at booth 1227
to learn about Strategic Library,
LibraryWorksTV, Library Bid & RFP
Alert, The Librarian’s Yellow Pages,
and more.
1954
PO Box 188784
Sacramento, CA 95815
Phone: 218-260-6115
Fax: 916-415-5446
www.libraryjuiceacademy.com
Library Juice Academy offers
a range of online professional
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
The Library Store
Inc.™
LibraryThing
Live Oak Media
1247
286 Spring St.
Portland, ME 04102
Phone: 207-899-4108
Fax: 815-301-5531
www.librarything.com
412
470
Browse, search and discover your
library’s holdings in a powerful and
engaging way. LibraryThing for
Libraries works by adding information and interactivity directly into
your catalog. Pick and choose
between enhancements, including
ratings and reviews, tags, similar
books, series, awards, virtual
book displays, or BookPsychic, a
personal recommendation system.
For over 30 years Live Oak
Media has produced distinctive
read-along recordings of classic
and award-winning children’s
literature for ages 3–12. As a
small, family-owned company,
we are dedicated to providing our
young listeners with meaningful
reading and listening experiences.
Our recordings have received
distinguished recognition, including two ALA Odyssey Awards and
three Grammy® Awards, as well
as Audie Awards, ALA Notable
Recordings and outstanding
reviews.
301 E. South St., PO Box 964
Tremont, IL 61568
Phone: 309-925-5571
Fax: 309-925-5227
www.thelibrarystore.com
The Library Store, Inc.™ offers
more than 30,000 supply and
furnishing products, all backed by
our hassle-free, 100% Satisfaction
Guarantee. Stretch your budget by
purchasing TLS™ manufactured
products, including custom bar
codes, labels protectors, book
covers, book jacket covers, book
tape, processing labels, book
pockets and cards.
Listening Library
Library
Systems &
Services (LSSI)
1128
12850 Middlebrook Rd., Ste. 400
Germantown, MD 20874
Phone: 301-540-5100
Fax: 301-540-5522
www.lssi.com
LSSI, an ALA Library Champion,
partners with communities
throughout the nation to provide
premier services to public,
academic, and government
libraries. We provide RFID tagging,
item conversion, automation
management, authority processing
and other database preparation
services. Our Validator product
puts the entire LC Name & Subject
authorities databases right on your
desktop to assist with cataloging.
Come to our booth and meet our
valued team members. LSSI is
hiring! Visit the ALA JOBList.
2113
2300 Computer Ave., Ste. D-19
Willow Grove, PA 19090-1736
Phone: 215-830-9320
Fax: 215-830-9422
www.librarytech.com
Authority Control Services.
Authority Express for new
cataloging and Authority Update
Processing to maintain all
controlled bibliographic headings.
We update all of your controlled
headings to the current RDA
cataloging standard. 25 years of
experience improving access to
library collections.
Attn: Library and School Services, 400
Hahn Road
Westminster, MD 21157
Phone: 800-733-3000
Fax: 800-940-7046
www.booksontape.com
For over 55 years, Listening
Library has been a leading
publisher of unabridged audiobooks for children and teens.
Our backlist includes the largest
collections of Newbery winners,
plus a wide selection of classic
literature and popular fiction. Enjoy
our Library Edition CDs @ Retail
Prices when you order direct from
Books on Tape.
Little, Brown Books
for Young Readers
422
237 Park Ave.
New York, NY 10017-0010
Phone: 212-364-1100
Fax: 212-364-0925
littlebrownlibrary.com
Quality hardcover, paperback and
eBooks, fiction and nonfiction
books for children and young
adults.
Little Pickle Press
313
3701 Sacramento St., Ste. 494
San Francisco, CA 94118
Phone: 877-415-4488
Fax: 415-366-1520
www.littlepicklepess.com
Little Pickle Press is a 21st
Century publisher dedicated to
helping parents and educators
cultivate conscious, responsible
little people by stimulating explorations of the meaningful topics of
their generation through a variety
of media, technologies, and
techniques.
Live Tribute
Productions
Lonely Planet
466
150 Linden St.
Oakland, CA 94607
Phone: 510-893-8556
Fax: 510-893-8563
www.lonelyplanet.com
Lonely Planet is a world-leading
travel content provider. Started in
1973, we enable curious travelers
to experience the world and get to
the heart of a place via guidebooks to every destination on the
planet, an award-winning website,
a suite of mobile and digital travel
products and a dedicated traveler
community.
1944
Branson Superstars Theater,
PO Box 1553
Branson, MO 65615
Phone: 800-358-4795
www.bransonsuperstars.com
Llewellyn Worldwide/
FLUX and Midnight
Ink
235
2143 Wooddale Dr.
Woodbury, MN 55125
Phone: 651-312-8415
Fax: 651-291-1908
www.llewellyn.com
The Oldest Metaphysical publisher
in the United States w/ lines in
self-help, natural healing, tarot/
divination. Fiction Imprints:
Midnight Ink (mystery) and FLUX
(young adult). 150 new titles
and 14 annuals yearly. 800 titles
backlist. Expanding worldwide
through distribution of English and
licensing rights.
The London Book
Fair
639
Gateway House, 28 The Quadrant
Richmond, Surrey TW9 1DN
United Kingdom
Phone: 44208-271-2124
www.londonbookfair.co.uk
The London Book Fair, April
14–16, 2015, takes place at
Olympia, London. The Fair is
the global marketplace for rights
negotiation and the sale and
distribution of content across
print, audio, TV, film and digital
channels. Taking place every
Lorito Books
225
University of Houston, 4902 Gulf Fwy.,
Bldg. 18, Rm. 100
Houston, TX 77204-2004
Phone: 713-743-2999
Fax: 713-743-3080
www.artepublicopress.com
Lorito Books is dedicated to
building second language literacy
and appreciation for the richness
of Latino culture. We believe
audiobooks are powerful learning
tools and hope that our books
will unlock the mysteries of
second-language learning while
entertaining children as they build
skills and confidence. We are
both a publisher and a distributor,
publishing Spanish audiobook
read-along sets and distributing
for Mexican publishers of Spanish
children’s literature
Lucas Color Card
2260
4900 N. Santa Fe
Oklahoma City, OK 73118
Phone: 405-524-1811
Fax: 405-524-3323
www.lucascolorcard.com
lynda.com
931
6410 Via Real
Carpinteria, CA 93013
Phone: 805-755-1523
Fax: 805-566-0636
lynda.com
exhibitor listings l
Library Technologies
Inc.
542
PO Box 652, 2773 Church St.
Pine Plains, NY 12567-0652
Phone: 518-398-1010
Fax: 518-398-1070
www.liveoakmedia.com
spring in the world’s premier
publishing and cultural capital, it
is a unique opportunity to explore,
understand and capitalize on the
innovations shaping the publishing
world of the future. The London
Book Fair brings you direct
access to customers, content and
emerging markets.
lynda.com is an online learning
company that helps anyone learn
software, creative and business
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
207
skills to achieve personal and
professional goals. Members
receive unlimited access to a vast
library of high quality, current and
engaging video tutorials taught
by great teachers who are also
working professionals.
Lyngsoe Systems
655
7470 New Technology Way
Frederick, MD 21703
Phone: 301-360-0910
www.lyngsoelibrary.com
Lyngsoe Systems designs,
manufactures and installs the most
innovative and reliable Automated
Material Handling systems for
libraries. Our systems integrate
seamlessly into the library system
and the modular design of our
products makes installations or
expansions fast and simple. Large
or small library, we provide the
optimal automation solution—RFID
and/or Barcode.
954
1438 W. Peachtree St. NW, Ste. 200
Atlanta, GA 30309
Phone: 800-999-8558
Fax: 404-892-7879
www.lyrasis.org
LYRASIS, the organizational
home for ArchivesSpace and
CollectionSpace, partners with
member libraries and cultural
heritage organizations to create,
access and manage information with an emphasis on digital
content, while building and sustaining collaboration, enhancing
operations and technology, and
increasing buying power. For more
information, please visit www.
lyrasis.org.
l exhibitor listings
528
175 5th Ave.
New York, NY 10010
Phone: 919-904-7253
www.macmillanlibrary.com
Titles for adults and teens.
Macmillan Children’s
Publishing Group
522
175 5th Ave.
New York, NY 10010
Phone: 646-307-5281
Fax: 646-307-5247
www.mackids.com/macteenbooks.
com
Macmillan Children’s Publishing
Group publishes award-winning
trade books in hardcover and
paperback for grades PreK–12.
Macprofessionals,
Inc.
2247
LYRASIS
208
Macmillan
Mackin Educational
Resources
1643
3505 County Rd. 42 W.
Burnsville, MN 55306
Phone: 800-245-9540
Fax: 800-369-5490
www.mackin.com
Mackin Educational Resources is
a complete one-source service
providing virtually any book,
e-book, audio, DVD, CD-ROM
or educational software in print
for libraries and classrooms. All
orders receive free processing,
free cataloging and free shipping.
Our goal is to make things less
complicated for librarians and
teachers and we achieve it with
thousands of customers around
the world every day.
30275 Hudson Dr.
Novi, MI 48377
Phone: 248-893-0738
Fax: 2448-893-0747
www.macprofessionals.com
Magazine
Subscription Service
Agency
1850
5248 State Rd. 54
New Port Richey, FL 34652
Phone: 800-368-7922
Fax: 800-889-2004
www.magazinesubseragy.com
We are a small, independent
subscription service. We handle
more than 250,000 publications.
Our target markets are libraries
(schools, public and institutional)
and professional offices. When
available, we will provide free
replacement issues for our
customers.
Mango Languages
1163
30445 Northwestern Hwy., Ste. 300
Farmington Hills, MI 48334
Phone: 248-254-7450
Fax: 248-254-7424
www.mangolanguages.com
Mango Languages loves libraries, and libraries love Mango.
Just ask the over 2,700 North
American libraries that subscribe
to Mango’s digital languagelearning resources. For your
patrons: a fresh, intuitive, and
flat-out fun way to learn new
languages in the library, at home
or on-the-go. For you and your
staff: a stellar customer support
team, downloadable promotional
materials, and your very own client
care specialist who can’t wait to
help you get the most out of your
subscription.
MARCIVE, Inc.
1239
PO Box 47508
San Antonio, TX 78265
Phone: 210-646-6161
Fax: 210-646-0167
www.marcive.com
Put us to work! Together we can
bring your catalog up to spec.
Stop by our boothto discuss
Authority control, Metadata conversion, RDA Conversion Service
(RDACS) FREE with authority
control!, Retrospective conversion, Reclassification, Enrichment
(TOC, Fiction/Biography,
Accelerated Reader, Lexile and
more), Cataloging for government documents, Documents
Without Shelves. Let’s roll up our
sleeves and talk about a custom
solution to your library’s database
problems.
MarketLine
1048
ChristChurch Ct., 10 NewGate St.
St. Pauls, EC EC1A 7AZ
United Kingdom
Phone: 44203-377-3045
www.marketline.com
Martin Pearl
Publishing
239
PO Box 1441
Dixon, CA 95620
Phone: 707-318-4970
Fax: 707-678-5420
www.martinpearl.com
An independent publishing
company founded by a former
educator. Our children’s books
promote literacy skills and
enhance educational topics. Our
novels and life style books provide
entertainment and enjoyment.
Meet authors John McKinsey and
Loriene Honda.
Mason Crest
371
450 Parkway Dr., Ste. D
Broomall, PA 19008
Phone: 812-604-1603
Fax: 610-543-3878
www.masoncrest.com
Mason Crest is devoted to publishing young adult, non-fiction,
series books on high interest and
socially responsible subjects. We
have 2000+ titles in categories
such as Global & American
Studies, Contemporary Bios and
Issues, Drugs & Health, Ripley’s
Entertainment. With each series
we obtain the most knowledgeable editors, senior consultants
and institutions to ensure the
highest quality for our books. We
have worked with the Gallup Poll,
Harvard, Yale, Johns Hopkins &
World Peace Foundation.
Massaging Insoles
By The Master’s Plan
1909
4848 E. Cactus Rd., Ste. 505-130
Phoenix, AZ 85254
Phone: 602-993-0461
www.massaginginsoles.com
Matt Dembicki—
Artist Alley
2021
matt-dembicki.blogspot.com
Matt Dembicki previously edited
and contributed to the Eisnernominated and Aesop Prizewinning Trickster: Native American
Tales: A Graphic Collection. He
also served at the helm of District
Comics: An Unconventional
History of Washington, D.C.,
a Harvey Award-nominated
anthology that was named as one
of the best books of 2012 by the
Washington Post. His book Xoc:
The Journey of a Great White won
the 2013 SPACE Prize.
Matthew Fillbach
and Shawn
Fillbach—Artisit Alley
2025
1firstcomics.com
Graphic Novels and comic
books from the publisher FIRST
COMICS. We have 5 graphic
novels out presently: Freakin’ ButtKickin’ Zombie Ants, Tales Of The
S.S. Junky Star, Cadaver Dogs Of
Winter, Lives, Captain Freebird.
We will also have samples of
the upcoming titles Shotgun
To Sugarland, Dog Soldier, and
Naked Leone.
McFarland &
Company
1423
Box 611
Jefferson, NC 28640
Phone: 336-246-4460
Fax: 336-246-5018
www.mcfarlandpub.com
McFarland is a leading independent publisher of academic and
nonfiction books. McFarland is
especially known for covering
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
topics of popular appeal in a
serious and scholarly fashion
and for going to great lengths to
manufacture their books to the
highest standards and library
specifications.
MerryMakers
McGraw-Hill
Professional
Featuring dolls from bestselling
children’s books.
1116
2 Penn Plaza, 9th Fl.
New York, NY 10121-2298
Phone: 646-766-3156
www.mhprofessional.com
McGraw-Hill Education publishes
highly valued content in the areas
of business management and
leadership; medicine, nursing and
allied health; science reference,
engineering, technology and
construction; computer training
and network security; test
preparation; and world languages.
Our publications provide essential
content to an array of outstanding
and innovative digital products,
including The MHeBook Library,
AccessScience, AccessMedicine,
AccessEngineering.
The Media Preserve
1831
111 Thomson Park Dr.
Cranberry Township, PA 16066
Phone: 800-416-2665
Fax: 724-779-9808
www.ptlp.com
Media Flex—OPALS
2030
PO Box 1107
Champlain, NY 12919
Phone: 877-331-1022
Fax: 514-336-8217
www.mediaflex.net
1217
580 Kingsley Park Dr.
Fort Mill, SC 29715
Phone: 704-559-7659
Fax: 800-559-6945
www.mergent.com
Mergent, Inc. is a leading provider
of business and financial information on global publicly listed
companies and has partnered
with D&B® to provide several
online/print solutions. Based in the
U.S., Mergent maintains a strong
global presence, with offices in
New York, Charlotte, San Diego,
London, Tokyo, Kuching and
Melbourne. Founded in 1900,
Mergent operates one of the
longest continuously collected
databases of descriptive and
fundamental information.
3540 Grand Ave., Ste. 200
Oakland, CA 94610
Phone: 510-451-2254
Fax: 510-451-2174
www.merrymakersinc.com
Midpoint Trade
Books
226
27 W 20, Ste. 1102
New York, NY 10011
Phone: 913-362-1120
Fax: 913-362-1121
www.midpointtrade.com
Midpoint Trade Books is a sales
and distribution company of more
than 200 print and e-book
publishers with 6000 active titles.
Our list includes Fiction-mystery,
thriller, suspense, contemporary,
paranormal and young adult,
cookbooks, health, business,
self-help, craft, children’s picture
books and a deep backlist of
general interest titles. Midpoint
offers publishers national print
distribution, worldwide e-book
distribution, high level sales
reporting, exclusive promotions
and a knowledgeable team.
Midwest Tape
1371
6950 Hall St.
Holland, OH 43528
Phone: 800-875-2785
Fax: 800-444-6645
www.midwesttapes.com
Through quality media
products—DVDs, Music CDs and
Audiobooks, unmatched customer
service and now the introduction
of hoopla, a digital media platform
featuring state-of-the-art streaming capabilities and user-friendly
digital design, Midwest Tape
delivers the expertise to help
libraries deliver a better customer
experience by becoming a more
valuable destination of learning,
education activity, ideas, enrichment and enjoyment for their
communities.
Midwest Library
Service
837
11443 St. Charles Rock Rd.
Bridgeton, MO 63044
Phone: 800-325-8833
Fax: 800-962-1009
www.midwestls.com
Midwest Library Service provides
books, processing, and collection development services
library shelving to include multimedia applications, book stacks,
newspaper storage, medical
records and accessories. We also
recently added a complete line
of compact shelving on movable
carriages marketed as Focustack
HD. Please visit our booth to learn
more about our new Escalook line
of shelving.
Mike Maihack—Artist
Alley
mk Solutions, Inc.
2139
1542
mikemaihack.com
Mike Maihack will have his newest
Scholastic published Graphic
Novel, Cleopatra in Space #1:
Target Practice, on hand as well
as a collection of art prints from a
variety of genres.
Milkweed Editions
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
322
1011 Washington Ave. S., Open
Book, Ste. 300
Minneapolis, MN 55415
Phone: 612-332-3192
www.milkweed.org
Nonprofit publisher dedicated
to identify and nurture outstanding literary voices, and publish
transformative literature and build
an engaged community around it.
Mitchell Lane
Publishers
364
1104 Kelly Dr.
Newark, DE 19711
Phone: 800-814-5484
Fax: 866-834-4164
www.mitchelllane.com
Publisher of series Non-fiction
library books for interest levels
early childhood through beginning
high school. Publisher specializes
in high interest content series and
contemporary biographies for
school & public libraries. Recent
series include: “My Guide to US
Citizenship,” “Jr. Biography From
Ancient Civilization,” “A Teen Guide
To Investing,” “Practical Economics
For Teens,” and “Native Americans
in the 21st Century.” Our books
receive consistently outstanding
reviews in SLJ & Booklist.
MJ Industries Inc.
1618
4 Carleton Dr., PO Box 259
Georgetown, MA 01833
Phone: 978-352-6190
Fax: 978-352-6964
www.mjindustries.com
105 Highland Park Dr.
Bloomfield, CT 06002-1396
Phone: 860-760-0438
Fax: 860-760-0448
www.mk-sorting-systems.com
mk Solutions products include
RFID systems, patron self-check
and payment kiosks, security
gates, staff workstations, handhelds and automated materials
handling. Our evolutionary and
acclaimed self-service lending
machine, the mk LibDispenser™,
provides 24-hour access library
services in convenient locations
for patrons. Your communities can
benefit from a distributed library
service when they can’t afford
another branch or unable to afford
keeping a small branch open. Our
24/7 self-service lending machine
provides various services for
Patrons such as retrieval of items
on hold, ability to borrow various
size/type items and return items
providing for automated restocking for the next patron use. Items
are retrieved from the machine
and delivered to the patron with
all transactions registered in the
library management software
using SIP. mk Solutions provides
professional advice to the library
completely from start to finish,
including initial system design
to post-installation support. All
products purchased from mk
Solutions will be custom manufactured by our experienced team
and tailored to meet the Libraries’
specific needs.
Montel Inc.
1171
225 4th Ave., PO 130
Montmagny, QC G5V 3S5 Canada
Phone: 418-248-0235
Fax: 418-248-7266
www.montel.com
For your academic, public or
special libraries, Montel offers
a complete line of products for
cantilever library shelving, mobile
shelving systems, cabinets and
much more.
exhibitor listings m
Mergent, Inc.
243
including firm order, approval plan,
out-of-print, and standing order
programs to academic, public,
FEDLINK, and special libraries.
InterACQ is Midwest’s web-based
acquisitions management and
collection development system.
Midwest is a WorldCat Cataloging
Partner.
Manufactures a complete line of
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
209
Moody Publishers
1662
820 N. LaSalle Blvd.
Chicago, IL 60610
Phone: 312-329-4480
Fax: 312-329-8062
www.moodypublishers.com
Morgan & Claypool
Publishers
My Heritage—
WorldVitalRecords
2053
1253
1829
2975 Executive Pkwy., Ste. 310
Lehi, UT 84043
Phone: 888-377-0588
www.worldvitalrecords.com
Morningstar
Nathan Hale—Artist
Alley
825
2136
22 W. Washington St.
Chicago, IL 60602
Phone: 312-384-3776
Fax: 312-384-4090
www.morningstar.com
Morningstar, Inc. is a leading
provider of independent investment research. We offer an extensive line of products and services
for individuals, financial advisors,
and institutions. Morningstar
Investment Research Center
is an easy-to-navigate online
database designed specifically
for libraries. With comprehensive
data and analysis of over 41,000
investments, the database is sure
to fulfill the investing needs of
patrons, students, and researchers across all levels of expertise.
Movie Licensing USA
1263
m exhibitor listings
reading. Subjects include history,
science, nature, conservation,
healthy living, exploration, travel.
PreK–12 books align with and
support the Common Core State
Standards.
National Information
Standards
Organization (NISO)
40 Oak View Dr.
San Rafael, CA 94903
Phone: 415-785-8003
Fax: 415-785-2507
www.morganclaypool.com
210
collections, the ALS operates in a
controlled environment with proper
humidity and temperature control,
free of dust and other contaminates. The ALS has the ability to
assign items to random locations,
maximizing space utilization.
10795 Watson Rd.
St. Louis, MO 63127
Phone: 877-321-1300
Fax: 877-876-9873
www.movlic.com/library
Enhance library programming with
the power of film! Movie Licensing
USA offers the exclusive, comprehensive site license that covers
titles for the biggest studios such
as Disney, Sony, Universal, Warner
Brothers and more.
www.hazardoustales.com
Author/illustrator Nathan Hale,
creator of the Hazardous Tales
series of graphic novels for middle
grade readers will be at this table,
sketching, answering questions
and signing books.
National Endowment
for the Humanities
2228
1100 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Rm. 426
Washington, DC 20506
Phone: 202-606-8307
Fax: 202-606-8557
www.neh.gov
The National Endowment for the
Humanities (NEH) is an independent federal agency and one of
the largest funders of humanities
programs in the United States.
The Endowment accomplishes
this mission by providing grants for
high-quality humanities projects
in preservation and access,
education, research and public
programs. NEH grants typically
go to cultural institutions, such
as museums, archives, libraries,
colleges, universities, public
television and radio stations and to
individual scholars.
National Geographic
642
Muratec
2151
2120 Queen City Dr., PO Box 667609
Charlotte, NC 28266
Phone: 704-394-6900
Fax: 704-394-2001
www.muratec-usa.com
Muratec’s Automated Library
System (ALS) utilizes an
Automated Storage & Retrieval
System along with our integrated
software control system to provide
high density media storage that is
fully automated. To preserve library
1145 17th St. NW
Washington, DC 20036
Phone: 202-857-7304
Fax: 202-775-6585
www.ngs.org
NGB & NGCB are the only book
publishers with the world’s premier
scientific, education and research
organization at their core, with
global multimedia outreach to
more than 450 million people each
month. Nonfiction genres include
illustrated reference, atlases, photography, narratives, guidebooks,
biographies, early childhood
3600 Clipper Mill Rd., Ste. 302
Baltimore, MD 21211-1948
Phone: 301-654-2512
Fax: 410-685-5273
NISO, the National Information
Standards Organization, a
non-profit association accredited by the American National
Standards Institute (ANSI),
identifies, develops, maintains,
and publishes technical standards
to manage information in our
changing and ever-more digital
environment. NISO standards
apply both traditional and new
technologies to the full range of
information-related needs, including retrieval, re-purposing, storage,
metadata, and preservation.
National Storytelling
Network
2275
515 E. Capital Ave., Ste. 205
Little Rock, AR 72202
Phone: 501-515-3224
www.storynet.org
Where can you find national and
regional storytellers, learn more
about storytelling yourself, and
connect with other story-users?
The National Storytelling Network!
Storytelling has a long and
profound relationship with libraries,
where information is transmitted in
every imaginable medium: spoken,
written, and digital. Please stop by
our booth to learn more about the
National Storytelling Network and
what we can do for you.
National Underwriter
2253
5081 Olympic Blvd.
Erlanger, KY 41018
Phone: 859-692-2208
Fax: 859-692-2246
www.nationalunderwriter.com
For over 110 years, National
Underwriter has been the first
in line with the targeted tax,
insurance, and financial planning
information that professionals
need to make critical business
decisions. With respected
resources available in print, online,
and in eBook formats, National
Underwriter remains at the
forefront of the evolving insurance
industry, delivering the thorough
and easy-to-use resources that
professionals rely on for success.
Visit us at www.nationalunderwriter.com.
Nature Publishing
Group
930
75 Varick St, 9th Fl.
New York, NY 10013
Phone: 212-726-9636
Fax: 212-696-9591
www.nature.com
Nature Publishing Group brings
you leading scientific and medical
research. Our portfolio combines
the continued excellence of
Nature, its associated research,
review journals, and over 50
leading academic and society.
Site license access is available
for all our journals and Scientific
American. Visit the NPG booth to
pick up your free copy of the first
issues of Nature and Scientific
American. Site license access
is available for both Nature and
Scientific American archive
collections.
Navajo Jewelry &
Crafts
1853
2904 18th St. NW
Albuquerque, NM 87104
Phone: 505-345-5750
Fax: 505-345-2808
Naxos of America,
Inc.
1376
1810 Columbia Ave., Ste. 28
Franklin, TN 37064
Phone: 615-465-3836
Fax: 615-465-3836
www.naxos.com
Naxos, a world-leading Classical
Label, brings you fine classical
recordings and performing arts
products, the Naxos Music and
Video Libraries: Online streaming;
Classical music, plus many other
genres, including Jazz, Blues
and World, more than 1,000,000
tracks and Naxos Audiobooks
featuring the best in classic and
contemporary literature.
Neatoscan
2256
3225 Country Dr., Ste. 160
Little Canada, MN 55117
Phone: 651-905-0995
www.neatoscan.com
Quit losing money! Why are you
still looking at funding the same
ways you did 10 years ago? Why
are we still giving away our funding
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
dollars? Neatoscan is a software
company whose purpose is to
help clients with an selection of
media products gain the right
Tools, Knowledge, and Market
Insights to prosper themselves.
Neatoscan for Libraries is a
program giving you the same
tools we provide other partners
around the world, all while meeting
the challenges a modern library
system faces every day.
Neschen—ITMS
Group
207
708 Third Ave., 6th Fl.
New York, NY 10017
www.digitaliapublishing.com
Neschen is a German company
that develops, produces and
markets innovative coated
self-adhesive and digital print
media worldwide, together
with their processing machines
and presentation systems. The
Documents sector comprises
self-adhesive films and papers
for the protection, repair and
care of books. Libraries, archives
and museums can also obtain
the necessary working materials
and processing equipment from
Neschen. Numerous products in
this series can also be used for
picture framing: To fix, mount and
protect pictures and photographs.
Nevada Library
Association
1813
900 N Roop St
Carson City, NV 89701
Phone: 702-443-3468
www.nevadalibraries.org
357
5674 Shattuck Ave.
Oakland, CA 94609
Phone: 510-209-9194
Fax: 510-652-3280
www.newharbinger.com
For over forty years, New
Harbinger Publications has offered
the best in self-help and psychology titles. Our evidence based
books are written by respected
professionals and are based on
the most current clinical research.
We are committed to publishing
books that offer your patrons real
tools for real change.
339
120 Wall St., 31st Fl.
New York, NY 10005
Phone: 212-629-8802
Fax: 212-629-8617
www.thenewpress.com
The New Press publishes books
that promote and enrich public
discussion and understanding of
the issues vital to our democracy
and to a more equitable world.
Key categories include education,
popular history and economics,
criminal justice, current affairs and
politics, environmental issues, and
international fiction in translation.
New York Review of
Books
Nienkämper
Furniture
452
1974
435 Hudson St., Ste. 300
New York, NY 10014
Phone: 212-757-8070
Fax: 212-333-5374
www.nyrb.com
257 Finchdene Square
Toronto, ON M1X 1B9 Canada
Phone: 416-298-5700
Fax: 416-298-9535
www.nienkamper.com
See the newest adult and
children’s books from New York
Review Books, The New York
Review Children’s Collection,
NYRB Poets, and The Little
Bookroom. Also, stop by and pick
up a free Children’s Collection
poster and the latest issue of The
New York Review of Books.
Established in 1968, Nienkämper
is an internationally recognized
designer and manufacturer of
fine office and library furniture.
Recognized as one of the 50 Best
Managed Companies in Canada
each year since 2009, Nienkämper
is committed to being at the forefront of innovation; collaborating
with forward-thinking designers;
and pushing the boundaries
of technology. Excellence from
design to delivery.
NewsBank
New York Times
1415
2242
5801 Pelican Bay Blvd., Ste. 600
Naples, FL 34108
Phone: 239-263-6004
Fax: 239-263-3004
www.newsbank.com
NewsBank, Inc. provides libraries
worldwide with online access to
more than two billion current and
historical informational articles
from 12,000 U.S. and international sources. Up-to-the-minute
coverage allows users of all kinds
to gain local, regional, national
and international perspectives
on a wide variety of topics,
including business, education,
health, people, genealogy, social
issues, the arts and many more.
NewsBank’s online resources
feature current and historical information from a variety of sources,
including newspapers, newswires,
broadcasts, videos, websites
and blogs, as well as historical,
government and educational
documents.
New World Library
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
322
14 Pamaron Way
Novato, CA 94949
Phone: 415-884-2100
Fax: 415-884-2199
www.newworldlibrary.com
New World Library is dedicated to
publishing books and other media
that inspire and challenge us to
improve the quality of our lives and
the world.
613 South Ave.
Weston, MA 02451
Phone: 216-789-8194
Fax: 781-890-2799
www.ontheavenuemarketing.com
Visit the New York Times booth
for reduced home delivery and
receive a complimentary gift
with your new subscription. The
New York Times newspaper is
distributed internationally and is
the largest metropolitan newspaper in the United States. Although
nicknamed the “Gray Lady” for
its staid appearance and style,
it is frequently relied upon as the
official and authoritative reference
for modern events. Subscribe
today!
New York Times
2237
1840 Barksdale Dr.
The Villages, FL 32162
Phone: 732-432-4800
www.nytimes.com
nextScan, Inc.
2114
690 S. Inustry Way
Meridian, ID 83642
Fax: 208-514-4001
www.nextscan.com
nextScan is a world technology
leader for micrographics conversion and document management.
nextScan’s innovative products are
designed with simplicity and functionality to increase user production and lower costs for scanning
film and fiche. nextScan’s
products include the high-speed
Eclipse Microfilm Scanner, the
multi-format FlexScan scanner,
and their newest product, Virtual
Film, a NEW, low cost conversion
method that replaces ReaderPrinter technology with a PC
based Microfilm viewer.
Ninestars
Information
Technologies PVT.
LTD.
206
#10, Bannerghatta Rd.
Bangalore, KA 560 078 India
Phone: 91804-346-2121
Fax: 91804-346-2223
www.ninestars.in
NOAA Scijinks
231
4800 Oak Grove Dr.
Pasadena, CA 91109-8099
Phone: 818-354-1067
Fax: 818-354-9068
www.spaceplace.nasa.gov
NOAA and NASA have joined
forces to create the ultimate
weather website. Brought to
you by NASA’s award-winning
Space Place team, SciJinks
makes weather and science
fun with articles, games, and
interactive multimedia targeted at
middle-schoolers. Find answers
to mysteries like our changing
seasons, lightning, hurricanes,
and tornadoes. Complete with
videos, printable posters, and tons
of other help for educators, this
site is as useful as it is engaging.
http://scijinks.gov.
NOLO
313
7031 Koll Center Pkwy., Ste. 260
Pleasanton, CA 94566
Phone: 855-802-8230
Fax: 800-838-1149
www.nolo.com/products/
exhibitor listings n
New Harbinger
Publications
The New Press
Nolo has been a leader in do-ityourself law since its founding in
1971. Since its founding, Nolo
has evolved with technology,
developing do-it-yourself software
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
211
and building Nolo.com into one
of the Internet’s leading legal
websites. Consumers and small
business owners can handle many
legal matters themselves with
Nolo’s products, which range from
books, ebooks to online forms
and software. All are written in
plain English, with step-by-step
instructions that help you get the
job done!
Nomad Press
(dist. by Legato/
Publishers Group West)
322
2456 Christian St.
White River Junction, VT 05001
Phone: 802-649-1995
www.nomadpress.net
Nomad Press has been publishing nonfiction books for 10 years
that stimulate learning in social
sciences, STEM, and language
arts by integrating facts with
inquiry-based projects.
Northern
Micrographics
1663
n exhibitor listings
2004 Kramer St.
La Crosse, WI 54603
Phone: 608-781-0850
Fax: 608-781-3883
www.normicro.com
Northern Micrographics can
help with your microfilming and
digitizing projects. Whether
you’ve books, newspapers,
photos—we’ll work with you to
create the images you need. We
also offer software and hosting
to help put your images online.
ProSeek, a document management system, supports image and
audio-based objects, and creates
audio transcriptions for editing and
searching. PhotoAtlas displays
your photos online in a geographic,
temporal context, telling your community’s story in a unique way.
NorthSouth
313
600 Third Ave., 2nd Fl.
New York, NY 10016
Phone: 917-212-5868
northsouthbooks.wordpress.com/
NorthSouth Books publishes
beautiful picture books created by
international authors and illustrators. They are best known for the
beloved Rainbow Fish series.
Norwood House
Press
222
PO Box 316598
Chicago, IL 60631
Phone: 312-467-0837
Fax: 773-467-9686
www.norwoodhousepress.com
Norwood House Press is a
children’s book publisher that
focuses on materials for schools
and public libraries. We are
celebrating eight years of
publishing books that meet the
needs of the K–8 librarian and
teacher. With over 500 titles in
print, major series include iMath,
iScience, The Beginning-to-Read
series by Margaret Hillert, and
Team Spirit by Mark Stewart. For
additional information please visit
our website at: www.norwoodhousepress.com.
OCLC
913
6565 Kilgour Pl.
Dublin, OH 43017
Phone: 614-764-6000
Fax: 614-764-6096
www.oclc.org
Visit the OCLC booth to see NEW
WorldCat Discovery Services,
which combine the strengths
of FirstSearch and WorldCat
Local. See OCLC WorldShare
Management Services, which
represent your digital, print and
e-collections, streamline workflows
and enable sharing opportunities.
Ask about WorldShare Interlibrary
Loan for delivery and new
WorldShare Metadata services.
See CONTENTdm for your digital
collections. Ask about OCLC
membership benefits, advocacy
initiatives and OCLC Research
projects.
OdiloTID®, S.L.
2165
Southeast Financial Center,
20 S. Biscayne Blvd.
Miami, FL 33131
Phone: 786-220-4693
www.odilotid.com
OdiloTID® is a leading provider
of library automation solutions,
offering a comprehensive product
suite for the discovery, management, and distribution of all
library materials; physical and
digital. OdiloTID® is dedicated
to developing the market’s most
Paul Anka wrote “My Way,” the song
associated with Vegas Rat Pack member
Frank Sinatra.
212
innovative and creative solutions,
leading the way in defining and
designing efficient, user-friendly
products that serve the needs
of public, academic, school,
special, and national library
systems today, while enabling
a transition into the future. We
give libraries control over their
Digital Collections and believe
in safeguarding these assets for
them and their patrons. To this
end, OdiloTID® enables libraries
to offer bestselling eBooks and
audiobooks from the big presses,
mid list presses, small presses,
and self-published authors as well
as music and video content right
from within their library’s catalog.
Mobile devices supported include
iPad®, iPhone®, Android™, Kindle®
and hundreds of other devices.
With branches in Spain, Mexico,
U.S.A and hundreds of customers
worldwide, OdiloTID® is rapidly
growing; becoming a global leader
and changing the way people
access digital content.
Office of Minority
Health Resources
Center
1528
8400 Corporate Dr., Ste. 500
Landover, MD 20785
Phone: 301-251-1797
Fax: 301-251-2160
minorityhealth.hhs.gov
OMHRC is your source for the
latest health information on issues
facing minorities. We offer free
funding searches, publications,
information referrals & library
outreach packets. Special
collections include materials on
ACA health insurance, multilingual
brochures, health literacy, cultural
competency, and statistical
reports. Grants and funding
resources for minority health
programs also are available.
Search the online library catalog
for reports, organizations and
consumer health brochures.
To receive free minority health
resources call 800-444-6472 or
visit http://minorityhealth.hhs.gov.
Oncology Nursing
Society
2154
125 Enterprise Dr.
Pittsburgh, PA 15275
Phone: 412-859-6356
Fax: 412-859-6164
www.ons.org
The Oncology Nursing Society
is a professional organization of
more than 35,000 nurses. ONS
publishes two journals; Oncology
Nursing Forum and Clinical
Journal of Oncology Nursing.
ONS also produces books on
clinical nursing in areas such as
chemotherapy administration,
nursing management, symptom
management, and survivorship.
In addition, ONS offers books
for patients, families, and their
caregivers. ONS is looking for new
books so stop by our booth with
your idea or manuscript.
OneClickdigital
eAudio
1568B
c/o Recorded Books 270 Skipjack Rd.
Prince Frederick, MD 20678
Phone: 800-638-3104
www.recordedbooks.com/oneclickdigital.com
OneClickdigital eAudio from
Recorded Books is an easy-to-use
platform that provides one-click
download and transfer to portable
devices. Over 30,000 eAudio
include exclusive content, other
publisher’s titles, and simultaneous
access.
OneClickdigital
eBooks
1568C
c/o Recorded Books 270 Skipjack Rd.
Prince Frederick, MD 20678
Phone: 800-638-1304
www.recordedbooks.com/oneclickdigital.com
OneClickdigital eBooks from
Recorded Books is an easy-to-use
platform that provides one-click
download and transfer to portable
devices. Over 100, eBooks are
included from all popular publishing houses.
OpenEdition
1437
38 rue Frederic joliot Curie
Marseille Cedex, 13451 France
Phone: 33-04-13-55-02-91
www.openedition.org
OpenEdition serves the humanities and social sciences research
communities through 4 publication
platforms: OpenEdition Books,
OpenEdition Journals (Revues.
org), Calenda (academic events)
and Hypotheses (research blogs),
all validated by our scientific
committee. OpenEdition is a
non-profit public initiative promoting Open Access publishing.
It has developed a Freemium
programme addressing libraries’
specific needs, with the access to
over 1200 books and 120 journals
and many dedicated services.
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Open Road
Integrated Media
242
345 Hudson St., Ste. 6C
New York, NY 10014
Phone: 212-462-7878
www.openroadmedia.com
Open Road Integrated Media is a
digital publisher and multimedia
content company. Open Road
creates connections between
authors and their audiences by
marketing its ebooks through a
new proprietary online platform,
which uses premium video content
and social media. Open Road has
published ebooks from legendary
authors including William Styron,
Pat Conroy, Chris Lynch, M.E.
Kerr, and Virginia Hamilton as well
as beloved characters like Franklin
and The Berenstain Bears.
OpinionArchives
1254
49 Casey Cir.
Waltham, MA 02451
Phone: 781-820-9019
Fax: 781-487-0164
www.opinionarchives.com
Orange County
Library System
1364
101 E. Central Blvd.
Orlando, CA 32801
Phone: 407-835-7323
www.ocls.info
EPOCH (Electronically Preserving
Obituaries as Cultural Heritage)
is an exciting new platform for
Owlkids Books
Orca Book
Publishers
Owlkids publishes entertaining, unique, high-quality books
and magazines that nurture the
potential of children and instill
in them a love of reading and
learning—about themselves
and the world around them.
With numerous books and three
magazines covering various age
groups, our publications reach
more than one million youngsters
and their parents every year.
654
1016 Balmoral Rd.
Victoria, BC V8T 1A8 Canada
Phone: 800-210-5277
Fax: 877-408-1551
www.orcabook.com
Well-known for their reluctant
reader series, Orca Soundings
and Orca Currents, Orca book
Publishers also publishes picture
books, early chapter books,
juvenile fiction, middle-school
nonfiction, outstanding teen
novels and a series of small novels
for adults called Rapid Reads.
Distributed companies include
Lorimer, Pajama Press, Second
Story and Tradewind.
O’Reilly Media, Inc.
313
1005 Gravenstein Hwy. N.
Sebastopol, CA 95472
Phone: 707-827-7000
Fax: 707-829-0104
oreilly.com/
Our books for technology professionals, knowledge workers, digital
media professionals, and the
emerging do-it-yourself technology
market has earned us treasured
places on bookshelves. We are
proud to distribute titles from the
following publishers: Maker Media,
Manning, No Starch Press, PC
Publishing, Pragmatic Bookshelf,
Rocky Nook and SitePoint.
OverDrive, Inc.
1317
One OverDrive Way
Cleveland, OH 44125
Phone: 216-573-6886
Fax: 216-573-6888
www.overdrive.com
Create your Virtual Branch!
OverDrive® enables you to offer
bestselling eBooks, audiobooks,
music and video from your library’s
website. More than 28,000 libraries and schools worldwide rely on
OverDrive library services, with
1.3 million digital titles available
from 5,000 publishers. Featuring
support for iPad®, iPhone®,
Android™, Kindle® and hundreds
of other devices.
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
322
10 Lower Spadina Ave., Ste. 400
Toronto, ON M5V 2Z2 Canada
Phone: 416-340-2700
owlkidsbooks.com/
Oxford University
Press
1135
2001 Evans Rd.
Cary, NC 27513
Phone: 919-677-0977
Fax: 919-677-1714
www.oup.com/us
Oxford University Press is one
of the world’s leading innovators
in online academic research,
publishing leading reference works
and more than 270 highly-cited
journals. OUP publishes a suite
of critically-acclaimed online
products including the Oxford
English Dictionary, Oxford
Reference, Oxford Handbooks
Online, Oxford Scholarly Editions
Online and the cross-publisher
e-book platform University Press
Scholarship Online.
Palgrave Macmillan
924
175 5th Ave.
New York, NY 10010
Phone: 646-307-5028
Fax: 212-982-5562
www.palgrave.com
Palgrave Macmillan is one of the
largest publishers of cutting-edge
academic resources, publishing across all formats in the
Humanities, Social Sciences and
Business. Palgrave Connect is
home to 12,500 eBook titles
offered through two flexible
perpetual business models:
Subject Collections and Build
Your Own Collections. The latest
additions to our list include
International Historical Statistics,
The Encyclopedia of Strategic
Management, and Palgrave Pivot,
an innovative publication format.
Palmieri Furniture
Ltd.
1177
1230 Reid St.
Richmond Hill, ON L4B 1C4 Canada
Phone: 905-731-9300
Fax: 905-731-9878
www.palmierifurniture.com
Palmieri has manufactured library,
institutional and office furniture
for distribution across North
America for years. Contemporary
technologies are utilized throughout our processes in order to
provide unsurpassed quality. We
provide furniture that will integrate
spaces effectively in order to
create harmony and functionality
within any environment. Palmieri
offers products such as: Shelving,
Tables, Seating, Collaborative
Workstations, Book Trucks,
Displays and much more. Check
out our website or email us at
info@palmierifurniture.com for
more information.
Papercutz
2009
160 Broadway, Ste. 700E
New York, NY 10038
Phone: 212-643-5407
Fax: 212-643-1545
www.papercutz.com
Papercutz is dedicated to
publishing great graphic novels
for all ages. Popular with reluctant
readers and gifted readers alike,
Papercutz graphic novels for kids,
tweens, and teens include a wide
range of genres, including humor,
action adventure, mystery, horror,
and favorite characters. Papercutz
is proud to be the only publisher
exclusively dedicated to children’s
graphic novels. We work every day
to introduce young readers to the
imaginative wonders waiting to be
discovered in comics.
Paratext
1029
24600 Millstream Dr., Ste. 480
Aldie, VA 20105
Phone: 703-327-4743
Fax: 703-738-7571
www.paratext.com
Pardey Books
1346B
PO Box 29
Arcata, CA 95518
Phone: 805-910-8312
www.landlpardey.com
exhibitor listings p
OpinionArchives offers the leading
and oldest full-text searchable
opinion journals available only
through OpinionArchives. This
collection is full text searchable
and is an important collection
for schools. These primary
source materials are invaluable
for political science, literature,
English, religious, Latin American
and other humanities and social
sciences studies. We have the
complete collection of these
titles and the material contains a
firsthand account of events going
back to 1850. These leading
scholarly journals of politics, arts,
history since 1850 and culture,
full text searchable from the
beginning of each magazine to
the present include: The Nation,
The New Republic, Harper’s,
Commentary, National Review,
NACLA, Commonweal, American
Spectator, New York Review of
Books, Dissent, The New Yorker,
The Progressive, The New
Leader, The Washington Monthly,
Moment, The Weekly Standard
and Orion.
preserving local legacies by
engaging the community to create
detailed tributes that include
digital memorabilia. Created with
an IMLS grant, EPOCH is a free
resource. Stop by to find out how
you can bring EPOCH to your
community.
Award winning authors of seven
highly regarded nautical books,
published by W.W. Norton, Lin
and Larry Pardey chose to take
over publication of their own titles
when their editor retired. Since
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
213
1996, they have written several
additional books under their own
imprint and created five DVD
programs. they now partner with
Paradise Cay Publications to
offer a full line of nautical books
and videos. In addition, Paradise
Cay Publications has become
the nations largest wholesaler of
nautical titles.
Partners Publishers
Group, Inc.
2108
2325 Jarco Dr.
Holt, MI 48842
Phone: 517-694-3205
Fax: 517-694-0617
www.partnerspublishersgroup.com
Partners Publishers Group has
been in business for 17 years. We
offer national distribution to small
and medium-sized independent
presses at a flat rate distribution
discount. Our services include:
cataloging, key account sales
presentation, accounts receiveable, and sales reporting.
p exhibitor listings
Perma-Bound Books
Pictoscope
212
666
2055
Peachtree Publishers is an
independently owned trade book
publisher, specializing in quality
children’s books, from picture
books to young adult fiction and
nonfiction; consumer references in
health, education and parenting;
and regional guide books about
the American South, where the
company is based. Our mission is
to create books that captivate and
educate young and old readers
alike, with well-crafted words and
pictures.
Perma-Bound Books offers books
and educational materials for use
in grades PreK through 12. Be
sure to check out of new e-book
selections!
PolicyMap
1700 Chattahoochee Ave.
Atlanta, GA 30318-2112
Phone: 404-876-8761
Fax: 800-875-8909
www.peachtree-online.com
Pearls with a
Purpose
2026
337 West 3800 North
Provo, UT 84604
Phone: 801-810-4654
PBS Educational
Media
Penguin Group (USA)
Inc.
1267
449
2100 Crystal Dr.
Arlington, VA 22202
Phone: 703-739-8693
Fax: 703-739-8487
www.shoppbs.org/education
214
Peachtree Publishers
Educators, librarians and
trainers—when you want to stay
current with the latest innovations
in science and technology, explore
fascinating ancient cultures,
journey to faraway lands or delve
into an epic part of history, you
want PBS Educational Media!
Content-rich and filled with breathtaking cinematography, every
program explores the evolving
perspectives of today’s world that
spur critical thinking. Challenge
assumptions and explore new
avenues of thought with the best
content from public television that
spans the educational range from
early learners to lifelong learners.
Plus, you get in-depth support
from insightful viewer guides
and helpful teaching materials to
standards-based lesson plans
designed to enhance learning
opportunities at every turn. Every
purchase you make comes with a
full money-back guarantee!
375 Hudson St.
New York, NY 10014
Phone: 212-366-2378
Fax: 212-366-2933
us.penguingroup.com
Penguin Group (USA) publishes
trade fiction and nonfiction books
through a wide range of imprints.
Please visit us.penguingroup.
com for information on our titles,
reading group guides, teacher’s
guides, videos, author podcasts
and subject catalogs. For more
information, please email us at
librariansden@us.penguingroup.
com. Join us on Facebook,
Penguin Group (USA) Librarian’s
Den and follow us on twitter and
Tumblr at penguinlibrary.
Penguin Young
Readers Group
442
345 Hudson St., 15th Fl.
New York, NY 10014
Fax: 212-414-3393
www.penguinclassroom.com
Penguin Group (USA) Inc. is also a
global leader in children’s publishing, through its Young Readers
Group, with preeminent imprints
such as Dial Books, Dutton,
Grosset & Dunlap, Philomel,
Puffin, Speak, Firebird, G. P.
Putnam’s Sons, Razorbill, Viking,
Nancy Paulsen books, Kathy
Dawson books, Price Stern Sloan,
and Frederick Warne.
617 E. Vandalia Rd.
Jacksonville, IL 62650
Phone: 217-243-5451
Fax: 877-277-0748
www.perma-bound.com
Perseus Books
Group
334
250 W. 57th St., 15th Fl.
New York, NY 10107
Phone: 212-340-8128
Fax: 212-340-8105
www.perseusbooks.com
The Perseus Books Group is an
independent company committed
to enabling independent book
publishers to reach their potential.
Perseus publishing imprints
include Avalon Travel, Basic
Books, Basic Civitas, Da Capo
Press, Da Capo Lifelong Books,
PublicAffairs, Running Press,
Seal Press and Westview Press,
as well as partnerships with The
Newsweek/Daily Beast Company,
The Nation Institute and The
Weinstein Company.
Perseus Distribution
335
250 W. 57th St., Fl. 15
New York, NY 10107-1307
Phone: 212-340-8100
Fax: 212-340-8115
www.perseusdistribution.com
Peter Pauper Press,
Inc.
1942
202 Mamaroneck Ave., Ste. 400
White Plains, NY 10601-5376
Phone: 914-681-0144
Fax: 914-681-0389
www.peterpauper.com
Phil Yeh—Artist Alley
2129
www.wingedtiger.com
Phil will be displaying his kidfriendly books and art. He will also
display materials from his 28 year
literacy tour with his organization,
Cartoonists Across America & the
World.
620 NW 35th St.
Gainesville, FL 32607
Phone: 352-328-0215
www.pictoscope.com
2223
1700 Market St., 19th Fl.
Philadelphia, PA 19103
Phone: 215-574-5923
www.policymap.com
Popular Subscription
Service
2071
621 Franklin St.
Michigan City, IN 46360
Phone: 800-426-5038
Fax: 219-872-5940
www.popularss.com
52 years professional expertise
within the periodical industry.
Competitive pricing, order savings
and consolidation. Electronic
journals, online ordering; claim
submittal and history. No cost and
non obligatory competitive bid
analysis. Certified Woman Owned
Business, the State of Indiana,
and nationally through WBENC.
Praeger
1343
130 Cremona Dr., Ste. C
Santa Barbara, CA 93117
Phone: 800-368-6868
Fax: 805-685-9685
www.abc-clio.com
Praeger, the non-fiction imprint of
ABC-CLIO, LLC, provides expert
perspectives that guide learners
in the development and communication of informed positions on
complex issues and topics. From
business and psychology to pop
culture and current events, Praeger
helps readers move beyond
preconceived notions by presenting
multiple points of view on important
topics. For more information, visit
www.abc-clio.com.
Prashanti Press, LLC
1581
27 Spring House Rd.
Pound Ridge, NY 10576
Phone: 413-441-9234
www.prashantipress.com
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
PressReader
Project MUSE
Psychotherapy.net
Publishers Weekly
1568H
1435
1536
535
Project MUSE is a rich and diverse
database of Social Science and
Humanities content from more
than 200 distinguished university
presses and scholarly societies.
With more than 550 journals and
23,000 books, Project MUSE
is the trusted and standalone
provider of cutting-edge scholarly
research. Project MUSE books
and journals provide DRM-free
content; unlimited simultaneous
usage, printing and downloading; mobile accessibility; and
simultaneous print and electronic
publication for new content.
Public Information
Kiosk, Inc.
200-13111 Vanier Pl.
Richmond, BC V6V 2J1 Canada
Phone: 604-278-4604
Fax: 604-278-4684
www.pressreader.com
PressReader provides unlimited
access to 2,500+ full-content
newspapers and magazines
through computers or the patron’s
own mobile device, with intuitive
features like cross-title search,
audio, translation and social
sharing.
Print2Cloud247
2269
290 Regency Park Dr.
Alabaster, AL 35007
www.print2cloud247.com
Print2Cloud247, LLC is a
cutting-edge mobile technology
company that leverages the cloud
to allow secure printing from any
mobile device to any printer. With
our proprietary cloud technology any printer can become a
secure cloud printer. Thanks to
smartphones, laptops and tablets,
studying on the go has become
business as usual. The P2C
system is the most user friendly
currently on the market, and our
unique subscription model makes
it cost effective to leverage the
power of the cloud.
Privateer Press
2051
9559 Summer Cypress St.
Las Vegas, NV 89123
Phone: 323-422-3655
www.privateerpress.com
Probitas Press, LLC
2016 Cummings
Los Angeles, CA 90027
Phone: 800-616-8081
Fax: 435-753-5131
www.probitaspress.com
Progressive Rising
Phoenix Press, LLC
2045
100 Goldmine Ct.
Aledo, TX 76008
Phone: 817-757-7143
www.progressiverisingphoenix.com
Pronunciator LLC
2156
PO Box 2167
Shepherdstown, WV 25443
Phone: 800-328-1776
Fax: 304-876-8407
www.pronunciator.com
One of the world’s largest
language-learning service,
Pronunciator has 80 languages to
learn, and 50 interface languages,
for a total of 4,000 language
courses. Includes ESL for 50
native languages. feature films,
music, poetry, PDF phrasebooks,
audio lessons, pronunciation and
pitch analysis, and a Course
Designer to create and deploy
custom language courses.
ProQuest®
703
789 E. Eisenhower Pkwy.,
PO Box 1346
Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1346
Phone: 734-707-2681
Fax: 734-997-4224
www.proquest.com
ProQuest® connects people
with vetted, reliable research
information. The company’s
products are a gateway to the
world’s knowledge, including
dissertations, governmental and
cultural archives, news, historical
collections, and eBooks. ProQuest
includes Bowker®, Dialog®, EBL®,
ebrary®, and Serials Solutions®
businesses, and tools such as
RefWorks®, Pivot™, Intota®, and
Summon® services.
150 Shoreline Hwy., Ste. 1
Mill Valley, CA 94941
Phone: 415-332-3232
Fax: 415-332-3238
www.psychotherapy.net
1330
12850 Middlebrook Rd., Ste. 410
Germantown, MD 20874
Phone: 301-916-1500
Fax: 301-916-1181
www.pikinc.biz
PIKinc. is a leading supplier of
KIOSKS for Libraries including
the LENDING LIBRARY book
and media distribution system;
THE LIBRARY MEDIA BOX media
distribution system to protects
DVDs, Games and CDs. AND
INTRODUCING THE E-BOOK
DISTRIBUTION MACHINE that
downloads e-books and lends
and retrieves fully loaded e-books
without librarian intervention.
PIKinc. systems use proprietary
software to enable unique functions and uses that potential
competitors do not offer. ALL
MADE IN THE USA.
Publishers Group
West (PGW)
322
1700 Fourth St.
Berkeley, CA 94710
Phone: 510-809-3700
Fax: 510-809-3777
www.pgw.com
PGW is a leading book sales and
distribution company, representing
more than 100 independent adult
and children’s publishers from
the U.S., Canada, and around
the world, who are publishing the
mostly timely and innovative titles
today. In 2007, PGW became
a division of the Perseus Books
Group.
Publisher Spotlight
240
455 Sam Ridley Pkwy., Ste. 248
Smyrna, TN 37167
Phone: 615-287-0105
Fax: 615-676-2779
www.indiepressshowcase.com
Featuring outstanding publishers
including Lemniscaat USA, Gecko
Press, LA Theatre Works, Child’s
Play, JR Comics, SteinerBooks,
Floris Books and more. Books and
audiobooks for all ages.
71 West 23rd Street, Suite 1608
New York, NY 10010
Phone: 212-377-5500
Fax: 212-377-2733
www.publishersweekly.com
Publishers Weekly is the
international news platform for
the book publishing industry.
Librarians rely on PW for news,
prepublication reviews, author
interviews, bestsellers lists,
seasonal announcements issues
and educational webinars as
well as a robust website that is
continually updated and features
news and analysis about the world
of publishing. Reviewing nearly
9,000 books each year, as well as
e-books, apps and audiobooks,
PW is published weekly in print
and digital formats.
PubMatch
636
277 White Street
Buchanan, NY 10511
Phone: 914-739-7500
Fax: 914-739-7575
www.pubmatch.com
PubMatch is a complete rights
tool for Publishers, Agents and
Authors. Members can network
with each other for the purposes
of finding potential rights partners
around the world using a number
of search options, or use in-profile
tools for marketing, sales and
catalog generation tools to help
make their rights business easier.
Launching in mid-2014, users
can buy and sell subrights with
the new Rights.PubMatch tool,
powered by RightsLink, and
featuring a fully executed contract.
Puvill Libros S.A.
1655
C/Estany, 13, nave D-1
Barcelona, 08038 Spain
Phone: 3493-298-8960
Fax: 3493-298-8961
www.puvill.com
Book dealer from Spain, Mexico,
Portugal and Andorra. Services to
libraries include approval plans,
firm orders, standing orders and
subscriptions; new titles weekly or
monthly, bibliographical service,
USMARC records and shelf ready
materials.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
exhibitor listings p
1348B
c/o John Hopkins University Press,
2715 N. Charles St.
Baltimore, MD 21218
Phone: 410-516-3810
Fax: 410-516-8805
www.muse.jhu.edu
215
P.V. Supa, Inc.
1967
2600 Technology Dr., Ste. 200
Plano, TX 75074
Phone: 866-990-7872
Fax: 972-929-5750
www.pv-supa.com
Process Improvement Application
for libraries. Full line of AMH and
Rfid applications. New line of
products to extend your library
opening hours and improve
productivity.
QEB Publishing
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
322
6 Blundell St.
London, N7 9BH United Kingdom
Phone: 44-02077006700
www.qeb-publishing.co.uk
Since its inception in 2003, each
book in QEB’s diverse range of
titles from factual nonfiction to
beautifully illustration fiction has
been specially designed to make
learning exciting, stimulating and
fun for kids. QEB is a division of
The Quarto Group.
QSR International
1275
55 Cambridge St.
Burlington, MA 01803
Phone: 617-607-5112
Fax: 617-812-7799
www.qsrinternational.com
Quality Copying, Inc.
Rainbow Book
Company
Random House
Children’s Books
213
543
Rainbow Book Company is a full
service distributor of fiction and
non-fiction library books at the
pre-k through middle school level.
Featuring bilingual and AR titles
and all the newest copyrights. A
diverse selection and one-stop
shopping at discounted prices
from more than 150 publishers.
Quality books from hardcovers to paperbacks, pre-school
through Young Adult, including
the imprints of Alfred A. Knopf,
Bluefire, Crown, Delacorte Press,
Doubleday, Ember, Golden,
Laurel-Leaf, Random House,
Schwartz & Wade, Step into
Reading, Stepping Stones, Wendy
Lamb, and Yearling.
500 E. Illinois Route 22
Lake Zurich, IL 60047
Phone: 847-726-9930
Fax: 847-726-9935
www.rainbowbookcompany.com
Rancho Cucamonga
Public Library
1958
7368 Archibald Ave.
Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91730
Phone: 909-447-2720
Fax: 909-477-2721
www.rcpl.lib.ca.us
Rancho Cucamonga Public
Library was recognized by
IMLS for services, enrichment,
innovation and experiences for the
community. The Play and Learn
Islands™ typify those innovative
developments. Play and Learn
Islands™ feature classic wood
and metal construction, take no
more space than a library table
and foster play and early learning
in your library. Take a break during
the conference to come play with
us. See how a Play and Learn
Island™ will enhance services to
children and families.
p exhibitor listings
2270
7409 Palm Ave.
Highland, CA 92346
Phone: 800-479-2313
Fax: 909-425-2902
The Randolph Rose
Collection
Quayside Publishing
Group
500 Nepperhan Ave.
Yonkers, NY 10701
Phone: 914-423-2047
Fax: 914-423-2095
www.randolphrose.com
1750
400 First Ave. N., Ste. 400
Minneapolis, MN 55401
Phone: 612-344-8100
Fax: 612-344-8691
www.quaysidepub.com
Quayside Publishing Group
represents a dynamic group of
imprints dedicated to providing
quality print- and e-books to its
readers.
1370
The Randolph Rose Collection
is a family owned and operated
business specializing in bronze
sculpture for the library community. Some of our featured
designs include functional and
unique bronze Book Benches, life
size Children Reading and Family
Activities. Libraries across the
country have incorporated our
pieces in their interior designs as
well as enhancing the landscape
and grounds surrounding the
library itself. Our pieces will draw
attention and make your library
stand out from the rest.
1745 Broadway
New York, NY 10019
Phone: 212-782-9000
Fax: 212-782-9682
www.RHTeachersLibrarians.com
The American Slavery Collection,
1820-1922: From the American
Antiquarian Society; The American
Civil War Collection, 1860-1922:
From the American Antiquarian
Society; Early American
Newspapers, Series 10, 17301900; Caribbean Newspapers,
Series 1, 1718-1876: From the
American Antiquarian Society
(AAS); American Pamphlets,
Series 1, 1820-1922: From the
New-York Historical Society; AfroAmericana Imprints, 1535-1922:
From the Library Company of
Philadelphia; and the Washington
Evening Star (1852-1981).
Also see American Newspaper
Archives and state-based historical newspaper collections, which
feature significant titles from every
U.S. region.
Random House
Library and
Academic Marketing
Recorded Books
542
771
1745 Broadway, MD 3-1
New York NY 10019
Phone: 212-782-9000
Fax: (212) 940-7381
www.randomhouse.com/library
Random House, LLC. is one
of the world’s largest Englishlanguage general trade book
publishers and includes an
army of prestigious imprints
and distribution lines, publishing
some of the foremost writers of
our time. Please also visit our
websites for high schools (www.
randomhouse.com/highschool)
and for colleges/universities (www.
randomhouse.com/academic).
Read our blog for librarians at
www.RandomHouseLibrary.com
and find rhlibrary on Facebook
and Twitter.
Readers to Eaters
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
322
12437 SE 26th Pl.
Bellevue, WA 98005
Phone: 206-849-1962
www.readerstoeaters.com/
Publisher of books for children and
families, both fiction and nonfiction, that promotes food literacy
by telling stories about what and
how we eat.
Readex
1415
5801 Pelican Bay Blvd., Ste. 600
Naples, FL 34108
Phone: 239-263-6004
Fax: 239-263-3004
www.newsbank.com
270 Skipjack Rd.
Prince Frederick, MD 20678
Phone: 800-638-1304
Fax: 410-414-2575
www.recordedbooks.com
Red Rock Press
1346A
205 W. 57th St., Ste. 8B
New York, NY 10019
Phone: 212-362-8304
Fax: 212-362-6216
www.redrockpress.com
Red Rock Press, in NYC and
Telluride CO, publishes highlydesigned photography and
lifestyle books that open up worlds
through image and word. Our
Red Pebble imprint is devoted
to children’s picture books. Our
award-winning authors have been
featured on national television
and print media for over a dozen
years. Titles are available from
Redrockpress.com, Baker &
Taylor, Ingram and Follett.
Reed Tech
2146
7 Walnut Grove Dr.
Horsham, PA 19044
Phone: 215-441-6375
Fax: 215-441-6354
www.reedtech.com
Reed Tech, a LexisNexis®
company, offers powerful,
full-featured archiving services
to protect and preserve digital
material, including fully-functioning
websites and social media
platforms.
Explore the newest Readex collections at the NewsBank booth:
216
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The Reference Shelf
2063
10 Ferry St., Ste. 429
Concord, NH 03301
Phone: 603-229-0662
Fax: 603-226-9443
www.thereferenceshelf.com
The Reference Shelf provides
face-out display of materials from
multiple publishers. Librarians,
stop by to browse an eclectic
range of research resources.
Publishers, talk to us about how
to be represented at up to 25
library shows a year without the
expenses of airfares, accommodation, staff, and booth fees.
your digital library to Library of
Congress metadata standards. Do
it all with no-hassle, professional
grade software. Stop by the booth
for a full featured free copy of our
software. Not an evaluation copy;
get the real thing for FREE. See
ResCartaWeb in action at demos.
rescarta.org/ResCarta-Web.
The RoadRunner
Press
Reveal Digital / NA
Publishing
Rock’s Backpages
1742
6564 S. State Rd.
Saline, MI 48176
Phone: 734-821-3888
www.revealdigital.com
Reindex Library
Management
Services
Rittenhouse Book
Distributors Inc.
1053
511 Feheley Dr.
King of Prussia, PA 19406
Phone: 800-345-6425
Fax: 800-223-7488
www.rittenhouse.com
www.r2library.com
Nyhavn 43A, 3.th.
Copenhagen, DK-1051 Denmark
Phone: 458-880-8220
reindexlibrary.com
Reindex offers a comprehensive
and fully hosted library management service for special and corporate libraries and libraries within
education and research. Services
for cataloging, circulation, serials
management, ILL & Document
Delivery, Digital Repository, and
more is presented in a single web
interface for librarians, patrons,
and community.
Renaissance
Learning
1809
2911 Peach St.
Wisconsin Rapids, WI 54494
Phone: 715-424-3636
Fax: 715-424-4242
www.renlearn.com
2244
312 Walnut St.
Lansdale, PA 19446
Phone: 215-368-0154
Fax: 215-362-1985
www.repindustries.com
ResCarta
Foundation, Inc.
1257
313 15th Ave. N.
Onalaska, WI 54650
Phone: 608-566-5966
www.rescarta.org
Become the institutional repository
champion. Archive city directories,
theses and papers. Allow full
text searches of oral histories.
Publish your photographs and
newspapers to the web. Build
Health Sciences content demands
a specialized platform. The R2
Digital Library is one database with
thousands of ebooks from bestselling publishers. You’ll love what
you discover for your patrons.
RM Connections,
LLC
1582
1400 Forum Blvd., Box 464, Ste. 1C
Columbia, MO 65203
Phone: 573-825-7586
www.rmconnections.net
Ristech Company,
Inc.
2116
8-5115 Harvester Rd.
Burlington, ON L7L OA3 Canada
Phone: 905-631-7451
Fax: 905-634-4813
www.ristech.ca
Ristech specializes in digitization
and scanning technologies for
books, microfilm, microfiche,
newspapers, maps and other
bound documents. Ristech
combines a broad selection of
imaging hardware and software
products with the knowledge and
expertise to ensure our clients
implement the most productive
and efficient digitization solutions
for their requirements.
PO Box 2564
Oklahoma City, OK 73101
Phone: 405-524-6205
Fax: 405-524-6312
www.theroadrunnerpress.com
2157
11 Glenthorne Rd., Ste. 2,
Britannia House
London, SW1X 0BD United Kingdom
www.rocksbackpages.com
Rock’s Backpages is the biggest
online database of music writing
in the world. It is a unique
resource unavailable elsewhere
online. The database contains
an ever-expanding collection of
primary-source, full-text music
writing. Sourced from the pages of
the music and mainstream press,
it is a library of articles (reviews,
interviews, features and more)
from the early ‘60s up to present
day and includes a growing collection of exclusive audio interviews.
Rogue Bear Press
1948
PO Box 513
Ardsley, NY 10502
Phone: 914-437-7628
www.roguebearpress.com
Purveyors of frighteningly funny
chapter/mid-grade books
including Amazon #1 bestselling Chronicles of the Monster
Detective Agency. Producers of
engaging InterACTIVE enrichment
programs for schools and libraries:
The MONSTER HUNT Library
Skills-building Adventure—children
develop research skills as they
track down a lurking monster;
DESTINATION INSPIRATION
InterACTIVE StoryCrafting
Adventure—children learn the
elements of Story Crafting by
producing a madcap adventure
right on the spot!
Rosen Publishing
Group Inc.
1042
29 E. 21st St.
New York, NY 10010
Phone: 212-777-3017
Fax: 212-777-0277
www.rosenpublishing.com
Rosen Publishing offers print
and interactive digital resources
for youth and teen engagement.
Resources for the Common Core,
digital and financial literacy, STEM,
language arts, and anti-bullying.
Interactive eBooks with digital
content creation tools provide a
Rourke Educational
Media
217
PO Box 643328
Vero Beach, FL 32964
Phone: 772-234-6520
Fax: 772-234-6622
www.rourkepublishing.com
Rowman &
Littlefield
735
4501 Forbes Blvd., Ste. 200
Lanham, MD 20706
Phone: 301-459-3366
www.rowman.com/Imprint/SCP
Rowman & Littlefield is a
preeminent publisher of critically
acclaimed general interest and
scholarly books in the social
sciences and humanities as well
as college textbooks, professional
titles, journals and award winning
reference titles. Imprints such as
Rowman & Littlefield Education,
Scarecrow Press, Government
Institute, AltaMira, and Bernan
Press are under the R&L umbrella.
The Royal Society of
Chemistry
1550
Thomas Graham House,
Science Park, Milton Rd.
Cambridge, CB4 0WF
United Kingdom
Phone: 44122-343-2378
Fax: 44122-343-2458
www.rsc.org
R.R. Bowker
1211
4919 Route 22, PO Box 56
Amenia, NY 12501-0056
Phone: 800-562-2139
www.greyhouse.com
Grey House Publishing is the
publisher and distributor of R.R.
Bowker’s print reference, under
an exclusive license from Bowker.
This extraordinary reference
resource will continue to be
derived from the Bowker-managed
publishing database. For over 100
years, Bowker has been delivering
comprehensive, authoritative
bibliographic information to
publishers, libraries and booksellers. Books In Print®, now with
coverage of more than 400,000
titles, represents the largest,
most comprehensive collection of
bibliographic information in print.
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R.E.P. Industries, Inc.
1568J
2067
safe digital environment to read,
create, and publish. Learn how
students can be college-prepared
and career ready at rosenpublishing.com and rosendigital.com.
217
RTI—DVD Repair
Salem Press
1328
1211
4700 W. Chase Ave.
Lincolnwood, IL 60712-1689
Phone: 847-677-3000
Fax: 847-677-1311
www.rtico.com
Libraries #1 Choice! ECO/RTI
Professional Disc Repair System,
Precision Computer Controlled
Machines that automatically
perform maintenance through
DEEP scratch repair on DVDs,
CDs, Game Discs, Blu-ray Discs
and Books-on-Discs for your
valuable collection. Exclusive
flat-polishing technology keeps
discs in perfect condition and
looking brand new over and over
again! Library friendly, Whisper
Quiet, and Hands-Free Operation.
Introducing a New Tabletop
Robotic Repair Machine.
S&P Capital IQ
702
55 Water St., 46th Fl.
New York, NY 10041
Phone: 212-438-2000
Fax: 212-438-6270
www.spcaptialiq-corporations.com
r exhibitor listings
One of the world’s largest
producers of independent
research, S&P Capital IQ’s team of
experienced analysts use a
fundamental, bottom-up approach
to assess a global universe of
equities across industries. S&P
Capital IQ’s research can be found
on MarketScope Advisor, Net
Advantage and S&P Capital IQ.
These platforms provide advisors
and investors with actionable
investment intelligence on stocks,
ETFs, funds, bonds and workflow
tools. For more information, visit
www.spcapitaliq.com.
218
SAGE
743
2455 Teller Rd.
Thousand Oaks, CA 91320
Phone: 805-499-7881
Fax: 805-410-7239
www.sagepub.com
SAGE is a leading international
publisher of journals, books and
electronic media for academic,
educational and professional
markets. Since 1965, SAGE has
helped educate a global community spanning a wide range of
subject areas including business,
humanities, social sciences and
science, technology and medicine.
Visit us at www.sagepub.com.
2 University Plaza, Ste. 310
Hackensack, NJ 07601
Phone: 800-221-1592
www.salempress.com
Published for over 50 years, Salem
Press products deliver awardwinning literary, historical, medical
and science reference content to
the public library, academic and
high school markets. From the
long-standing Magill’s Literary
Annual to the forthcoming
Defining Documents in American
History: World War I, Salem Press
reference continues to enrich the
collections of all types of libraries.
Visit the booth to check out
Salem’s online database—free
with your print purchase!
Samhain Publishing
539
11821 Mason Montgomery Rd.
Cincinnati, OH 45249
Phone: 513-453-4688
Fax: 513-583-0191
www.samhainpublishing.com
Launched in 2005 with a vision
of bringing extraordinary fiction
to compulsive readers, Samhain
Publishing is an international
publisher of ebook and print. One
of the most prominent voices of
original ebook fiction, Samhain
represents some of today’s
brightest authors of romance and
horror. Learn why at Samhain “it’s
all about the story…” at www.
samhainpublishing.com.
San Jose State
University-SLIS
1766
One Washington Square,
Clark Hall 407
San Jose, CA 95192-0029
Phone: 408-924-2500
Fax: 408-924-2476
slisweb.sjsu.edu
The School of Library and
Information Science at San José
State University offers a nationally ranked, ALA-accredited,
fully online Master of Library
and Information Science (MLIS)
degree, as well as a fully online
Post-Master’s Certificate in
Library and Information Science
designed for working professionals
who want to stay current with
emerging trends. The fully online
Master of Archives and Records
Administration degree (MARA)
is a unique graduate program
designed for students who want to
pursue leadership roles in information governance. The San José
Gateway PhD Program is offered
in partnership with Queensland
University of Technology, one of
Australia’s top 10 research institutions. The School also offers a
myriad of lifelong learning opportunities, designed to strengthen the
professional community. Let the
learning begin: slisweb.sjsu.edu.
Santa Monica Press
(dist. by Legato/
Publishers Group West)
322
PO Box 850
Solano Beach, CA 92075
Phone: 800-784-9553
www.santamonicapress.com
Santa Monica Press has been
publishing an eclectic line of
books since 1994. Our list of
lively and modern nonfiction titles
includes books in such categories
as popular culture, film history,
photography, humor, biography,
travel, and reference.
Scannx, Inc.
1248
838 Gray Fox Cir.
Pleasanton, CA 94566
Phone: 925-200-7900
Fax: 925-426-1525
www.scannx.com
Scannx develops self-service
book-scanners to replace copiers
in libraries. Its patented book-edge
scanner protects the book spine
from damage. Save scanned
pages to email, USB drives,
Google Docs, OneDrive, DropBox,
smartphones/tablets, and printers.
Libraries scanned 11 million pages
on Scannx systems during the
last 2 years, only 2% of the pages
scanned went to a printer. Scannx
Cloud Services tracks usage,
enables/disables features and
pushes updates. Scannx supports
vend payment systems.
Scarecrow Press
735
4501 Forbes Blvd., Ste. 200
Lanham, MD 20706
Phone: 301-459-3366
www.rowman.com/Imprint/SCP
Scarecrow Press is known for
reference books, especially historical dictionaries and titles on library
science, music, and film. We
devote our resources to cultivating
superb scholarship and innovative
teaching in the academic disciplines. Visit us in the Rowman &
Littlefield booth to see our recently
published titles.
Scarletta
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
322
1201 Currie Ave.
Minneapolis, MN 55403
Phone: 612-455-0252
scarlettapress.com
Scarletta independently publishes
works with quality editorial and
design for children and adults.
Innovation, attention to detail,
and a love for reading define our
approach to every title we publish.
SCB Distributors
1631
15608 New Century Dr.
Gardena, CA 90248-2129
Phone: 310-532-9400
Fax: 310-532-7001
www.scbdistributors.com
SCB Distributors is a full service
North American book distributor
for more than 4000 titles from 150
independent publishers from the
United States, Canada, Europe
and Asia.
Schedule3W/
Medianet Dymaxion
1762
5515 Cogswell St.
Halifax, NS B3J 1R2 Canada
Phone: 902-422-1973
Fax: 902-421-1267
www.Schedule3W.com
Schedule3W (who, when and
where) for scheduling working time
and service point/desk assignments of staff, substitutes and
volunteers. Easy to create a
master schedule, easy to change.
Great schedule and report formats
including color, highlighting, PDFs,
etc. Optional WebView for live
displays and Vacation Requests.
Also, Medianet, your portal to all
your motion media, digitized and
physical. Teachers and staff love
the web interface! Interfaces with
your ILS. Optional hosting using
our servers.
Scholastic Inc.
430
557 Broadway, Fl. 2
New York, NY 10012
Phone: 212-343-6969
Fax: 212-343-6849
www.scholastic.com
Scholastic is of the world’s largest
publishers and distributors of
children’s books and a leader
in educational technology. The
company creates quality books,
print and technology-based
learning materials and programs,
classroom magazines, multi-media
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and other products that support
teachers and help children learn
both at school and at home.
Se-Kure Controls,
Inc.
1912
School Library
Journal
829
160 Varick St., 11th Fl.
New York, NY 10013
Phone: 646-380-0752
Fax: 646-380-0756
www.slj.com
School Library Journal is one of
the most influential publications
serving the largest market for new
children’s and young adult books
and is a full-service publication
serving the youth and school
library market. It reaches more
than 35,000 elementary, middle/
junior and senior high school
librarians and youth service
librarians in public libraries SLJ
educates its readers to become
leaders in technology, reading and
information literacy.
School Library
Monthly
1343
130 Cremona Dr., Ste. C
Santa Barbara, CA 93117
Phone: 800-368-6868
Fax: 805-685-9685
www.abc-clio.com
Sean O’Neill—Artist
Alley
2121
www.rocketrobinson.com
I will be promoting the new graphic
novel Rocket Robinson and the
Pharaoh’s Fortune. I’ll have copies
of the books that I’ll be signing,
as well as promotional materials
(bookmarks, buttons, etc.).
Se-Kure Controls manufactures
systems that enable you to display
and power small electronics, such
as tablets, while protecting them
from theft.
Seven Stories Press
555
140 Watts St.
New York, NY 10013
Phone: 212-226-8760
Fax: 212-226-1411
www.sevenstories.com
Founded in 1995 in New York City
and named for the seven authors
who committed to a home with a
fiercely independent spirit, Seven
Stories Press publishes works of
the imagination and political titles
by voices of conscience.
Silvermine
International Books
2236
25 Perry Ave., Ste. 11
Norwalk, CT 06850
Phone: 203-451-2396
Fax: 203-847-8145
www.silvermineinternational.com
Silvermine International Books has
international books in science,
art, young adult, history, Spanish
language, from Iberoamericana,
Marcial Pons, Sparkling Books,
Unseen Pictures, Centro de
Estudios Europa Hispanica,
others. It also has library approval
plans for academic libraries.
include Simon & Schuster Adult
Publishing, Simon & Schuster
Children’s Publishing, Simon
& Schuster Audio and Simon
& Schuster Digital, For more
information, visit our website at
www.simonandschuster.com
SimplyMap
1271
244 5th Ave., Ste. 2316
New York, NY 10001
Phone: 888-845-5064
Fax: 866-212-8001
www.simplymap.com
SimplyMap is an award winning
web-based mapping and data
analysis application that enables
non-technical and advanced users
to quickly create professional
thematic maps and reports.
SimplyMap has all the data you
need to answer key research
questions, make sound business
decisions, and understand the
demographic and economic
conditions of any geographic area
in the United States or Canada.
Explore SimplyMap today!
Shadow Mountain
Publishing
Simmons College
SirsiDynix
1926
1943
227
300 The Fenway
Boston, MA 02115
Phone: 617-521-2801
Fax: 617-521-3192
www.simmons.edu/gslis
57 W. South Temple
Salt Lake City, UT 84101
Phone: 801-517-3152
Fax: 801-517-3119
www.shadowmountain.com
We believe in the power of stories.
Stories that enrich, inspire and
ennoble. Stories that bring out the
best in us. Stories that when told,
read, and shared have the power
to strengthen individuals, families
and communities. As a publisher
we are committed to providing
books that build and uplift. We
are a U.S.-based publisher of children’s fantasy, children’s picture
books, inspiration, fiction, history,
and business titles. A number of
our titles have landed on the NYT
bestseller list.
Simmons Graduate School of
Library and Information Science
(GSLIS) is ranked in the top 10
by US News and World Report.
GSLIS offers a Master of Science
with a general, school library
teacher or archives focus, two
PhD programs, dual degrees in
Library and Information Science
(LIS/History and LIS/Children’s
Literature), post-Master’s certificates and Continuing Education
workshops. GSLIS offers face-toface, online and blended learning
options, with campuses in Boston
and South Hadley, MA
Sharjah International
Book Fair
Simon & Schuster,
Inc.
734, 736
302
PO Box 5119
Sharjah United Arab Emirates
www.sharjahbookfair.com
The Sharjah International Book
Fair (SIBF) was launched in
1982 under the guidance of His
Highness Sheikh Dr. Sultan bin
Mohammed Al Qasimi, the UAE
Supreme Council Member &
Ruler of Sharjah. The SIBF now
attracts over 1 million people to
the ten day fair and is considered
the fourth top International book
1230 6th Ave.
New York, NY 10020
Phone: 212-698-2801
Fax: 212-698-2891
www.simonandschuster.com
Simon & Schuster, a part of CBS
Corporation, is a global leader
in the field of general interest
publishing, dedicated to providing
the best in fiction and nonfiction for consumers of all ages,
across all printed, electronic,
and audio formats. Its divisions
3300 N. Ashton Blvd.,
Ste. 500
Lehi, UT 84043
Phone: 801-223-5200
Fax: 256-704-7007
www.sirsidynix.com
Sisters in
Crime
354
10050 Ravenna Rd.
Twinsburg, OH 44087
Phone: 330-425-4268
Fax: 330-425-3622
www.sistersincrime.org
Learn about membership and
library program opportunities. Find
out how easy it is for your library
to participate in SinC’s We Love
Libraries grant program.
Smith System
805
1714 E. 14th St.
Plano, TX 75074
Phone: 972-398-4050
Fax: 972-398-4051
www.smithsystem.com
Smith System remains at the
forefront of meeting the needs
of 21st Century Learning with a
broad array of desks, seating,
presentation, and connectivity
products created expressly
to meet the needs of today’s
active, student-centered learning
models. The Library Commons
environment is one of discovery,
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School Library Monthly (SLM)
magazine supports K–12 school
librarians as they plan instruction
collaboratively with teachers.
Each issue provides insightful
and inspiring expert advice to
help strengthen leadership skills
and build curriculum. SLM is
an imprint of ABC-CLIO, LLC’s
library professional development
program, Libraries Unlimited.
For more information, visit www.
schoollibrarymonthly.com/.
3714 Runge St.
Franklin Park, IL 60131
Phone: 847-288-1111
Fax: 847-288-9999
www.se-kure.com
fairs in the world. The Sharjah
International Book Fair SIBF will
work in collaboration with the ALA
to debut the first SIBF/ALA library
conference (Nov. 5–15, 2014).
Its aim is to promote the love of
the written word and the value
of libraries throughout Sharjah,
UAE, and the region. A full slate
of programs will be offered along
with vendor opportunities.
219
collaboration and creativity.
Explore Smith System Learning
Commons furniture at ALA.
books, e-books, children’s and YA.
There’s something for every library
in the Sourcebooks catalog.
Social Security
Administration
Spacesaver
Corporation
2252
977
6401 Security Blvd., 3434 Annex
Baltimore, MD 21244
Phone: 443-204-6575
Fax: 410-966-4871
www.socialsecurity.gov
Soho Press
646
853 Broadway, Ste. 1402
New York, NY 10003
Phone: 212-260-1900
Fax: 212-260-1902
www.sohopress.com
Located in the heart of downtown
Manhattan and founded in 1986
by Laura and Alan Hruska and
Juris Jurjevics, Soho Press is an
independent publisher of literary
fiction, international crime fiction,
literature in translation and a brand
new young adult imprint, Soho
Teen.
Sounds True
372
s exhibitor listings
413 S. Arthur Ave.
Louisville, CO 80027
Phone: 303-665-3151
Fax: 303-665-8890
www.soundstrue.com
What began as one woman with
a tape recorder nearly 30 years
ago has evolved into a multimedia publishing company that
distributes hundreds of books,
audio and DVD programs with one
purpose: to help people live more
genuine, loving and fulfilling lives.
Sounds True embraces the world’s
major spiritual traditions as well as
the arts and humanities, embodied
by the leading authors, teachers
and visionary artists of our time.
We are the proud publisher
of How To Meditate by Pema
Chödrön, a Library Journal Best
Book of 2013 selection (nonfiction/
consumer health).
Sourcebooks, Inc.
662
1935 Brookdale Rd., Ste. 139
Naperville, IL 60563
Phone: 630-961-3900
Fax: 630-961-2168
www.sourcebooks.com
Sourcebooks is a leading publisher
with an innovative vision. From our
roots in poetry and reference, we
have grown to include romance,
historical fiction, the #1 college
220
1450 Janesville Ave.
Fort Atkinson, WI 53538
Phone: 920-563-0716
Fax: 920-563-0783
www.spacesaver.com
Spacesaver recognizes the challenge libraries face of transitioning
from simple book collections to
multifunctional learning centers
and community gathering places.
As the demand for increased
and improved services grows, so
grows the need for more space.
Spacesaver’s High Density Mobile
Storage, which can double collection capacity and flexible Library
Shelving and display systems
can relieve space pressure by
maximizing space efficiency in collection areas. Spacesaver’s Xtend®
High-Bay solutions can help
clear even more space on-site by
moving materials off-site.
SparkFun
Electronics
1870
6175 Longbow Dr.
Boulder, CO 80301
Phone: 303-284-0979
learn.sparkfun.com
Spirit Lala
2170
4241 Highborne Dr.
Marietta, GA 30066
Phone: 678-432-5067
Fax: 770-809-5149
www.spiritlala.com
Springshare
Star Bright Books
1447
247
Springshare is a leading provider of
web-based software for the Library
and Education Market. Springshare
provides applications for the
management of web resources,
virtual reference with SMS/
Texting and real-time chat service,
calendar and event management
with a room booking function and
a complete analytics tool.
Award-winning books for children
of all ages, including board books,
picture books, early readers,
inclusion, cultural diversity and
Holocaust-related non-fiction as
well as books in more than 20
languages including Spanish,
French, Portuguese, Chinese
(traditional and simplified),
Vietnamese, Korean, Tagalog,
Arabic, Farsi, Navajo, Russian and
Haitian Creole.
801 Brickell Ave.
Miami, FL 33131
Phone: 518-577-7121
Fax: 518-691-9272
www.springshare.com
StackMap
2257
1440 Pacific Ave.
San Francisco, CA 94109
Phone: 650-701-7275
Fax: 708-778-5975
www.stackmap.com
StackMap is an indoor mapping
solution that provides library
patrons with maps and written
directions to any item in a library’s
catalog. StackMap is a fully
customizable solution that is
completely compatible for use on
any web-enabled mobile device.
New features are constantly being
added, the latest of which maps
available computer workstations,
in real time.
Stallion Books
1477
PO Box 681
Flossmoor, IL 60422
Phone: 708-990-8111
Fax: 708-747-4659
www.stallionbooks.com
Springer
Stanger Litho-Library
Services Div.
1351
2117
Springer Science+Business
Media is a leading global scientific
publisher, providing academia, scientific institutions and corporations
with quality content via innovative
products and services. Springer
publishes roughly 2,000 journals
and 7,000 new books each year
and is home to the largest STM
e-book collection and the most
comprehensive portfolio of open
access journals.
Products used with all book theft
detection security systems and
media packaging solutions for
CD/DVD. EM strips and gates,
RFID Tags, date due cards
that deactivate RF Systems,
and pre-dated date due cards
that eliminate hand stamping.
Locking CD/DVD cases including
One-Time, Zenith, Securecase, &
more. Over 40 years of service to
libraries. We place a high-value on
your business.
233 Spring St., 6th Fl.
New York, NY 10013
Phone: 212-460-1500
Fax: 212-460-1700
www.springer.com
921 Industrial Dr.
West Chicago, IL 60185
Phone: 630-951-7400
Fax: 630-231-4100
www.StangerLitho.com
13 Landsdowne St.
Cambridge, MA 02139
Phone: 617-354-1300
Fax: 617-354-1399
www.starbrightbooks.com
StarWalk Kids Media
947
15 Cuttermill Rd.
Great Neck, NY 11021
Phone: 203-257-4077
www.starwalkkids.com
StarWalk Kids Media is a publisher
of K–8 eBooks by award-winning
authors, providing schools &
libraries with high-quality Common
Core mentor texts. Our books
work on any device and allow
multiple simultaneous access, all
for an affordable price. Founder/
Author Seymour Simon and author
Susan L. Roth will be signing in
Booth 947.
Sterling Publishing
Co. Inc.
622
387 Park Ave. S., 5th Fl.
New York, NY 10016
Phone: 646-688-2509
Fax: 212-532-5415
www.sterlingpublishing.com
With over 5,000 titles in print and
60 years in business, Sterling’s
reputation for publishing quality
books comes from a variety of
imprints led by dedicated editorial
and creative design teams that
bring great ideas and stories
to readers of every age. From
educational resources, children’s
picture books, craft and photography, cookbooks, self-help, classics
and more, Sterling’s list offers
something for everyone.
Steve Ellis—Artist
Alley
2131
www.olbcomic.com
I am a graphic novelist and
illustrator of books and book
covers. I have done illustration
work for Dungeons and Dragons,
The Breaking Bad Comic, Elric
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
of Melnibone, Marvel Comics,
DC Comics, Image Comics, Dark
Horse Comics. My graphic novel
High Moon received the Best
Webcomic of the year Harvey
Award, and my newest project is
a young Adult Action Adventure
series called the Only Living Boy
which has already garnered two
Harvey Nominations for Best Inker
and Best Cover of the year 2013. I
plan to show my original work and
promote my projects.
ST Imaging
1855
630 Dundee Rd., Ste. 210
Northbrook, IL 60062
Phone: 847-501-3344
Fax: 847-501-3377
www.stimaging.com
Storey Publishing: A
member of the Workman
Family of Imprints
414
225 Varick St.
New York, NY 10014-4381
Phone: 212-614-7572
Fax: 800-344-3482
www.workman.com
Books for country living. Through
an array of how-to books, Storey
arms readers with practical skills
and inspiration on a range of
do-it-yourself topics: gardening,
cooking, knitting and other crafts,
backyard building, animal care,
farming, and home improvement.
This season’s big noise has been
made by Spruce: A Step-by-Step
Guide to Upholstery and Design.
Subaru of America,
Inc.
1608
Sustainable
Collection Services
1378
63 Woodwell’s Garrison
Contoocook, NH 03229
Phone: 603-456-3224
Fax: 603-746-6052
sustainablecollections.com
Sustainable Collection Services
(SCS) offers deselection decisionsupport tools for academic
libraries and consortia. SCS
tools enable carefully managed
drawdown of low-use print
monographs collections while
supporting shared print archiving
efforts.
Preservation, CAS in Data Science
and the CAS in Information
Innovation: Social Media.
1265
10795 Watson Rd.
St. Louis, MO 63127
Phone: 314-984-6215
Fax: 314-984-0964
www.swank.com/digitalcampus
Tanglewood Press
Extend learning beyond the
classroom with MOVIES! Swank
Digital Campus is the exclusive
source for streaming the most
requested titles, allowing students
to watch full-length, copyright
compliant feature films outside the
classroom.
322
Swets
1455
904 Black Horse Pike
Runnemede, NJ 08078
Phone: 856-312-2268
Fax: 856-632-7268
www.swets.com
Swets is a global market leader in
managing professional information. We develop and deliver innovative services that enable the use
of knowledge to its full extent. Our
focal services improve selection
management, access management and research productivity.
From more than 20 offices around
the world we actively serve clients
and publishers in more than 160
countries.
Sylvan Dell
Publishing
362
612 Johnnie Dodds Blvd., Ste. Z2
Mt. Pleasant, SC 29464
Phone: 843-971-6722
Fax: 843-216-3804
www.sylvandellpublishing.com
Syracuse University
School of
Information Studies
1933
114 Hinds Hall
Syracuse, NY 13244
Phone: 315-443-3439
Fax: 315-443-5806
ischool.syr.edu
The nationally ranked and ALAaccredited School of Information
Studies at Syracuse University
offers an M.S. Library and
Information Science and an M.S.
Library and Information Science–
School Media Specialization
available in distance and campus
formats. Certificates of Advanced
Study (CAS) also available
through the school include: CAS
in Digital Libraries, CAS in School
Media, CAS in Cultural Heritage
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
4400 Hulman St.
Terre Haute, IN 47803
Phone: 812-877-9488
www.tanglewoodbooks.com
Tanglewood is a small, independent-minded children’s press, with
a full range of quality fiction for
toddlers, tweens, and teens.
Taylor &
Francis Group
953
325 Chestnut St., 8th Fl.
Philadelphia, PA 19106
Phone: 215-606-4203
Fax: 215-625-2940
www.taylorandfrancisgroup.com
Taylor & Francis Group is one of
the world’s leading publishers of
scholarly journals, books, e-books
and online resources publishing
more than 1,700 journals and
over 3,600 new books each
year, with a books backlist in
excess of 50,000 specialist titles.
Our content spans all areas of
Humanities, Social Sciences,
Behavioral Sciences, Science and
Technology, from leading imprints
such as Routledge, CRC Press,
Psychology Press, Focal Press,
Garland Science.
Taylor Trade
735
4501 Forbes Blvd., Ste. 200
Lanham, MD 20706
Phone: 301-459-3366
www.rowman.com/Imprint/GTT
The Taylor Trade Publishing
program consists of an awardwinning list of books on gardening,
health, history, family issues,
sports, entertainment, nature, field
guides, house and home, and
children’s titles. Visit the Rowman
& Littlefield booth to browse a few
titles and for more information
about Taylor Trade.
TDNet, Inc.
738
unified, single interface for the
discovery of research content,
available form publishers, vendors
and aggregators, driving the user
through organizational content
delivery workflows. Discover to
Delivery integrates e-Journals,
e-Books, e-Databases, Internal
Repositories, purchased articles
and more thus driving, via TDNet
TOUResolver OpenURL Link
Resolver, the researcher to the
FulllText article with minimum
clicks.
TeachingBooks.net
237
150 E. Gilman St., Ste. 1200
Madison, WI 53703
Phone: 608-257-2919
Fax: 608-327-8010
www.teachingbooks.net
TeachingBooks.net is an affordable, easy-to-use web-based
service that inspires reading and
a deeper interest in children’s and
young adult books. We integrate
technology and reading into all
content areas K–12 and strive
to make it easy, intuitive and
meaningful for every reader to add
a multimedia experience into his/
her reading activities.
Tech Logic
1363
1818 Buerkle Rd.
White Bear Lake, MN 55110
Phone: 651-747-0492
Fax: 651-747-0493
www.tech-logic.com
Tech Logic is a leading provider
of Automated Material Handling
systems and barcode and RFID
check-in/out systems. Our
systems are designed to meet the
needs of libraries of all sizes, and
can be customized for any space.
Tech Logic has also introduced
MediaSurfer, the kiosk that lends
iPads! Check out all of Tech
Logic’s patented advantages to
see why our products are the
top choice. Tech Logic designs,
manufactures, delivers, installs,
maintains, and services all of its
systems in the US.
Telelift Ltd.
2249
800 S. Wells St, Ste 1101
Chicago, Il 60607
www.telelift.us
120 North Church Street, Suite 109
West Chester, PA 19380
Phone: 610-738-0280
Fax: 610-738-9124
www.tdnet.com
exhibitor listings t
Proud Partner of the American
Association for the Advancement
of Science (AAAS) and the
Subaru/AAAS Science Book &
Film Awards.
Swank Digital
Campus
Experience TDNet’s new
Discovery to Delivery Suite.
Discovery to Delivery adds a
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
221
Thebookcheckout.
com
offices in Plano, TX. For more
information, please visit www.
thomasnelsoncorporate.com.
636
277 White Street
Buchanan, NY 10511
Phone: 914-739-7500
Fax: 914-739-7575
www.thebookcheckout.com
The Book Checkout is an online
destination for librarians to read
exclusive content such as author
interviews, publisher spotlights,
news from individual librarians
and more! Visitors to The Book
Checkout can also preview tens of
thousands of books, and review
them for their peers. Sign up for
our monthly newsletter, and enter
to win the monthly giveaway!
Third Iron
2038
PO Box 270400
St. Paul, MN 55127
Phone: 612-716-4825
www.thirdiron.com
Third Iron is a new library technology company and BrowZine is our
first product. BrowZine works by
uniting articles from databases into
complete journals, then arranges
by subject on a library-branded
newsstand. The result is a revolutionary new way to browse, read
and monitor scholarly journals. All
in a tablet format users love.
Third Week Books
1580
t exhibitor listings
PO Box 390771
Minneapolis, MN 55439
Phone: 612-275-7331
www.thirdweekbooks.com
222
Thomas Nelson
Publishers
511
501 Nelson Pl.
Nashville, TN 37214
Phone: 615-889-9000
Fax: 615-902-1610
www.thomasnelson.com
Thomas Nelson, Inc., part of
HarperCollins Christian Publishing,
is a world leading provider of
Christian content and has been
providing readers with quality
inspirational products for over 200
years. The publishing group
provides multiple formats of
award-winning Bibles and books,
including nonfiction, fiction,
children’s books, gift books,
cookbooks, curriculum and digital
content, with distribution in more
than 100 countries. Thomas
Nelson, is headquartered in
Nashville, TN with additional
Thomson
Reuters
923
1500 Spring Garden St., 4th Fl.
Philadelphia, PA 19130
Phone: 800-336-4474
www.thomsonreuters.com
Thrift Books, LLC
1919
18200 Cascade Ave. S, Ste. 204
Seattle, WA 98188
Phone: 253-275-2241
Fax: 253-322-6164
www.gotlibrarybooks.com
Thrift Books Library Program offers
a better deal for libraries with an
un-matched 50% commission on
all books sold! This program is
totally free, pays you monthly and
we even provide you with your
own online storefront. With 10
distribution centers nationwide,
shipping is easy. We are already
partnered with many leading libraries across the USA and we look
forward to discussing this great
program with you at the show!
Tiger Tales
1342
5 River Rd., Ste. 128
Wilton, CT 06897
Phone: 203-834-0005
Fax: 203-834-0004
www.tigertalesbooks.com
Tiger Tales continues to expand
our publishing program!
Introducing our newest series,
My Little World, a collection of
board books that teach simple
concepts with bright and engaging
illustrations. Our photographic
series, My First, continues to grow
with the addition of 12 new titles
in various board book formats.
Twenty beautiful hardcover picture
books, five anthologies, and an
assortment of board and padded
board books round out our new
and exciting 2014 list!
Timber Press: A
member of the Workman
Family of Imprints
414
225 Varick St.
New York, NY 10014-4381
Phone: 212-614-7572
Fax: 800-344-3482
www.workman.com
informative Seeing Flowers and
Beatrix Potter’s Gardening Life),
ornamental and edible horticulture,
garden design, sustainability,
natural history, and the Pacific
Northwest.
Tin House Books
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
322
2617 NW Thurman St.
Portland, OR 97210
Phone: 503-473-8663
www.tinhouse.com
The first issue of Tin House
magazine appeared in 1999. This
independent press was launched
in 2005, and offers an artful and
irreverent array of fiction,
nonfiction, and poetry.
TLC—The
Library
Corporation
1043
1 Research Park
Inwood, WV 25428
Phone: 304-229-0100
Fax: 304-229-0295
www.tlcdelivers.com
The Library Corporation (TLC), a
family-owned company founded
in 1974, serves more than 4,500
libraries worldwide with Webbased, touchscreen-optimized
automation, cataloging, and
e-resource integration products
including Library•Solution®,
Library•Solution® for Schools,
CARL•X™, LS2 PAC, LS2
Kids, LS2 Staff, eBiblioFile,
RDAExpress, and ITS•MARC®—all
backed by an unparalleled level of
customer support and assistance.
Learn more at TLCdelivers.com.
Today’s Business
Solutions
1961
7820 S. Quincy St.
Willowbrook, IL 60527
Phone: 630-537-1370
Fax: 630-537-1369
www.singlecard.com
TBS offers high-tech library
solutions that enhance the patron
experience including computer
reservation, mobile printing, print
management, scanning solutions and secure account based
payment methods including
Patron Web Portal for all Printing,
Computer Management, Fees/
Fines Payment with Secure PCI
Compliant Credit/Debit Card
solutions.
Tomo Books USA
1555
PO Box 14052
Fresno, CA 93650
Phone: 559-392-3547
Fax: 559-272-0386
Tor/Forge Books
532
175 5th Ave.
New York, NY 10010
Phone: 646-307-5498
Fax: 646-307-5088
www.tor-forge.com
Tor Books is a full category
hardcover and mass market
publisher and the largest publisher
of science fiction and fantasy in
the world. We also publish military
and historical fiction along with
paranormal, horror, mystery,
thrillers, westerns, graphic novels
and manga.
Total Boox
1775
TMC Furniture, Inc.
2160
119 E. Ann St.
Ann Arbor, MI 48104
Phone: 734-622-0080
Fax: 734-622-0088
www.tmcfurniture.com
Founded in 1998 and headquartered in Ann Arbor, Michigan, TMC
was started (and is still owned) by
artists and designers who share
the philosophy that design, innovation and customization are the
core to modern US manufacturing.
3 Monroe Pkwy Ste P-423
Lake Oswego, OR 97035
Phone: 503-720-7149
Fax: 503-210-0219
www.totalboox.com
TouchWood Editions
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
322
103-1075 Pendergast St.
Victoria, BC V8V 0A1 Canada
Phone: 250-360-0829
www.touchwoodeditions.com
We publish books of literary merit
about Canada’s West: the people,
places, landscape, food, art and
culture of the region.
Timber focuses on gardening (including the beautiful &
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
T PUBLICATIONS
Tundra Book
1950
245
19A Aubrey House,
7 Maida Ave. Maida
Vale, London, W2 1TQ
United Kingdom
Phone: 44-07592-20391
www.tPUB.CO.UK
TrafSys Walker
Wireless
2168
3141 Dawnele Ct.
Lebanon, OH 45036-9300
Phone: 800-385-6436
Fax: 419-710-8235
www.trafsys.com
Providing patron counting solutions since 1986, Traf-sys Walker
Wireless is the premier patron
counting solution for the library
market. We are focused on delivering the solution that will yield the
needed traffic count. Our patron
counters and VisiCount software
are the solution to the unknown
aspects of traffic management
data. Traf-sys Walker Wireless
stands behind the product and the
library market with great support
and value and understands the
growing demand for meaningful
and accurate data.
1 Toronto St., Ste. 300
Toronto, ON M5C 2V6 Canada
Phone: 416-957-1572
Fax: 416-598-0247
www.tundrabooks.com
Turner Publishing
313
424 Church St., Ste. 2240
Nashville, TN 37219
Phone: 615-255-2665
www.turnerpublishing.com/
Turner is an award-winning general
trade publisher of over 2000
titles, including over 1000 general
interest titles acquired from John
Wiley & Sons. Named 4 times to
PW’s fastest growing list, Turner
produces a wide range of titles
in fiction and non-fiction. Turner
publishes NYT Bestselling authors,
such as Alice Randall, Eugenia
Price, Barbara Wood, and Peter
Kiernan and is well-known for its
Historic Photos & Remembering
local history series. Turner is
distributed by Ingram Publisher
Services.
Tutor.com
1243
Transparent
Language, Inc.
1749
12 Murphy Dr.
Nashua, NH 03110
Phone: 603-262-6321
Fax: 603-262-6475
www.transparent.com
Tutor.com is a leader in online
tutoring, having delivered over
10 million sessions since 2001
in math, science, social studies,
English, test preparation and
career services. Our 3,100+ tutors
are subject-matter experts and
skilled instructors. That’s why
our tutoring sessions are the
highest-rated in the industry, with
over 97% of students saying they
would recommend the service to
a friend.
Treehouse
Tutto Luggage/
Mascot Metropolitan,
Inc.
1908
2271
2712 N. Mississippi
Portland, OR 97227
Phone: 415-852-0387
www.teamtreehouse.com
The extensive Treehouse library
of step-by-step video courses
and training exercises will give
you a wide range of competitive,
in-demand technology skills that
will help you land your next dream
job or build your startup idea. No
experience? No problem!
280 Swift Ave, #18
South San Francisco, CA 94080
Phone: 650-873-7717
Fax: 650-873-1629
www.tutto.com
United Nations
Publications
1535
1522
351 Executive Dr.
Carol Stream, IL 60188
Phone: 630-784-5413
Fax: 630-668-8905
www.tyndale.com
U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services
1827
20 Massachusetts Ave., NW,
Ste. 5200
Washington, DC 20529
Phone: 202-272-1310
Fax: 202-272-1316
www.uscis.gov
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services is the government
agency that oversees lawful
immigration to the U.S. The
USCIS Office of Citizenship leads
initiatives to promote citizenship
awareness and demystify the
naturalization process for aspiring
citizens. In 2013, USCIS entered
into a formal partnership with the
IMLS to provide public libraries
with information, educational
materials, and training resources
on immigration and citizenship.
www.uscis.gov/citizenship.
UDON Entertainment
2018
118 Tower Hill Rd., C1
Toronto, ON M6H 1X3 Canada
Phone: 416-567-5683
www.udoneentertainment.com
Unikeep, A division
of Univenture, Inc.
2222
13311 Industrial Pkwy.
Marysville, OH 43040
Phone: 937-645-4600
Fax: 937-645-4700
www.univenture.com
The UniKeep brand offers specialized solutions for your document
and product storage needs. Built
around our own cutting-edge
design and 100% recyclable polypropylene materials, UniKeep’s
range of products is a perfect
vehicle for archiving, presenting
and packaging any product or
supporting material.
300 E. 42nd St., 9th Fl.
New York, NY 10017
Phone: 917-367-3702
Fax: 212-963-3489
www.un.org/publications
United Nations Publications brings
together all UN publications in one
place. We are the source for more
than 5,300 titles produced by the
Organization and its key agencies.
These titles reflect the many facets
of the Organization as it works for
a better world for all. Our website
offers on-line access to our
complete catalogue, in a range of
formats including print, electronic
and multimedia.
University of
Fashion®
2073
220 Madison Ave., Ste. PhH
New York, NY 10016
Phone: 604-620-5999
www.universityoffashion.com
University of Fashion® is a hidefinition, professionally produced
online fashion design video library
delivering lectures on costume
history, trend forecasting, color
theory, fashion business marketing, licensing/branding, prominent
fashion designer interviews and
design tutorials in draping, pattern
making, sewing, fashion drawing
and product development, all
taught by college professors and
industry pros. University of Fashion
is a perfect library resource for
everyone interested in fashion.
University of Hawaii
Press
1928
2840 Kolowalu St.
Honolulu, HI 96822
Phone: 808-956-8255
Fax: 808-988-6052
www.uhpress.hawaii.edu
University of Illinois
GSLIS
1923
501 E. Daniel St.
Champaign, IL 61820-6211
Phone: 217-244-3274
Fax: 217-244-3302
www.lis.illinois.edu
MS, CAS residential or online
programs; PhD residential,
continuing education, ALA
CPLA program. Specializations:
socio-technical data analytics,
data curation, digital libraries,
special collections, community
informatics, bio-informatics and
K–12 media.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
exhibitor listings u
Transparent Language builds
language-learning software for
consumers, educational institutions, libraries, corporations,
and government organizations.
Working with language experts
and native speakers around the
world, Transparent Language is
committed to helping millions learn
new languages quickly, easily, and
effectively.
555 W. 18th St.
New York, NY 10011
Phone: 212-528-3101
Fax: 646-532-4458
www.tutor.com
Tyndale House
Publishers
223
University of North
Texas College of
Information
University of
WisconsinMilwaukee
Unshelved/Overdue
Media
2235
1932
4819 S. Oregon St.
Seattle, WA 98118
Phone: 424-226-2286
www.unshelved.com
1155 Union Circle 311068
Denton, TX 76203-5017
Phone: 940-565-3565
Fax: 940-369-7600
www.lis.unt.edu
University of
Tennessee School of
Information Sciences
1929
1345 Circle Park Dr., Ste. 451
Knoxville, TN 37996
Phone: 865-974-2858
Fax: 865-974-4967
www.sis.utk.edu
The University of Tennessee
School of Information Sciences
is educating the next generation
of information professionals for
a dynamic world. Explore your
future career with our diverse
team of faculty whose research
is addressing cutting-edge
information problems. The masters
degree may be completed
on-campus or from a distance. An
interdisciplinary doctoral degree in
communication and information is
also offered.
University of
Washington
Information School
1927
u exhibitor listings
Box 352840, Mary Gates Hall,
Rm. 370
Seattle, WA 98195
Phone: 206-543-3172
Fax: 206-616-3152
www.ischool.uw.edu
The University of Washington
Information School is a community engaged with the study
of information and its use by
people and organizations. We
prepare information leaders,
research problems in information, and design solutions to
information challenges. Our
graduate degree programs include
a PhD in Information Science,
Master of Science in Information
Management, and Master of
Library and Information Science.
Seventeen of the 20 biggest hotels
in the US are in Las Vegas.
224
School of Information Studies,
PO Box 413
Milwaukee, WI 53201
Phone: 414-229-5409
Fax: 414-229-6699
www.uwm.edu
Through leading international
faculty, degree programs, and
partnerships spanning the
globe, UW-Milwaukee School
of Information Studies iSchool
prepares students for success
in our information world. SOIS
offers a BS in Information Science
& Technology, ALA-accredited
Master’s in Library and Information
Science, School Library Media
Certification, Certificates of
Advanced Studies in Archives
and Digital Libraries, and PhD in
Information Studies.
University Products
Inc.
2119
517 Main St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Phone: 413-532-3372
Fax: 413-532-9281
www.universityproducts.com
University Products is a world
leading manufacturer and supplier
of archival storage materials
for display, conservation and
preservation. We also supply a
full range of library processing
supplies, equipment, AV materials
and furniture. Computer workstations and childrens furniture.
UNLV Archives
1818
4505 S. Maryland Pkwy.
Box 457001
Las Vegas, NV 89154
Phone: 702-895-2100
2008
Publishers of Unshelved, a daily
comic about a library and creators
of fine, reader-friendly merchandise. Read our comics for free at
www.unshelved.com.
Upstart
1203
4810 Forest Run Rd.
Madison, WI 53704
Phone: 608-242-2398
www.upstartpromotions.com
Upstart is a leading publisher of
library promotional and instructional materials, including bookmarks, posters and incentives.
Our Very Ready Reading Program
is a full storytime curriculum for
birth – age 5 designed to help
librarians model simple things
parents can share with their kids
to boost reading readiness.
Value Line Publishing
2248
485 Lexington Ave.
New York, NY 10017
Phone: 212-907-1821
Fax: 212-907-1922
Since 1931, Value Line has
taken pride in knowing that our
efforts have helped thousands of
investors successfully navigate the
stock market. Library patrons, in
particular, single out our research
as independent and authoritative—the bedrock of investing.
They look to Value Line for the
epitome of these standards,
basing major decisions on our
guidance and insight. Spanning
thousands of companies, we help
your patrons avoid past mistakes,
make sound decisions today, and
profit in the future.
VanitaBooks
313
1000 Woodhaven Blvd.
Akron, OH 44333
Phone: 216-544-8930
www.vanitabooks.com
At VanitaBooks our books help
children work through those
life experiences we adults call
“growing up.” They can be as
universal as getting a pet or they
can be the inspiring stories of real
life heroes. In each we try to tell a
story that kids and their parents
will see as honest, informative and
leave them smiling at the end.
We are pleased to introduce two
new titles. The Pullman Porters
and Don’t Dangle Your Participle.
Come see our other popular titles,
including: Bonyo, Bonyo The True
Story of a Brave Boy From Kenya,
A Tale of Two Mommies, A Tale of
Two Daddies and the Idiom Series.
VenMill Industries
1764
670 Douglas St.
Uxbridge, MA 01569-2001
Phone: 508-278-0091
Fax: 508-278-0005
www.venmill.com
The Best in Disc Repair just got
Better! Visit VenMill Industries
at Booth #1764 for a demo of
the new VMI 2500 and the new
VMI Hybrid! VenMill has been
the trusted source for disc repair
products for over the past 12
years. No matter if you are looking
to fix CDs to Blu-ray discs, VenMill
Industries’ will provide the right
disc repair solution for you.
Video Librarian
1960
3435 NE Nine Boulder Dr.
Poulsbo, WA 98370-6829
Phone: 800-265-7965
Fax: 360-830-9346
www.videolibrarian.com
Called “too good to miss...a
winner” (LJ) and “the best” (Public
Libraries), Video Librarian is the
premier DVD/Blu-ray review
magazine for public, school, and
academic libraries. Stop by for a
free sample, and ask about Video
Librarian Plus!, featuring online
access to over 30,000 full-text
reviews and much more!
VIP Learning
636
6520 Platt Ave., Ste. 355
West Hills, CA 91307
Phone: 877-520-5524
Fax: 818-835-4314
www.viplearning.org
The best source of audiovisual
learning materials in Spanish,
English and Portuguese. Subjects
areas cover Agriculture, Apparel
and Fashion Design, Automotive,
Beauty, Health, Computers,
Culinary Arts, Education,
Arts, Languages, Electronics,
Refrigeration and Welding.
Motivating and entertaining,
content rich DVDs with step
by step procedures will help to
develop lifelong skills of individuals. More than 55 years helping
libraries, schools and students.
Now available online!! Have
access to more than 1500 videos!
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
VIZ Media
2013
295 Bay St.
San Francisco, CA 94133
Phone: 415-546-7073
Fax: 415-321-8756
www.viz.com
VIZ Media is one of the most
comprehensive and innovative
companies in the field of graphic
novel and manga publishing,
animation and entertainment
licensing of Japanese content in
North America. For over 25 years,
we have been pioneering new
paths in global entertainment and
publishing. We are committed to
bringing the very best storytelling to fans of all ages, with hits
Naruto, Bleach and Vampire
Knight, original releases based
on Hello Kitty, Uglydoll, Bravest
Warriors and Winx Club, & more!
VOYA—Teacher
Librarian
Walrus & Carpenter
Productions LLC
1326
1568G
16211 Oxford Ct.
Bowie, MD 20715
Phone: 301-805-2191
Fax: 301-805-2192
www.voyamagazine.com
Voice of Youth Advocates, aka
VOYA, is a leading journal for
librarians serving teens. VOYA
book reviews, columns and
feature stories are valued by
librarians and publishers, alike.
Teacher Librarian: The Journal for
School Library Professionals
focuses on professional development, with articles, columns,
reviews and practical advice from
the leaders of the profession. Both
titles are published by E L Kurdyla
Publishing LLC,
www.kurdylapublishing.com.
18760 Vista Dr.
Buena Vista, CO 81211
Phone: 719-395-9240
www.alicewinks.com
Alicewinks is a multimedia
version of Alice’s Adventures in
Wonderland designed for tablet
computers. It is distributed in
mp4, app format Android tablets,
and iBook format for iPads.
Warren Associates
1051
2901 Brighton Rd.
Pittsburgh, PA 15212
Phone: 412-766-5757
Fax: 412-766-6993
www.warrenassociates.net
VMDO Architects
VTLS Inc.
2148
Watson Label
Products
1614
949
200 E. Market St.
Charlottesville, VA 22960
Phone: 434-296-5684
www.vmdo.com
VMDO Architects is an awardwinning architecture firm specializing in customized planning
and design for K–12 and Higher
Education clients. Our distinctive
designs of library programs and
facilities are based on an in-depth
understanding of the complex
needs and aspirations of today’s
vibrant library communities. Our
designs foster campus connections—reinforcing the library’s role
as “campus center,” offer inspiring
interior and exterior learning
environments and flexibility.
voxgov
113 University Pl. 11th FL
New York, NY 10003
Phone: 347-556-1031
www.voxgov.com
voxgov is an electronic resource,
which aggregates a broad range
of official and ephemeral information issued by representatives and
organizations from all branches
of the U.S. Federal Government.
voxgov has an archive of 9.6+
million U.S. data files and we add
an average of more than 13,000
files daily. 90% of our content
has never before been organized,
indexed or aggregated, such as
press releases, speeches and
social media.
VTLS provides software solutions for all types of libraries. The
new VTLS Open Skies Library
Services Platform combines our
Virtua ILS, VITAL DAMS and
Chamo Discovery solutions into
a unified platform to provide all
traditional ILS functions as well as
management of digital content &
streaming media, visual content
browsing, discovery of external
content, events and more.
Solutions also include the MozGo
Mobile app and Drupal consulting
and development services. Your
way to the future is clear.
W. W. Norton & Co.
616
500 Fifth Ave.
New York, NY 10110-0017
Phone: 212-790-4314
Fax: 212-790-9453
www.wwnorton.com
W. W. Norton & Company, the
oldest and largest publishing
house owned wholly by its
employees, strives to carry out
the imperative of its founder to
“publish books not for a single
season, but for the years” in
fiction, nonfiction, poetry, cookbooks, art books and psychology books. In addition to our
Countryman Press and Liveright
Publishing imprints, we are the
distributors of Thames & Hudson,
New Directions, Pegasus, Persea,
Fantagraphics, and more.
10616 Trenton Ave.
St. Louis, MO 63132
Phone: 314-493-9300
Fax: 314-493-9390
www.wlp.com
White Cloud Press
(dist. by Publishers Group
West)
322
PO Box 3400
Ashland, OR 97520
Phone: 800-380-8286
www.whitecloudpress.com/
White Cloud Press is celebrating
its 20th anniversary in 2013.
Genres: world religions, translations, memoirs, and nature-ecology. Imprints: Confluence Books
(health and wellness, sports) and
RiverWood Books (children).
John Wiley & Sons
1229
111 River St.
Hoboken, NJ 07030-5774
Phone: 201-748-6000
Fax: 201-748-6617
www.wiley.com
Wiley is a leader in creating
award-winning content for
academic, professional and
scientific audiences. The WileyBlackwell division serves the
global research and scholarly
community and is the world’s
largest society publisher. The
Professional Development
business connects consumers
and professionals with a print
and digital portfolio focusing on
business, finance, accounting,
William B. Meyer Inc.
2036
255 Long Beach Blvd.
Stratford, CT 06615
Phone: 203-383-6115
Fax: 203-383-6143
www.meyerlibrary.com
William B. Meyer’s Library
Relocation Services Division
offers a full-service solution for
our clients from the initial stages
of planning a project through a
final, flawless delivery. From our
first job moving the Yale University
Library 25 years ago, to today’s
operation which moves over
10,000,000 volumes per year
(including recent exciting projects
at Boston Public Library and the
University of Chicago), MEYER
Library Relocation has built a
solid reputation for honesty and
dependability.
Worden Company
937
199 E. 17th St.
Holland, MI 49423
Phone: 616-392-1848
Fax: 616-392-2542
www.wordencompany.com
Superior craftsmanship, quality
and design—you’ll find them in
every Worden solution. Our broad
range of standard library furniture
designs, latest innovations, and
one-of-a-kind custom designs are
made to delight, inspire, and last
well into the future. That’s Worden.
Workman Publishing
414
255 Varick St.
New York, NY 10014-4381
Phone: 212-614-7572
Fax: 800-344-3482
www.workman.com
Publisher of the Library Reads
favorite, Show Your Work, as well
as perennials like the What to
Expect When You’re Expecting
series, 1,000 Places to See
Before You Die, & Sandra Boynton
children’s books (New title alert!
It features singing bunny rabbits.
What could be bad?).
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
exhibitor listings w
1538
1701 Kraft Dr.
Blacksburg, VA 24060
Phone: 540-557-1200
Fax: 540-557-1210
www.vtls.com
leadership, technology, architecture, psychology, education and
through the world-famous For
Dummies brand.
225
World Bank
Publications
1523
1818 H St. NW
Washington, DC 20433
Phone: 202-458-8966
Fax: 202-522-2625
www.worldbank.org/publications
The Reference of Choice on
Development and Economics. The
World Bank is a vital source of
financial and technical assistance to developing countries.
In support of its mission—to
reduce poverty—it conducts and
publishes research on a broad
range of social and economic
development topics including
finance, health, education, climate
change, trade, policy, aid effectiveness, labor and gender equality.
World Bank books are available
in print; online through the new
Open Knowledge Repository and
by subscription to the World Bank
eLibrary. Stop by to see our latest
titles and to learn more about
the World Bank’s many online
resources.
World Book Inc.
649
z exhibitor listings
233 N. Michigan Ave., Ste. 2000
Chicago, IL 60601
Phone: 312-729-5888
Fax: 312-729-5614
www.worldbookonline.com
World Book, Inc. is a leading
publisher of authoritative,
age-appropriate, and reliable
reference and learning materials
for children and adults. Based in
Chicago, IL, World Book is committed to creating print and digital
educational products that meet
the highest standards of editorial
excellence and ignite and inspire
a lifelong love of learning. Visit
World Book’s website at www.
worldbook.com.
The Writer’s Muse
YBP Library Services
Zinio for Libraries
1956
1334
1568D
WT Cox Information
Services
YBP Library Services, a Baker &
Taylor company, provides print and
digital content, supporting collection management and technical
services to academic, research
and special libraries around the
world. GOBI3, YBP’s acquisition
and collection development
interface, provides access to more
than 10 million titles.
546 Long Point Rd.
Mt. Pleasant, SC 29464
Phone: 800-426-9538
www.writersmuse.com
1149
201 Village Rd.
Shallotte, NC 28470
Phone: 800-571-9554
Fax: 877-755-6274
www.wtcox.com
WT Cox proudly offers the best
service standards in the industry.
Our customers enjoy personalized
electronic and print serials management along with a host of integrated services. Added offerings
include eContentStats—powered
by Pubget, providing your library
the ability to collect, manage and
analyze e-resource statistics;
Journal Finder—our exclusive A–Z,
Link Resolver and ERM solution
and more. WT Cox is committed
to providing cost-effective services
tailored to your library.
Xist Publishing
1952
16604 Sonora St.
Tustin, CA 92782
Phone: 949-478-2568
www.xistpublishing.com
999 Maple St.
Contoocook, NH 03229
Phone: 704-998-3231
Fax: 704-998-3316
www.ybp.com
Zine Pavilion
1731
zinepavilion.tumblr.com/
Zines are self-published works
created out of passion, not for
profit. They represent diverse
perspectives otherwise hard to
come by and are inexpensive
additions to your collection. Come
make a page for a collaborative
zine, take a look at our exhibit of
zines and enter a raffle to get your
library kitted out with a starter zine
collection! Local zinesters and
distros will also be in attendance
tabling with their zines and other
independent media.
c/o Recorded Books 270 Skipjack Rd.
Prince Frederick, MD 20678
Phone: 800-638-1304
www.recordedbooks.com/zinio
Zinio for Libraries from Recorded
Books provides patrons with
simultaneous access to over 1700
of popular digital magazines.
Download, read offline, bookmark,
print, and share articles with handy
mobile apps.
Zondervan/
Zonderkidz
508
5300 Patterson SE
Grand Rapids, MI 49530
Phone: 616-698-3209
Fax: 616-698-3578
www.zondervan.com
Committed to helping children
develop a lifetime love of reading
no matter what form it takes, Xist
Publishing offers beautiful print
and eBooks for schools & libraries.
CSLP Partner and Summer
Reading incentive provider.
Howard Hughes stayed at the Desert Inn
for so long that he was asked to leave so
he bought the hotel.
226
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Visit us in booth #1126
ALA
Annual 2014
Special!
Learn more about us at
www.choice360.org.
25% off first year of
Choice Reviews Online
for new subscribers
Reference code:
CONF14
The best in fiction
starts here!
Visit our authors at ALA 2014 • Booth 363
Saturday, June 28
In-Booth Signings: Harlequin Booth #363
9:30 a.m.–10:30 a.m.
Jason Mott
The Wonder of All Things
11:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
Jeaniene Frost
The Beautiful Ashes
1:00 p.m.–2 p.m.
Julie Kagawa
Talon
Sunday, June 29
In-Booth Signings: Harlequin Booth #363
9:30 a.m.–10:30 a.m.
Robyn Carr
Four Friends
11:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
Adi Alsaid
Michelle Madow
Let’s Get Lost
Diamonds in the Rough
1:00 p.m.–2 p.m.
Robin Talley
Lies We Tell Ourselves
3:00 p.m.–4 p.m.
Mary Kubica
The Good Girl
Monday, June 30
In-Booth Signing: Harlequin Booth #363
9:30 a.m.–10:30 a.m.
Heather Gudenkauf
Little Mercies
www.Harlequin.com • www.HarlequinForLibraries.com
Exhibitor Listings by Product
AUDIOVISUAL EQUIPMENT &
MATERIALS
Alternative
BookExpo America (BEA). . . . . . . . . . . . . . 537
ETS HiSET. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2115
Audio Books
Audio Visual Equipment
Birchard Company/EZDROP . . . . . . . . . . . 936
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Burgeon Group LLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1515
Demco. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 902
Library Bureau Steel. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568A
Live Oak Media. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 412
Naxos of America, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1376
RTI - DVD Repair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1328
The Media Preserve. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1831
VenMill Industries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1764
Audio Visual Materials
Ambrose Video Publishing . . . . . . . . . . . . 1273
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Bi-Folkal Productions, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 2043
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Chicago One Stop/Browser Display. . . . . . 803
Dreamscape. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1371
Film Movement. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2150
Findaway World. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 875
Live Oak Media. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 412
Midwest Tape. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1371
Movie Licensing USA. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1263
RTI - DVD Repair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1328
University of Fashion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2073
Video Librarian. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1960
BookExpo America (BEA). . . . . . . . . . . . . . 537
Chicago One Stop/Browser Display. . . . . . 803
Findaway World. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 875
Recorded Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 771
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Children’s
3Branch Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1869
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Boyds Mills Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 567
Dreamscape. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1371
Highlights for Children. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 569
Kane Miller/Usborne Books . . . . . . . . . . . . 218
Kiki Magazine / B-books Ltd.. . . . . . . . . . . 233
Learning Props L.L.C.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1483
Live Oak Media. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 412
Midwest Tape. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1371
NOAA Scijinks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 231
Norwood House Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 222
Peachtree Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212
Recorded Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 771
Video Librarian. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1960
Educational
Afinia 3D Printer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2117
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Birchard Company/EZDROP . . . . . . . . . . . 936
Britannica Digital Learning . . . . . . . . . . . . 1817
CLCD, LLC (Children’s Literature
Comprehensive Database). . . . . . . . . . . . . 374
Demco. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 902
DK Publishing Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 448
Dreamscape. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1371
Drexel University Online,
College of Computing & Informatics. . . . . 2238
ETS HiSET. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2115
Infobase Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1322
Kiki Magazine / B-books Ltd.. . . . . . . . . . . 233
Learning A-Z . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1962
Learning Props L.L.C.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1483
Midwest Tape. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1371
National Information Standards
Organization (NISO) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1829
NOAA Scijinks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 231
OpenEdition. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1437
Pronunciator LLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2156
Publisher Spotlight. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 240
Rogue Bear Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1948
Swank Digital Campus. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1265
Transparent Language, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . 1749
Treehouse. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1908
Tutor.com. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1243
University of Fashion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2073
Xist Publishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1952
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
Film & Video
Ambrose Video Publishing . . . . . . . . . . . . 1273
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Bound to Stay Bound Books . . . . . . . . . . . 516
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Dreamscape. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1371
Film Movement. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2150
Infobase Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1322
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
Kanopy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1463
lynda.com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 931
Midwest Tape. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1371
Public Information Kiosk, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . 1330
Stanger Litho-Library Services Div.. . . . . . 2117
VenMill Industries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1764
Video Librarian. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1960
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
VIZ Media. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2013
Historical Film and Video
ABC-CLIO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1343
Alexander Street Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 912
OpinionArchives. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1254
Paratext. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1029
Video Librarian. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1960
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
Instructional
Alexander Street Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 912
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Dreamscape. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1371
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
Midwest Tape. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1371
Transparent Language, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . 1749
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
Laser Discs
Chicago One Stop/Browser Display. . . . . . 803
Music
Alexander Street Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 912
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Chicago One Stop/Browser Display. . . . . . 803
Naxos of America, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1376
OverDrive, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1317
Special Interest
Alexander Street Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 912
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Dreamscape. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1371
Midwest Tape. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1371
AUTOMATION
Authority Control
Auto-Graphics, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1111
Backstage Library Works. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1112
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
CASSIE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1362
Ex Libris North America . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1143
Librarica LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1362
Library Technologies Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2113
MARCIVE, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1239
TLC - The Library Corporation . . . . . . . . . 1043
VTLS Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1614
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
exhibitor listings by product
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Blackstone Audio. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1915
Books on Tape. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 542
Brilliance Publishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Chicago One Stop/Browser Display. . . . . . 803
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Findaway World. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 875
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
Listening Library. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 542
Live Oak Media. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 412
New World Library
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
OneClickdigital eAudio. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568B
OneClickdigital eBooks. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568C
OverDrive, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1317
Peachtree Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212
Publisher Spotlight. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 240
Recorded Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 771
Shadow Mountain Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . 227
Simon & Schuster, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 302
Sounds True. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 372
Stanger Litho-Library Services Div.. . . . . . 2117
Tyndale House Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1535
VenMill Industries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1764
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Book & Audio Packages
229
Automation
Atlas Systems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1023
Bibliotheca. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 663
Booksite. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 429
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 963
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568F
Innovative Interfaces. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1035
Lyngsoe Systems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 655
Muratec. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2151
Print2Cloud247 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2269
P.V. Supa, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1967
Stanger Litho-Library Services Div.. . . . . . 2117
TLC - The Library Corporation . . . . . . . . . 1043
Today’s Business Solutions. . . . . . . . . . . . 1961
TrafSys Walker Wireless. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2168
Bar Codes
Auto-Graphics, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1111
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Library Technologies Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2113
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
Watson Label Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 949
Bibliographic
American Psychological Association. . . . . . 763
Association for Computing Machinery. . . . 2171
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Elsevier Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 717
Ex Libris North America . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1143
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
MARCIVE, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1239
Thomson Reuters. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 923
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
exhibitor listings by product
Business Information
Geographic Research, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . 1271
Kodak Alaris. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1374
Mergent, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1217
Morningstar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 825
SimplyMap. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1271
University of Fashion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2073
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Computer Software
Association for Computing Machinery. . . . 2171
Atlas Systems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1023
AWE, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1755
BiblioCommons Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1743
Bibliotheca. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 663
Book Systems, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1519
Boopsie for Libraries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2032
ByWater Solutions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2225
CASSIE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1362
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Compendium Library Services . . . . . . . . . 1027
Comprise Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 843
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 963
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568F
Equinox Software, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1843
Evanced Solutions, LLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1103
Ex Libris North America . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1143
FamilySearch. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 971
Infogroup-ReferenceUSA. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1429
Infovision Software, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1255
Innovative Interfaces. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1035
LEGO Education. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2012
Librarica LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1362
Library of Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1709
Mango Languages. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1163
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
PolicyMap . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2227
Pronunciator LLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2156
Third Iron . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2038
Today’s Business Solutions. . . . . . . . . . . . 1961
Transparent Language, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . 1749
VenMill Industries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1764
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
VTLS Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1614
Computers & Peripheral Equipment
Cataloging
Auto-Graphics, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1111
Backstage Library Works. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1112
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Book Systems, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1519
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Ex Libris North America . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1143
Infovision Software, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1255
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
Library of Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1709
MARCIVE, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1239
Midwest Library Service. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 837
OCLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 913
Reindex Library Management Services. . . 1053
TLC - The Library Corporation . . . . . . . . . 1043
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
VTLS Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1614
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
CD-ROM
Auto-Graphics, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1111
Brookhaven Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1665
Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) . . . . . 1524
230
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Infogroup-ReferenceUSA. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1429
Intelex Corp. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1617
LexisNexis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 815
VenMill Industries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1764
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Archelon Enclosures. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2174
AWE, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1755
Contex Americas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1251
Indus International, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1763
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
Scannx, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1248
Today’s Business Solutions. . . . . . . . . . . . 1961
Database
Accessible Archives, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1738
Artstor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
Mergent, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1217
Morningstar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 825
Paratext. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1029
Project MUSE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1435
ProQuest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 703
ResCarta Foundation, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1257
Rock’s Backpages. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2157
Transparent Language, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . 1749
Tutor.com. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1243
Video Librarian. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1960
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
voxgov. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1538
World Book Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 649
WT Cox Information Services. . . . . . . . . . 1149
Database Preparation
Backstage Library Works. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1112
Library Technologies Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2113
Thomson Reuters. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 923
Digitization
Backstage Library Works. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1112
Contentra Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2028
Contex Americas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1251
The Crowley Company. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1154
DLSG at Image Access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1953
East View Information Services. . . . . . . . . 1547
LYRASIS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 954
Northern Micrographics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1663
Ristech Company, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2116
Scannx, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1248
Today’s Business Solutions. . . . . . . . . . . . 1961
Document Delivery Systems
BioMed Central . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1667
CoLibri Systems North America, Inc..308, 1630
DLSG at Image Access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1953
Indus International, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1763
Infovision Software, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1255
Kodak Alaris. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1374
Konica Minolta
Business Solutions USA, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . 2265
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
Reindex Library Management Services. . . 1053
ResCarta Foundation, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1257
Scannx, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1248
Today’s Business Solutions. . . . . . . . . . . . 1961
Electronic Document Delivery
Atlas Systems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1023
BioMed Central . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1667
Contex Americas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1251
Indus International, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1763
Infovision Software, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1255
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
OCLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 913
Project MUSE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1435
Electronic Imaging Systems
BioMed Central . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1667
Contex Americas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1251
The Crowley Company. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1154
DLSG at Image Access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1953
Ex Libris North America . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1143
Indus International, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1763
Infovision Software, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1255
Kodak Alaris. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1374
LibLime, a division of PTFS. . . . . . . . . . . . 1913
ResCarta Foundation, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1257
Scannx, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1248
Today’s Business Solutions. . . . . . . . . . . . 1961
VTLS Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1614
Information Superhighway
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Comprise Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 843
Elsevier Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 717
NewsBank/Readex. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1415
VTLS Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1614
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Integrated Library Systems
Auto-Graphics, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1111
Book Systems, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1519
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
D-Tech International USA, LLC. . . . . . . . . 1837
Elsevier Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 717
Equinox Software, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1843
Ex Libris North America . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1143
Infovision Software, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1255
Innovative Interfaces. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1035
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
Muratec. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2151
Schedule3W/Medianet Dymaxion. . . . . . . 1762
VTLS Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1614
Library Automated Systems
Library Cards
Able Card, LLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1478
D-Tech International USA, LLC. . . . . . . . . 1837
Watson Label Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 949
Literacy
Burgeon Group LLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1515
Library of Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1709
Magnetic Stripe Cards
Able Card, LLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1478
D-Tech International USA, LLC. . . . . . . . . 1837
Watson Label Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 949
Media Management
Artstor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1379
Auto-Graphics, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1111
Bibliotheca. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 663
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
D-Tech International USA, LLC. . . . . . . . . 1837
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 963
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568F
Kodak Alaris. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1374
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
Micrographic Equipment
The Crowley Company. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1154
Indus International, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1763
Konica Minolta
Business Solutions USA, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . 2265
nextScan, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2114
Microsystems
The Crowley Company. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1154
Multimedia
ABDO. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1071
Film Movement. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2150
Public Information Kiosk, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . 1330
VTLS Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1614
Networking
Auto-Graphics, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1111
Thomson Reuters. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 923
Online Search Services
Auto-Graphics, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1111
Britannica Digital Learning . . . . . . . . . . . . 1817
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Comprise Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 843
Ex Libris North America . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1143
Infogroup-ReferenceUSA. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1429
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
Innovative Interfaces. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1035
Intelex Corp. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1617
LibraryThing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1247
Mergent, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1217
OCLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 913
S&P Capital IQ. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 702
StackMap. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2257
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
OPAC
BiblioCommons Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1743
Book Systems, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1519
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Equinox Software, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1843
Ex Libris North America . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1143
Infovision Software, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1255
Innovative Interfaces. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1035
Library of Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1709
TLC - The Library Corporation . . . . . . . . . 1043
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
VTLS Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1614
Reference Systems
BioMed Central . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1667
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Ex Libris North America . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1143
Mergent, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1217
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Retro Conversion
Backstage Library Works. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1112
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Contentra Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2028
MARCIVE, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1239
RFID
3M Library Systems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 753
Backstage Library Works. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1112
Bibliotheca. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 663
D-Tech International USA, LLC. . . . . . . . . 1837
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 963
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568F
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
P.V. Supa, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1967
Serials/ACQ Systems
Equinox Software, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1843
Ex Libris North America . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1143
VTLS Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1614
Tape Processing
Dematic. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1669
Technical Information
ASM International. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2111
Association for Computing Machinery. . . . 2171
BayScan Technologies. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1865
D-Tech International USA, LLC. . . . . . . . . 1837
Elsevier Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 717
Ex Libris North America . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1143
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
OdiloTid, S.L.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2165
Treehouse. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1908
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
Web Products
Auto-Graphics, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1111
AWE, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1755
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
BiblioCommons Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1743
Booksite. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 429
Boopsie for Libraries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2032
CHOICE Magazine. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1126
CLCD, LLC (Children’s Literature
Comprehensive Database). . . . . . . . . . . . . 374
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Compendium Library Services . . . . . . . . . 1027
Counting Opinions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1627
Equinox Software, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1843
Evanced Solutions, LLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1103
Ex Libris North America . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1143
Geographic Research, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . 1271
Infovision Software, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1255
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
Innovative Interfaces. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1035
LexisNexis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 815
Library of Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1709
Library Systems & Services (LSSI). . . . . . .1128
MARCIVE, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1239
Mergent, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1217
NewsBank/Readex. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1415
Paratext. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1029
Reed Tech . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2146
ResCarta Foundation, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1257
SimplyMap. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1271
Springshare . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1847
University of Fashion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2073
Video Librarian. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1960
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
World Book Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 649
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
exhibitor listings by product
Atiz Innovation, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1916
Auto-Graphics, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1111
BayScan Technologies. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1865
Bibliotheca. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 663
BioMed Central . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1667
Book Systems, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1519
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
CASSIE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1362
CoLibri Systems North America, Inc.. 308, 1630
Dematic. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1669
D-Tech International USA, LLC. . . . . . . . . 1837
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 963
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568F
Evanced Solutions, LLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1103
Indus International, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1763
Infovision Software, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1255
Innovative Interfaces. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1035
Librarica LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1362
Library of Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1709
Lyngsoe Systems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 655
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
Muratec. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2151
OCLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 913
P.V. Supa, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1967
Scannx, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1248
Schedule3W/Medianet Dymaxion. . . . . . . 1762
VTLS Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1614
Public Information Kiosk, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . 1330
Stanger Litho-Library Services Div.. . . . . . 2117
VenMill Industries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1764
231
BOOKS, PERIODICALS,
DOCUMENTS
ADA
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Library of Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1709
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Alternative Books
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Antiquarian
NewsBank/Readex. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1415
Art Books
ABC-CLIO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1343
Abrams Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 628
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Barron’s. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2144
Casalini Libri - Fiesole, Italy. . . . . . . . . . . . 1656
Crabtree Publishing Company . . . . . . . . . . 214
East View Information Services. . . . . . . . . 1547
Erasmus Boekhandel BV . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1654
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
OpenEdition. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1437
Red Rock Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1346A
Sterling Publishing Co. Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 622
VIZ Media. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2013
W. W. Norton & Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 616
Workman Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 414
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
exhibitor listings by product
Books/Periodicals
232
Abrams Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 628
Agate Publishing
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Alibris. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1178
Andrews McMeel Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . . 309
Annick Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325
Arte Publico Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225
B & H Publishing Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1864
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Barron’s. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2144
Boyds Mills Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 567
Brill. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1861
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Cambridge University Press. . . . . . . . . . . 1443
Cameron + Company, Inc.
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Cato Institute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1530
Clarkson Potter Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . . . 543
Clavis Publishing
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Consortium Book Sales & Distribution . . . . 343
Crabtree Publishing Company . . . . . . . . . . 214
De Gruyter, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1626
DK Publishing Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 448
East View Information Services. . . . . . . . . 1547
Edinburgh University Press. . . . . . . . . . . . 1931
Emery-Pratt Company . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1122
Enslow Publishers Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 204
Francis Lincoln Children’s Books
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Goosebottom Books
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Groundwood Books
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Grove Atlantic, Inc.
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Highlights for Children. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 569
IGI Global. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1235
Independent Publishers Group. . . . . . . . . . 232
Infobase Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1322
Information Today, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 377
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
Insight Editions
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
International Monetary Fund (IMF). . . . . . . 1526
Legato Publishers Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 322
Library Juice Academy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1954
Library Resources Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1227
Llewellyn Worldwide/FLUX
and Midnight Ink. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 235
Lorito Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225
Macmillan. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 528
Milkweed Editions
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Moody Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1662
New World Library
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
New York Review of Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . 452
Nomad Press
(dist. by Legato/Publishers Group West). . . 322
Oncology Nursing Society . . . . . . . . . . . . 2154
Open Road Integrated Media. . . . . . . . . . . 242
Owlkids Books
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Oxford University Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1135
Pardey Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1346B
Partners Publishers Group, Inc. . . . . . . . . 2108
Peachtree Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212
Penguin Young Readers Group. . . . . . . . . . 442
Perseus Books Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 334
Privateer Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2051
Publishers Group West (PGW) . . . . . . . . . . 322
QEB Publishing
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Quayside Publishing Group. . . . . . . . . . . .1750
Random House Library and Academic
Marketing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 542
Readers to Eaters
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Santa Monica Press
(dist. by Legato/Publishers Group West). . . 322
Scarletta
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Sounds True. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 372
Sterling Publishing Co. Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 622
Tanglewood Press
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
The Book House Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1751
The History Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1946
The New Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 339
Thomas Nelson Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . 511
Tin House Books
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Tor/Forge Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 532
TouchWood Editions
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Tundra Book. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 245
University of Hawaii Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1928
Value Line Publishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2248
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
W. W. Norton & Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 616
White Cloud Press
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Workman Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 414
WT Cox Information Services. . . . . . . . . . 1149
Xist Publishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1952
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
Zinio for Libraries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568D
Business Books
ABC-CLIO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1343
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Books24x7, a product line of Skillsoft. . . . 1754
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Emery-Pratt Company . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1122
Enrich Professional Publishing . . . . . . . . . 1917
Euromonitor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2181
Grey House Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1211
Information Today, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 377
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
Mergent, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1217
Partners Publishers Group, Inc. . . . . . . . . 2108
Perseus Books Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 334
Sourcebooks, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 662
The Book House Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1751
Thomas Nelson Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . 511
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
CD-ROM
Bound to Stay Bound Books . . . . . . . . . . . 516
Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) . . . . . 1524
Intelex Corp. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1617
Oxford University Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1135
World Book Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 649
Children’s Books
ABC-CLIO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1343
ABDO. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1071
Abrams Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 628
Albert Whitman & Company. . . . . . . . . . . . 517
American Psychological Association. . . . . . 763
Andrews McMeel Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . . 309
Annick Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325
Arte Publico Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225
Babalu, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 202
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Barron’s. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2144
Bloomsbury Children’s Books. . . . . . . . . . . 529
BookExpo America (BEA). . . . . . . . . . . . . . 537
Bound to Stay Bound Books . . . . . . . . . . . 516
Boyds Mills Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 567
Brilliance Publishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Cameron + Company, Inc.
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Candlewick Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 602
Capstone. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 462
Cavendish Square . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1046
Cherry Lake Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 224
Children’s Plus, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 342
Chronicle Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 608
Clavis Publishing
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
CLCD, LLC (Children’s Literature
Comprehensive Database). . . . . . . . . . . . . 374
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Consortium Book Sales & Distribution . . . . 343
Crabtree Publishing Company . . . . . . . . . . 214
Craigmore Creations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2016
Creston Books
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Demco. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 902
Diamond Book Distributors. . . . . . . . . . . . 2015
Disney - Hyperion Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 603
DK Publishing Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 448
East View Information Services. . . . . . . . . 1547
East West Discovery Press. . . . . . . . . . . . 2059
Eerdmans Books for Young Readers . . . . . 402
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Scholastic Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 430
Scholastic Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 431
Shadow Mountain Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . 227
Simon & Schuster, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 302
Star Bright Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 247
StarWalk Kids Media. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .947
Sterling Publishing Co. Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 622
Tanglewood Press
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
The History Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1946
Third Week Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1580
Thomas Nelson Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . 511
Tiger Tales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1342
Tor/Forge Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 532
Tundra Book. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 245
Tyndale House Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1535
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
VIZ Media. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2013
W. W. Norton & Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 616
White Cloud Press
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Workman Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 414
World Book Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 649
Xist Publishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1952
Cookbooks
Agate Publishing
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Andrews McMeel Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . . 309
Barron’s. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2144
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
DK Publishing Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 448
International Latino Book Awards
(Latino Literacy Now) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2110
Open Road Integrated Media. . . . . . . . . . . 242
Red Rock Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1346A
Shadow Mountain Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . 227
Simon & Schuster, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 302
Sterling Publishing Co. Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 622
W. W. Norton & Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 616
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Credo. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 863
De Gruyter, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1626
D-Tech International USA, LLC. . . . . . . . . 1837
East View Information Services. . . . . . . . . 1547
e-Libro Corporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 704
Gale, Cengage Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1303
Holiday House . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 415
IGI Global. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1235
Infobase Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1322
Information Today, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 377
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
Learning A-Z . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1962
Lerner Publishing Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 623
Llewellyn Worldwide/FLUX
and Midnight Ink. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 235
LYRASIS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 954
Mason Crest. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 371
Mitchell Lane Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 364
OneClickdigital eAudio. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568B
OneClickdigital eBooks. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568C
Open Road Integrated Media. . . . . . . . . . . 242
OpenEdition. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1437
OverDrive, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1317
Peachtree Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212
Perma-Bound Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 666
ProQuest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 703
Public Information Kiosk, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . 1330
Red Rock Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1346A
Rock’s Backpages. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2157
StarWalk Kids Media. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .947
Sterling Publishing Co. Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 622
Swets. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1455
The New Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 339
TLC - The Library Corporation . . . . . . . . . 1043
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
World Book Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 649
WT Cox Information Services. . . . . . . . . . 1149
Xist Publishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1952
Electronic Online Journals
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Euromonitor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2181
Grey House Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1211
Infogroup-ReferenceUSA. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1429
Information Today, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 377
Library Resources Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1227
Taylor & Francis Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 953
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Basch Subscriptions, Inc., A Prenax Inc.. . . 2061
BioMed Central . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1667
Bloomsbury Academic. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 479
CAIRN INFO. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2274
Cambridge University Press. . . . . . . . . . . 1443
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
De Gruyter, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1626
Edinburgh University Press. . . . . . . . . . . . 1931
Information Today, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 377
OpenEdition. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1437
OpinionArchives. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1254
Rock’s Backpages. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2157
Swets. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1455
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
WT Cox Information Services. . . . . . . . . . 1149
eBooks
Electronic Resources
Demographics
East View Information Services. . . . . . . . . 1547
Euromonitor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2181
Geographic Research, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . 1271
SimplyMap. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1271
Directories
3M Library Systems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 753
Accessible Archives, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1738
BiblioCommons Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1743
BioMed Central . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1667
Boyds Mills Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 567
Britannica Digital Learning . . . . . . . . . . . . 1817
CAIRN INFO. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2274
Candlewick Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 602
Capstone. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 462
Casalini Libri - Fiesole, Italy. . . . . . . . . . . . 1656
Accessible Archives, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1738
Ambrose Video Publishing . . . . . . . . . . . . 1273
Artstor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1379
ASM International. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2111
Basch Subscriptions, Inc., A Prenax Inc.. . . 2061
BioMed Central . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1667
Bloomsbury Academic. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 479
Brill. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1861
CAIRN INFO. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2274
Credo. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 863
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
exhibitor listings by product
Egmont USA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 454
Emery-Pratt Company . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1122
Enslow Publishers Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 204
Evanced Solutions, LLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1103
Findaway World. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 875
Fitzhenry & Whiteside. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1176
Francis Lincoln Children’s Books
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Gareth Stevens Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . . . 943
Goosebottom Books
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Groundwood Books
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
HarperCollins Children’s Books. . . . . . . . . . 503
Highlights for Children. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 569
Holiday House . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 415
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 403
Independent Publishers Group. . . . . . . . . . 232
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
Insight Editions
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
International Latino Book Awards
(Latino Literacy Now) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2110
James Lorimer & Company . . . . . . . . . . . . 323
Junior Library Guild. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 829
Kane Miller/Usborne Books . . . . . . . . . . . . 218
Kids Can Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 650
KO Kids Books
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Learning Props L.L.C.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1483
Lee & Low Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 626
Legato Publishers Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 322
Lerner Publishing Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 623
Little, Brown Books for Young Readers. . . . 422
Llewellyn Worldwide/FLUX
and Midnight Ink. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 235
Lorito Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225
Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group. . . . 522
Martin Pearl Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 239
Mason Crest. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 371
MerryMakers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 243
Mitchell Lane Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 364
National Geographic. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 642
New York Review of Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . 452
Nomad Press
(dist. by Legato/Publishers Group West). . . 322
Norwood House Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 222
Open Road Integrated Media. . . . . . . . . . . 242
Orca Book Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 654
Owlkids Books
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Partners Publishers Group, Inc. . . . . . . . . 2108
Peachtree Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212
Penguin Young Readers Group. . . . . . . . . . 442
Perma-Bound Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 666
Progressive Rising Phoenix Press, LLC. . . 2045
Publisher Spotlight. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 240
Publishers Group West (PGW) . . . . . . . . . . 322
QEB Publishing
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Quayside Publishing Group. . . . . . . . . . . .1750
Rainbow Book Company. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213
Random House Children’s Books. . . . . . . . 543
Readers to Eaters
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Red Rock Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1346A
Rogue Bear Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1948
Rosen Publishing Group Inc. . . . . . . . . . . 1042
Rourke Educational Media. . . . . . . . . . . . . 217
Scarletta
233
Edinburgh University Press. . . . . . . . . . . . 1931
e-Libro Corporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 704
IGI Global. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1235
Infobase Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1322
Information Today, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 377
Kanopy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1463
Learning A-Z . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1962
Mergent, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1217
NewsBank/Readex. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1415
Northern Micrographics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1663
ResCarta Foundation, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1257
Rock’s Backpages. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2157
Transparent Language, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . 1749
Treehouse. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1908
Tutor.com. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1243
WT Cox Information Services. . . . . . . . . . 1149
Zinio for Libraries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568D
exhibitor listings by product
Foreign Language Books
234
Amalivre. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1553
Aux Amateurs De Livres-Touzot . . . . . . . . 1553
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Barron’s. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2144
CAIRN INFO. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2274
Casalini Libri - Fiesole, Italy. . . . . . . . . . . . 1656
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
East View Information Services. . . . . . . . . 1547
East West Discovery Press. . . . . . . . . . . . 2059
e-Libro Corporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 704
Erasmus Boekhandel BV . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1654
HARRASSOWITZ. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1650
Independent Publishers Group. . . . . . . . . . 232
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
International Latino Book Awards
(Latino Literacy Now) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2110
Kong & Park, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1551
Learning Props L.L.C.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1483
Lee & Low Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 626
Mango Languages. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1163
Puvill Libros S.A.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1655
Rainbow Book Company. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213
Star Bright Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 247
The Bilingual Publications Company. . . . . 1557
Tundra Book. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 245
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Genealogy
Accessible Archives, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1738
My Heritage-WorldVitalRecords . . . . . . . . 1253
General Magazines
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Information Today, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 377
New York Review of Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . 452
NewsBank/Readex. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1415
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Zinio for Libraries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568D
Government Documents
ABC-CLIO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1343
Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) . . . . . 1524
Bureau of Labor Statistics. . . . . . . . . . . . . 2229
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
EPA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2224
NewsBank/Readex. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1415
SimplyMap. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1271
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Graphic Novels/Comic Books
ABDO. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1071
Andrews McMeel Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . . 309
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Consortium Book Sales & Distribution . . . . 343
Craigmore Creations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2016
Diamond Book Distributors. . . . . . . . . . . . 2015
Papercutz. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2009
Publisher Spotlight. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 240
Publishers Group West (PGW) . . . . . . . . . . 322
UDON Entertainment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2018
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
VIZ Media. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2013
W. W. Norton & Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 616
Historical Books
Accessible Archives, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1738
Brookhaven Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1665
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
East West Discovery Press. . . . . . . . . . . . 2059
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
New York Review of Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . 452
NewsBank/Readex. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1415
OpenEdition. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1437
Partners Publishers Group, Inc. . . . . . . . . 2108
Shadow Mountain Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . 227
Simon & Schuster, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 302
The History Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1946
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Journals
ABC-CLIO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1343
American Psychological Association. . . . . . 763
Association for Computing Machinery. . . . 2171
BioMed Central . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1667
Bloomsbury Academic. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 479
Bureau of Labor Statistics. . . . . . . . . . . . . 2229
Cambridge University Press. . . . . . . . . . . 1443
CHOICE Magazine. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1126
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
De Gruyter, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1626
Edinburgh University Press. . . . . . . . . . . . 1931
Elsevier Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 717
Emerald Group Publishing Inc. . . . . . . . . . . 948
Euromonitor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2181
HARRASSOWITZ. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1650
IGI Global. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1235
Intelex Corp. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1617
NewsBank/Readex. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1415
OpinionArchives. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1254
Project MUSE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1435
ProQuest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 703
Springer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1351
Swets. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1455
Taylor & Francis Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 953
Video Librarian. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1960
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
WT Cox Information Services. . . . . . . . . . 1149
Zinio for Libraries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568D
Large Print Books
Bi-Folkal Productions, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 2043
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Gale, Cengage Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1303
Library Science Texts
ABC-CLIO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1343
BioMed Central . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1667
Information Today, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 377
The Book House Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1751
Literature & Criticism
ABC-CLIO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1343
Booklist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 617
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Consortium Book Sales & Distribution . . . . 343
Infobase Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1322
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
New York Review of Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . 452
Penguin Young Readers Group. . . . . . . . . . 442
Perseus Books Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 334
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
W. W. Norton & Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 616
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
Medical
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Elsevier Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 717
Emery-Pratt Company . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1122
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
Office of Minority Health Resources Center. 1528
Rittenhouse Book Distributors Inc.. . . . . 1568J
Springer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1351
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Microfiche
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Brookhaven Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1665
The Crowley Company. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1154
Indus International, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1763
LexisNexis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 815
NewsBank/Readex. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1415
Northern Micrographics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1663
ProQuest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 703
Microfilms
Backstage Library Works. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1112
Brookhaven Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1665
Contentra Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2028
The Crowley Company. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1154
Indus International, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1763
LexisNexis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 815
Northern Micrographics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1663
ProQuest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 703
Music/Music Reference
ABC-CLIO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1343
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Perseus Books Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 334
Rock’s Backpages. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2157
Sterling Publishing Co. Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 622
Taylor & Francis Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 953
Mystery Books
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Grove Atlantic, Inc.
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Harlequin Enterprises. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 363
Independent Publishers Group. . . . . . . . . . 232
Llewellyn Worldwide/FLUX
and Midnight Ink. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 235
Martin Pearl Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 239
Open Road Integrated Media. . . . . . . . . . . 242
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Orca Book Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 654
Partners Publishers Group, Inc. . . . . . . . . 2108
ProQuest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 703
Publishers Group West (PGW) . . . . . . . . . . 322
Shadow Mountain Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . 227
Tor/Forge Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 532
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
W. W. Norton & Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 616
Out-of-Print Books
Alibris. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1178
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
Midwest Library Service. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 837
ProQuest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 703
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
Paperbacks
Poetry Books
Boyds Mills Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 567
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Consortium Book Sales & Distribution . . . . 343
International Latino Book Awards
(Latino Literacy Now) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2110
New York Review of Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . 452
Open Road Integrated Media. . . . . . . . . . . 242
Partners Publishers Group, Inc. . . . . . . . . 2108
Penguin Young Readers Group. . . . . . . . . . 442
Sourcebooks, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 662
Sterling Publishing Co. Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 622
Tin House Books
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
W. W. Norton & Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 616
Political/Cultural
Cato Institute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1530
Independent Publishers Group. . . . . . . . . . 232
Mitchell Lane Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 364
New York Review of Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . 452
OpinionArchives. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1254
W. W. Norton & Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 616
ProQuest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 703
Upstart. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1203
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
Reference Books
Scholarly Books
ABC-CLIO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1343
American Psychological Association. . . . . . 763
ASM International. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2111
Barron’s. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2144
Bloomsbury Academic. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 479
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Cambridge University Press. . . . . . . . . . . 1443
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Credo. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 863
DK Publishing Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 448
Emery-Pratt Company . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1122
Enrich Professional Publishing . . . . . . . . . 1917
Euromonitor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2181
Federal Trade Commission. . . . . . . . . . . . 1531
Gale, Cengage Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1303
Grey House Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1211
IGI Global. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1235
Independent Publishers Group. . . . . . . . . . 232
Infobase Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1322
Information Today, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 377
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
LexisNexis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 815
McGraw-Hill Professional. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1116
Moody Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1662
Oxford University Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1135
Paratext. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1029
Partners Publishers Group, Inc. . . . . . . . . 2108
Perma-Bound Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 666
Rosen Publishing Group Inc. . . . . . . . . . . 1042
Sourcebooks, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 662
Sterling Publishing Co. Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 622
Taylor & Francis Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 953
The Book House Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1751
The Reference Shelf. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2063
The Writer’s Muse. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1956
Thomas Nelson Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . 511
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
World Bank Publications. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1523
World Book Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 649
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
ABC-CLIO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1343
American Psychological Association. . . . . . 763
Bloomsbury Academic. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 479
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Cambridge University Press. . . . . . . . . . . 1443
Cato Institute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1530
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Edinburgh University Press. . . . . . . . . . . . 1931
Elsevier Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 717
Information Today, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 377
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
Intelex Corp. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1617
Midwest Library Service. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 837
New York Review of Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . 452
Oncology Nursing Society . . . . . . . . . . . . 2154
Oxford University Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1135
Perseus Books Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 334
Taylor & Francis Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 953
Tor/Forge Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 532
University of Hawaii Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1928
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
Religion
ABC-CLIO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1343
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Brilliance Publishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Eerdmans Books for Young Readers . . . . . 402
Emery-Pratt Company . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1122
Insight Editions
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Intelex Corp. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1617
Thomas Nelson Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . 511
Tyndale House Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1535
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
White Cloud Press
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Resource and Activity Books
AAAS/Science . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1719
Boyds Mills Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 567
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
Rosen Publishing Group Inc. . . . . . . . . . . 1042
Sourcebooks, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 662
Science Books
AAAS/Science . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1719
Cambridge University Press. . . . . . . . . . . 1443
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Crabtree Publishing Company . . . . . . . . . . 214
DK Publishing Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 448
East West Discovery Press. . . . . . . . . . . . 2059
Elsevier Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 717
Enslow Publishers Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 204
Infobase Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1322
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
LexisNexis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 815
McGraw-Hill Professional. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1116
Midwest Library Service. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 837
Mitchell Lane Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 364
Perseus Books Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 334
Publisher Spotlight. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 240
Rosen Publishing Group Inc. . . . . . . . . . . 1042
Springer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1351
Sterling Publishing Co. Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 622
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
W. W. Norton & Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 616
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
Self-Help Books
Agate Publishing
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Independent Publishers Group. . . . . . . . . . 232
Insight Editions
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Llewellyn Worldwide/FLUX
and Midnight Ink. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 235
New Harbinger Publications. . . . . . . . . . . . 357
New World Library
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Open Road Integrated Media. . . . . . . . . . . 242
Readers to Eaters
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Rosen Publishing Group Inc. . . . . . . . . . . 1042
Sourcebooks, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 662
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
exhibitor listings by product
ABC-CLIO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1343
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
BookExpo America (BEA). . . . . . . . . . . . . . 537
Boyds Mills Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 567
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Disney - Hyperion Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 603
Enslow Publishers Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 204
Holiday House . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 415
Little, Brown Books for Young Readers. . . . 422
Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group. . . . 522
National Geographic. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 642
New York Review of Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . 452
Norwood House Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 222
Penguin Young Readers Group. . . . . . . . . . 442
Perma-Bound Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 666
Shadow Mountain Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . 227
Sterling Publishing Co. Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 622
Tor/Forge Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 532
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
VIZ Media. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2013
Rare Books
235
Sterling Publishing Co. Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 622
Thomas Nelson Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . 511
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
White Cloud Press
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Workman Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 414
Specialized Books
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
New Harbinger Publications. . . . . . . . . . . . 357
The History Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1946
Sports & Fitness
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Crabtree Publishing Company . . . . . . . . . . 214
Enslow Publishers Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 204
James Lorimer & Company . . . . . . . . . . . . 323
Pardey Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1346B
Perseus Books Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 334
Sourcebooks, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 662
Sterling Publishing Co. Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 622
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
White Cloud Press
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Technical Books
Books24x7, a product line of Skillsoft. . . . 1754
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Bureau of Labor Statistics. . . . . . . . . . . . . 2229
Elsevier Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 717
Emery-Pratt Company . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1122
Information Today, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 377
Midwest Library Service. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 837
Springer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1351
The Book House Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1751
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
exhibitor listings by product
Travel Books
236
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
DK Publishing Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 448
Harlequin Enterprises. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 363
Independent Publishers Group. . . . . . . . . . 232
New York Review of Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . 452
Pardey Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1346B
Partners Publishers Group, Inc. . . . . . . . . 2108
Red Rock Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1346A
University of Hawaii Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1928
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
W. W. Norton & Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 616
Web Publishing
PressReader. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568H
Springshare . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1847
voxgov. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1538
Young Adult Books
ABC-CLIO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1343
Abrams Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 628
Albert Whitman & Company. . . . . . . . . . . . 517
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Bloomsbury Children’s Books. . . . . . . . . . . 529
BookExpo America (BEA). . . . . . . . . . . . . . 537
Bound to Stay Bound Books . . . . . . . . . . . 516
Brilliance Publishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Candlewick Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 602
CBAY Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 477
Children’s Plus, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 342
Clavis Publishing
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Consortium Book Sales & Distribution . . . . 343
Craigmore Creations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2016
Creston Books
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Diamond Book Distributors. . . . . . . . . . . . 2015
Disney - Hyperion Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 603
East West Discovery Press. . . . . . . . . . . . 2059
Eerdmans Books for Young Readers . . . . . 402
Egmont USA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 454
Enslow Publishers Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 204
Fitzhenry & Whiteside. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1176
Francis Lincoln Children’s Books
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Gareth Stevens Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . . . 943
Goosebottom Books
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Groundwood Books
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Holiday House . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 415
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 403
Independent Publishers Group. . . . . . . . . . 232
International Latino Book Awards
(Latino Literacy Now) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2110
James Lorimer & Company . . . . . . . . . . . . 323
Junior Library Guild. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 829
Kids Can Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 650
Lee & Low Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 626
Legato Publishers Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 322
Lerner Publishing Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 623
Little, Brown Books for Young Readers. . . . 422
Llewellyn Worldwide/FLUX
and Midnight Ink. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 235
Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group. . . . 522
Mason Crest. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 371
Milkweed Editions
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Mitchell Lane Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 364
National Geographic. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 642
New Harbinger Publications. . . . . . . . . . . . 357
Nomad Press
(dist. by Legato/Publishers Group West). . . 322
Open Road Integrated Media. . . . . . . . . . . 242
Orca Book Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 654
Oxford University Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1135
Peachtree Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212
Penguin Young Readers Group. . . . . . . . . . 442
Publisher Spotlight. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 240
Publishers Group West (PGW) . . . . . . . . . . 322
QEB Publishing
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Rainbow Book Company. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213
Rosen Publishing Group Inc. . . . . . . . . . . 1042
Scarletta
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Scholastic Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 430
Scholastic Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 431
Shadow Mountain Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . 227
Simon & Schuster, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 302
Star Bright Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 247
StarWalk Kids Media. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .947
Tanglewood Press
(dist. by Publishers Group West). . . . . . . . . 322
Thomas Nelson Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . 511
Tor/Forge Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 532
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
VIZ Media. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2013
Workman Publishing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 414
EQUIPMENT, FURNITURE,
SUPPLIES
Archival Products
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Contex Americas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1251
The Crowley Company. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1154
Estey/Tennsco . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1223
LYRASIS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 954
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
nextScan, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2114
Reed Tech . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2146
Unikeep, A division of Univenture, Inc. . . . 2226
Watson Label Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 949
Binders
Unikeep, A division of Univenture, Inc. . . . 2226
Bookmobiles
Farber Specialty Vehicles . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1366
Copiers
Scannx, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1248
Display Cases/Fixtures/Systems
3Branch Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1869
Library Bureau Steel. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568A
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
Public Information Kiosk, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . 1330
Se-Kure Controls, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1912
Electronic Library Kiosk
Archelon Enclosures. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2174
Bibliotheca. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 663
DLSG at Image Access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1953
D-Tech International USA, LLC. . . . . . . . . 1837
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 963
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568F
Indus International, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1763
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
Public Information Kiosk, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . 1330
Scannx, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1248
Today’s Business Solutions. . . . . . . . . . . . 1961
Environmental Products
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
Furniture/Shelving/Equipment/
Supplies
3Branch Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1869
AGATI Furniture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 643
Big Cozy Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1862
Birchard Company/EZDROP . . . . . . . . . . . 936
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Burgeon Group LLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1515
Chicago One Stop/Browser Display. . . . . . 803
Demco. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 902
D-Tech International USA, LLC. . . . . . . . . 1837
Hallett & Sons Expert Movers, Inc.. . . . . . . 938
Henan USA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2246
Huggmee Chair Co., LLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1427
Innovative Label Technology. . . . . . . . . . . 2049
KI. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 469
Library Bureau Steel. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568A
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
MJ Industries Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1618
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
Montel Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1171
Nienkämper Furniture. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1974
Palmieri Furniture Ltd.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1177
Public Information Kiosk, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . 1330
Smith System. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 805
TMC Furniture, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2160
University Products Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2119
Worden Company . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 937
Library Store/Promotional Products
Upstart. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1203
Watson Label Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 949
PROGRAMS
Children’s Rooms Programs
AWE, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1755
Evanced Solutions, LLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1103
LEGO Education. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2012
Movie Licensing USA. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1263
Rogue Bear Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1948
Community Programs
OCLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 913
Orange County Library System. . . . . . . . . 1364
SERVICES
Mobile Storage
Library Bureau Steel. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568A
MJ Industries Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1618
Montel Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1171
Spacesaver Corporation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 977
William B. Meyer Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2036
Architects
Burgeon Group LLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1515
VMDO Architects. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2148
Associations
Demco. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 902
Upstart. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1203
ALISE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1922
Grant Professionals Association. . . . . . . . 1825
International Latino Book Awards
(Latino Literacy Now) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2110
Puzzles and Games
Book Wholesalers
Posters
Burgeon Group LLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1515
Highlights for Children. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 569
Learning Props L.L.C.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1483
Security Systems
Sign Systems
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Demco. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 902
TMC Furniture, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2160
Storage Systems
3Branch Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1869
Chicago One Stop/Browser Display. . . . . . 803
Dematic. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1669
D-Tech International USA, LLC. . . . . . . . . 1837
Library Bureau Steel. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568A
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
Montel Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1171
Muratec. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2151
Public Information Kiosk, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . 1330
Spacesaver Corporation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 977
TMC Furniture, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2160
Unikeep, A division of Univenture, Inc. . . . 2226
William B. Meyer Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2036
Traffic Counters
Bibliotheca. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 663
D-Tech International USA, LLC. . . . . . . . . 1837
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 963
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568F
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
Book/Audio Leasing
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Recorded Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 771
Careers
CareerOneStop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2149
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
University of Fashion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2073
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Colleges and Universities
ALISE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1922
Ambrose Video Publishing . . . . . . . . . . . . 1273
Books24x7, a product line of Skillsoft. . . . 1754
Cato Institute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1530
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Edinburgh University Press. . . . . . . . . . . . 1931
Grant Professionals Association. . . . . . . . 1825
Midwest Library Service. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 837
New Harbinger Publications. . . . . . . . . . . . 357
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. . . . . . 1932
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
voxgov. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1538
Consultants
Dewberry Architects, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1077
FamilySearch. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 971
Database Conversions
Backstage Library Works. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1112
Book Systems, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1519
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Contentra Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2028
e-Libro Corporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 704
MARCIVE, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1239
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
TLC - The Library Corporation . . . . . . . . . 1043
Database Preparation
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
Contex Americas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1251
MARCIVE, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1239
Facilities Management
Bibliotheca. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 663
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 963
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568F
Library Systems & Services (LSSI). . . . . . .1128
Federal Government Services
Auto-Graphics, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1111
CareerOneStop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2149
EPA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2224
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1527
Institute of Museum & Library Services. . . 1534
Library of Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1709
MARCIVE, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1239
Office of Minority Health
Resources Center. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1528
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. . 1827
Financial Information Provider
Global Financial Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2152
S&P Capital IQ. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 702
Value Line Publishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2248
Foreign Book Dealers
Amalivre. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1553
Aux Amateurs De Livres-Touzot . . . . . . . . 1553
Brockhaus/German Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . 637
Casalini Libri - Fiesole, Italy. . . . . . . . . . . . 1656
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
East View Information Services. . . . . . . . . 1547
Erasmus Boekhandel BV . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1654
Guadalajara Int’l Book Fair. . . . . . . . . . . . 1548
HARRASSOWITZ. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1650
Puvill Libros S.A.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1655
The Bilingual Publications Company. . . . . 1557
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Foreign Publishers
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Guadalajara Int’l Book Fair. . . . . . . . . . . . 1548
International Latino Book Awards
(Latino Literacy Now) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2110
The Bilingual Publications Company. . . . . 1557
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
exhibitor listings by product
Bibliotheca. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 663
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
CASSIE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1362
Demco. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 902
D-Tech International USA, LLC. . . . . . . . . 1837
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 963
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568F
Librarica LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1362
Se-Kure Controls, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1912
Stanger Litho-Library Services Div.. . . . . . 2117
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Bound to Stay Bound Books . . . . . . . . . . . 516
Children’s Plus, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 342
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Diamond Book Distributors. . . . . . . . . . . . 2015
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
Midwest Library Service. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 837
Partners Publishers Group, Inc. . . . . . . . . 2108
The Bilingual Publications Company. . . . . 1557
The Book House Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1751
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
Geographic Research, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . 1271
Hallett & Sons Expert Movers, Inc.. . . . . . . 938
Library Systems & Services (LSSI). . . . . . .1128
LYRASIS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 954
Sustainable Collection Services . . . . . . . . 1378
William B. Meyer Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2036
237
Fundraising
Watson Label Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 949
Interlibrary Loan Services
Atlas Systems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1023
Auto-Graphics, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1111
Brodart Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 723
DLSG at Image Access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1953
Indus International, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1763
OCLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 913
Library Promotion
Upstart. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1203
Watson Label Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 949
Moving Companies
Hallett & Sons Expert Movers, Inc.. . . . . . . 938
William B. Meyer Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2036
Online Tutoring
Brainfuse . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 463
Transparent Language, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . 1749
Tutor.com. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1243
University of Fashion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2073
Patron Card Mfg.
D-Tech International USA, LLC. . . . . . . . . 1837
Watson Label Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 949
Preservation
Backstage Library Works. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1112
The Crowley Company. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1154
LYRASIS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 954
Orange County Library System. . . . . . . . . 1364
Reed Tech . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2146
ResCarta Foundation, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1257
exhibitor listings by product
Promotional Materials
Unikeep, A division of Univenture, Inc. . . . 2226
Upstart. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1203
Watson Label Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 949
Reading Promotion
Library of Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1709
LibraryThing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1247
Recorded Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 771
Upstart. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1203
Watson Label Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 949
Scanning/Digital Imaging
Backstage Library Works. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1112
Contentra Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2028
Contex Americas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1251
The Crowley Company. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1154
DLSG at Image Access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1953
Indus International, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1763
Kodak Alaris. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1374
Northern Micrographics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1663
Scannx, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1248
Today’s Business Solutions. . . . . . . . . . . . 1961
Warren Associates. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1051
Seminars & Conferences
Birchard Company/EZDROP . . . . . . . . . . . 936
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Serial Dealers
Borckhaus/German Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . 637
238
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
WT Cox Information Services. . . . . . . . . . 1149
Services
Jones eGlobal Library. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2172
Library Juice Academy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1954
Neatoscan. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2256
Subscription Service
Accessible Archives, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1738
Amalivre. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1553
Aux Amateurs De Livres-Touzot . . . . . . . . 1553
Basch Subscriptions, Inc., A Prenax Inc.. . . 2061
Blackstone Audio. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1915
Brockhaus/German Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . 637
Casalini Libri - Fiesole, Italy. . . . . . . . . . . . 1656
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
East View Information Services. . . . . . . . . 1547
HARRASSOWITZ. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1650
Infobase Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1322
Infogroup-ReferenceUSA. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1429
Ingram Content Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611
Junior Library Guild. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 829
Popular Subscription Service. . . . . . . . . . 2071
Puvill Libros S.A.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1655
Recorded Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 771
Swets. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1455
Transparent Language, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . 1749
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
WT Cox Information Services. . . . . . . . . . 1149
YBP Library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1334
Technical Services
Baker & Taylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1333
Lucas Color Card. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2260
MARCIVE, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1239
Northern Micrographics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1663
Print2Cloud247 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2269
ResCarta Foundation, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1257
Telelift Ltd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2249
Training
Atlas Systems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1023
Bibliotheca. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 663
Combined Book Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
D-Tech International USA, LLC. . . . . . . . . 1837
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 963
EnvisionWare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1568F
mk Solutions, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208
VIP Learning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 636
Emerald Group Publishing Inc. . . . . . . . . . . 948
Enrich Professional Publishing . . . . . . . . . 1917
IGI Global. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1235
LEGO Education. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2012
Library Resources Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1227
Midwest Library Service. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 837
OpenEdition. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1437
ProQuest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 703
Rock’s Backpages. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2157
S&P Capital IQ. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 702
Tutor.com. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1243
University of Fashion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2073
University of Illinois GSLIS. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1923
University of Washington
Information School. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1927
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. . . . . . 1932
voxgov. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1538
All
Afinia 3D Printer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2117
Sterling Publishing Co. Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . . 622
Watson Label Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 949
Association
Grant Professionals Association. . . . . . . . 1825
National Information Standards Organization
(NISO). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1829
Community College
AGATI Furniture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 643
Books24x7, a product line of Skillsoft. . . . 1754
Consortium
IGI Global. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1235
Sustainable Collection Services . . . . . . . . 1378
Corporate
ASM International. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2111
Boopsie for Libraries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2032
IGI Global. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1235
ResCarta Foundation, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1257
Elementary School
ABDO. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1071
Boyds Mills Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 567
Evanced Solutions, LLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1103
Highlights for Children. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 569
Mitchell Lane Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 364
Rogue Bear Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1948
Xist Publishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1952
Federal
TYPES OF LIBRARIES
EPA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2224
Grant Professionals Association. . . . . . . . 1825
Academic
Government
ALISE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1922
ASM International. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2111
Bloomsbury Academic. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 479
Boopsie for Libraries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2032
Brill. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1861
Brookhaven Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1665
CAIRN INFO. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2274
Cambridge University Press. . . . . . . . . . . 1443
De Gruyter, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1626
Drexel University Online, College
of Computing & Informatics . . . . . . . . . . . 2238
Edinburgh University Press. . . . . . . . . . . . 1931
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. . . 2147
EPA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2224
High School
ABDO. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1071
ETS HiSET. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2115
Perma-Bound Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 666
Information-Related Organization
University of Washington Information
School. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1927
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Law
Nonprofit
School/Media Center
Cato Institute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1530
OpenEdition. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1437
voxgov. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1538
ASM International. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2111
Grant Professionals Association. . . . . . . . 1825
International Latino Book Awards
(Latino Literacy Now) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2110
Oncology Nursing Society . . . . . . . . . . . . 2154
Mitchell Lane Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 364
Reindex Library Management Services. . . 1053
Rogue Bear Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1948
Xist Publishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1952
Library School
ALISE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1922
University of Washington
Information School. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1927
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. . . . . . 1932
Medical
Oncology Nursing Society . . . . . . . . . . . . 2154
Middle School
ABDO. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1071
Mitchell Lane Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 364
Perma-Bound Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 666
Rogue Bear Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1948
Xist Publishing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1952
Museum
LYRASIS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 954
Neatoscan. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2256
Native
Lee & Low Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 626
Other
GEICO. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1918
Red Rock Press. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1346A
S&P Capital IQ. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 702
Prison Library
New Harbinger Publications. . . . . . . . . . . . 357
Public
Boopsie for Libraries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2032
Brookhaven Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1665
Mitchell Lane Publishers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 364
New Harbinger Publications. . . . . . . . . . . . 357
Northern Micrographics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1663
Research Library
Britannica Digital Learning . . . . . . . . . . . . 1817
Brookhaven Press . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1665
Reindex Library Management Services. . . 1053
University of Fashion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2073
State Library
Books24x7, a product line of Skillsoft. . . . 1754
Student
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. . . . . . 1932
Undergraduate
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. . . . . . 1932
Urban
Lee & Low Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 626
exhibitor listings by product
Tour the outdoor “Boneyard” to see vintage
neon signs at The Neon Museum.
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
239
your 2015 ALA Midwinter Meeting & Exhibits and
Annual Conference & Exhibition registration!
“The conversation starts here . . .” in Chicago, January 29-February 3, and continues
as we work on Transforming Our Libraries, Ourselves in San Francisco, June 25-30.
I have returned . . .
with a renewed
for my profession.
zest
—Cortni O’Brien
A must for the library professional
who wants to stay
ALA is the
of the
—Gwendolyn B.
Guster Welch
The greatest
place on earth to
—Twana Cannon
—Yoshira Castro
investment for
your money.
—Jude Schanzer
with fellow librarians.
conferences open
gates to knowledge.
professional development experience.
—Ellen Spring
Like swimming in a cauldron of
and stirring up some of your own.
—Matt Weston
to see, to do, to learn. —Chet Mulawka
A feast at the
of library knowledge.
—Jeff White
Get the most at the best price—
plus priority access for housing.
Bundle registration for both events is
open September 9-30, 2014.
Midwinter Meeting-only registration opens October 1, 2014.
Annual Conference-only registration opens January 12, 2015.
alamidwinter.org
• alaannual.org
,
Index
A
Affiliate Assembly Executive Committee (AASL), 122
Affiliate Assembly Meeting I/II (AASL), 124, 138
Affiliate Groups (AFL)
ABOS (See Association of Bookmobile and Outreach Services
(ABOS): Bookmobiles 101)
AILA (See American Indian Library Association (AILA))
APALA (See Asian Pacific American Librarians Association (APALA))
ARL (See Association of Research Libraries (ARL))
BCALA (See Black Caucus of the American Library Association
(BCALA))
Beta Phi Mu (See Beta Phi Mu)
CALA (See Chinese American Librarians Association (CALA))
GPA—Crafting a Successful Grant Proposal: Tips & Tricks to Win
Every Point, 143
Literacy Outcomes in Fabulous Las Vegas, Nevada, 74, 129
Nevada Library Association Annual Board Meeting, 127
OLAC (See Online Audiovisual Catalogers Inc. (OLAC))
Performing Vegas: Documenting Music and Stage in Sin City, 132
REFORMA (See National Association to Promote Library &
Information Services to Latinos and the Spanish Speaking
(REFORMA))
ULC (See Urban Libraries Council (ULC): Connecting Youth: Key
Findings from the Learning Labs in Libraries and Museums
Projects)
Affiliates Committee Meeting (BCALA), 132
Affiliates Showcase (ALCTS), 75, 136
AFL-CIO/ALA Joint Committee on Library Service to Labor Groups
(RUSA), 131
Africa
Cooperate, Preserve, Share: Improving Access to Primary Source
Materials from Africa (poster), 181
Growing Libraries, Growing Librarians: Partnerships with Libraries
and Library Schools in Africa, 22, 65, 105, 143
Afro-American Studies Librarians Section (AFAS). See under Association
of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
AILA. See American Indian Library Association (AILA)
AL21C. See America’s Libraries for the 21st Century (AL21C)
Subcommittee Meeting (OITP)
ALA. See American Library Association (ALA)
ALA Ambassadors, 53
ALA and Moving Ahead with Digital Content (OITP), 67, 94, 132
ALA-APA (American Library Association–Allied Professional Association)
Board of Directors, 122
Certification Program Committee, 132
Certification Update, 64, 139
Certified Public Library Administrator Review Committee, 124
Earn What You’re Worth: Salary Negotiation for Library Workers, 54,
70, 108, 145
Promotions & Fundraising Committee, 134
Salaries & Status of Library Workers, 146
ALA Awards Presentation and President’s Program (Lois Lowry with Jeff
Bridges), 10, 55, 110
ALA/Council Incoming Committee Chairs Strategic Leadership Meeting
(ALA), 85, 123
ALA/IIDA Library Interior Design Awards (LLAMA-BES), 70, 144
ALA Membership Pavilion, 24, 53
ALA Office, 42
ALAPlay 2014 (GAMERT), 25, 71, 124
ALA Scholarship Award Winners’ Breakfast (EBSCO Publishing; UNO),
140
ALA Store, 24
ALCTS. See Association for Library Collections and Technical Services
(ALCTS)
ALCTS 101, 54, 124
Alexander Street Press Breakfast (UNO), 138
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Index a
AAMES. See under Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
AAP Children’s Author Speed Dating (UNO), 131
AAP Library Family Feud (UNO), 145
AAP/LibraryReads Book-a-Licious Breakfast (UNO), 128
AASL. See American Association of School Librarians (AASL)
AASL 101, 54, 96, 134
AASL/ACRL Interdivisional Committee on Information Literacy, 142
Aboriginal Students. See First Steps for Aboriginal Students: The Library’s
Partnership with the Aboriginal Centre (poster)
ABOS. See Association of Bookmobile and Outreach Services (ABOS):
Bookmobiles 101
Abrams Books for Young Readers/Amulet Books (Book Buzz Theater;
ALA), 16, 156
Academic Friends and Development Officers Discussion Group (UNITED),
75, 141
Academic Library Services to International Students Interest Group
(ACRL), 134
Academic Library Trends and Statistics Survey Editorial Board (ACRL),
138
Accessibility: Opening Windows to Digital Collections (poster), 181
Accessible Documents and Presentations. See Other Content, The:
Creating Accessible Documents and Presentations (LITA)
Accessible eBooks: Ensuring That Your Library’s eContent Is Universally
Accessible to All (ASCLA, SRRT), 68, 85, 127
Access to Continuing Resources Interest Group (ALCTS-CRS), 68, 145
Access to Information Committee Meeting (RUSA), 128, 148
Accidental Map Librarian, The (MAGIRT), 68, 94, 133
Accreditation Appeal Process Training (ALA), 124
ACG. See Advocacy Coordinating Group (ACG) Meeting (ALA)
Acquisitions Managers & Vendors Interest Group (ALCTS-AS), 67, 143
Acquisitions Section (AS). See under Association for Library Collections
and Technical Services (ALCTS)
ACRL. See Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
ACRL 101 & Membership Meeting, 54, 85, 126
ACRL/LLAMA Interdivisional Committee on Building Resources Meeting,
143
ACRL/SPARC Forum, 134
Action Council Meeting I/II (SRRT), 128, 145
Administration of Collection Management Interest Group (ALCTS-CMS),
68, 136
Advisory Board Meeting (American Libraries; ALA), 132
Advisory Committees/Groups
Center for Civic Life (ALA), 139
Continuing Education (PLA), 131
Digital Inclusion Survey (ALA), 134
HRDR, 149
Library Advisory Committee ¬¬¬Meeting (OITP), 123
MARC (UNO), 128, 145
Membership (PLA), 128
OITP, 122, 147
OLOS, 127
PCPAC, 130, 149
PLDS (PLA), 141
Public Libraries (Journal; PLA), 123
Reference Publishing (RUSA-CODES), 141
Website (ALA), 145
Advisory Council (ACRL-EBSS), 144
Advocacy. See Power of Persuasion, The: Developing Influence to
Become Your Own Best Advocate (AASL)
Advocacy Coordinating Group (ACG) Meeting (ALA), 143
Advocating Smarter: Powerful Persuasion Techniques for the Influential
Professional (Spectrum Institute; ALA), 17, 64, 122
AFAS. See under Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
241
a Index
242
ALISE Cooperative Library and Information Studies Alumni Reunion, 52,
146
All Committee(s) Meetings
AASL, 148
ACRL
ARTS, 144
CJCLS, 140
DLS, 140
EBSS, 126, 129
LES, 147
LPSS, 126
SEES, 134
STS, 126–127
ULS, 145
WGSS, 127
ALCTS (with Executive Committee)
AS, 132
CMS, 139
CRS, 127
PARS, 148
ALSC, 139
ASCLA, 146
EMIERT (with Executive Meeting), 141
GODORT, 124
LIRT, 130
LITA, 130
LLAMA (all sections), 127
National Conference (REFORMA), 147
PLA, 128
REFORMA, 126
RUSA
HS (with Open House), 128
MARS, 128
RSS (with Open House), 128
STARS, 128
All Discussion Meeting (ALSC), 143
All Division-Level Committees (LLAMA), 133
Alliance for Association Excellence (AASL), 122
Allied Professional Association. See ALA-APA (American Library
Association–Allied Professional Association)
All Section Committees (LLAMA), 127
All Subcommittee Meeting (IRC/IRRT), 127
All Task Force Meeting (SRRT), 126
All Task Forces Meeting (ACRL-STS), 144, 145
Ally-brarian, The (ignite session), 78, 142
ALSC. See Association for Library Service to Children (ALSC)
ALSC 101, 54, 99, 136
Alternate Career Paths: Federal Opportunities (JobLIST Placement
Center; ALA), 39, 145
Altmetrics in Practice (EBSCO Publishing; UNO), 135
alumni receptions. See Library School (LS) events: ALISE Cooperative
Library and Information Studies Alumni Reunion
Amazing Audiobooks for Young Adults (YALSA), 133
Ambassadors (ALA), 53
Amelia Bloomer Project and Rainbow Project Author Panel (SRRT), 63,
128
American Association of School Librarians (AASL)
AASL 101, 54, 96, 134
Affiliate Assembly Executive Committee, 122
Affiliate Assembly Meeting I/II, 124, 138
All Committee Meeting, 148
Alliance for Association Excellence, 122
Awards Ceremony, 129
Awards Green Room, 126
Best Apps for Teaching and Learning, 74, 96, 134
Best of the Best from the American University Presses, The, 67, 107,
142
Best Websites for Teaching and Learning, 74, 98, 135
Board of Directors Meeting I/II, 123, 133
CLASS Research Report, 75, 144
College Readiness Dialogues: Together We Succeed, 74, 105, 142
Common Core IRL: In Real Libraries, 74, 102, 140
Designing Effective Library Experiences for African-American Male
Youth, 74, 100, 138
ESLS (Educators of School Librarians Section) Meeting, 122
Executive Committee Meeting I/II, 121, 150
Interdivisional Committee on Information Literacy (with ACRL), 142
ISS (Independent Schools Section)
Meeting, 147
Social, 124
Tour, 121
Joint Intellectual Freedom Committee Meeting (with ALSC, YALSA),
142
Joint Youth Divisions Executive Meeting (with ALSC, YALSA), 121
Joint Youth Legislation Committee (with ALSC, YALSA), 131
Knowledge Quest Editorial Board Meeting, 148
Learning4Life Coordinators Meeting, 148
Makerspace and Digital Badging: New Avenues to Help Students
Show What They Know, 74, 103, 140
National Conference Committee Meeting, 142
NCATE (See NCATE (AASL))
No More Eye-Candy! Inspiring Visual Imagination, Assessing Visual
Creativity, 106, 142
Past-President’s Luncheon, 131
PBL Way, The: Partnerships, Pedagogy and Purpose, 123
Play, Play, Learn: Games and the Common Core Library, 74, 115,
149
Power of Persuasion, The: Developing Influence to Become Your
Own Best Advocate, 121
President’s Program, 28, 91, 129
Project Connect Panel, 99, 135
Pros and Cons of Coming in 3rd Place, The, 66, 99, 135
Retiree SIG Meeting, 142
School/Public Library Cooperation (with ALSC, YALSA), 146
SPVS (Supervisors Section)
Leading the Way—Strategies for Moving School Library
Programs Forward, 75, 144
Meeting, 147
Stepping Up: Providing Effective Library and Information Services,
Programs and Resources to Students with Disabilities, 74, 109,
144
Student SIG Meeting, 145
“TC Reads!” Breathing New Life into Book Program, 74, 96, 134
Teaching Digital Citizenship to Youth with Autism Spectrum Disorders,
74, 116, 150
Teach Me SUCCESS: Teaching Success and Strong Character
through Characters Kids Love, 74, 115, 149
USBBY (See United States Board on Books for Young People
(USBBY))
What We Need Around Here Is a Little More Chaos: Embracing
Disorganization and Discruption, 74, 110, 146
American Dream Starts @ Your Library, The (ALA)
Meetup and Tea, 71
Stories from the Field—The American Dream Starts @ Your Library,
71, 107, 143
American Indian Library Association (AILA)
American Indian Youth Literature Awards, 146
Business Meeting, 143
Celebrating 35 Years of AILA, 129
Executive Board Meeting, 124
American Indian Youth Literature Awards (AILA), 146
American Libraries Advisory Board Meeting (ALA), 132
American Library Association (ALA). See also ALA-APA (American Library
Association–Allied Professional Association)
Accreditation Appeal Process Training, 124
acronyms, 60–61
Advocacy Coordinating Group (ACG) Meeting, 143
ALA Store, 24
Ambassadors, 53
American Dream Starts @ Your Library, The—Meetup and Tea, 71
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Resolutions Committee, 134
Digital Content Working Group (DCWG) Subgroup Meeting, 136,
140, 145
Digital Inclusion Survey Advisory Committee Meeting, 134
Discovery: The New Name for Reader’s Advisory, 63, 113, 148
Diversity Success Stories, 65, 98, 136
Division Leaders and the Budget Analysis & Review Committee, 144
Divisions’ Leadership Breakfast, 138
divisions of
AASL (See American Association of School Librarians (AASL))
ACRL (See Association of College and Research Libraries
(ACRL))
ALCTS (See Association for Library Collections and Technical
Services (ALCTS))
ALSC (See Association for Library Service to Children (ALSC))
ASCLA (See Association of Specialized and Cooperative Library
Agencies (ASCLA))
division presidents, 8
LITA (See Library and Information Technology Association (LITA))
LLAMA (See Library Leadership and Management Association
(LLAMA))
PLA (See Public Library Association (PLA))
presidential programs (See Presidential Programs)
RUSA (See Reference and User Services Association (RUSA))
YALSA (See Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA))
Draft Revised Standards for Accreditation of LIS Master’s Programs,
146
Education Assembly, 130
Emerging Leaders (See Emerging Leaders (ALA))
E-Rate Task Force Meeting, 139
Eurasia and Central Asia Subcommittee Program, 105, 143
Europe Subcommittee Program, 74, 93, 132
Executive Board
Executive Board Meeting I–III, 55, 122, 149, 150
Executive Committee, 121
Finance & Audit Committee, 131
members of, 7
Exhibits Closing Reception (Wrap-Up/Rev-Up), 155
External Review Panel Training, 121
film program (See Now Showing @ ALA (film program))
first-time attendee information, 53
FTRF (See Freedom to Read Foundation (FTRF; ALA))
Future of Libraries, 89
general conference information, 3, 35–36
Graphic Novel Petting Zoo, 63, 98, 136
Graphic Novels & Comics in Libraries Member Interest Group
Business Meeting, 130
Graphic Novel Stage (See Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage (ALA))
green meeting efforts, 26
Grow Forward: Professional Education Needs in the 21st Century, 70,
93, 132
Guide to Reference Editorial Meeting, 132
IFLA Update, 22, 75, 130
IMLS (Institute of Museum and Library Services) Update, 100, 139
Inaugural Brunch, 11, 150
Information Manipulation Part II: Surveillance, 111, 147
International Council of Library Association Executives (ICLAE)
Meeting, 140
International Relations Program, 75, 110, 146
Introduction to Women’s Issues: The Staff Potluck, 132
Joint Committee on Library Service to Labor Groups (See AFL-CIO/
ALA Joint Committee on Library Service to Labor Groups (RUSA))
“Kitchen Table” Conversations, 126, 138, 147
Korean Libraries Today and Tomorrow, 109, 145
Leaders Wanted / LIS Doctoral Program Options Fair: Cultivating
Diversity in LIS Education, 130
Leading with Ebooks: New Strategies for Librarians and Publishers,
67, 110, 145
Leaning International...Recipes from the Field, 22, 75, 115, 149
Legislation Assembly, 147
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Index a
American Libraries Advisory Board Meeting, 132
Annual Library Camp, 25, 71, 150
Auditorium Speaker Series (See Auditorium Speaker Series (ALA))
Awards Presentation and President’s Program (Lois Lowry with Jeff
Bridges), 55, 110, 145
Awards/President’s Reception, 55, 146
Best and Worst Manga, 63, 101, 140
Book Buzz Theater (See Book Buzz Theater (ALA))
Booklist Editorial Advisory Board Meeting, 129
Bookmobile (See Bookmobile Saturday (OLOS))
Bringing the Comic Festival to YOUR Library!, 66, 98, 134
Campaign for America’s Libraries Subcommittee Meeting, 132
Career Development Workshops (See under JobLIST Placement
Center (ALA))
Center for Civic Life Advisory Committee, 139
Chapter Councilors Forum, 150
Chapter Leaders Forum, 69, 122
Citizenship Programs and Resources at the Library, 71, 100, 139
Closing General Session (B. J. Novak), 11, 55, 150
committees of
Award Committee, 127, 149
BARC (See Budget Analysis and Review Committee (BARC;
ALA))
COL (See Committee on Legislation (COL; ALA))
COLA (See Committee on Library Advocacy (COLA) Meeting
(ALA))
Committee on Accreditation, 126, 138
Committee on Archives, Libraries, and Museums (CALM; ALA),
141
Committee on Diversity and All Sub-Committee Business
Meeting, 122
Committee on Education, 127
Committee on Literacy
All Subcommittee Planing Meeting, 130
Literacy Assembly Meeting, 123
Committee on Membership Meetings, 122
Committee on Organization Meeting I/II, 130, 145
Committee on Professional Ethics I/II, 124, 147
Committee on Research and Statistics Meeting, 143
Committee on the Status of Women in Librarianship (COSWL),
136
Conference Committee, 132
Constitution & Bylaws Committee Meeting, 132
Council Orientation Committee, 124
CRC (See Chapter Relations Committee (CRC) Meeting I/II (ALA))
Executive Board Executive Committee, 121
Finance & Audit Committee (Executive Board), 131
IFC (See Intellectual Freedom Committee (IFC))
IRC Americas (See IRC Americas Subcommittee Program (ALA))
Membership Committee Meeting, 132
Nominating Committee Meeting, 150
Public Awareness Committee (PAC) Meeting, 134
Scholarships & Study Grants Committee, 139
Training, Orientation, and Leadership Development (TOLD)
Committee, 122
Website Advisory Committee Meeting, 145
conference office locator, 42
Conference Program Coordinating Team, 130
Cooking @ ALA (See What’s Cooking @ ALA Stage)
Council
Council/Executive Board/Membership Information Session, 55,
134
Council Forum I/II, 55, 147, 150
Council I–III, 55, 139, 147, 150
Council Incoming Committee Chairs Strategic Leadership
Meeting, 85, 123
Orientation Committee, 124
Orientation for New and Reelected Councilors, 55, 85, 126
Policy Monitoring Committee, 142
Prompt Book Meeting I–III, 126, 147, 150
243
a Index
244
Let’s Talk Comics: A Roundtable Discussion, 63, 113, 148
Librarians Take SXSW by Storm!, 101, 139
Libraries Fostering Civic Engagement Member Interest Group, 140
Library Champions, 51
Library Champions, ALA Advocates and Legacy Society Reception,
121
Library Communicators’ Network, 136
Library Games, The, 25, 150
Library Services in Multi-Branch Networks in China, 22, 75, 98, 136
Library Support Staff Certification (LSSC) Review Committee, 143
Making a Mentorship Match: What Works, What Doesn’t, and What
Can ALA Offer, 64, 87, 127
Managing Challenges: Maximizing Impact: Policies and Practices for
Controversial Programming, 65, 90, 130
Membership Meeting, 55, 75, 136
Membership Pavilion, 24, 53
Membership Promotion Task Force, 134
Merritt Fund (See LeRoy C. Merritt Humanitarian Fund (ALA):
Intellectual Freedom 101 (with FTRF, IFRT))
Money Smart Week @ Your Library, 74, 106, 143
New Library Imprint, The: Libraries and Self Publishing, 71, 88, 127
offices of
HRDR (See Office for Human Resource Development and
Recruitment (HRDR): Advisory Committee (ALA))
OITP (See Office for Information Technology Policy (OITP; ALA))
OLOS (See Office for Literacy and Outreach Services (OLOS;
ALA))
WO (See Washington Office (WO; ALA))
Opening General Session, 9, 55, 124
Out-of-the-Box Book Clubs to Banish the Boring, 66, 106, 143
Panel: Public Libraries and Digital Inclusion, 66, 103, 141
Placement Center (See JobLIST Placement Center (ALA))
Planning & Budget Assembly (PBA), 143
PopTop Stage (See PopTop Stage (ALA))
poster sessions (See Poster Sessions)
Power, Privilege, and Positionality: Applying a Critical Lens to LIS
Education, 65, 109, 145
presidential welcome letter, 4
PR Forum: Stories Matter—13 Tips and One Cautionary Note for
Powerful Narratives That Drive Social Impact, 66, 99, 138
Programming Librarian Interest Group Meeting, 66, 136
Promotion, Advocacy, and Creative Funding Ideas for Rural or Tribal
Libraries, 65, 94, 132
Public and Cultural Programs Advisory Committee (PCPAC): Advisory
Committee Meeting I/II, 130, 149
Public Libraries and Digital Inclusion (Panel), 66, 103, 141
Rebranding Librarianship—Building a Knowledge Alliance, 70, 103,
141
Recruitment Assembly, 69, 148
Role and Limitations of Social Media as an Information Source in the
Middle East, The (ALA), 22, 107, 143
Round Table Coordinating Assembly, 122
round tables
EMIERT (See Ethnic and Multicultural Information Exchange
Round Table (EMIERT; ALA))
ERT (See Exhibits Round Table (ERT; ALA))
FAFLRT (See Federal and Armed Forces Libraries Round Table
(FAFLRT; ALA))
GAMERT (See Games and Gaming Round Table (GAMERT; ALA))
GLBTRT (See Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgendered Round
Table (GLBTRT; ALA))
GODORT (See Government Documents Round Table (GODORT;
ALA))
IFRT (See Intellectual Freedom Round Table (IFRT; ALA))
IRRT (See International Relations Round Table (IRRT; ALA))
LEARNRT (See Learning Roundtable (LEARNRT; ALA))
LHRT (See Library History Round Table (LHRT; ALA))
LIRT (See Library Instruction Round Table (LIRT; ALA))
LRRT (See Library Research Round Table (LRRT; ALA))
LSSIRT (See Library Support Staff Interests Round Table (LSSIRT;
ALA))
MAGIRT (See Map and Geospatial Information Round Table
(MAGIRT; ALA))
NMRT (See New Members Round Table (NMRT; ALA))
RMRT (See Retired Members Round Table (RMRT; ALA))
SRRT (See Social Responsibilities Round Table (SRRT; ALA))
SUSTAINRT (See Sustainability Round Table (SUSTAINRT; ALA))
VRT (See Video Round Table (VRT; ALA))
Schneider Family Book Award Luncheon, 149
Singapore Libraries—Trend Setters in Community Engagement and
Collaboration (ALA), 22, 75, 113, 148
Speaking about The Speaker, 65, 115, 149
Spectrum Institute (See Spectrum Institute (ALA))
sponsor thanks, 50
Stories from the Field—The American Dream Starts @ Your Library,
71, 107, 143
TEDx: An Independently Hosted Event at Your Library, 123
Think Fit, 26, 37, 138
Time to Reskill: An Action Plan for Literacy, 65, 98, 134
Turning Outward to Lead Change in Your Community
Aspirations, 66, 88, 127
Intentionality, 66, 101, 139
Sustaining Yourself, 66, 107, 143
Turn Quiz, 66, 95, 132
Unconference, 25, 71, 122
What Is an RDA “Record”?, 101, 139
What Would You Do? Ethics in Action: Libraries and Law
Enforcement, 65, 108, 143
Who Uses Libraries and Who Doesn’t: A Special Typology, 67, 114,
148
Wrap Up/Rev Up Party, 155
American Psychological Association (APA; UNO)
Librarian Roundtable Breakfast, 140
Lunch and Learn, 150
America’s Libraries for the 21st Century (AL21C) Subcommittee Meeting
(OITP), 124
Analytics, Simplified: A Unified, Data-Driven Approach to Decision
Support (UNO), 131
Andrew Carnegie Medals for Excellence in Fiction and Nonfiction (RUSA),
37, 63, 138
Angelini, Josephine (Class of 2K14’s YA vs. MG Trivia Showdown;
PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 164
Angleberger, Tom (Graphic Novel Author Panel; Graphic Novel/Gaming
Stage; ALA), 168, 170
Animation
Experimenting with Animation: Lehman College’s Animated
Information Literacy Advocate (LITA), 75, 86
Teaching Information Literacy Through Graphic Novels and Animation
(poster), 181
Annual Conference 2014 & 2015 Program Subcommittees Meeting
(PLA), 128
Annual Conference Program Committee Meeting (UNITED), 149
Annual Library Camp (ALA), 25, 71, 150
Annual Program (CALA), 143
ANSS. See under Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
Answering Tough Questions as You Improve Your Interviewing Skills
(JobLIST Placement Center; ALA), 38, 131
Anthropology and Sociology Section (ANSS). See under Association of
College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
Anthropology Librarians Discussion Group (ACRL-ANSS), 67, 146
APA. See ALA-APA (American Library Association–Allied Professional
Association); American Psychological Association (APA; UNO)
APALA. See Asian Pacific American Librarians Association (APALA)
Apps Are All Right, The! Exploring the Role of Apps in Children’s and Teen
Services (ALSC), 71, 87, 127
Are You Ready? Developing a Disaster Preparedness Plan for Libraries
(poster), 181
Are You Taking a Gamble on Your Academic Library Career by Having a
Baby (or Two)? (ACRL), 70, 112, 148
ARL. See Association of Research Libraries (ARL)
ARL Licensing Initiative Task Force (LYRASIS; UNO), 129
Articles on Demand: Library Perspectives (ALCTS-CRS), 67, 114, 149
Artist Alley (pavilion), 157
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Continuing Education Committee, 134
Copy Cataloging Interest Group, 67, 127
Executive Committee II, 141
Faceted Subject Access Interest Group, 73, 136
Forum, 68, 143
Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR)
Interest Group (with ALCTS), 67, 122
Heads of Cataloging Interest Group, 68, 148
Library Code Year Interest Group (with LITA), 73, 132
Metadata Interest Group (with ALCTS, ALCTS-CRS), 67, 139
Metadata Standards Committee (with LITA, ALCTS-PARS,
ALCTS-CRS, ALCTS-AS), 143
Policy and Planning Committee, 148
Recruiting and Mentoring Committee, 132
Research and Publication Committee, 136
Subject Analysis Committee (SAC)
Meeting I/II, 139, 149
RDA Subcommittee, 124
Subcommittee on Genre/Form Implementation I/II, 132, 148
Subcommittee on Genre/Form LCGFT Literature Terms, 127
Care of Borrowed Special Collections: Playing Nice with Other
People’s Toys, 67, 100, 139
CMS (Collection Management Section)
Administration of Collection Management Interest Group, 68, 136
All Committee and Executive Committee, 139
Chief Collection Development Officers of Large Research
Libraries Interest Group, 68, 127
Collection Development Issues for the Practitioner Interest Group,
68, 132
Collection Development Librarians of Academic Libraries Interest
Group, 68, 134
Collection Evaluation and Assessment Interest Group, 68, 143
Collection Management and Development Research Forum, 74,
146
Collection Management and Electronic Resources Interest Group,
68, 145
Collection Management in Public Libraries Interest Group, 68,
149
Continuing Education Committee, 143
Creating Sustainable AV Preservation in Academic Libraries, 73,
114–115, 149
Creative Ideas in Technical Services, 67, 145
CRS (Continuing Resources Section)
Access to Continuing Resources Interest Group, 68, 145
All Committee and Executive Committee Meeting, 127
Articles on Demand: Library Perspectives, 68, 114, 149
College and Research Libraries Interest Group, 68, 139
Continuing Resources Cataloging Forum, 68, 149
Continuing Resources Standards Forum, 68, 141
Discovering Open Access Articles: Maximum Access, Maximum
Visibility!, 73, 96, 134
Electronic Resources Interest Group (with ALCTS), 67, 132
Holdings Information Forum, 68, 134
Metadata Interest Group (with ALCTS, ALCTS-CaMMS), 67, 139
Metadata Standards Committee (with LITA, ALCTS-PARS,
ALCTS-CaMMS, ALCTS-AS), 143
Dewey Update Breakfast (OCLC) and Public Libraries Technical
Services Interest Group, 126
Division All Committee Meeting, 143
Division Committee Chairs, 141
E-Books: Discovering the Virtual Backlog, 67, 102, 141
Electronic Resources Interest Group (with ALCTS-CRS), 67, 132
Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR) Interest
Group (with ALCTS-CaMMS), 67, 122
Fundamentals of Collection Assessment, 67, 121, 122
International Developments in Library Linked Data: Think Globally, Act
Globally, 22, 73, 87, 89, 127, 130
Library Materials Price Index (LMPI), 146
Library Resources & Technical Services (LRTS) Editorial Board, 141
MARC Formats Transition Interest Group (with LITA, ALCTS-CaMMS),
67, 135
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
Index a
Artist Alley Auction (ERT), 21
Art of the Author Visit, The: Connecting Teens with Their Favorite Authors
(YALSA), 72, 107, 144
ARTS. See under Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
Arts Section (ARTS). See under Association of College and Research
Libraries (ACRL)
ArtsVegas: Everything You Wanted to Know and More (ACRL-ARTS), 66,
142
AS. See under Association for Library Collections and Technical Services
(ALCTS)
ASCLA. See Association of Specialized and Cooperative Library Agencies
(ASCLA)
ASCLA 101, 54, 88, 130
Asher, Jay (Class of 2K14’s YA vs. MG Trivia Showdown; PopTop Stage;
ALA), 163, 164
Asia and the World. See Forum Migration 1914–2014: Asia and the World
(ACRL-AAMES)
Asian, African, and Middle Eastern Section (AAMES). See under
Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
Asian Pacific American Librarians Association (APALA)
Executive Board Meeting, 124
Immigration Reform, Asian Americans and Librarianship, 106, 143
Membership Meeting, 139
Ask the Experts: Discover Key Strategies for Successful Academic Library
Fundraising (LLAMA-FRFDS), 127
Assemble Autonomatronic Arduino and Feel Fake Fur: Innovative New
Media and Materials Enhance the Curriculum in Qatar (poster), 180
Assessing Library Services. See The World Is at Our Doorstep. Are We
Inviting Them In? Assessing Library Services to International Students
(poster)
Assessing Pre-Service Teachers Information Literacy. See So You
think You Are Information Literate?: Assessing Pre-Service Teachers
Information Literacy (poster)
Assessment and Research Committee (LITA), 130
Assessment Committee Meeting (ACRL-STS), 127
Assessment Discussion Group (ACRL), 71, 131
Assessment in Action (ACRL)
Facilitator Preparation, 121
Focus Group I/II, 122, 129
Meeting I/II and Breakout Sessions, 121–122
Year One Project Posters I/II, 124, 126
Association for Library Collections and Technical Services (ALCTS)
Affiliates Showcase, 75, 136
ALCTS 101, 54, 124
AS (Acquisitions Section)
Acquisitions Managers & Vendors Interest Group, 67, 143
All Committee and Executive Committee, 132
Metadata Standards Committee (with LITA, ALCTS-PARS,
ALCTS-CaMMS, ALCTS-CRS), 143
Statistics and Reports: Data-Driven Decision-Making (with
ALCTS), 71, 122
Streaming Media Passes the Tipping Point: Now What? (with
ALCTS), 73, 122
Technical Services Collaboration through Technology, 73, 95, 132
Authority Control Interest Group (with LITA, ALCTS-CaMMS), 73, 143
Awards Ceremony, 136
Board of Directors, 123, 149
CaMMS (Cataloging and Metadata Management Section)
Authority Control Interest Group (with LITA, ALCTS), 73, 143
Cartographic Resources Cataloging Interest Group (with
MAGIRT), 139
Catalog Form and Function Interest Group, 67, 134
Cataloging and Classification Research Interest Group, 68, 141
Cataloging Norms Interest Group, 67, 130
Cataloging of Children’s Materials, 143
Catalog Management Interest Group, 67, 132
Committee on Cataloging
Asian and African Materials, 136
Description and Access I/II, 132, 148
Committee on Continuing Education Training Materials, 143
Competencies and Education for a Career in Cataloging Interest
Group, 74
245
a Index
246
Metadata and Indicators for Discovery and Open Access, 73, 90, 130
Metadata beyond the Library: Consultation and Collaboration with
Faculty, Staff and Students, 73, 98, 136
Metadata Interest Group (with ALCTS-CRS, ALCTS-CaMMS), 67
Monographs Editorial Board, 136
Newspaper Interest Group, 67, 136
PARS (Preservation and Reformatting Section)
All Committee and Executive Committee Meeting, 148
Book and Paper Interest Group, 68, 143
Digital Conservation Interest Group, 68, 132
Digital Preservation Interest Group, 68, 139
Forum, 68, 146
Intellectual Access to Preservation Metadata Interest Group, 68,
134
Metadata Standards Committee (with LITA, ALCTS-CaMMS,
ALCTS-CRS, ALCTS-AS), 143
Preservation Administrators Interest Group, 68, 127
Promoting Preservation Interest Group, 68, 141
Successful Outreach: Celebrating 5 Years of Preservation Week,
71, 107, 143
Program Committee, 127, 149
Publisher/Vendor/Library Relations Interest Group, 67, 136, 147
Quiet Strengths of Introverts, The: President’s Program with Jennifer
Kahnweiler, 28, 114, 148
Real Leaders in a Virtual World: Tools and Strategies for Success, 73,
95, 132
Role of the Professional in Technical Services Interest Group, 70, 130
Scholarly Communications Interest Group, 67, 132
Statistics and Reports: Data-Driven Decision-Making (with ALCTSAS), 71, 122
Streaming Media Passes the Tipping Point: Now What? (with ALCTSAS), 73, 122
Technical Services Directors of Large Research Libraries Interest
Group, 67, 122
Technical Services Managers in Academic Libraries Interest Group,
70, 127
Technical Services Workflow Efficiency Interest Group, 70, 149
Transforming Collections Task Force, 124
Understanding Schema.org, 73, 104, 141
Association for Library Service to Children (ALSC)
All Committee II, 139
All Discussion Meeting, 143
ALSC 101, 54, 99, 136
Apps Are All Right, The! Exploring the Role of Apps in Children’s and
Teen Services, 71, 87, 127
Board of Directors Meeting II, 150
Board Orientation, 96, 132
Budget Meeting I/II, 139, 150
Charlemae Rollins President’s Program: The Ripple Effect:
Library Partnerships That Positively Impact Children, Families,
Communities, and Beyond, 28, 66, 114, 149
Children’s Librarians in the Lead: Managing Change, Inspiring
Innovation & Empowering the Next Generation, 64, 102, 141
Collection Management Discussion Group, 143
Dynamic Digital Dia: Promoting Cultural Competence in Digital
Storytimes, 73, 111, 145
Every Child Ready to Read (See Every Child Ready to Read (ECRR))
Executive Committee, 121
Joint Intellectual Freedom Committee Meeting (with AASL, YALSA),
142
Joint Youth Divisions Executive Meeting (with AASL, YALSA), 121
Joint Youth Legislation Committee (with AASL, YALSA), 131
Leadership & ALSC, 127
Odyssey Award Ceremony, 63, 150
President’s Program: Ripple Effect, 28, 66, 114, 149
Priority Group Consultant Meeting, 126
Pura Belpré Award 20th Anniversary Celebration Task Force (with
REFORMA), 63, 139
Ripple Effect (President’s Program), 28, 66, 114, 149
School/Public Library Cooperation (with AASL, YALSA), 146
So Long, Drive-By Storytimes: Hello, Focus and Impact, 71, 104, 141
2014 Awards Presentation, 63, 147
2014 Membership Meeting, 148
2014 Newbery-Caldecott Awards Banquet, 37, 63, 146
2014 Pura Belpré Award Celebraciòn, 63, 143
2015 Award/Notable Chair Orientation (ALSC), 124
2015 Batchelder Award Committee Meeting I/II, 136, 146
2015 Belpré Award Committee Meeting I/II, 136, 139
2015 Caldecott Award Committee Meeting I/II, 127, 139
2015 Geisel Award Committee Meeting I-III, 127, 136, 146
2015 Newbery Award Committee Meeting I/II, 132
2015 Nominating Committee I/II, 132, 141
2015 Notable Children’s Books Committee Meeting I–IV, 130, 132,
143, 149
2015 Notable Children’s Recordings Committee Meeting I/II, 132,
143
2015 Sibert Award Committee Meeting I–III, 130, 136, 139
2015 Wilder Award Committee Meeting, 127
USBBY (See United States Board on Books for Young People
(USBBY))
What No Tchotskes? Creating an Experience Based Summer
Program, 71, 91, 130
Whet Your APPetite: Rapid Reviews of Apps for Children from
Preschool to Tweens, 73, 108, 143
Association of Bookmobile and Outreach Services (ABOS): Bookmobiles
101, 27, 88, 130. See also Bookmobile Saturday (OLOS)
Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
AAMES (Asian, African, and Middle Eastern Section)
Executive Committee Meeting, 126
Forum Migration 1914–2014: Asia and the World, 131
Academic Library Services to International Students Interest Group,
134
Academic Library Trends and Statistics Survey Editorial Board, 138
ACRL 101 & Membership Meeting, 54, 85, 126
AFAS (Afro-American Studies Librarians Section)
Executive Board Committee Meeting, 126
Forum for Research and Scholarship in African American Studies,
135
General Membership Meeting, 131
ANSS (Anthropology and Sociology Section)
Anthropology Librarians Discussion Group, 67, 146
Conference Program Planning
Las Vegas, 2014 Committee Meeting, 129
San Francisco, 2015 Committee Meeting, 138
Criminal Justice/Criminology Discussion Group, 134
Executive Committee Meeting I/II, 126, 147
Instruction and Information Literacy Committee Meeting, 135
Liaison Committee Meeting, 134
Membership Committee Meeting, 131
Nominating 2015 Committee Meeting, 138
Publications Committee, 131
Resource Review and Bibliography Committee Meeting, 134
Review and Planning Committee Meeting, 140
Social, 75, 124
Sociology Librarians Discussion Group, 74, 129
Subject and Bibliographic Access Committee Meeting, 129
Supporting Community Transformation: Becoming a Community
Engaged Academic Library (with ACRL-EBSS), 68, 95, 131
Are You Taking a Gamble on Your Academic Library Career by Having
a Baby (or Two)?, 70, 112, 148
ARTS (Arts Section)
All-Committees Meeting, 144
ArtsVegas: Everything You Wanted to Know and More, 66, 142
Dance Librarians Discussion Group, 146
Executive Committee and Membership and Outreach Committee
Meeting, 126
Presentation Meeting of the Publications and Research
Committee Meeting, 129
Assessment Discussion Group, 71, 131
Assessment in Action
Facilitator Preparation, 121
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Health Sciences Interest Group Continuing Education Meeting, 71,
129
Health Sciences Interest Group Membership Meeting, 126
Hearing on Framework for Information Literacy in Higher Education,
129
Image Resources Interest Group, 75, 131
Immersion Faculty
Interviews I/II, 126, 138
Meeting I/II, 121
Planning Retreat I, 121
Immersion Program Committee Meeting, 142
Informal Meet-up for Academic Librarians Interested in Library
Marketing and Outreach, 135
Information Commons Discussion Group, 70, 131
Information Literacy
Competency Standards for Higher Education Task Force I/II, 142,
144
Professional Development Committee, 142
Standards Committee, 142
Web Site Committee, 142
Interdivisional Committee on Building Resources Meeting (with
LLAMA), 143
Interdivisional Committee on Information Literacy (with AASL), 142
International Perspectives on Academic and Research Libraries
Discussion Group, 66, 123
Intersections of Scholarly Communication and Information Literacy
Task Force Meeting, 140
iPad, YouPad: Circulating iPad Collections in Academic Libraries, 123
IS (Instruction Section)
Current Topics Discussion, 74, 135
Executive Committee Meeting I–III, 126, 132, 134
From Stumbling Blocks to Building Blocks: Using Threshold
Concepts to Teach Information Literacy, 74, 105, 143
Soiree, 74, 136
Leadership Council, 124
Leadership Council Networking Session, 123
Leadership Discussion Group, 64, 134
Leadership Recruitment and Nomination Committee Meeting, 131
LES (Literatures in English)
All-Committees Meeting, 147
Collections Discussion Group, 144
Conference Program Planning—San Francisco 2015 Committee,
147
“Embedded” Cultural Communities in Europe and the Americas:
Challenges for Librarians (with ACRL-WESS, ACRL-SEES), 66,
92, 132
Executive Committee Meeting I/II, 126, 148
General Membership Forum, 143
Membership Committee Meeting, 147
New Members Discussion Group, 135
Nominating 2015 Committee Meeting, 147
Planning Committee Meeting, 147
Publications Committee Meeting, 147
Reference Discussion Group, 140
Virtual Participation Committee Meeting, 147
Liaisons Assembly Committee Meeting, 131
Liaisons Coordinating Committee Meeting I/II, 144, 146
Liaisons Coordinating Component Committee Meeting, 144, 146
Liaisons Grants Committee Meeting I/II, 144, 146
Liaisons Training and Development Committee Meeting I/II, 144, 146
Librarians as Digital Leaders: Collaborating on the Development and
Use of Digitized Collections, 73, 89, 129
Librarianship in For-Profit Educational Institutions Interest Group, 64,
144
Libraries in the Publishing Game: New Roles from Content to Access,
71, 90, 129
Library and Information Science Collections Discussion Group, 67,
138
Library and Information Science Education Interest Group, 126
Library Support for Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs)
Discussion Group, 74
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
Index a
Focus Group I/II, 122, 129
Meeting I/II and Breakout Sessions, 121–122
Year One Project Posters I/II, 124, 126
Balancing Baby and Book Discussion Group Meeting, 64, 146
Board of Directors Meeting I/II, 133, 149
Board Orientation, 122
Board Update, 121
Budget & Finance Committee Meeting I/II, 140, 147
Chapters Council Meeting, 138
Chapters Council Work Session, 140
CHOICE Community College Think Tank, 66
Choice Editorial Board Meeting, 138
CJCLS (Community and Junior College Libraries Section)
All-Committees Meeting, 140
Awards Committee Meeting, 140
Conference Program Planning—San Francisco, 2015 Committee
Meeting, 140
Executive Committee Meeting, 138
Hot Topics Discussion Group, 70, 134
Library Technical Assistance Education Committee Meeting, 140
Membership/Communications Committee Meeting, 135
Nominating 2015 Committee Meeting, 140
CLS (College Libraries Section)
CLIPP Committee Meeting, 138
Executive Committee Meeting, 126
Leadership and Management Issues in College Libraries
Discussion Group, 142
Medium-Sized Academic Libraries Discussion Group, 138
Science + Form = Function: The Impact of Neuroscience on
Architecture and Design, 70, 95, 131
C&RL Editorial Board, 138
C&RL News Editorial Board, 138
Common Core State Standards and General Education: Information
Literacy Connects the Dots, 74, 92, 131
Continuing Education/Professional Development Discussion Group,
64, 134
Copyright Discussion Group, 67, 129
Crash Course in Evaluation Research, 71, 111, 147
Digital Curation Interest Group Meeting, 142
Digital Humanities Interest Group, 71, 146
Diversity Committee Meeting, 142
DLS (Distance Learning Section)
All-Committees Meeting, 140
Award Luncheon, 142
Discussion Group, 142
Executive Committee Meeting, 144
Leading from the Side: On, Off and Within Your Campus (with
ACRL-ULS), 74, 89, 129
EBSS (Education and Behavioral Sciences Section)
Advisory Council, 144
All-Committees Meeting I/II, 126, 129
Conference Program Planning—San Francisco, 2015 Committee
Meeting, 140
Curriculum Materials Committee, 138
Education Research Libraries Forum, 124
ERIC Presentation, 142
Executive Committee Meeting, 147
Research Committee Poster Forum, 134
Social Work/Social Welfare Committee Meeting, 138
Supporting Community Transformation: Becoming a Community
Engaged Academic Library (with ACRL-ANSS), 66, 95, 131
E. J. Josey Spectrum Scholar Mentor Committee Meeting, 135
Executive Committee Meeting II, 147
Financial Literacy at Your Library (President’s Program), 28, 67, 91,
129
First Year Experience Discussion Group, 74, 126
Get Writing! Overcome Procrastination, Remove Roadblocks and
Create a Map for Success, 70, 115, 149
Government Relations Committee Meeting, 142
Heads of Public Services Discussion Group, 71, 135
247
a Index
248
LPSS (Law and Political Science Section)
All-Committees Meeting, 126
Discussion Forum on Water Politics, 132
General Membership Meeting, 129
Making Tenure: A Model for Collaborative Publishing, 70, 90, 129
Marketing Discussion Group, 134
Maximize Your Professional Time: Strategies to Cultivate a Habit of
Scholarship, 123
Membership Committee Meeting, 129
Metrics User Group Meeting, 129
Modern Language Association (MLA) International Bibliography
Discussion Group, 75, 129
New Members Discussion Group, 64, 129
New Publications Advisory Board Meeting, 138
Numeric and Geospatial Data Services in Academic Libraries Interest
Group Meeting, 71, 135
Personnel Administrators & Staff Development Discussion Group I/II,
70, 129, 140
Philosophical, Religious, & Theological Studies Discussion Group
Meeting, 146
Popular Cultures Discussion Group, 70, 138
President’s Program: Financial Literacy at Your Library, 28, 67, 91,
129
President’s Program Planning 2015 Committee Meeting, 126
Professional Development Committee Meeting, 126
Professional Values Committee Meeting, 142
Publications Coordinating Committee Meeting, 138, 140
Publications in Librarianship Editorial Board Meeting, 138
RBM Editorial Board Meeting, 138
RBMS (Rare Books and Manuscripts Section)
Bibliographic Standards Committee
Controlled Vocabularies Group I/II, 124
DCRM/RDA Revision Group, 123, 132, 134, 135, 138, 140,
149, 150
Meeting I/II, 126, 129
Standard Citations Forms Working Group I/II, 134, 135
Budget and Development Committee, 132
Collection Development Discussion Group, 129
Conference Development Committee, 138
Conference Program Planning—San Francisco, 2015 Committee
Meeting, 135
Curators and Conservators Discussion Group, 135
Digital Special Collections Discussion Group, 134
Diversity Committee, 138
Executive Committee Meeting I/II, 147, 148
Exhibition Awards Committee Meeting I/II, 126, 129
Leab Awards & RBMS Information Exchange I/II, 144, 146
Manuscripts and Other Formats Discussion Group, 132
Membership and Professional Development Committee, 126
Preconference Program Planning—Oakland, 2015 Committee
Meeting I/II, 134, 135
Security Committee I/II, 126, 129
Seminars Committee I/II, 132
Sin and Vice in Special Collections: Working with Provocative
Primary Sources, 143
Task Force to Review Competencies for Special Collections
Professionals, 138
Task Force to Review Guidelines on the Selection of General
Collection Materials for Transfer to Special Collections, 140
Technical Services Discussion Group, 140
Workshops Committee, 135
Research and Scholarly Environment Committee Meeting I/II, 138,
140
Research Planning and Review Committee Meeting, 138
Residency Interest Group Meeting, 70, 134
Resources for College Libraries Editorial Board Meeting, 138
Scholarly Communication Discussion Group, 144
Scholarly Communication Road Show Presenters, 124
Section Membership Committee Meeting, 134
SEES (Slavic and Eastern European Section)
All-Committee Meeting, 134
“Embedded” Cultural Communities in Europe and the Americas:
Challenges for Librarians (with ACRL-LES, ACRL-WESS), 66,
92, 132
Executive Committee Meeting, 135
75th Anniversary Celebration Task Force
Component Committees, 129
Meeting, 126
SPARC Forum, 134
Standards Committee Meeting, 142
Standards Presenter Team, 126
Sticking with STEM: How the Academic Library Can Help to Retain
Successful Students (with ACRL-STS), 74, 112, 147
Stop Dreaming and Do It! Best Practices for Gaining Momentum,
Developing and Maintaining a Successful Residency Program, 70,
106–107, 142
STS (Science and Technology Section)
All-Committees Meeting, 126–127
All Task Forces Meeting, 144, 145
Assessment Committee Meeting, 127
College Science Librarians Discussion Group, 129
Conference Program Planning
Las Vegas, 2014 Committee Meeting, 126
San Francisco, 2015 Committee Meeting, 134
Continuing Education Committee Meeting, 127
Council I/II, 124, 150
Demonstrating Success through Assessment: Don’t Leave
Outcomes to Chance, 135
Discussion Group Chairs Committee Meeting, 126
Executive Committee Meeting, 150
Federal Science Agencies Update, 132
General Membership Meeting & Breakfast, 138
Government Information Committee Meeting, 127
Hot Topics Discussion Group, 140
Information Literacy Committee Meeting, 126
Innovation Award Task Force Meeting, 144
Liaison Committee Meeting, 126
Membership and Recruitment Committee Meeting, 126
Oberly Award Task Force Meeting, 144
Organizing and Planning Committee Meeting, 126
Program Poster Session, 74, 148
Publications Committee Meeting, 127
Research Agenda Task Force, 145
Research Committee Meeting, 126
Scholarly Communications Committee Meeting, 127
Science and Technology Library Research Forum, 143
Science Resources: Discovery & Access Committee, 127
Sticking with STEM: How the Academic Library Can Help to
Retain Successful Students (with ACRL), 74, 112, 147
Unconference II, 146
Student Learning and Information Literacy
Component Committees Meeting, 142
Coordinating Committee Meeting I/II, 129, 144, 146
Student Retention Discussion Group, 74, 134
Surveillance, 71, 107, 142
Technical Services Interest Group Meeting, 75, 135
Tenure-Track Support Systems: Perceptions of Academic Librarians,
70, 109, 144
Turn Your Intentions into Results: Strategies to Improve Productivity
and Cultivate a Habit of Scholarship, 123
2015 Component Committees Meeting I/II, 147, 148
2015 Contributed Paper Committees, 147
2015 Coordinating Committee Meeting, 142
2015 Panel Sessions Committee, 147
2015 Workshops Committee, 147
ULS (University Libraries Section)
All-Committees Meeting, 145
Campus Administration and Leadership Discussion Group, 134
Committee on the Future of University Libraries, 143
Current Topics Discussion Group, 132
Evidence-Based Practices Discussion Group, 139
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Library Services to the Incarcerated and Detained, 141
LSTA Coordinators’ Interest Group, 75, 143
Online Inside: Justification, Issues and Solutions for Digital Literacy in
Correctional Settings, 71, 94, 132
Physical Delivery Interest Group, 71, 141
President’s Program: Connected Learning and Libraries: At the
Intersection of the Arts, Media, New Technologies, and Informal
Learning, 28, 65, 104, 141
Teen Reading Lounge: Engaging Teens through Interactive
Humanities Based Programming, 71, 97, 135
Temporary Staffing Solutions for Libraries: A Consortial Approach in
Massachusetts, 70, 99, 136
Universal Accessibility Interest Group Meeting (with ACRL, LITA), 69,
145
Whither Library Consortia?, 71, 91, 130
Youth Services Consultants Interest Group, 75, 150
Atlas Systems Mentoring Award Committee Meeting (RUSA-STARS), 128
Atlas Systems Users Group (UNO), 136
Auditorium Speaker Series (ALA)
Fonda, Jane, 12, 55, 127
Kahnweiler, Jennifer B., 15
Lee, Stan, 13, 55, 131
McCall Smith, Alexander, 13
Nafisi, Azar, 12, 130
Petit, Philippe (United for Libraries President’s Program), 15, 29, 111,
148
PLA President’s Program and Awards Presentation (with Barry
Lopez), 14, 29, 106, 144
Shabazz, Ilyasah, 14, 55, 140
Authority Control Interest Group (ALCTS, LITA, ALCTS-CaMMS), 73, 143
author signings. See Meet the Author/Illustrator
autism
Creative Collaborations: Successful Partnerships That Serve Children
with Autism (ASCLA), 66, 92–93, 132
Teaching Digital Citizenship to Youth with Autism Spectrum Disorders
(AASL), 74, 116, 150
Awards Ceremonies/Presentations/Receptions
AASL, 129
ALA, 55, 110, 145, 146
ALCTS, 136
ALSC
2014 Awards Presentation, 63, 147
2014 Pura Belpré Award Celebraciòn, 63, 143
American Indian Youth Literature (AILA), 146
Andrew Carnegie Medals for Excellence in Fiction and Nonfiction
(RUSA), 37, 63, 138
ASCLA-COSLA, 136
BCALA (with Membership Meeting), 147
Exhibits Closing Reception (ALA), 155
Exhibits Opening Reception (ERT), 9
FAFLRT, 142
John Cotton Dana Library Public Relations Awards (LLAMA-PRMS),
146
Leab Awards (with RBMS Information Exchange; ACRL), 144, 146
LITA, 29, 73, 109, 145
LLAMA-BES, 70
NMRT, 147
Odyssey (ALSC), 63, 150
PLA, 29, 106
RUSA (and Volunteer Appreciation Party), 146
Will Eisner Graphic Novel Awards for Libraries, The (Graphic Novel/
Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 169
Will Eisner Graphic Novel Grant Celebration (Graphic Novel/Gaming
Stage; ALA), 136
YALSA
Alex, 63, 104, 142
Michael L. Printz, 37, 126
Award(s) Committees
ACRL-CJCLS, 140
ALA, 127, 149
GODORT, 141
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
Index a
Executive Committee Meeting, 127
Leading from the Side: On, Off and Within Your Campus (with
ACRL-DLS), 74, 89, 129
Mid-Level Managers Discussion Group, 143
Public Service Directors of Large Research Libraries Discussion
Group, 146
Undergraduate Librarians Discussion Group, 71, 147
Universal Accessibility Interest Group (with LITA, ASCLA), 69, 145
Update on the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES)
Academic Library Survey, 134
Update on Value of Academic Libraries Initiative, 142
Using Instructional Design Applications to Effectively Flip Library
Instruction, 74, 88, 126
Value of Academic Libraries Committee Meeting I/II, 126, 129
Virtual Reference with JoinMe, 73, 114, 148
Virtual Worlds Interest Group, 70, 129
WESS (Western European Studies Section)
Cataloging Issues Discussion Group, 127
Classical, Medieval, and Renaissance and Special Topics
Discussion Group, 139
“Embedded” Cultural Communities in Europe and the Americas:
Challenges for Librarians (with ACRL-LES, ACRL-SEES), 66,
92, 132
Executive Committee, 148
General Membership Discussion Group, 75, 147
Germanists and Romance Languages Discussion Groups, 143
Joint Committees Meeting, 129
Research and Planning Committee Meeting, 136
Scandinavian Discussion Group, 146
Social Sciences and History and College and Medium-Sized
Libraries Discussion Group, 145
WGSS (Women and Gender Studies Section)
All-Committees Meeting, 127
Digital Humanities and Academic Libraries: Practice and Theory,
Power and Privilege, 71, 114, 147
Executive Committee Meeting, 143
General Membership Forum, 75, 136
Social, 75, 138
Association of Research Libraries (ARL)
ARL Licensing Initiative Task Force (LYRASIS; UNO), 129
Design Thinking and LibQUAL+: The Changing Needs and
Expectations of Faculty and Undergraduates in ARL Libraries—
Trends (poster), 180
Liaison Supervisor Group, 148
Library Assessment Forum, 124
Association of Specialized and Cooperative Library Agencies (ASCLA)
Accessible eBooks: Ensuring That Your Library’s eContent Is
Universally Accessible to All (with SRRT), 68, 85, 127
All-Committee Meeting, 146
ASCLA 101, 54, 88, 130
Board of Directors I/II, 135, 149
Collaborative Digitization Interest Group Meeting, 73
Connected Learning and Libraries: At the Intersection of the Arts,
Media, New Technologies, and Informal Learning (President’s
Program), 28, 65, 104, 141
Consortium Management Discussion Special Interest Group, 146
Consulting after Retirement: Is It Right for You?, 64, 88, 130
COSLA (Chief Officers of State Library Agencies): Reception and
Awards, 136
Creating Fun, Accessible Programming for Youth with Disabilities, 71,
89, 130
Creative Collaborations: Successful Partnerships That Serve Children
with Autism, 66, 92–93, 132
Deaf Force, The: Cultural Programs for All, 71
Embedding Librarians in Virtual Communities, 64, 93, 132
Facility Tour of Summit View Juvenile Correctional Center Library, 71,
147
Free and Affordable Apps for Accessibility, 71, 93, 132
Library Services for People with Visual or Physical Disabilities That
Prevent Them from Reading Standard Print Interest Group
Meeting, 75, 124
Library Services for Youth in Custody Meeting, 135
249
Awards Green Room (AASL), 126
Aydin, Andrew (March; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 164
b Index
B
250
Bachelor of Business Administration Students. See You Are Teaching,
But Are They Learning: An Assessment of Bachelor of Business
Administration Students (poster)
Balancing Baby and Book Discussion Group Meeting (ACRL), 64, 146
BARC. See Budget Analysis and Review Committee (BARC; ALA)
Batchelder Award Committee. See 2015 Batchelder Award Committee
Meeting I/II (ALSC)
Batman: A Celebration of 75 Years (ERT), 63, 88, 130
BCALA. See Black Caucus of the American Library Association (BCALA)
Beastie Bash (Eric Wight; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 169
Become a Social Media GURU in Your Job Search (JobLIST Placement
Center; ALA), 38, 134
Becoming a Powerful Public Speaker. See Coming out of the Shell:
Becoming a Powerful Public Speaker (NMRT)
Behavior for Collection Development. See Study: Psychology
Researchers’ Citing Behavior for Collection Development (poster)
Bell, Cece (Graphic Novel Author Panel; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage;
ALA), 168, 170
Belpré Award Committee. See 2015 Belpré Award Committee Meeting I/
II (ALSC)
BES. See under Library Leadership and Management Association
(LLAMA)
Best and Worst Manga (ALA), 63, 101, 140
Best Apps for Teaching and Learning (AASL), 74, 96, 134
Best Fiction for Young Adults (YALSA), 135, 142, 148
Best Fiction for Young Adults Teen Feedback Session (YALSA), 133
Best Free Web Sites (RUSA-MARS), 128
Best of the Best from the American University Presses, The (AASL), 67,
107, 142
Best Practices in Training (LEARNRT), 75, 112–113, 148
Best Practice—Support Staff Edition (LSSIRT), 71, 99, 139
Best Websites for Teaching and Learning (AASL), 74, 98, 135
Beta Phi Mu
Executive Board Meeting, 132
General Assembly, 134
Beyond Glitz and Glitter: Great Brands Start from Within (PLA), 67, 122
Beyond the Classroom: Developing Soft Skills through Student
Organizations (poster), 179
BIBFRAME Update Forum (LC; UNO), 142
Bibliographic Standards Committee (ACRL-RBMS)
Controlled Vocabularies Group I/II, 124
DCRM/RDA Revision Group, 123, 132, 134, 135, 138, 140, 149, 150
Meeting, 126, 129
Standard Citations Forms Working Group I/II, 134, 135
Biomedical Research and Practice. See Transforming Biomedical
Research and Practice: Promoting Research and Awareness of Sex and
Gender Differences in Health (poster)
BISG. See 8th Annual NISO/BISG Forum: The Changing Standards
Landscape (NISO; UNO)
Black Caucus of the American Library Association (BCALA)
Affiliates Committee Meeting, 132
E. J. Josey Scholarship Committee, 123
Executive Board Meeting, 122
Executive Board Retreat, 121
Health Information Project Taskforce, 129
International Relations Committee Meeting, 124
Librarians of Color: The Challenges of “Movin’ on Up,” 140
Membership Committee Meeting, 134
Membership Meeting & Literary Awards, 147
NCAAL 9 Committee/Team Meetings, 132
Professional Development and Recruitment Committee, 64, 129
Professional Development and Recruitment Committee Open
Session, 140
Blink (Book Buzz Theater), 16, 156
Block by Block: Computational Thinking for Tweens & Teens (poster), 180
Bloomsbury Children’s Books and Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group
Fall 2014 Book Buzz (Book Buzz Theater), 16, 156
Blurring the Lines of Books (ignite session), 79, 149
Board Meetings. See also Board of Directors; Executive Board
CALA, 124, 138, 147
ERT, 138
GAMERT, 136
Journal of Academic Librarianship (UNO), 128
REFORMA, 140
RUSA-RSS, 131
RUSA-STARS, 148
SUSTAINRT, 133
Board of Directors
AASL, 123, 133
ACRL, 133, 149
ALA-APA, 122
ALCTS, 123, 149
ALSC, 150
ASCLA, 135, 149
LITA, 134, 150
LLAMA, 124, 149
PLA, 133
RUSA, 133, 150
UNITED, 131
USBBY (AASL, ALSC, YALSA), 122
YALSA, 133, 146, 150
Board of Trustees (FTRF), 121
Board Orientations. See under Orientations
Board Update (ACRL), 121
Boba Fett at the Circ Desk: Library Leadership from The Empire Strikes
Back (PLA), 69, 86, 128
Book and Paper Interest Group (ALCTS-PARS), 68, 143
Book Buzz Theater (ALA), 16, 23, 156
Book Industry Study Group (BISG). See 8th Annual NISO/BISG Forum:
The Changing Standards Landscape (NISO; UNO)
Booklist Editorial Advisory Board Meeting (ALA), 129
Bookmobile Saturday (OLOS)
Bookmobiles 101 (with ABOS), 27, 88, 130
Panel Discussion: Stories from the Field, 71
Parade of Bookmobiles (in conjunction with ALA Diversity & Outreach
Fair), 23, 27, 65, 134
Saturday Author Luncheon Featuring Josh Hanagarne, 27, 71, 131
Books & Authors (content area), 62, 63
Boucher Award Committee Meeting (RUSA-STARS), 128
Branching Out: Adventures in Non-Traditional Libraries and New
Emerging Roles (Spectrum Institute; ALA), 17, 64, 124
Branding You! Matching Your Brand to Your Career Plan (Spectrum
Institute; ALA), 17, 64, 122
BRASS. See under Reference and User Services Association (RUSA)
breakfasts
AAP/LibraryReads Book-a-Licious Breakfast (UNO), 128
ALA Scholarship Award Winners’ Breakfast (EBSCO Publishing;
UNO), 140
Alexander Street Press Breakfast (UNO), 138
Coretta Scott King Book Awards Breakfast (EMIERT), 37, 63, 138
Dewey Update Breakfast and ALCTS Public Libraries Technical
Services Interest Group Meeting (OCLC; UNO), 126
Divisions’ Leadership Breakfast (ALA), 138
General Membership Meeting & Breakfast (ACRL-STS), 138
ICOLC Consortia Breakfast (UNO), 138
Librarian Roundtable Breakfast (APA; UNO), 140
OverDrive’s Roadmap Breakfast (UNO), 128
Past President’s Breakfast (PLA), 148
Project MUSE User Group Breakfast (UNO), 126
Spectrum Institute Breakfast, 17, 121
State Librarians Breakfast (UNO), 126
Bridges, Jeff. See ALA Awards Presentation and President’s Program
(Lois Lowry with Jeff Bridges)
Bridging the Information Literacy Gap. See InfoSkills2Go: Bridging the
Information Literacy Gap between High School and College (poster)
Bridging the Skills Gap: Enhancing the Student Employee Experience
(poster), 179
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Bringing Inspiration Home. See Igniting the Conversation: Bringing
Inspiration Home (conversation starter)
Bringing Personal Stories to Research and Learning. See Human
Libraries: Bringing Personal Stories to Research and Learning (ignite
session)
Bringing the Comic Festival to YOUR Library! (ALA), 66, 98, 134
Brody, Sophie. See Sophie Brody Medal Committee (RUSA-CODES)
Brown Girl Dreaming (Poetry Blast; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 165
Bryant, Kimberly. See LITA Awards Presentation & President’s Program
Featuring Kimberly Bryant
Buccellato, Brian (What Does It Take to Create a New Comic Book?;
Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 170
Budget Analysis and Review Committee (BARC; ALA)
Division Leaders and the Budget Analysis & Review Committee, 144
Meeting (ALA), 122
Budget and Development Committee (ACRL-RBMS), 132
Budget and Finance Committees/Meetings
ACRL, 140, 147
PLA, 128
RUSA, 141
Budget Meeting I/II (ALSC), 139, 150
Building a Learning Culture from the Inside Out (PLA), 69, 102, 141
Building Gorgeous Responsive Web Sites Fast with Twitter Bootstrap
(LITA), 75, 100, 139
Building Holistic Library Assessment: Space + Collections = Effective
Services (LLAMA-MAES), 73, 86, 127
Buildings and Equipment Section (BES). See under Library Leadership
and Management Association (LLAMA)
Building the Capacity of Librarians from Nine African Universities (poster),
180
Burning Need to Know, A: How Passion Connects to Learning (YALSA
President’s Program and Membership Meeting), 29, 72, 116, 150
Business Meetings
AILA, 143
COL (ALA), 123, 143, 145, 149, 150
Committee on Diversity and All Sub-Committee Business Meeting
(ALA), 122
Graphic Novels & Comics in Libraries Member Interest Group (ALA),
130
Business of Advertising, The. See Mad Men: The Business of Advertising
(RUSA, RUSA-BRASS)
Business of Lectures. See Edward G. Holley Memorial Lecture: The
Business of Lectures (LHRT)
Business Reference and Services Section (BRASS). See under Reference
and User Services Association (RUSA)
Business Reference in Academic Libraries Committee Meeting (RUSABRASS), 135
Business Reference in Academic Libraries Forum (RUSA-BRASS), 72,
133
Business Reference in Public Libraries Committee Meeting (RUSABRASS), 136
Business Reference Services Discussion Group (RUSA-BRASS), 72, 139
Business Reference Sources Committee Meeting (RUSA-BRASS), 136
Business Reference Sources Committee Publishers’ Forum (RUSABRASS), 72, 144
Buzz Into Fall with Scholastic (Book Buzz Theater), 16, 156
Bylaws and Organization Committee (LITA), 130
Bylaws Committee Meeting (GODORT), 124
CAEP. See under NCATE (AASL)
CALA. See Chinese American Librarians Association (CALA)
Caldecott Award Committee. See 2015 Caldecott Award Committee
Meeting I/II (ALSC)
Calling All Library Donors!: Using an Undergraduate Research Ward to
Engage Potential Donors (poster), 181
CALM. See Committee on Archives, Libraries, and Museums (CALM;
ALA): Meeting
CaMMS. See under Association for Library Collections and Technical
Services (ALCTS)
Cammuso, Frank (Otto’s Backwards Day; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage;
ALA), 168, 169
Campaign for America’s Libraries Subcommittee Meeting (ALA), 132
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
Index c
C
Campus Administration and Leadership Discussion Group (ACRL-ULS),
134
Campus Collaborations! (ignite session), 79, 149
captioned meetings, 55
Care and Feeding of Teen Volunteers (YALSA), 72, 111, 148
Career Counseling (JobLIST Placement Center; ALA), 38, 129
Career Development (content area), 62, 64
Career Development Workshop: Answering Tough Questions as You
Improve Your Interviewing Skills (ALA), 38, 131
CAREful Change: Supporting Users and Each Other through Times of
Significant Change (poster), 181
Care of Borrowed Special Collections: Playing Nice with Other People’s
Toys (ALCTS), 67, 100, 139
Cartographic Resources Cataloging Interest Group (ALCTS-CaMMS,
MAGIRT), 139
Cascadia Community College. See Know When to Hold ‘em, Know
When to Scaf-fold ‘em: The Case of Sustaining an Information Literacy
Instruction Program at Cascadia Community College (poster)
Catalog Form and Function Interest Group (ALCTS-CaMMS), 67, 134
Cataloging and Classification Committee (CCC) Meeting (MAGIRT), 141
Cataloging and Classification Research Interest Group (ALCTS-CaMMS),
68, 141
Cataloging and Metadata Management Section (CaMMS). See under
Association for Library Collections and Technical Services (ALCTS)
Cataloging Committee Meeting (GODORT), 136
Cataloging in Publication (CIP) Advisory Group Meeting (UNO), 131
Cataloging Issues Discussion Group (ACRL-WESS), 127
Cataloging Norms Interest Group (ALCTS-CaMMS), 67, 130
Cataloging of Children’s Materials (ALCTS), 143
Cataloging Policy Committee Meeting (OLAC), 124
Catalog Management Interest Group (ALCTS-CaMMS), 67, 132
CCC. See Cataloging and Classification Committee (CCC) Meeting
(MAGIRT)
Celebrating 35 Years of AILA (AILA), 129
Center for Civic Life Advisory Committee (ALA), 139
Certification Program Committee (ALA-APA), 132
Certification Update (ALA-APA), 64, 139
Certified Public Library Administrator Review Committee (ALA-APA), 124
Chairs Orientation (RUSA-STARS, RSS, MARS, HS, CODES, BRASS),
149
Change Does Not Suck (conversation starter), 78, 146
Changing Standards Landscape, The. See 8th Annual NISO/BISG Forum:
The Changing Standards Landscape (NISO; UNO)
Chapter Councilors Forum (ALA), 150
Chapter Leaders Forum (ALA), 69, 122
Chapter Relations Committee (CRC) Meeting I/II (ALA), 132, 149
Chapters Council (ACRL)
Meeting, 138
Work Session, 140
Charcuteria: The Soul of Spain (Jeffrey Weiss; What’s Cooking @ ALA
Stage), 163, 162
Charlemae Rollins President’s Program: The Ripple Effect: Library
Partnerships That Positively Impact Children, Families, Communities, and
Beyond (ALSC), 28, 66, 114, 149
Charlesbridge (Book Buzz Theater), 16, 156
Chat and Email Reference Services. See Viva Virtual Reference: Using
Mixed Methods to Understand Chat and Email Reference Services
(poster)
Check Out a Librarian (JobLIST Placement Center; ALA), 38
Chicago Public Library. See Collaborate to Innovate @ Chicago Public
Library: Engaging the Community to Design the Future (LITA)
Chief Collection Development Officers of Large Research Libraries
Interest Group (ALCTS-CMS), 68, 127
Chief Officers of State Library Agencies (COSLA). See under Association
of Specialized and Cooperative Library Agencies (ASCLA)
child care, 35
Children’s Librarians in the Lead: Managing Change, Inspiring Innovation
& Empowering the Next Generation (ALSC), 64, 102, 141
children’s policy, 35
children with autism. See autism
China: Library Services in Multi-Branch Networks in China (ALA), 22, 75,
98, 136
251
c Index
252
Chinese American Librarians Association (CALA)
Annual Program, 143
Board Meeting, 124, 138, 147
Membership Meeting, 145
CHOICE Community College Think Tank (ACRL), 66
Choice Editorial Board Meeting (ACRL), 138
CIFNAL (UNO): Steering Committee, 128
CIP. See Cataloging in Publication (CIP) Advisory Group Meeting (UNO)
Circulating iPad Collections in Academic Libraries. See iPad, YouPad:
Circulating iPad Collections in Academic Libraries (ACRL)
Circulation/Access Services Discussion Group (LLAMA-SASS), 144
Citizenship Programs and Resources at the Library (ALA), 71, 100, 139
CJCLS. See under Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
Classical, Medieval, and Renaissance and Special Topics Discussion
Group (ACRL-WESS), 139
Class of 2K14’s YA vs. MG Trivia Showdown (Jay Asher and Josephine
Angelini; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 164
CLASS Research Report (AASL), 75, 144
Class-Sourced Bibliography, A: Tapping the Web and Social Media Tools
to Develop an Evolving Annotated Bibliography (poster), 181
Cleland, Jane (Women in Mystery; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 164
CLIPP Committee Meeting (ACRL-CLS), 138
Closing General Session (B. J. Novak; ALA), 11, 55, 150
CLS. See under Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
CMS. See under Association for Library Collections and Technical
Services (ALCTS)
Code4ILL: How to Grow Your Own Innovation for Resource Sharing
(RUSA, RUSA-STARS), 72, 92, 133
CODES. See under Reference and User Services Association (RUSA)
Codes, Guidelines, and Technical Standards Committee Meeting (RUSASTARS), 128
COL. See Committee on Legislation (COL; ALA)
COLA. See Committee on Library Advocacy (COLA) Meeting (ALA)
Coleman, Jean E. See Jean E. Coleman Library Outreach Lecture:
Equality...Equity...Diversity: Libraries, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the
Mission (OLOS)
COL/IFC Joint Meeting, 140
Collaborate to Innovate @ Chicago Public Library: Engaging the
Community to Design the Future (LITA), 66, 86, 127
Collaborating to Build a Teacher Resources Collection Using Primary
Sources (poster), 179
Collaboration and Assessment. See Online Post-Its: Library Collaboration
and Assessment Using Padlet (ignite session)
Collaboration between School and Public Library Systems. See Dynamic
Duos: Collaboration between School and Public Library Systems (YALSA)
Collaborative Digitization Interest Group Meeting (ASCLA), 73
Collaborative “Movie” Program for Continuing Competencies. See Lights!
Camera! Education!: A Library & Nurse Educator Collaborative “Movie”
Program for Continuing Competencies (poster)
Collaborative Publishing. See Making Tenure: A Model for Collaborative
Publishing (ACRL)
Collection Development and Evaluation Section (CODES). See under
Reference and User Services Association (RUSA)
Collection Development Discussion Group (ACRL-RBMS), 129
Collection Development Issues for the Practitioner Interest Group
(ALCTS-CMS), 68, 132
Collection Development Librarians of Academic Libraries Interest Group
(ALCTS-CMS), 68, 134
Collection Evaluation and Assessment Interest Group (ALCTS-CMS), 68,
143
Collection Maintenance and Development Procedures. See Data Driven
Collections: Integrating Evidence into Your Collection Maintenance and
Development Procedures (PLA)
Collection Management and Development Research Forum (ALCTSCMS), 74, 146
Collection Management and Electronic Resources Interest Group
(ALCTS-CMS), 68, 145
Collection Management Discussion Group (ALSC), 143
Collection Management in Public Libraries Interest Group (ALCTS-CMS),
68, 149
Collection Management Section (CMS). See under Association for Library
Collections and Technical Services (ALCTS)
Collections Discussion Group (ACRL-LES), 144
Collective Engagement: What Aspiring, New and Seasoned Professionals
Bring to the Table (poster), 180
C&RL Editorial Board (ACRL), 138
C&RL News Editorial Board (ACRL), 138
College and Research Libraries Interest Group (ALCTS-CRS), 68, 139
College Libraries Section (CLS). See under Association of College and
Research Libraries (ACRL)
College Readiness Dialogues: Together We Succeed (AASL), 74, 105,
142
College & Research Libraries Editorial Board. See C&RL Editorial Board
(ACRL)
College Science Librarians Discussion Group (ACRL-STS), 129
Colombia. See Puerto Rico and Colombia: Enhancing the Library to
Empower Communities in the Digital Age (poster)
Come Make a Game: Library Game Jams (GAMERT), 71, 96, 135
Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, The—Intellectual Freedom and the
Defense of Graphic Novels and Comic Books (IFRT), 64, 95, 133
Comics Bakery (Raina Telgemeier, Dave Roman, and Jerzy Drozd;
Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 170
Coming out of the Shell: Becoming a Powerful Public Speaker (NMRT),
64, 122
Committee Meetings. See also under specific committees
Coretta Scott King–Virginia Hamilton Award for Lifetime Achievement
(EMIERT), 136
LRRT, 150
Committee on Accreditation Meeting (ALA), 126, 138
Committee on Archives, Libraries, and Museums (CALM; ALA): Meeting,
141
Committee on Cataloging (ALCTS-CaMMS)
Asian and African Materials, 136
Description and Access I/II, 132, 148
Committee on Continuing Education Training Materials (ALCTS-CaMMS),
143
Committee on Diversity and All Sub-Committee Business Meeting (ALA),
122
Committee on Education (ALA), 127
Committee on Legislation (COL; ALA)
Business Meeting I–III, 123, 143, 145, 149, 150
COL/IFC Joint Meeting, 140
Copyright Subcommittee Meeting, 136
E-Government Subcommittee, 134
Government Information Subcommittee, 139
Government Information Subcommittee (with GODORT), 132
Grassroots Subcommittee, 132, 139
Joint Telecom Meeting (with OITP), 146
Telecom Subcommittee, 132
Committee on Library Advocacy (COLA) Meeting (ALA), 132
Committee on Literacy (ALA)
All Subcommittee Planning Meeting, 130
Literacy Assembly Meeting, 123
Committee on Membership Meetings (ALA), 122
Committee on Organization Meeting I/II (ALA), 130, 145
Committee on Professional Ethics I/II (ALA), 124, 147
Committee on Research and Statistics Meeting (ALA), 143
Committee on Status of Women in Librarianship (COSWL; ALA), 136
Committee on the Future of University Libraries (ACRL-ULS), 143
Common Core IRL: In Real Libraries (AASL), 74, 102, 140
Common Core State Standards and General Education: Information
Literacy Connects the Dots (ACRL), 74, 92, 131
Communication with Funders & Policy Makers. See Getting a Bigger
Piece of the Pie: Effective Communication with Funders & Policy Makers
(UNITED)
Community and Junior College Libraries Section (CJCLS). See under
Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
Community Collaboration. See Something to Talk About: Creating
Dialogue and Transforming Viewpoints through Library and Community
Collaboration (poster)
Community Driven Design (LLAMA-BES), 70, 100, 139
Community Engagement. See Practical Outreach: Best Practices for
Engaging Your Community (conversation starter)
Community Engagement and Collaboration. See Singapore
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Continuing Resources Section (CRS). See under Association for Library
Collections and Technical Services (ALCTS)
Continuing Resources Standards Forum (ALCTS-CRS), 68, 141
Controlled Vocabularies Group of the Bibliographic Standards Committee
I/II (ACRL-RBMS), 124
Controversial Programming. See Managing Challenges: Maximizing
Impact: Policies and Practices for Controversial Programming (ALA)
Conversation Starters and Ignite Sessions (ALA), 76–80
Convincing the Decision-Makers: Turning Skeptics into Champions
(conversation starter), 79, 148
Cookies for Grown-Ups (Kelly Cooper; What’s Cooking @ ALA Stage),
163, 162
Cooking Stage. See What’s Cooking @ ALA Stage
Coonts, Deborah (Seedy Criminal Underbellies; PopTop Stage; ALA),
163, 165
Cooperate, Preserve, Share: Improving Access to Primary Source
Materials from Africa (poster), 181
Cooperative Collection Development Committee Meeting (RUSA-CODES,
RUSA-STARS), 144
Cooperative Library and Information Studies Alumni Reunion (LS), 52
Cooper, Kelly (What’s Cooking @ ALA Stage), 163, 162
Coordinating Committee Meeting (NCATE/CAEP; AASL), 121
Copy Catalog Interest Group (ALCTS-CaMMS), 67, 127
Copyright Discussion Group (ACRL), 67, 129
Copyright Hot Topics and Big Ideas (OITP), 74, 132
Copyright Subcommittee (COL; ALA), 136
Copyright Subcommittee Meeting I/II (OITP), 124, 140
Core Competencies Ad Hoc Committee Meeting (RUSA-BRASS), 141
Coretta Scott King Book Awards (EMIERT)
Breakfast, 37, 63, 138
General Committee Meeting, 130
Green Room for Breakfast, 138
Let Our Rejoicing Rise—45 Years of the Coretta Scott King Book
Award: A Conversation with Past and Present Winners, 63, 136
Set-up Room for Coretta Scott King Book Awards Breakfast, 126
2015 Jury Meeting, 136
Coretta Scott King–Virginia Hamilton Award for Lifetime Achievement
Committee Meeting (EMIERT), 136
Core Values (content area), 62, 65
Correlating Student Confidence and Outcomes. See Digital Natives Tech
Skills: Correlating Student Confidence and Outcomes (poster)
COSLA. See under Association of Specialized and Cooperative Library
Agencies (ASCLA)
COSWL. See Committee on Status of Women in Librarianship (COSWL;
ALA)
Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation (CAEP). See under
NCATE (AASL)
Council Meetings
ACRL-STS, 124, 150
Action Council (SRRT), 128, 145
ALA
Council/Executive Board/Membership Information Session, 55,
134
Council Forum I/II, 55, 147, 150
Council I–III, 55, 139, 147, 150
Council Incoming Committee Chairs Strategic Leadership
Meeting, 85, 123
Orientation Committee, 124
Orientation for New and Reelected Councilors, 55, 85, 126
Prompt Book Meeting I–III, 126, 147, 150
Resolutions Committee, 134
Course Management Systems. See Libraries in the Course Management
System: Best Practices and New Directions (RUSA-MARS)
Crafting a Successful Grant Proposal. See GPA—Crafting a Successful
Grant Proposal: Tips & Tricks to Win Every Point (AFL)
Crash Course in Evaluation Research (ACRL), 71, 111, 147
CRC. See Chapter Relations Committee (CRC) Meeting I/II (ALA)
Create, Transform and Sustain: Managing for Edgy New Technology
Services (LLAMA-SASS), 71, 100, 139
Creating a Collaborative Culture (PLA), 69, 122
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
Index c
Libraries—Trend Setters in Community Engagement and Collaboration
(ALA)
Community Needs, Reference, & Assessment in Job & Career Reference:
RSS Job & Career Reference Committee Discussion Forum (RUSA-RSS),
133
Compestine, Ying Chang (What’s Cooking @ ALA Stage), 163, 162
Competencies and Education for a Career in Cataloging Interest Group
(ALCTS-CaMMS), 74
Composition Students. See Librarian Will See You Now, The: Mandatory
Research Conferences for Composition Students (poster)
Computational Thinking. See Block by Block: Computational Thinking for
Tweens & Teens (poster)
computers, access to, 35
Conference 101: Orient Yourself, 53–54
Conference Committee (ALA), 132. See also Program Committees
Conference Development Committee (ACRL-RBMS), 138
conference office locator, 42
Conference Orientation (NMRT), 53, 67, 85, 123
Conference Program Coordinating Committee (RUSA), 149
Conference Program Coordinating Team (ALA), 130
Conference Program Planning Committees
Las Vegas, 2014 (ACRL)
ANSS, 129
STS, 126
RUSA-BRASS, 131, 145
RUSA-MARS, 128
San Francisco, 2015 (ACRL)
ANSS, 138
CJCLS, 140
EBSS, 140
LES, 147
RBMS, 135
STS, 134
WESS, 134
conference sponsors (ALA), 50
Connect and Create @ Your Library (conversation starter), 77, 140
Connected Learning and Libraries: At the Intersection of the Arts, Media,
New Technologies, and Informal Learning (ASCLA President’s Program),
28, 65, 104, 141
Connecting Arizona Tribal Libraries (poster), 181
Connecting Communities Through Local History. See Youryongestreet:
Connecting Communities Through Local History (poster)
Connecting Core Values to Library Materials and Expertise. See Diversity
Project, A: A Poster Series Connecting Core Values to Library Materials
and Expertise (poster)
Connecting First Year Students with Library Web Portal via Information
Literacy Course (poster), 180
Connecting Youth: Key Findings from the Learning Labs in Libraries and
Museums Projects (ULC), 122
CONSER/BIBCO/SACO-at-Large (UNO), 140
Consortial Borrowing Committee Meeting (LLAMA-SASS, RUSA-STARS),
145
Consortium Management Discussion Special Interest Group (ASCLA),
146
Constitution & Bylaws Committee Meeting (ALA), 132
Consulting after Retirement: Is It Right for You? (ASCLA), 64, 88, 130
content areas. See program content areas
CONTENTdm Users Group Meeting (OCLC; UNO), 148
Continuing Competencies. See Lights! Camera! Education!: A Library
& Nurse Educator Collaborative “Movie” Program for Continuing
Competencies (poster)
Continuing Education Advisory Group Meeting (PLA), 130
Continuing Education Committees. See also Education Committees
ACRL-STS, 127
ALCTS, 143
ALCTS-CaMMS, 134
Continuing Education for Libraries: A National Conversation (PLA), 75, 96,
135
Continuing Education/Professional Development Discussion Group
(ACRL), 64, 134
Continuing Resources Cataloging Forum (ALCTS-CRS), 68, 149
253
Creating an Experience Based Summer Program. See What No
Tchotskes? Creating an Experience Based Summer Program (ALSC)
Creating a Safe Library Space for All Youth (GLBTRT), 66, 135
Creating Effective Videos and Screencasts: A Library Learning Video and
Screencasts BootCamp (LEARNRT), 74, 122
Creating Fun, Accessible Programming for Youth with Disabilities
(ASCLA), 71, 89, 130
Creating Sustainable AV Preservation in Academic Libraries (ALCTS), 73,
114–115, 149
Creative Aging @ Your Library (RUSA, RUSA-RSS), 102, 141
Creative Collaborations: Successful Partnerships That Serve Children with
Autism (ASCLA), 66, 92, 132
Creative Ideas in Technical Services (ALCTS), 67, 145
Creativity and Innovation: LRRT Research Forum, 75, 102, 141
Criminal Justice/Criminology Discussion Group (ACRL-ANSS), 134
CRS. See under Association for Library Collections and Technical
Services (ALCTS)
Cullotta, Frank (LVCC Mob Panel; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163
Cultivating Diversity in LIS Education. See Leaders Wanted / LIS Doctoral
Program Options Fair: Cultivating Diversity in LIS Education (ALA)
Culturally Diverse Children’s Library Programs. See How Do YOU Día?:
An Interactive Showcase of Culturally Diverse Children’s Library Programs
(poster)
Curators and Conservators Discussion Group (ACRL-RBMS), 135
Current Topics Discussion Groups
ACRL-IS, 74, 135
ACRL-ULS, 132
Curriculum Crunch: How to Develop and Evaluate Curriculum Materials
Collections (poster), 180
Curriculum Materials Committee (ACRL-EBSS), 138
Cutting Edge Technology in Library Services (OITP), 75, 94, 132
c Index
D
254
Dance Librarians Discussion Group I/II (ACRL-ARTS), 146
Data-Driven Approach to Decision Support. See Analytics, Simplified: A
Unified, Data-Driven Approach to Decision Support (UNO)
Data Driven Collections: Integrating Evidence into Your Collection
Maintenance and Development Procedures (PLA), 68, 102, 141
Data-Driven Decision-Making
LRRT Research Forum, 71, 86, 128
Statistics and Reports: Data-Driven Decision-Making (ALCTS,
ALCTS-AS), 73, 122
Data for Librarians (conversation starter), 80, 150
Data Management and Curation. See Role of Libraries in Data
Management and Curation, The (LITA)
Data Scrubbing. See Managing Data: Tools for Plans and Data Scrubbing
(LITA)
DCRM. See Descriptive Cataloging of Rare Materials (DCRM): RDA
Revision Group (ACRL-RBMS)
DCWG. See Digital Content Working Group (DCWG) Subgroup Meeting
(ALA)
Deaf Force, The: Cultural Programs for All (ASCLA), 71
Deciding What’s Next for YALSA (YALSA), 149
Deep in the Heart of Texzines (poster), 179
Defiant Requiem (Now Showing @ ALA), 18, 133
Defining Diversity through Dialogue (Spectrum Institute; ALA), 17, 64, 121
Demand-Driven-Preferred Approval Plan, A: One Year Later, 179
Dembicki, Matt (Teaching with Comics; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage;
ALA), 168
Demonstrating Success through Assessment: Don’t Leave Outcomes to
Chance (ACRL-STS), 135
Dennison, Hannah (Women in Mystery; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 164
Descriptive Cataloging of Rare Materials (DCRM): RDA Revision Group
(ACRL-RBMS), 123, 132, 134, 135, 138, 140, 149, 150
Designing Effective Library Experiences for African-American Male Youth
(AASL), 74, 100, 138
Design It! Developing a Graphic Design Process for Diversity Resources
(poster), 181
Design Thinking and LibQUAL+: The Changing Needs and Expectations
of Faculty and Undergraduates in ARL Libraries—Trends (poster), 180
Develop and Evaluate Curriculum Materials Collections. See Curriculum
Crunch: How to Develop and Evaluate Curriculum Materials Collections
(poster)
Developing Collaborative Spaces That Encourage Community
Engagement (ERT), 93, 132
Developing Soft Skills Through Student Organizations. See Beyond the
Classroom: Developing Soft Skills through Student Organizations (poster)
Development Committee Meeting (GODORT), 135
Dewey or Don’t We: Word Based Classification in San Mateo County
(conversation starter), 78, 144
Dewey Update Breakfast and ALCTS Public Libraries Technical Services
Interest Group (OCLC; UNO), 126
Dialog with Directors Discussion Group (LLAMA), 148
Digital Badging. See Makerspace and Digital Badging: New Avenues to
Help Students Show What They Know (AASL)
Digital Collections. See Accessibility: Opening Windows to Digital
Collections (poster)
Digital Conservation Interest Group (ALCTS-PARS), 68, 132
Digital Content Working Group (DCWG) Subgroup Meeting (ALA), 136,
140, 145
Digital Curation Interest Group Meeting (ACRL), 142
Digital Exhibits. See Library Outreach through Digital Exhibits (poster)
Digital Gap, The. See E-Books and E-Readers: Leveling the Playing Field
or Widening the Digital Gap? (IRRT)
Digital Humanities and Academic Libraries: Practice and Theory, Power
and Privilege (ACRL-WGSS), 71, 114, 147
Digital Humanities Interest Group (ACRL), 71, 146
Digital Inclusion Survey Advisory Committee Meeting (ALA), 134
Digital Literacy in Correctional Settings. See Online Inside: Justification,
Issues and Solutions for Digital Literacy in Correctional Settings (ASCLA)
Digital Natives Tech Skills: Correlating Student Confidence and Outcomes
(poster), 179
Digital Oral Histories with Full Text Searching via Open Source Software
(UNO), 128
Digital Preservation Interest Group (ALCTS-PARS), 68, 139
Digital Special Collections Discussion Group (ACRL-RBMS), 134
Digital Stuff and Copyright (OITP), 75, 109, 145
Digitized Collections. See Librarians as Digital Leaders: Collaborating on
the Development and Use of Digitized Collections (ACRL)
Diplomacy in Cataloging Procedure Change. See You Want to Change
What?! Diplomacy in Cataloging Procedure Change (poster)
Disabilities
Creating Fun, Accessible Programming for Youth with Disabilities
(ASCLA), 71, 89, 130
Library Services for People with Visual or Physical Disabilities That
Prevent Them from Reading Standard Print Interest Group Meeting
(ASCLA), 75, 124
Stepping Up: Providing Effective Library and Information Services,
Programs and Resources to Students with Disabilities (AASL), 74,
109, 144
Disaster Preparedness
Are You Ready? Developing a Disaster Preparedness Plan for
Libraries (poster), 181
Disaster Preparedness in the 21st Century: Preserving Library
Collections and Services (LITA), 73, 115, 149
Discovering Open Access Articles: Maximum Access, Maximum Visibility!
(ALCTS-CRS), 73, 96, 134
Discover the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute: Where Mature Minds
Bloom (RMRT; ALA), 148
Discovery & Access Committee. See Science Resources: Discovery &
Access Committee (ACRL-STS)
Discovery Services Committee Meeting (RUSA-RSS), 128
Discovery: The New Name for Reader’s Advisory (ALA), 63, 113, 148
Discussing Discovery Services: What’s Working, What’s Not and What’s
Next? (RUSA-RSS), 72, 145
Discussion Forum on Water Politics (ACRL-LPSS), 132
Discussion Group Chairs Committee Meeting (ACRL-STS), 126
Discussion Groups. See also under specific discussion groups
ACRL-DLS, 142
LLAMA-FRFDS, 136
LLAMA/NMRT, 141
Disney-Hyperion (Book Buzz Theater), 16, 156
Distance Learning Interest Group (LITA), 141
Distance Learning Section (DLS). See under Association of College and
Research Libraries (ACRL)
Dive into Digital Badges! A Badge Curriculum Workshop (LITA), 75, 105,
143
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Diversity and Outreach Fair (OLOS), 23, 27, 65, 134
Diversity Committees
ACRL, 142
ACRL-RBMS, 138
Committee on Diversity and All Sub-Committee Business Meeting
(ALA), 122
Diversity Officers Discussion Group (LLAMA), 139
Diversity Project, A: A Poster Series Connecting Core Values to Library
Materials and Expertise (poster), 180
Diversity Success Stories (ALA), 65, 98, 136
Division All Committee Meeting (ALCTS), 143
Division Committee Chairs (ALCTS), 141
Division Leaders and the Budget Analysis & Review Committee (ALA),
144
Divisions’ Leadership Breakfast (ALA), 138
DK Publishing
Book Buzz Theater, 16, 156
Luncheon (UNO), 131
DLS. See under Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
DLS Award Luncheon (ACRL-DLS), 142
Document Design. See Fonts in Space: Engaging Document Design
(ignite session)
Documenting the Nation’s Oldest City. See Partners in Preservation:
Documenting the Nation’s Oldest City (poster)
Dominican University (alumni reunion; LS), 52
Don’t Let Your Kids Slip and Slide (poster), 180
Don’t Sweat That Presentation (ignite session), 76, 131
Down and Dirty Quick and Brilliant Training Ideas (LEARNRT), 75, 110,
146
Draft Revised Standards for Accreditation of LIS Master’s Programs
(ALA), 146
Dragotta, Nick (Howtoons; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 169
Drexel University (alumni reunion; LS), 52
Dropping a Few Balls: Juggling for Relevancy (poster), 181
Drozd, Jerzy (Comics Bakery; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168,
170
Drupal4Lib Interest Group (LITA), 133
DVD/Video Pavilion, 157
Dynamic Digital Dia: Promoting Cultural Competence in Digital Storytimes
(ALSC), 73, 111, 145
Dynamic Duos: Collaboration between School and Public Library
Systems (YALSA), 72, 98, 136
E
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
Index e
Earn What You’re Worth: Salary Negotiation for Library Workers (ALAAPA), 54, 70, 108, 145
Eat What You Love Every Day (Marlene Koch; What’s Cooking @ ALA
Stage), 163, 162
E-Books and E-Readers: Leveling the Playing Field or Widening the
Digital Gap? (IRRT), 22, 68, 93, 133
E-Books: Discovering the Virtual Backlog (ALCTS), 67, 102, 141
EBSCO Publishing (UNO)
ALA Scholarship Award Winners’ Breakfast, 140
Altmetrics in Practice, 135
EDS API, The—Faculty Ease of Use and Bringing Library Materials
into Student Reading Assignments, 145
Panel, 150
Power of Integration, The, 129
Revisiting Discovery for Public Library Patrons, 131
RIPM Focus Group—sponsored by EBSCO, 131
What Is New from EBSCO?, 128
What Makes An E-book Bestseller?, 140
EBSS. See under Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
ECRR. See Every Child Ready to Read (ECRR)
Editorial Advisory Board (Booklist; ALA), 129
Editorial Boards
Academic Library Trends and Statistics Survey (ACRL), 138
Choice (ACRL), 138
C&RL (ACRL), 138
C&RL News (ACRL), 138
ITAL (LITA), 141
Knowledge Quest (AASL), 148
LRTS (ALCTS), 141
Monographs (ALCTS), 136
Publications in Librarianship (ACRL), 138
RBM (ACRL), 138
Resources for College Libraries (ACRL), 138
Edmunds, Tracy (Reading with Pictures: Comics That Make Kids Smarter;
Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 169
EDS API, The—Faculty Ease of Use and Bringing Library Materials into
Student Reading Assignments (EBSCO Publishing; UNO), 145
Education and Behavioral Sciences Section (EBSS). See under
Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
Education and Training Committee Meeting (RUSA-STARS), 128
Education Assembly (ALA), 130
Education Committees. See also Continuing Education Committees
GODORT, 145
LITA, 130
MAGIRT, 135
RUSA-BRASS, 136
Education & Professional Development for Reference Committee Meeting
(RUSA-RSS), 128
Education Research Libraries Forum (ACRL-EBSS), 124
Education Resources Information Center. See ERIC Presentation
(ACRL-EBSS)
Educators of School Librarians Section (ESLS). See under American
Association of School Librarians (AASL)
Edward G. Holley Memorial Lecture: The Business of Lectures (LHRT),
65, 103, 141
E-Government Subcommittee (COL; ALA), 134
8th Annual NISO/BISG Forum: The Changing Standards Landscape
(NISO; UNO), 122
Eisele, Cosmo (Pathfinder Roleplaying Game; Graphic Novel/Gaming
Stage; ALA), 168, 170
Eisner, Will. See under Will Eisner (Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA)
E. J. Josey
Scholarship Committee (BCALA), 123
Spectrum Scholar Mentor Committee Meeting (ACRL), 135
Elder, Josh (Reading with Pictures: Comics That Make Kids Smarter;
Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 169
Electronic Lab Notebooks: Managing Research from Data Collection to
Publication (LITA), 73, 86, 127
Electronic Resources Interest Group (ALCTS, ALCTS-CRS), 67, 132
Electronic Resources Management Interest Group (LITA), 130
“Embedded” Cultural Communities in Europe and the Americas:
Challenges for Librarians (ACRL-LES, ACRL-WESS, ACRL-SEES), 66,
92, 132
Embedded Librarianship vs. the One-Shot. See Tale of Two Classes, A:
Embedded Librarianship vs. the One-Shot (poster)
Embedding Librarians in Virtual Communities (ASCLA), 64, 93, 132
Emerging Leaders (ALA)
Interest Group Steering Committee, 143
Interest Group World Cafe, 69, 134
Poster Session and Reception, 124
Subcommittee, 140
2014 Wrap-Up, 69, 130
Workshop, 69, 122
Emerging Trends Discussion Group (LLAMA-HRS), 132
EMIERT. See Ethnic and Multicultural Information Exchange Round Table
(EMIERT; ALA)
Empire Strikes Back, The. See Boba Fett at the Circ Desk: Library
Leadership from The Empire Strikes Back (PLA)
Empower Communities in the Digital Age. See Puerto Rico and
Colombia: Enhancing the Library to Empower Communities in the Digital
Age (poster)
Energizing Teen Creativity by Letting Go (YALSA), 72, 113, 149
Engage Potential Donors. See Calling All Library Donors!: Using an
Undergraduate Research Ward to Engage Potential Donors (poster)
Engaging Communities in Local History. See KNOW YOUR
NEIGHBORHOOD: Engaging Communities in Local History (poster)
Engaging Learners through Interface, Interactivity, and Instant Feedback
(poster), 181
255
e Index
256
Engle, Margarita (Poetry Blast; PopTop Stage; ALA), 165
Enhance Sharing Session (OCLC; UNO), 122
Enhancing the Student Employee Experience. See Bridging the Skills
Gap: Enhancing the Student Employee Experience (poster)
Environments by Design: Creating—and Re-Creating—Spaces for Both
Quiet and Collaboration (LLAMA-BES), 70, 105, 144
Equality...Equity...Diversity. See Jean E. Coleman Library Outreach
Lecture: Equality...Equity...Diversity: Libraries, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
and the Mission (OLOS)
E-Rate Task Force Meeting (ALA), 139
ERIC Presentation (ACRL-EBSS), 142
ERT. See Exhibits Round Table (ERT; ALA)
ESLS. See under American Association of School Librarians (AASL)
Ethics in Action. See What Would You Do? Ethics in Action: Libraries and
Law Enforcement (ALA)
Ethnic and Multicultural Information Exchange Round Table (EMIERT;
ALA)
Coretta Scott King Book Awards
Breakfast, 37, 63, 138
General Committee Meeting, 130
Green Room for Breakfast, 138
Set-up Room for Breakfast, 126
2015 Jury Meeting, 136
Coretta Scott King–Virginia Hamilton Award for Lifetime Achievement
Committee Meeting, 136
Executive and All Committee Meeting, 141
Get HIP: Highly Interactive Programs for Multicultural Communities,
71, 86, 127
Let Our Rejoicing Rise—45 Years of the Coretta Scott King Book
Award: A Conversation with Past and Present Winners, 63, 136
Membership Meeting, 130
Eurasia and Central Asia Subcommittee Program (ALA), 105, 143
Europe Subcommittee Program (ALA), 74, 93, 132
Evaluation Research. See Crash Course in Evaluation Research (ACRL)
Every Child Ready to Eat: Nutrition Education for Families Using Early
Literacy Practices (PLA), 72, 108, 145
Every Child Ready to Read (ECRR)
Does It Really Work? Evaluating the Program (ALSC), 71, 86, 127
ECRR 2.0: Using Apps and eBooks in Early Literacy Programs (PLA),
65, 93, 133
Oversight Committee Meeting (PLA), 131
Everyone Lives in the Greatest Place on Earth: Librarian as Local Area
Guide and Advocate (ignite session), 79, 149
Evidence Based Decision Making in Library Technology (LITA), 73, 102,
141
Evidence-Based Practices Discussion Group (ACRL-ULS), 139
Excellence in Nonfiction for Young Adults. See 2015 Excellence in
Nonfiction (YALSA)
Executive Board Committee Meeting (ACRL-AFAS), 126
Executive Board Executive Committee (ALA), 121
Executive Board Retreat (BCALA), 121
Executive Boards. See also Executive Committees; Executive Meetings
AILA, 124
ALA, 55, 122, 149, 150
APALA, 124
BCALA, 122
Beta Phi Mu, 132
Captioned, 55
GLBTRT, 127
LEARNRT, 129, 147
LHRT, 139
LIRT, 148
MAGIRT, 145, 146
NMRT, 141
VRT, 148
Executive Committee Planning Meeting (RUSA-BRASS), 128
Executive Committees. See also Executive Boards
AASL, 121, 150
ACRL, 147
AAMES, 126
ANSS, 126, 147
ARTS (with Membership and Outreach Committee), 126
CJCLS, 138
CLS, 126
DLS, 144
EBSS, 147
IS, 126, 132, 134
LES, 126, 148
RBMS, 147, 148
SEES, 135
STS, 150
ULS, 127
WESS, 148
WGSS, 143
Affiliate Assembly (AASL), 122
ALCTS (with All Committee Meeting)
AS, 132
CaMMS, 141
CMS, 139
CRS, 127
PARS, 148
ALSC, 121
IRRT, 139
LITA, 122
LLAMA (BES, SASS, PRMS, MAES, LOMS, HRS, FRFDS), 133
REFORMA, 124, 149
RUSA, 124
BRASS, 150
CODES, 149
HS, 148
MARS, 148
MARS/RSS (joint), 149
Executive Meetings
EMIERT (with All Committee Meeting), 141
joint meeting with AASL, ALSC, and YALSA, 121
YALSA, 122, 150
exhibit hall/floor
alphabetical list of exhibitors, 185–228
product categories of exhibitors, 231–242
specialty pavilions, 157
stage highlights, 23
Exhibition Awards Committee Meeting I/II (ACRL-RBMS), 126, 129
exhibits receptions
Closing Reception & Wrap Up/Rev Up Party (ALA), 155
Opening Reception (ERT), 9
Exhibits Round Table (ERT; ALA)
Artist Alley Auction, 21
Batman: A Celebration of 75 Years, 63, 88, 130
Board Meeting, 138
Developing Collaborative Spaces That Encourage Community
Engagement, 93, 132
Exhibits Opening Reception, 9
How to Convince Management to Approve Your New ILS, 86, 127
I’m a Librarian! No! I’m an Author! No! I’m a Librarian and an Author,
97, 135
Implementing an IL Curriculum, with a Little Help from my Friends,
89, 130
Membership Meeting, 147
You Shouldn’t Have to Find a Book by Its Cover, 99, 136
Expanding the School Library: Connecting Students with Students,
Across International Boundaries, Using Modern Technology (IRRT Chair’s
Program), 22, 74, 108, 145
Experimenting with Animation: Lehman College’s Animated Information
Literacy Advocate (LITA), 75, 86, 127
External Review Panel Training (ALA), 121
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
F
Forums. See also specific kinds of forums
ALCTS-CaMMS, 68, 143
ALCTS-PARS, 68, 146
FRBR. See Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR)
Interest Group (ALCTS, ALCTS-CaMMS)
Free and Affordable Apps for Accessibility (ASCLA), 71, 93, 132
Free and Good for You! Open Refine, a Valuable Tools for Digital
Collections Managers (poster), 179
Freedom to Read Foundation (FTRF; ALA)
Board of Trustees Meeting, 121
Intellectual Freedom 101 (with Merritt Fund, IFRT), 54, 65, 85, 123
Issues Briefing Session (with IFC), 65, 134
Orientation, 121
FRFDS. See under Library Leadership and Management Association
(LLAMA)
From Distance Education to Online Learning: Practical Approaches to
Information Literacy Instruction and Collaborative Learning in Online
Environment (poster), 180
From Fired to Fired Up! (conversation starter), 77, 135
From Discovery to Delivery: Successful Systems Integration (poster), 179
From FirstSearch to WorldCat Discovery: Cooperative Discovery That
Puts You Where Your Users Are (OCLC; UNO), 131
From Here to Discovery (poster), 181
From Pages to People: Organizing Human Libraries in Academic Library
Settings (poster), 181
From Research Supporters to Research Partners: Librarians and Islamic
Bioethics (poster), 181
From Stumbling Blocks to Building Blocks: Using Threshold Concepts to
Teach Information Literacy (ACRL-IS), 74, 105, 143
From the Ground Up: Promoting Sustainability in Academic Libraries
(poster), 181
FTRF. See Freedom to Read Foundation (FTRF; ALA)
Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR) Interest Group
(ALCTS, ALCTS-CaMMS), 67, 122
Fundamentals of Collection Assessment (ALCTS), 67, 121, 122
Fundraising. See Ask the Experts: Discover Key Strategies for Successful
Academic Library Fundraising (LLAMA-FRFDS)
Fund Raising and Financial Development Section (FRFDS). See under
Library Leadership and Management Association (LLAMA)
Funky Fundraising—How We Used a Library Pub Crawl to Raise Money
for Literacy (poster), 181
Future & Emerging Access Service Trends. See FEAST: Future &
Emerging Access Service Trends (LLAMA-SASS)
Future of Libraries (ALA), 89
Future of Library Services for and with Teens, The (YALSA), 72, 104, 142
G
Gala Author Tea Sponsored by ReferenceUSA (UNITED), 150
Gale, Cengage Learning: shuttle bus service (UNO), 36–37
Game Making Interest Group (LITA), 139
Games and Gaming Round Table (GAMERT; ALA)
ALAPlay 2014, 25, 71, 124
Board Meeting, 136
Come Make a Game: Library Game Jams, 71, 96, 135
Using Meaningful Gamification to Motivate Library Users: A Hands-on
Workshop, 74, 122
Games and the Common Core Library. See Play, Play, Learn: Games and
the Common Core Library (AASL)
Gamification. See Using Meaningful Gamification to Motivate Library
Users: A Hands-on Workshop (GAMERT)
Gaming/Graphic Novel Pavilion. See Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage (ALA)
Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgendered Round Table (GLBTRT; ALA)
Creating a Safe Library Space for All Youth, 66, 135
Executive Board Meeting, 127
Membership Meeting, 140
Social, 146
Stonewall Book Awards Brunch, 63, 148
Gearing Up for College: Library Support for Outreach and Early
Recruitment for Middle School Students (poster), 180
Geisel Award Committee. See 2015 Geisel Award Committee Meeting
I–III (ALSC)
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
Index g
Faceted Subject Access Interest Group (ALCTS-CaMMS), 73, 136
Facilitating Teaching and Learning through the Integration of Library
Services and Course Management (UNO), 133
Facility Tour of Summit View Juvenile Correctional Center Library
(ASCLA), 71, 147
Faculty Collaborate with Librarians. See Problem Assignments: An
Opportunity for Faculty to Collaborate with Librarians (poster)
FAFLRT. See Federal and Armed Forces Libraries Round Table (FAFLRT;
ALA)
Family Hightower, The (Brian Francis Slattery; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163,
165
Far Out Isn’t Far Enough (Now Showing @ ALA), 19, 138
FEAST: Future & Emerging Access Service Trends (LLAMA-SASS), 71,
109, 145
Federal and Armed Forces Libraries Round Table (FAFLRT; ALA)
Awards Reception, 142
Innovative Talent Management Practices in Federal Libraries:
Responding to the Challenges of Recruitment, Retention, and
Succession, 70, 100, 139
Leveraging Librarian Expertise in Customer Resource Management,
71, 103, 141
Membership Meeting, 145
Rebranding Yourself for a Career Change/Transition into Information
Services, 64, 106, 143
Federal Documents Task Force Meeting (GODORT), 143
Federal Science Agencies Update (ACRL-STS), 132
Fedora Digital Collections and Open Geoportal. See Somewhere There’s
a PLACE for Us: Linking Fedora Digital Collections and Open Geoportal
(poster)
Fellowship of Christian Librarians & Information Specialists (FOCLIS;
UNO), 147
Feminists’ Night at the Movies (SRRT), 65, 111, 147
Feminist Task Force (SRRT), 124
films. See Now Showing @ ALA (film program)
Finance & Audit Committee (ALA Executive Board), 131
Finance Your Future—The University Finance Lab as a Venue for
Information Literacy & Student Engagement (poster), 181
Financial Know-How and YOU! The Library as a Gateway to Financial
Literacy (poster), 180
Financial Literacy at Your Library (ACRL President’s Program), 28, 67, 91,
129
Finding Dead People: Genealogy and Local History Resources for the ILL
Practitioner (RUSA, RUSA-STARS), 72, 96–97, 135
Finding the Right Needle in the Haystack—Relevance Ranking in the
Context of Library Discovery Systems and Big Data (UNO), 144
First Author, First Book: Veteran & Rookies (UNITED), 63, 139
FirstSearch. See From FirstSearch to WorldCat Discovery: Cooperative
Discovery That Puts You Where Your Users Are (OCLC; UNO)
First Steps for Aboriginal Students: The Library’s Partnership with the
Aboriginal Centre (poster), 181
first-time attendee information, 53
First-Time Library Directors Discuss Their Experiences. See What I
Really Want to Do Is Direct: First-Time Library Directors Discuss Their
Experiences (conversation starter)
First Year Experience Discussion Group (ACRL), 74, 126
Fiscal and Business Officers Discussion Group (LLAMA-LOMS), 145
Five Minute Activities (ignite session), 77, 142
Fixing Future Managers: Librarian Recommendations for Improving
Library School Management Education (poster), 181
FOCLIS. See Fellowship of Christian Librarians & Information Specialists
(FOCLIS; UNO)
Focusing on the Big Picture: Re-imagining the Library Website (LITA), 70,
110, 146
Fonda, Jane (Auditorium Speaker Series), 12, 55, 127
Fonts in Space: Engaging Document Design (ignite session), 78
Forming 2 (Jesse Moynihan; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168,
170
Forum for Research and Scholarship in African American Studies (ACRLAFAS), 135
Forum Migration 1914–2014: Asia and the World (ACRL-AAMES), 131
Forum Planning 2014 Committee (LITA), 130
Forum Planning 2015 Committee (LITA), 130
257
g Index
258
Genealogy and Local History Resources for the ILL Practitioner. See
Finding Dead People: Genealogy and Local History Resources for the ILL
Practitioner (RUSA, RUSA-STARS)
Genealogy & Local History Discussion Group (RUSA-HS), 136
General Assembly (Beta Phi Mu), 134
General Conference Information (ALA), 35–36
General Membership Discussion Group (ACRL-WESS), 75, 147
General Membership Forums
ACRL-LES, 143
ACRL-WGSS, 75, 136
General Membership Meetings. See also Membership Meetings
ACRL-AFAS, 131
ACRL-LPSS, 129
ACRL-STS (with breakfast), 138
REFORMA, 148
General Sessions
ALA Closing Session (B. J. Novak), 11, 55, 150
ALA Opening Session (featuring Jane McGonigal), 9, 124
General Social Survey. See What America Thinks: Using the General
Social Survey as a Reference Tool (poster)
GeoTech Committee (MAGIRT), 136
Germanists and Romance Languages Discussion Groups (ACRL-WESS),
143
German-North American Resources Partnership Meeting (GNARP; UNO),
140
Get HIP: Highly Interactive Programs for Multicultural Communities
(EMIERT), 71, 86, 127
Get Involved: Powered by Your Library (poster), 180
Get the Facts! Nonfiction, Informational Reading, and Literature for Youth
(poster), 179
Getting a Bigger Piece of the Pie: Effective Communication with Funders
& Policy Makers (UNITED), 66, 105, 144
Getting a Library Job in a Foreign Country: How (and Why) to Do It and
How to Thrive Once You Do (JobLIST Placement Center; ALA), 38, 140
Get Writing! Overcome Procrastination, Remove Roadblocks and Create
a Map for Success (ACRL), 70, 115, 149
Gildea, Kelly (Team Panel for Scowler; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 165
Gill, Joel Christian (Teaching with Comics; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage;
ALA), 168
GIS Discussion Group (MAGIRT), 73, 127
GLBTRT. See Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgendered Round Table
(GLBTRT; ALA)
Gleason, Patrick (What Does It Take to Create a New Comic Book?;
Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 170
GNARP. See German-North American Resources Partnership Meeting
(GNARP; UNO)
GODORT. See Government Documents Round Table (GODORT; ALA)
Going All In: Library Instruction for Students in Online Education
Programs (LIRT), 75, 103, 141
Going Analog & Getting Artsy: Transforming the Academic Library
through Creative Programming (poster), 181
Going beyond Job Search Help at Queens Library (PLA), 72, 100, 139
Going Global: Library as a Crucial Player for Internationalizing a University
(poster), 180
The Good, the Bad, the Ugly (LEARNRT), 74, 97, 135
Government Documents Round Table (GODORT; ALA)
All Committee Meeting, 124
Awards Committee Meeting, 141
Bylaws Committee Meeting, 124
Cataloging Committee Meeting, 136
Development Committee Meeting, 135
Education Committee Meeting, 145
Federal Documents Task Force Meeting, 143
Government Information for Children Committee Meeting, 133
Government Information Subcommittee (with COL), 132
International Documents Task Force Meeting, 146
Legislative Committee Meeting II/III, 141, 148
Membership Committee Meeting, 124
Membership Meeting, 148
Nominating Committee Meeting, 124
Program Committee Meeting, 145
Publications Committee Meeting, 135
Rare and Endangered Government Publications Committee Meeting,
141
State and Local Documents Task Force, 136
Steering Committee Meeting I/II, 123, 150
Tribes and Scribes: A Double Feature Highlighting Native American
and WPA Historical Research, 74, 116, 149
Web Managers Committee Meeting, 124
Government Information Committee Meeting (ACRL-STS), 127
Government Information for Children Committee Meeting (GODORT), 133
Government Information Pavilion, 157
Government Information Subcommittee
COL (ALA), 132
GODORT, 132
Government Relations Committee Meeting (ACRL), 142
GPA—Crafting a Successful Grant Proposal: Tips & Tricks to Win Every
Point (AFL), 143
Graham, Joan Bransfield (Poetry Blast; PopTop Stage; ALA), 165
Graphic Design Process for Diversity Resources. See Design It!
Developing a Graphic Design Process for Diversity Resources (poster)
Graphic Novel Author Panel (Raina Telgemeier, Tom Angleberger, and
Cece Bell; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 170
Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage (ALA), 23, 168–170
Graphic Novel Petting Zoo (ALA), 63, 98, 136
Graphic Novels
Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, The—Intellectual Freedom and the
Defense of Graphic Novels and Comic Books (IFRT), 64, 95, 133
Graphic Novels & Comics in Libraries Member Interest Group
Business Meeting (ALA), 130
Teaching Information Literacy Through Graphic Novels and Animation
(poster), 181
Grassroots Strategies for Friends, Trustees, Advocates, and Foundations.
See Making an Impact: Proven Grassroots Strategies for Friends,
Trustees, Advocates, and Foundations (WO Breakout Session IV; ALA)
Grassroots Subcommittee (COL; ALA), 132, 139
Great Brands Start from Within. See Beyond Glitz and Glitter: Great
Brands Start from Within (PLA)
Greater Western Library Alliance (GWLA): Student Learning Outcomes
Committee (UNO), 144
Great Graphic Novels for Teens (YALSA), 133, 144
green initiatives. See Las Vegas
green meeting efforts (ALA), 26
Grimes, Nikki (Poetry Blast; PopTop Stage; ALA), 165
Grow Forward: Professional Education Needs in the 21st Century (ALA),
70, 93, 132
Growing Libraries, Growing Librarians: Partnerships with Libraries and
Library Schools in Africa, 22, 65, 105, 143
Guideline Development for Financial Literacy Education in Libraries
(RUSA), 70, 128
Guide to Reference Editorial Meeting (ALA), 132
Guitars, Amps, & iPads: Music Libraries as Makerspaces (poster), 181
GWLA. See Greater Western Library Alliance (GWLA): Student Learning
Outcomes Committee (UNO)
H
Hachette Book Group Fall Book Buzz (Book Buzz Theater), 16, 156
HackHealth: Engaging Tweens in Seeking and Utilizing Health Information
(poster), 180
Hale, Nathan (Hazardous Tales: Treaties, Trenches, Mud, and Blood;
Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 169
Hall, Rachel Howzell (Women in Mystery; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 164
Hamilton, Virginia. See Coretta Scott King–Virginia Hamilton Award for
Lifetime Achievement Committee Meeting (EMIERT)
Hanagarne, Josh. See Saturday Author Luncheon Featuring Josh
Hanagarne (Bookmobile Saturday; OLOS)
Handler, Daniel. See ALA Awards Presentation and President’s Program
(Lois Lowry with Jeff Bridges)
Happy Hours
LEARNT, 146
LITA, 146
LLAMA, 147
HarperCollins (UNO)
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
People: Organizing Human Libraries in Academic Library Settings (poster)
Human Resources Section (HRS). See under Library Leadership and
Management Association (LLAMA)
Hunger, Homelessness and Poverty Task Force (SRRT), 126
I
Icebreaker & Introductions (Spectrum Institute; ALA), 17, 64, 121
ICLAE. See International Council of Library Association Executives
(ICLAE) Meeting (ALA)
ICOLC Consortia Breakfast (UNO), 138
Ideas and Practices in STEAM Learning (PLA), 72, 108, 145
Identity Play to Boost Teen Engagement. See Who Am I?: Incorporating
Identity Play to Boost Teen Engagement (poster)
IFC. See Intellectual Freedom Committee (IFC)
IFLA. See International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions
(IFLA): Update
IFRT. See Intellectual Freedom Round Table (IFRT; ALA)
Ignite Sessions (ALA), 76–79
Igniting the Conversation: Bringing Inspiration Home (conversation
starter), 77, 134
IL Curriculum. See Implementing an IL Curriculum, with a Little Help from
my Friends (ERT)
ILL Discussion Group (RUSA-STARS), 72, 131
ILLiad Users Group. See WorldShare ILL and ILLiad Users Group (OCLC;
UNO)
ILS. See How to Convince Management to Approve Your New ILS (ERT)
Image Resources Interest Group (ACRL), 75, 131
Imagineering Interest Group (LITA), 130
I’m a Librarian! No! I’m an Author! No! I’m a Librarian and an Author
(ERT), 97, 135
IMLS. See Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS): Update (ALA)
Immersion Faculty (ACRL)
Interviews I/II, 126, 138
Meeting I/II, 121
Planning Retreat I, 121
Immersion Program Committee Meeting (ACRL), 142
Immigration Reform, Asian Americans and Librarianship (APALA), 106,
143
Implementing an IL Curriculum, with a Little Help from my Friends (ERT),
89, 130
Implementing Patron-Driven Acquisition (PDA) for Ebook Acquisition That
Fits Your Library (poster), 179
Implementing RDA for Digital Libraries. See Taking the Journey Together:
Implementing RDA for Digital Libraries (poster)
Inaugural Brunch (ALA), 11, 150
Inclusive Instruction: Information Literacy for Adult Learners (poster), 180
Independent Schools Section (ISS). See under American Association of
School Librarians (AASL)
Indiana University Alumni Reception (alumni reunion; LS), 52, 146
Informal Learning. See Connected Learning and Libraries: At the
Intersection of the Arts, Media, New Technologies, and Informal Learning
(ASCLA President’s Program)
Informal Meet-up for Academic Librarians Interested in Library Marketing
and Outreach (ACRL), 135
Information Commons Discussion Group (ACRL), 70, 131
Information Literacy. See also Student Learning and Information Literacy
(ACRL)
AASL/ACRL Interdivisional Committee on Information Literacy, 142
Committee Meeting (ACRL-STS), 126
Common Core State Standards and General Education: Information
Literacy Connects the Dots (ACRL), 74, 92, 131
Competency Standards for Higher Education Task Force I/II (ACRL),
142, 144
Connecting First Year Students with Library Web Portal via
Information Literacy Course (poster), 180
Experimenting with Animation: Lehman College’s Animated
Information Literacy Advocate (LITA), 75, 86
Finance Your Future—The University Finance Lab as a Venue for
Information Literacy & Student Engagement (poster), 181
From Distance Education to Online Learning: Practical Approaches
to Information Literacy Instruction and Collaborative Learning in
Online Environment (poster), 180
From Stumbling Blocks to Building Blocks: Using Threshold
Concepts to Teach Information Literacy (ACRL-IS), 74, 105
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
Index i
Adult Book Buzz, 16, 140, 156
author signings, 172, 175, 177
Haute Dogs (Russell Van Kraayenburg; What’s Cooking @ ALA Stage),
163
Hazardous Tales: Treaties, Trenches, Mud, and Blood (Nathan Hale;
Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 169
Heads of Cataloging Interest Group (ALCTS-CaMMS), 68, 148
Heads of Library Technology Interest Group (LITA), 143
Heads of Public Services Discussion Group (ACRL), 71, 135
Health and Medical Reference Committee Meeting (RUSA-RSS), 128
Health Information Project Taskforce (BCALA), 129
Health Sciences Interest Group Continuing Education Meeting (ACRL),
71, 129
Health Sciences Interest Group Membership Meeting (ACRL), 126
Hearing on Framework for Information Literacy in Higher Education
(ACRL), 129
Heyborne, Kirby (Team Panel for Scowler; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 165
Higher Education Task Force. See under Information Literacy
HIP Film Fest, The: How to Plan, Partner and Execute! (PLA), 72,
113–114, 148
History Genealogy Preconference (RUSA, RUSA-HS), 122
History Librarians Discussion Group (RUSA-HS), 68, 94, 133
History Section (HS). See under Reference and User Services Association
(RUSA)
Holdings Information Forum (ALCTS-CRS), 68, 134
Holiday House Books (Book Buzz Theater), 16, 156
Holley, Edward G. See Edward G. Holley Memorial Lecture: The Business
of Lectures (LHRT)
Holt, K. A. (Poetry Blast; PopTop Stage; ALA), 165
Homeless Men in Public Libraries. See Library as Place: Experiences of
Homeless Men in Public Libraries in Vancouver, Canada (poster)
Hot Books from Small Press (UNITED), 63, 145
hotels
map and key, 43
meeting rooms, 44–49
shuttle bus service, 37
Hot Picks for Book Clubs (UNITED), 63, 142
Hot Topics Discussion Groups
ACRL-CJCLS, 70, 134
ACRL-STS, 140
RUSA-CODES, 131
RUSA-MARS, 67, 144
RUSA-STARS, 72, 136
Hour of Power, An: United for Libraries Leaders Orientation (UNITED), 75,
96, 135
How Business Librarians Support Entrepreneurs. See under
Preconference Events
How Do YOU Día?: An Interactive Showcase of Culturally Diverse
Children’s Library Programs (poster), 181
How I Discovered Poetry (Poetry Blast; PopTop Stage; ALA), 165
How Libraries Can be Community Collaborators & Catalysts for Position
Action. See People Experiencing Homelessness: How Libraries Can be
Community Collaborators & Catalysts for Position Action (conversation
starter)
How Passion Connects to Learning. See Burning Need to Know, A:
How Passion Connects to Learning (YALSA President’s Program and
Membership Meeting)
How to Convince Management to Approve Your New ILS (ERT), 86, 127
Howtoons (Nick Dragotta; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 169
HR Confidential: Insider Tips from Library HR Directors (JobLIST
Placement Center; ALA), 38, 129
HRDR. See Office for Human Resource Development and Recruitment
(HRDR): Advisory Committee (ALA)
HRS. See under Library Leadership and Management Association
(LLAMA)
HS. See under Reference and User Services Association (RUSA)
Human Books. See Women Studies and Human Books: A Valuable
Information Literacy Experiment (poster)
Humanities Based Programming. See Teen Reading Lounge: Engaging
Teens through Interactive Humanities Based Programming (ASCLA)
Human Libraries: Bringing Personal Stories to Research and Learning
(ignite session), 78, 142
Human Libraries in Academic Library Settings. See From Pages to
259
i Index
260
Hearing on Framework for Information Literacy in Higher Education
(ACRL), 129
Inclusive Instruction: Information Literacy for Adult Learners (poster),
180
InfoSkills2Go: Bridging the Information Literacy Gap between High
School and College (poster), 180
Instruction and Information Literacy Committee Meeting (ACRLANSS), 135
Integrating Information Literacy into the First-Year Experience of
International Students (poster), 180
Intersections of Scholarly Communication and Information Literacy
Task Force Meeting (ACRL), 140
Know When to Hold ‘em, Know When to Scaf-fold ‘em: The Case of
Sustaining an Information Literacy Instruction Program at Cascadia
Community College (poster), 180
No Bluffing—The New Nursing Information Literacy Competency
Standards Are on the Table! (poster), 180
Professional Development Committee (ACRL), 142
So You think You Are Information Literate?: Assessing Pre-Service
Teachers Information Literacy (poster), 180
Standards Committee (ACRL), 142
Student Learning and Information Literacy (ACRL)
Component Committees Meeting, 142
Coordinating Committee Meeting I/II, 129, 144, 146
Tailor It to Their Needs and They Will Come: Designing Information
Literacy Instruction for Large Class Settings (poster), 180
Teaching Information Literacy Through Graphic Novels and Animation
(poster), 181
Web Site Committee (ACRL), 142
Women Studies and Human Books: A Valuable Information Literacy
Experiment (poster), 180
Information Manipulation Part II: Surveillance (ALA), 111, 147
Information Manipulation Part I: Net Neutrality (WO Breakout Session I;
ALA), 65, 91, 130
Information Technology and Libraries (ITAL) Editorial Board (LITA), 141
InfoSkills2Go: Bridging the Information Literacy Gap between High
School and College (poster), 180
Innovation Award Task Force Meeting (ACRL-STS), 144
Innovative Assessment Strategies. See Looking Closely into the Crystal
Ball: Using Innovative Assessment Strategies to Predict the Future Needs
of Users in Academic Libraries (LLAMA-LOMS)
Innovative Talent Management Practices in Federal Libraries: Responding
to the Challenges of Recruitment, Retention, and Succession (FAFLRT),
70, 100, 139
Ins and Outs of Job Hunting for Library Positions, The—An Insider’s
Perspective (JobLIST Placement Center; ALA), 38, 133
Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS): Update (ALA), 100, 139
Instructional Technologies Interest Group (LITA), 130
Instruction and Information Literacy Committee Meeting (ACRL-ANSS),
135
Instruction Section (IS). See under Association of College and Research
Libraries (ACRL)
Integrating Information Literacy into the First-Year Experience of
International Students (poster), 180
Intellectual Access to Preservation Metadata Interest Group (ALCTSPARS), 68, 134
Intellectual Freedom 101 (Merritt Fund, FTRF, IFRT), 54, 65, 85, 123
Intellectual Freedom Committee (IFC)
ALA
COL/IFC Joint Meeting, 140
Issues Briefing Session (with FTRF), 65, 134
Meeting I-V, 121, 122, 127, 130, 150
Privacy Subcommittee, 139
PLA, 128
Intellectual Freedom in the Surveillance State (SRRT), 73, 97, 135
Intellectual Freedom Round Table (IFRT; ALA)
Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, The—Intellectual Freedom and the
Defense of Graphic Novels and Comic Books, 64, 95, 133
Intellectual Freedom 101 (with Merritt Fund, FTRF), 65, 85, 123
Meeting I/II, 124, 148
Reception, 131
Interactive Programs for Multicultural Communities. See Get HIP: Highly
Interactive Programs for Multicultural Communities (EMIERT)
Interdivisional Committee on Building Resources Meeting (ACRL,
LLAMA), 143
Interdivisional Committee on Information Literacy (AASL, ACRL), 142
Interlibrary Loan Committee Meeting (RUSA-STARS), 128
International Council of Library Association Executives (ICLAE) Meeting
(ALA), 140
International Crime Fiction (Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163,
164
International Developments in Library Linked Data: Think Globally, Act
Globally (ALCTS), 22, 73, 87, 89, 127, 130
International Documents Task Force Meeting (GODORT), 146
International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA):
Update, 22, 75, 130
International Interlibrary Loan Committee Meeting (RUSA-STARS), 128
Internationalizing a University. See Going Global: Library as a Crucial
Player for Internationalizing a University (poster)
International Librarians Orientation (IRRT), 22, 44, 75, 85, 124
International Librarians Reception (IRRT), 22, 150
International Pavilion, 22, 157
International Perspectives on Academic and Research Libraries
Discussion Group (ACRL), 66, 123
International Poster Session, 22
international programs and events, 22
International Relations Committee (IRC; ALA). See also IRC Americas
Subcommittee Program (ALA)
IRC/IRRT All Subcommittee Meeting, 127
Meeting I/II, 124, 149
International Relations Committee (LITA), 130
International Relations Committee Meeting (BCALA), 124
International Relations Program (ALA), 75, 110, 146
International Relations Round Table (IRRT; ALA)
All Subcommittee Meeting (with IRC), 127
Chair’s Program: Expanding the School Library: Connecting Students
with Students, Across International Boundaries, Using Modern
Technology, 22, 74, 108, 145
E-Books and E-Readers: Leveling the Playing Field or Widening the
Digital Gap?, 22, 68, 93, 133
Executive Committee Meeting, 139
Expanding the School Library: Connecting Students with Students,
Across International Boundaries, Using Modern Technology
(Chair’s Program), 22, 74, 108.145
International Librarians Orientation, 22, 54, 75, 85, 124
International Librarians Reception, 22, 150
International Sustainable Library Development (ISLD) Interest Group:
Many Facets of Volunteerism, The, 22, 75, 112, 148
Train the Trainer: Keeping Up and Staying Ahead of New Trends,
Standards, Services and Technologies (Preconference), 121
International Responsibilities Task Force (SRRT), 126
International Students. See Integrating Information Literacy into the FirstYear Experience of International Students (poster)
International Sustainable Library Development (ISLD) Interest Group:
Many Facets of Volunteerism, The (IRRT), 22, 75, 112, 148
Internet access, 36
Internet cafe, 35
Intersections of Scholarly Communication and Information Literacy Task
Force Meeting (ACRL), 140
Interview, The—Getting Ready for the Show (JobLIST Placement Center;
ALA), 39, 144
In Their Own Voices: The Study Habits of Distance Education Students
(poster), 180
Introduction to Women’s Issues: The Staff Potluck (ALA), 132
iPad, YouPad: Circulating iPad Collections in Academic Libraries (ACRL),
123
IRC Americas Subcommittee Program (ALA), 97, 134
IRL. See Common Core IRL: In Real Libraries (AASL)
IRRT. See International Relations Round Table (IRRT; ALA)
IS. See under Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
Islamic Bioethics. See From Research Supporters to Research Partners:
Librarians and Islamic Bioethics (poster)
Isn’t It Romantic (UNITED), 63, 128
ISS. See under American Association of School Librarians (AASL)
Issues Briefing Session (IFC; FTRF), 65, 134
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Is That a Penguin on Your Desktop? (PLA), 73, 87, 128
Is the Library Really Open If the Building Is Closed? Student Survey Panel
Results (poster), 181
Is the Public Library the New Education Institution of the Future? (PLA),
72, 89, 131
ITAL. See Information Technology and Libraries (ITAL) Editorial Board
(LITA)
(Book Buzz Theater)
Ko, Erik (Manga; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 169
Korean Libraries Today and Tomorrow (ALA), 109, 145
Kosher Cuisine for a New Generation (Cantor Mitch; What’s Cooking @
ALA Stage), 163, 162
Kraus, Daniel (Team Panel for Scowler; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 165
L
J
Jean E. Coleman Library Outreach Lecture: Equality...Equity...Diversity:
Libraries, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Mission (OLOS), 65, 112,
147
Job & Career Reference Committee Discussion Forum. See Community
Needs, Reference, & Assessment in Job & Career Reference: RSS Job &
Career Reference Committee Discussion Forum (RUSA-RSS)
Job & Career Reference Committee Meeting (RUSA-RSS), 128
JobLIST Placement Center (ALA), 35, 38, 53
Alternate Career Paths: Federal Opportunities, 39, 145
Answering Tough Questions as You Improve Your Interviewing Skills,
38, 131
Become a Social Media GURU in Your Job Search, 38, 134
Career Counseling, 38, 129, 140
Check Out a Librarian, 38
Getting a Library Job in a Foreign Country: How (and Why) to Do It
and How to Thrive Once You Do, 38, 140
HR Confidential: Insider Tips from Library HR Directors, 38, 129
Ins and Outs of Job Hunting for Library Positions, The—An Insider’s
Perspective, 38, 133
Interview, The—Getting Ready for the Show, 39, 144
On-the-Fly Mentoring, 39
Open Cover Letters Revealed! Job Search Stories and Advice from
Newly Hired Librarians, 39, 142
Open House, 53, 140
Orientation, 38, 127
Photography Service, 38
Résumé Review (Critiquing) Service, 38, 129, 140
Job Search Stories and Advice. See Open Cover Letters Revealed!
Job Search Stories and Advice from Newly Hired Librarians (JobLIST
Placement Center; ALA)
John Cotton Dana Library Public Relations Awards (LLAMA-PRMS), 146
Joint Committees Meeting (ACRL-WESS), 129
Joint Intellectual Freedom Committee Meeting (AASL, ALSC, YALSA),
142
Joint Interest Groups and Committees Chairs (LITA), 127
Joint Telecom Meeting (COL, OITP), 146
Joint Youth Legislation Committee (AASL, ALSC, YALSA), 131
Josey, E. J. See E. J. Josey
Journal of Academic Librarianship Board Meeting, The (UNO), 128
Just Ask Task Force (RUSA), 144
Juvenile Literature Displays in an Academic Library. See To Display or Not
to Display: The Question of Juvenile Literature Displays in an Academic
Library (poster)
K
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
Index l
Kahnweiler, Jennifer B. See Quiet Strengths of Introverts, The: President’s
Program with Jennifer Kahnweiler (ALCTS)
King, Coretta Scott. See Coretta Scott King Book Awards (EMIERT)
King Jr., Dr. Martin Luther. See also Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday
Jean E. Coleman Library Outreach Lecture: Equality...Equity...
Diversity: Libraries, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Mission
(OLOS), 65, 112, 147
King, Stacy (Manga; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 169
“Kitchen Table” Conversations (ALA), 126, 138, 147
Kitchen Table Conversation: What Do You Want from LLAMA? (LLAMA),
148
Knowledge Quest Editorial Board Meeting (AASL), 148
Know When to Hold ‘em, Know When to Scaf-fold ‘em: The Case of
Sustaining an Information Literacy Instruction Program at Cascadia
Community College (poster), 180
KNOW YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD: Engaging Communities in Local History
(poster), 180
Koch, Marlene (What’s Cooking @ ALA Stage), 163, 162
Kodansha Comics (Book Buzz). See Viz Media and Kodansha Comics
Labor Solidarity in a “Right-to-Work” State (RUSA), 70, 113, 148
Landing Your First Academic Library Job: A Cohort Study of Recent
Graduates from the UNC at Chapel Hill’s School of Information and
Library Science (poster), 180
Last Space of Democracy, The—Libraries and Urban Transformation
(poster), 181
Las Vegas
Board of Commissioners welcome, 6
convention center floor plan, 40–41
general information, 35
green initiatives, 26
hotel locations, 43
local transportation, 37
mayoral welcome, 5
Las Vegas Libraries, Legends and Highrollers (tour; LLAMA), 122
Laugh’s on Us, The! (sponsored by Sage; UNITED), 146
Law and Political Science Section (LPSS). See under Association of
College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
Law Enforcement. See What Would You Do? Ethics in Action: Libraries
and Law Enforcement (ALA)
Leab Awards & RBMS Information Exchange I/II (ACRL-RBMS), 144, 146
Lead and Inspire: The Effect of Transformational Leadership on
Organizational Outcomes (poster), 181
Leaders as Followers (LLAMA President’s Program), 29, 91, 130
Leadership & ALSC, 127
Leadership and Management Issues in College Libraries Discussion
Group (ACRL-CLS), 142
Leadership Council (ACRL), 124
Leadership Council Networking Session (ACRL), 123
Leadership Development. See Training, Orientation, and Leadership
Development (TOLD) Committee (ALA)
Leadership Development Committee Meeting (PLA), 123
Leadership Discussion Group (ACRL), 64, 134
Leadership Orientations. See under Orientations
Leadership Recruitment and Nomination Committee Meeting (ACRL), 131
Leaders Wanted / LIS Doctoral Program Options Fair: Cultivating Diversity
in LIS Education (ALA), 130
Leading from the Side: On, Off and Within Your Campus (ACRL-DLS,
ACRL-ULS), 74, 89, 129
Leading Successful Media Production Services in Academic and Public
Libraries: Different Models, Perspectives, and Recommendations (VRT),
72, 93, 133
Leading the Way—Strategies for Moving School Library Programs
Forward (AASL-SPVS), 75, 144
Leading with Ebooks: New Strategies for Librarians and Publishers (ALA),
67, 110, 145
Leaning International...Recipes from the Field (ALA), 22, 75, 115, 149
Leaning Your Library’s Materials Handling Workflows (PLA), 69, 113, 148
Learning4Life Coordinators Meeting (AASL), 148
Learning Roundtable (LEARNRT; ALA)
Best Practices in Training, 75, 112–113, 148
Creating Effective Videos and Screencasts: A Library Learning Video
and Screencasts BootCamp, 74, 122
Down and Dirty Quick and Brilliant Training Ideas, 75, 110, 146
Executive Board I/II, 129, 147
The Good, the Bad, the Ugly, 74, 97, 135
Happy Hour, 146
That Was Great, Now What?, 74, 104, 141
Training Showcase, 75, 144
Learning Theater, The: Radical Space Design in an Urban Academic
Library (ignite session), 79, 149
LEARNRT. See Learning Roundtable (LEARNRT; ALA)
Lee & Low Books (Book Buzz Theater), 16, 156
261
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Lee, Stan (Auditorium Speaker Series), 13, 55, 131
Legislation and Advocacy Committee Meeting (PLA), 139
Legislation and Licensing Committee Meeting (RUSA-STARS), 128
Legislation Assembly (ALA), 147
Legislative Committee Meeting II/III (GODORT), 141, 148
Lehman College: Experimenting with Animation: Lehman College’s
Animated Information Literacy Advocate (LITA), 75, 86, 127
Lena Finkle’s Magic Barrel (Anya Ulinich; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage;
ALA), 168, 169
Lerner Publishing Group’s Hottest Fall 2014 Titles! (Book Buzz Theater),
16, 156
LeRoy C. Merritt Humanitarian Fund (ALA): Intellectual Freedom 101 (with
FTRF, IFRT), 65, 85, 123
LES. See under Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
Lesesne, Teri (Timmy Failure; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 164
Let Our Rejoicing Rise—45 Years of the Coretta Scott King Book Award:
A Conversation with Past and Present Winners (EMIERT), 63, 136
Let’s Play in the Sandbox! Creating a Digital Literacies Program for
Faculty and Students (LITA), 75, 101, 139
Let’s Talk Comics: A Roundtable Discussion (ALA), 63, 113, 148
Leveraging Librarian Expertise in Customer Resource Management
(FAFLRT), 71, 103, 141
Leveraging National Data to Advocate Locally (PLA), 69, 103, 141
LHRT. See Library History Round Table (LHRT; ALA)
Liaison Committees
ACRL-ANSS, 134
ACRL-STS, 126
Liaisons Assembly Committee Meeting (ACRL), 131
Liaisons Coordinating Committee Meeting I/II (ACRL), 144, 146
Liaisons Coordinating Component Committee Meeting (ACRL), 144, 146
Liaisons Grants Committee I/II (ACRL), 144, 146
Liaisons Training and Development Committee Meeting I/II (ACRL), 144,
146
Liaison Supervisor Group (ARL), 148
LibQUAL+. See Design Thinking and LibQUAL+: The Changing Needs
and Expectations of Faculty and Undergraduates in ARL Libraries—
Trends (poster)
Librarian as Local Area Guide and Advocate. See Everyone Lives in the
Greatest Place on Earth: Librarian as Local Area Guide and Advocate
(ignite session)
Librarian Roundtable Breakfast (APA; UNO), 140
Librarians and Archivists to Palestine (SRRT), 66, 133
Librarians as Digital Leaders: Collaborating on the Development and Use
of Digitized Collections (ACRL), 73, 89, 129
Librarianship in For-Profit Educational Institutions Interest Group (ACRL),
64, 144
Librarians of Color: The Challenges of “Movin’ on Up” (BCALA), 140
Librarians Take SXSW by Storm! (ALA), 101, 139
Librarian Will See You Now, The: Mandatory Research Conferences for
Composition Students (poster), 181
Libraries and e-Government (WO Breakout Session III; ALA), 91, 130
Libraries and Law Enforcement. See What Would You Do? Ethics in
Action: Libraries and Law Enforcement (ALA)
Libraries and Self Publishing. See New Library Imprint, The: Libraries and
Self Publishing (ALA)
Libraries and Urban Transformation. See Last Space of Democracy,
The—Libraries and Urban Transformation (poster)
Libraries as Leaders for Community Broadband Access (OITP), 106, 143
Libraries Fostering Civic Engagement Member Interest Group (ALA), 140
Libraries in the Course Management System: Best Practices and New
Directions (RUSA-MARS), 67, 131
Libraries in the Publishing Game: New Roles from Content to Access
(ACRL), 71, 90, 129
Library Advisory Committee Meeting (OITP), 123
Library and Community Collaboration. See Something to Talk About:
Creating Dialogue and Transforming Viewpoints through Library and
Community Collaboration (poster)
Library and Information Science Collections Discussion Group (ACRL),
67, 138
Library and Information Science Education Interest Group (ACRL), 126
Library and Information Technology Association (LITA)
All Committees Meeting, 130
Assessment and Research Committee, 130
Authority Control Interest Group (with ALCTS, ALCTS-CaMMS), 73,
143
Awards Presentation & President’s Program Featuring Kimberly
Bryant, 29, 73, 109, 145
Board of Directors, 134, 150
Board of Directors Orientation, 122
Building Gorgeous Responsive Web Sites Fast with Twitter Bootstrap,
75, 100, 139
Bylaws and Organization Committee, 130
Collaborate to Innovate @ Chicago Public Library: Engaging the
Community to Design the Future, 66, 86, 127
Disaster Preparedness in the 21st Century: Preserving Library
Collections and Services, 73, 115, 149
Distance Learning Interest Group, 141
Dive into Digital Badges! A Badge Curriculum Workshop, 75, 105,
143
Drupal4Lib Interest Group, 133
Education Committee, 130
Electronic Lab Notebooks: Managing Research from Data Collection
to Publication, 73, 86, 127
Electronic Resources Management Interest Group, 130
Evidence Based Decision Making in Library Technology, 73, 102, 141
Executive Committee, 122
Experimenting with Animation: Lehman College’s Animated
Information Literacy Advocate, 75, 86, 127
Focusing on the Big Picture: Re-imagining the Library Website, 70,
110, 146
Forum Planning 2014 Committee, 130
Forum Planning 2015 Committee, 130
Game Making Interest Group, 139
Happy Hour, 146
Heads of Library Technology Interest Group, 143
Imagineering Interest Group, 130
Instructional Technologies Interest Group, 130
International Relations Committee, 130
ITAL Editorial Board, 141
Joint Interest Groups and Committees Chairs, 127
Let’s Play in the Sandbox! Creating a Digital Literacies Program for
Faculty and Students, 75, 101, 139
Library Code Year Interest Group (with ALCTS-CaMMS), 73, 132
Library Consortia and Systems Interest Group, 141
Library Technology Prototyping Service at Illinois, The: Products and
Initiatives, 73, 112, 148
Lightning Presentations, 71, 90, 130
Linked Library Data Interest Group, 139
LITA 101: Open House, 54, 124
LITA Awards Presentation & President’s Program Featuring Kimberly
Bryant, 29, 73, 109
Managing Data: Tools for Plans and Data Scrubbing, 73, 122
MARC Formats Transition Interest Group (with ALCTS, ALCTSCaMMS), 67, 135
Membership Development Committee, 130
Metadata Standards Committee (with ALCTS-PARS, ALCTS-CRS,
ALCTS-CaMMS, ALCTS-AS), 143
Mobile Computing Interest Group, 133
Next Generation Catalog Interest Group, 141
Nominating Committee, 130
Open Source Interest Group, 130
Other Content, The: Creating Accessible Documents and
Presentations, 73, 97, 135
Practical Linked Data with Open Source, 73, 122
President’s Program Featuring Kimberly Bryant, 29, 73, 109, 145
Program Planning Committee, 130
Publications Committee, 136
Public Libraries Interest Group, 143
Rebranding the Library: Generating Visibility in the Virtual Age, 73,
113, 148
Redefining Humans from the Past to the Future, 63, 99, 136
Role of Libraries in Data Management and Curation, The, 73, 104,
141
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Space Planning Primer, 70, 101, 139
Top Library Building Trends, 70, 115, 149
Tour of Public and Academic Libraries (Preconference), 123
Board of Directors Meeting I/II, 124, 149
Dialog with Directors Discussion Group, 148
Discussion Group (with NMRT), 141
Diversity Officers Discussion Group, 139
FRFDS (Fund Raising and Financial Development Section)
All Committee Meeting, 127
Ask the Experts: Discover Key Strategies for Successful
Academic Library Fundraising, 127
Discussion Group, 136
Executive Committee, 133
Happy Hour!, 147
HRS (Human Resources Section)
All Committee Meeting, 127
Emerging Trends Discussion Group, 133
Executive Committee, 133
Union Relations for Managers Discussion Group, 139
Interdivisional Committee on Building Resources Meeting (with
ACRL), 143
Kitchen Table Conversation: What Do You Want from LLAMA?, 148
Leaders as Followers (President’s Program), 29, 91, 130
Library Storage Discussion Group, 145
Library Tour: Las Vegas Libraries, Legends and Highrollers, 122
LOMS (Library Organization and Management Section)
All Committee Meeting, 127
Executive Committee, 133
Fiscal and Business Officers Discussion Group, 145
Looking Closely into the Crystal Ball: Using Innovative
Assessment Strategies to Predict the Future Needs of Users in
Academic Libraries, 67, 115, 150
Middle Managers Discussion Group, 127
Organizational Development Discussion Group, 136
MAES (Measurement Analysis and Evaluation Section)
All Committee Meeting, 127
Building Holistic Library Assessment: Space + Collections =
Effective Services, 73, 86, 127
Executive Committee, 133
Say-It-in-Six Lightning Rounds: Case Studies on Using Data to
Improve Library Services, 71, 112, 148
NPS (New Professionals Section)
All Committee Meeting, 127
Planning Meeting, 133
President’s Program—Leaders as Followers, 29, 91, 130
PRMS (Public Relations and Marketing Section)
All Committee Meeting, 127
Executive Committee, 133
John Cotton Dana Library Public Relations Awards, 146
PR X-change, 23, 66, 105, 142
Program Committee, 124
SASS (Systems and Services Section)
All Committee Meeting, 127
Circulation/Access Services Discussion Group, 144
Consortial Borrowing Committee Meeting (with RUSA-STARS),
145
Create, Transform and Sustain: Managing for Edgy New
Technology Services, 71, 100, 139
Executive Committee, 133
FEAST: Future & Emerging Access Service Trends, 71, 109, 145
Women Administrators Discussion Group, 139
Library Linked Data. See International Developments in Library Linked
Data: Think Globally, Act Globally
Library Materials Price Index (LMPI; ALCTS), 146
Library of Congress (LC): BibFRAME Update Forum (UNO), 142
Library Organization and Management Section (LOMS). See under Library
Leadership and Management Association (LLAMA)
Library Outreach through Digital Exhibits (poster), 181
Library Power to the People: Facing Up to the Climate Crisis with
Information & Actions (REFORMA President’s Program), 129
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Index l
Search Engine Optimization Interest Group, 141
Taking Action: Linked Data for Digital Collection Managers, 73, 95,
133
Technology and Access Committee, 130
Technology Priorities for the New Library Reality, 73, 97, 135
3D Printing at the Reference Desk & Library Makerspaces without the
Space, 70, 92, 133
Top Technology Trends, 73, 107, 143
Top Technology Trends Committee, 130
Universal Accessibility Interest Group Meeting (with ACRL, ASCLA),
69, 145
Web Coordinating Committee, 130
Web Therapy, 73, 122
Library and the City, The. See under Research Forums
Library Annual Reports Made Easy (poster), 181
Library as Place: Experiences of Homeless Men in Public Libraries in
Vancouver, Canada (poster), 181
Library Assessment Forum (ARL), 124
Library Best Practices: Fresh Innovations from Southeast Asia (poster),
180
Library Camp (ALA). See Annual Library Camp (ALA)
Library Champions (ALA), 51
Library Champions, ALA Advocates and Legacy Society Reception, 121
Library Code Year Interest Group (ALCTS-CaMMS, LITA), 73, 132
Library Communicators’ Network (ALA), 136
Library Consortia and Systems Interest Group (LITA), 141
Library Design Share: Inspiration for Library Creatives (poster), 180
Library Facilities Planning Discussion Group (LLAMA-BES), 143
Library Foundation Discussion Group (UNITED), 145
Library Friends Discussion Group (UNITED), 128
Library Games, The (ALA), 25, 150
Library History Round Table (LHRT; ALA)
Edward G. Holley Memorial Lecture: The Business of Lectures, 65,
103, 141
Executive Board Meeting, 139
Library and the City,—Historical Perspectives (Research Forum), 70,
109, 145
Research Forum: The Library and the City—Historical Perspectives,
70, 109, 145
Library Instruction Round Table (LIRT; ALA)
All Committee Meeting, 130
Executive Board Meeting II, 148
Going All In: Library Instruction for Students in Online Education
Programs, 75, 103, 141
Steering Committee I/II, 127, 148
Library Interiors Discussion Group (LLAMA-BES), 133
Library Leadership and Management Association (LLAMA)
All Division-Level Committees, 133
All Section Committees, 127
BES (Buildings and Equipment Section)
ALA/IIDA Library Interior Design Awards, 70, 144
All Committee Meeting, 127
Community Driven Design, 70, 100, 139
Environments by Design: Creating—and Re-Creating—Spaces
for Both Quiet and Collaboration, 70, 105, 144
Executive Committee, 133
Library Facilities Planning Discussion Group, 144
Library Interiors Discussion Group, 133
Moving Libraries Discussion Group, 141
New Campus Library, A: Vision, Design, and Assessing Usage,
70, 92, 133
New Central, The: Reimagining the Future of Flagship Libraries,
70, 112, 148
preconference events
Serving the Homeless in the Academic and Public Library,
70, 122
Tour of Public and Academic Libraries, 123
Safety and Security Discussion Group, 139
Serving the Homeless in the Academic and Public Library
(Preconference), 70, 122
263
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Library Pub Crawl. See Funky Fundraising—How We Used a Library Pub
Crawl to Raise Money for Literacy (poster)
Library Research Round Table (LRRT; ALA)
Committee Meeting, 150
Creativity and Innovation: LRRT Research Forum, 75, 102, 141
Data-Driven Decision-Making: LRRT Research Forum, 71, 86, 128
Mentorship Program Forum: LRRT Initiative, 64, 133
Library Resources & Technical Services (LRTS) Editorial Board (ALCTS),
141
Library School Alumni Association. See University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign Graduate School of Library and Information Science Library
School Alumni Association and Reception (alumni reunion; LS)
Library School and Instruction Pavilion, 157
Library School (LS) events: ALISE Cooperative Library and Information
Studies Alumni Reunion, 52, 146. See also specific university reunions
Library School Management Education. See Fixing Future Managers:
Librarian Recommendations for Improving Library School Management
Education (poster)
Library Services and Technology Act. See LSTA Coordinators’ Interest
Group (ASCLA)
Library Services for People with Visual or Physical Disabilities That
Prevent Them from Reading Standard Print Interest Group Meeting
(ASCLA), 75, 124
Library Services for Youth in Custody Meeting (ASCLA), 135
Library Services in Multi-Branch Networks in China (ALA), 22, 75, 98, 136
Library Services to an Aging Population Committee Meeting I/II (RUSARSS), 135
Library Services to the Incarcerated and Detained (ASCLA), 141
Library Services to the Underserved. See Outreach Panel I/II: Library
Services to the Underserved (OLOS)
Library Spaces and the Maker Movement. See Teaching Teens How to
Fail: Library Spaces and the Maker Movement (YALSA)
Library Storage Discussion Group (LLAMA), 145
Library Support for Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) Discussion
Group (ACRL), 74
Library Support for Outreach. See Gearing Up for College: Library
Support for Outreach and Early Recruitment for Middle School Students
(poster)
Library Support of Undergraduate Research Programs: Perceptions,
Value and Opportunity (poster), 181
Library Support Staff Certification (LSSC) Review Committee (ALA), 143
Library Support Staff Interests Round Table (LSSIRT; ALA)
Best Practice—Support Staff Edition, 71, 99, 139
Steering Committee/Membership Meeting, 128
Library Technical Assistance Education Committee Meeting (ACRLCJCLS), 140
Library Technology Prototyping Service at Illinois, The: Products and
Initiatives (LITA), 73, 112, 148
Library Tour: Las Vegas Libraries, Legends and Highrollers (LLAMA), 122
Library Web Portal. See Connecting First Year Students with Library Web
Portal via Information Literacy Course (poster)
Lightning, Dreamer (Poetry Blast; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 165
Lightning Presentations (LITA), 71, 90, 130
Lightning Rounds: Sustainability at Your Library (SUSTAINRT), 72, 106,
144
Lights! Camera! Education!: A Library & Nurse Educator Collaborative
“Movie” Program for Continuing Competencies (poster), 180
Linked Data
International Developments in Library Linked Data: Think Globally, Act
Globally (ALCTS), 22, 73, 87, 89
Practical Linked Data with Open Source (LITA), 73, 122
Taking Action: Linked Data for Digital Collection Managers (LITA), 73,
95
Linked Library Data Interest Group (LITA), 138
LIRT. See Library Instruction Round Table (LIRT; ALA)
LIS Doctoral Program Options Fair. See Leaders Wanted / LIS Doctoral
Program Options Fair: Cultivating Diversity in LIS Education (ALA)
LIS Education. See Power, Privilege, and Positionality: Applying a Critical
Lens to LIS Education (ALA)
LITA. See Library and Information Technology Association (LITA)
LITA 101: Open House, 54, 124
LITA Awards Presentation & President’s Program Featuring Kimberly
Bryant, 29, 73, 109
Literacy. See Time to Reskill: An Action Plan for Literacy (ALA)
Literacy in a Digital World. See 21st Century Teens: Literacy in a Digital
World (YALSA)
Literacy Outcomes in Fabulous Las Vegas, Nevada (AFL), 74, 129
Literary Tastes: Celebrating the Best Reading of the Year (RUSA, RUSACODES), 63, 99, 138
Literatures in English (LES). See under Association of College and
Research Libraries (ACRL)
LLAMA. See Library Leadership and Management Association (LLAMA)
LLAMA All Section Committees, 127
LMPI. See Library Materials Price Index (LMPI; ALCTS)
Local History. See KNOW YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD: Engaging
Communities in Local History (poster); Youryongestreet: Connecting
Communities Through Local History (poster)
Local Systems and Services Committee (RUSA-MARS), 128
local transportation information, 35
LOMS. See under Library Leadership and Management Association
(LLAMA)
Looking Closely into the Crystal Ball: Using Innovative Assessment
Strategies to Predict the Future Needs of Users in Academic Libraries
(LLAMA-LOMS), 67, 115, 150
Lopez, Barry (Auditorium Speaker Series), 14. See also under Public
Library Association (PLA)
Lost Rivers (Now Showing @ ALA), 18, 135
Louisiana State University (alumni reunion; LS), 52
Lowry, Lois. See ALA Awards Presentation and President’s Program (Lois
Lowry with Jeff Bridges)
LPSS. See under Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
LRRT. See Library Research Round Table (LRRT; ALA)
LRTS. See Library Resources & Technical Services (LRTS) Editorial Board
(ALCTS)
LS. See Library School (LS) events: ALISE Cooperative Library and
Information Studies Alumni Reunion
LSSC. See Library Support Staff Certification (LSSC) Review Committee
(ALA)
LSSIRT. See Library Support Staff Interests Round Table (LSSIRT; ALA)
LSTA Coordinators’ Interest Group (ASCLA), 75, 143
Lucero, Claudia (What’s Cooking @ ALA Stage), 163
luncheons
Bookmobile Saturday Author Luncheon Featuring Josh Hanagarne,
27, 71, 131
DK Publishing (UNO), 131
DLS Award Luncheon (ACRL-DLS), 142
Lunch and Learn (APA), 150
Past-President’s Luncheon (AASL), 131
Schneider Family Book Award Luncheon, 149
Spectrum Institute Closing Luncheon (ALA), 17, 142
Spectrum Institute Lunch (ALA), 123
Springer Innovations for Academic Libraries Lunch and Learn Session
(UNO), 131, 142, 149
LVCC Mob Panel (Geoff Schumacher, Morgan St. James, Frank Cullotta,
Tony Montana, and Geno Munari; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163
LYRASIS (UNO)
ArchivesSpace Hosting Demo, 124
ARL Licensing Initiative Task Force, 129
Repository Services Demo, 124
M
Machine-Assisted Reference Section (MARS). See under Reference and
User Services Association (RUSA)
Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group. See Bloomsbury Children’s Books
and Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group Fall 2014 Book Buzz (Book
Buzz Theater)
Mad Men: The Business of Advertising (RUSA, RUSA-BRASS), 72, 111,
147
MAES. See under Library Leadership and Management Association
(LLAMA)
MAGIRT. See Map and Geospatial Information Round Table (MAGIRT;
ALA)
Makerspace
Guitars, Amps, & iPads: Music Libraries as Makerspaces (poster),
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Turning Books into a Cool New Tool: RA Marketing in the Age of
Maker Spaces (RUSA, RUSA CODES), 63, 90, 131
Marketing Discussion Group (ACRL), 134
MARS. See under Reference and User Services Association (RUSA)
Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday (SSRT)
Multicultural Exchange, 66, 104, 141
Task Force, 126
Massachusetts. See Temporary Staffing Solutions for Libraries: A
Consortial Approach in Massachusetts (ASCLA)
Maximize Your Professional Time: Strategies to Cultivate a Habit of
Scholarship (ACRL), 123
Mayfair Games (Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168
McCall Smith, Alexander (Auditorium Speaker Series), 13
McClain, Jim (Reading with Pictures: Comics That Make Kids Smarter;
Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 169
McGonigal, Jane (Opening General Session), 9, 124
meals, 35
Measurement Analysis and Evaluation Section (MAES). See under Library
Leadership and Management Association (LLAMA)
Medium-Sized Academic Libraries Discussion Group (ACRL-CLS), 138
meeting room locator, 45–49
Meetings. See also specific meetings, committees, and boards of divisions, affiliated organizations, and unofficial groups
AASL
ESLS (with AASL), 122
ISS, 147
SPVS, 147
BARC (ALA), 122
CALM, 141
Chapters Council (ACRL), 138
COLA, 132
COL/IFC, 140
Committee on Research and Statistics, 143
COSWL (ALA), 136
CRC (ALA), 132, 149
FOCLIS (UNO), 147
GNARP (UNO), 140
ICLAE (ALA), 140
IFC, 121, 122, 127, 130, 150
IFRT, 124, 148
IRC, 124, 149
PAC (ALA), 134
RMRT, 131
RNTLOAK, 143
SAC (ALCTS-CaMMS), 139, 149
75th Anniversary Celebration Task Force (ACRL), 126
TOLD (ALA), 122
USBBY (AASL, ALSC, YALSA), 136
Meet the Author/Illustrator, 171–177
ABDO, 171, 174
Abrams Books, 171, 174
ALA Store, 171, 174
Albert Whitman & Company, 171, 174
Andrews McMeel Publishing, 171, 174
Arte Público Press, 171–172
Bloomsbury Children’s Books, 172, 174
Candlewick Press, 152
CBAY Books, 172, 174
Charlesbridge, 172, 174
Chronicle Books, 154, 172, 174
Combined Book Exhibit, 172
Consortium Book Sales & Distribution, 172, 174–175, 177
Craigmore Creations, 172
Creston Books / Publishers Group West, 172, 175
Disney-Hyperion, 172, 175, 177
East West Discovery Press, 171, 172, 175, 177
Egmont USA, 175
Flux/Llewellen, 172, 175
Goosebottom Books / Publishers Group West, 171, 172, 175
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Index m
181
Makerspace and Digital Badging: New Avenues to Help Students
Show What They Know, 74, 103, 140
Teaching Teens How to Fail: Library Spaces and the Maker
Movement, 72, 95, 133
3D Printing at the Reference Desk & Library Makerspaces without the
Space, 70, 92, 133
Turning Books into a Cool New Tool: RA Marketing in the Age of
Maker Spaces (with RUSA-CODES), 63, 90, 131
We Make Everyday: How You’re (Most Likely) Already Doing the
Makerspace Thing (conversation starter), 80
Makerspace and Digital Badging: New Avenues to Help Students Show
What They Know (AASL), 74, 103, 140
Making a Mentorship Match: What Works, What Doesn’t, and What Can
ALA Offer? (ALA), 64, 87, 127
Making an Impact: Proven Grassroots Strategies for Friends, Trustees,
Advocates, and Foundations (WO Breakout Session IV; ALA), 66, 91, 130
Making an Impact: Proven Grassroots Strategies for Friends, Trustees,
Advocates, and Foundations (WO; ALA), 66, 91, 130
Making MOOCs Work for Work: A Corporate Library Approach to
Professional Development (poster), 180
Making Tenure: A Model for Collaborative Publishing (ACRL), 70, 90, 129
Managing Against Change: Transactional Leadership and the
Experienced Library Leader (poster), 181
Managing Cataloging and E-resources Workflows. See WorldShare
Management Services: New Ways Libraries Are Efficiently Managing
Cataloging and E-resources Workflows (OCLC; UNO)
Managing Challenges: Maximizing Impact: Policies and Practices for
Controversial Programming (ALA), 65, 90, 130
Managing Change, Inspiring Innovation & Empowering the Next
Generation. See Children’s Librarians in the Lead: Managing Change,
Inspiring Innovation & Empowering the Next Generation (ALSC)
Managing Data: Tools for Plans and Data Scrubbing (LITA), 73, 122
Managing Local and Community-Produced Born-Digital Audiovisual
Content (VRT), 122
Managing Research. See Electronic Lab Notebooks: Managing Research
from Data Collection to Publication (LITA)
Manapul, Francis (What Does It Take to Create a New Comic Book?;
Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 170
Manga (Stacy King and Erik Ko; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168,
169
Man on Wire (Now Showing @ ALA), 20, 148
Manuscripts and Other Formats Discussion Group (ACRL-RBMS), 132
Many Facets of Volunteerism, The: International Sustainable Library
Development (ISLD) Interest Group (IRRT), 22, 75, 112, 148
Map and Geospatial Data Collection Managers Discussion Group
(MAGIRT), 130
Map and Geospatial Information Round Table (MAGIRT; ALA)
Accidental Map Librarian, The (Program), 68, 94, 133
Cartographic Resources Cataloging Interest Group (with ALCTSCaMMS), 139
Cataloging and Classification Committee (CCC) Meeting, 141
Education Committee Meeting, 135
Executive Board & Membership Meeting A/B, 145, 146
GeoTech Committee Meeting, 136
GIS Discussion Group, 73, 127
Map and Geospatial Data Collection Managers Discussion Group,
130
Program Planning Meeting, 144
maps (and related information)
ALA Office, 42
convention center floor plan, 40–41
MARC 583: The Journey to Recording Conservation Actions (poster), 179
MARC Advisory Committee I/II (UNO), 128, 145
MARC Formats Transition Interest Group (ALCTS, LITA, ALCTS-CaMMS),
67, 135
March (Andrew Aydin; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 164
Marketing. See also under Library Leadership and Management
Association (LLAMA), PRMS (Public Relations and Marketing Section)
Informal Meet-up for Academic Librarians Interested in Library
Marketing and Outreach (ACRL), 135
Marketing Discussion Group (ACRL), 134
Smart Marketing Using Big (or Little) Data (PLA), 66, 109, 145
265
m Index
266
Green Kids Press, 172
HarperCollins Children’s Books, 172, 175, 177
HarperCollins Publishers, 172, 175
Holiday House, 119, 172, 175
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 172, 175, 177
KO Kids / Publishers Group West, 171, 172, 175
Lee & Low Books, 172, 175, 177
Lerner Publishing Group, 173, 175
Mackin Educational Resources, 173, 175
Macmillan Adult, 171, 173, 175
Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group, 171, 173, 175, 177
Martin Pearl Publishing, 173
Midnight Ink/Llewellen, 173, 175
Nomad Press / Publishers Group West, 173
Open Road Integrated Media, 173
Orca Book Publishers, 171, 173
Pardey Books, 176
Partners Publishers Group, 173
Penguin Group, 171, 173, 176
Penguin Young Readers Group, 173, 176, 177
Prashanti Press, LLC, 173, 176
Random House Children’s Books, 27, 58–59, 173, 176, 177
Random House LLC, 173, 176
Recorded Books, 173
Red Rock Press, 173
Rogue Bear Press, 173
Rowman & Littlefield, 173
Scarletta / Publishers Group West, 173, 176
Scholastic Inc., 173–174, 176
Seal Press / Publishers Group West, 176
Simon & Schuster, Inc., 171, 174, 176, 177
Sleeping Bear Press, 171, 174, 176
Sourcebooks, 171, 174, 176, 177
StarWalk Kids Media, 174, 176
Thomas Nelson, 171, 174, 176
TouchWood Editions / Publishers Group West, 174
VOYA Press, 174
W. W. Norton & Company, 171, 174
Membership Advisory Group Meeting (PLA), 128
Membership and Outreach Committee Meeting (ACRL-ARTS), 126
Membership and Professional Development Committee (ACRL-RBMS),
126
Membership and Recruitment Committee Meeting (ACRL-STS), 126
Membership Committees
ACRL, 129
ANSS, 131
LES, 147
ALA, 132
BCALA, 134
GODORT, 124
RUSA-STARS, 128
Membership/Communications Committee Meeting (ACRL-CJCLS), 135
Membership Development Committee (LITA), 130
Membership Meetings. See also General Membership Meetings
ACRL, 54, 85
ACRL-STS (with breakfast), 138
ALA, 55, 75, 136
ALSC, 148
APALA, 124
BCALA (with Literary Awards), 147
CALA, 145
EMIERT, 130
ERT, 147
FAFLRT, 145
GLBTRT, 140
GODORT, 148
Health Sciences Interest Group (ACRL), 126
LSSIRT, 128
MAGIRT (with Executive Board), 145, 146
OLAC, 124
SRRT (with Dinner), 138
VRT (with Executive Board), 148
YALSA, 29, 72, 116
Membership Pavilion (ALA), 24, 53
Membership Promotion Task Force (ALA), 134
Mentoring Social (NMRT), 124
Mentorship
Making a Mentorship Match: What Works, What Doesn’t, and What
Can ALA Offer? (ALA), 64, 87, 127
Program Forum: LRRT Initiative, 64, 133
Merritt Fund. See LeRoy C. Merritt Humanitarian Fund (ALA): Intellectual
Freedom 101 (with FTRF, IFRT)
Metadata and Indicators for Discovery and Open Access (ALCTS), 73,
90, 130
Metadata beyond the Library: Consultation and Collaboration with
Faculty, Staff and Students (ALCTS), 73, 98, 136
Metadata for Digital Collections. See Work Smarter, Not Harder: Training
Students and Volunteers to Provide Professional-Level Metadata for
Digital Collections (poster)
Metadata Interest Group (ALCTS, ALCTS-CRS, ALCTS-CaMMS), 67,
139
Metadata Standards Committee (LITA, ALCTS-PARS, ALCTS-CaMMS,
ALCTS-CRS, ALCTS-AS), 143
Metrics User Group Meeting (ACRL), 129
Michael L. Printz (YALSA)
Committee (See 2015 Michael L. Printz Committee (YALSA))
Program and Reception, 37, 126
Middle East
Middle East and North Africa Disaster Planning in Time of War
(poster), 180
Role and Limitations of Social Media as an Information Source in the
Middle East, The (ALA), 22, 107, 143
Middle Managers Discussion Group (LLAMA-LOMS), 127
Mid-Level Managers Discussion Group (ACRL-ULS), 143
Midwest Library Service Reception (UNO), 146
Millet, Lydia (Pills and Starships; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 165
Mitch, Cantor (What’s Cooking @ ALA Stage), 163, 162
MLA. See Modern Language Association (MLA) International Bibliography
Discussion Group (ACRL)
M & M: M-Generation and M-Libraries (poster), 180
Mobile Applications Pavilion (Mobile App Stage), 23, 157, 160
Mobile Computing Interest Group (LITA), 133
Modern Language Association (MLA) International Bibliography
Discussion Group (ACRL), 75, 129
Money Smart Week @ Your Library (ALA), 74, 106, 143
Monographs Editorial Board (ALCTS), 136
Montana, Tony (LVCC Mob Panel; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163
MOOCs. See Library Support for Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs)
Discussion Group (ACRL)
More That Fun in the Sun! Building Collaborative Relationships and Using
Real Data to Increase Summer Learning (PLA), 66, 94, 133
Morris, Julie (What’s Cooking @ ALA Stage), 161, 162
Moss, Marissa (Tales of a 6th Grade Vampire; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163
Moving Ahead with Digital Content. See ALA and Moving Ahead with
Digital Content (OITP)
Moving Libraries Discussion Group (LLAMA-BES), 141
Moving School Library Programs Forward. See Leading the Way—
Strategies for Moving School Library Programs Forward (AASL-SPVS)
Moynihan, Jesse (Forming 2; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168,
170
Mr. Conservative: Goldwater on Goldwater (Now Showing @ ALA), 18,
126
Munari, Geno (LVCC Mob Panel; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163
Music Libraries as Makerspaces. See Guitars, Amps, & iPads: Music
Libraries as Makerspaces (poster)
My Librarian: Personalization and the Future of Reader Services (UNO),
126
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
N
Student Reception, 147
Tips for a Successful ALA Conference, 53
New Mother’s Room, 35
New Professionals Section (NPS). See under Library Leadership and
Management Association (LLAMA)
New Publications Advisory Board Meeting (ACRL), 138
Newspaper Interest Group (ALCTS), 67, 136
New Technology Services. See Create, Transform and Sustain: Managing
for Edgy New Technology Services (LLAMA-SASS)
New Vision for Teen Read Week, A (YALSA), 72, 108, 145
Next Generation Catalog Interest Group (LITA), 141
Nicaraguan Library Partners with Award-Winning Designers and Rotary
International: Renovating/Redesigning to Serve a Multipurpose Library
(poster), 180
NISO. See National Information Standards Organization (NISO): 8th
Annual NISO/BISG Forum: The Changing Standards Landscape (UNO)
NMRT. See New Members Round Table (NMRT; ALA)
NMRT 101, 53, 67, 87, 128
No Bluffing—The New Nursing Information Literacy Competency
Standards Are on the Table! (poster), 180
Nominating Committee Meetings
ACRL
ANSS, 138
CJCLS, 140
LES, 147
ACRL (with Leadership Recruitment), 131
ALA, 150
ALSC, 132
GODORT, 124
LITA, 130
RUSA-MARS, 135
No More Eye-Candy! Inspiring Visual Imagination, Assessing Visual
Creativity (AASL), 106, 142
Nonfiction, Informational Reading, and Literature for Youth. See Get the
Facts! Nonfiction, Informational Reading, and Literature for Youth (poster)
NorthEast Research Libraries Consortium Membership Meeting (UNO),
124
Notable Books Council (RUSA), 126
Notable Children’s Books. See 2015 Notable Children’s Books
Committee Meeting I–IV (ALSC)
Notable Children’s Recordings. See 2015 Notable Children’s Recordings
Committee Meeting I/II (ALSC)
Not the Same Old Story (ignite session), 76, 131
Novak, B. J. (Closing General Session), 11, 55, 150
Now Showing @ ALA (film program)
Defiant Requiem, 18, 133
Far Out Isn’t Far Enough, 18, 138
Lost Rivers, 18, 135
Man on Wire, 20, 148
Mr. Conservative: Goldwater on Goldwater, 18, 126
Pleasure of Being Out of Step, The, 19, 146
16 Acres, 19, 144
Speaker, The, 19, 20, 141, 147
Whole Gritty City, The, 18, 130
NPS. See under Library Leadership and Management Association
(LLAMA)
Numeric and Geospatial Data Services in Academic Libraries Interest
Group Meeting (ACRL), 71, 135
Nursing Information Literacy Competency Standards. See No Bluffing—
The New Nursing Information Literacy Competency Standards Are on the
Table! (poster)
Nuts & Bolts for Trustees, Friends, and Foundations (UNITED), 122
O
Oberly Award Task Force Meeting (ACRL-STS), 144
OCLC. See Online Computer Library Center (OCLC; UNO)
Odyssey Award Ceremony (ALSC), 63, 150
Odyssey Committee. See 2015 Odyssey Committee (YALSA)
Of *Course* It’s Due Tomorrow: What Is the Appropriate Level of
Homework Assistance in Libraries? (RUSA-RSS), 141
Office for Human Resource Development and Recruitment (HRDR):
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
Index o
Nafisi, Azar (Auditorium Speaker Series), 12, 130
National Association to Promote Library & Information Services to Latinos
and the Spanish Speaking (REFORMA)
All Committee Meeting, 126
Board Meeting, 140
Executive Committee Meeting I/II, 124, 149
General Membership Meeting, 148
Library Power to the People: Facing Up to the Climate Crisis with
Information & Actions (President’s Program), 129
National Conference All Committees Meeting, 147
President’s Program Library Power to the People: Facing Up to the
Climate Crisis with Information & Actions, 129
Pura Belpré Award 20th Anniversary Celebration Task Force (with
ALSC), 63, 139
National Atomic Testing Museum Tour (RUSA-HS), 124
National Conference All Committees Meeting (REFORMA), 147
National Conference Committee Meeting (AASL), 142
National Conference of African American Librarians (NCAAL). See NCAAL
9 Committee/Team Meetings (BCALA)
National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education. See NCATE
(AASL)
National Geographic Books (Book Buzz Theater), 16, 156
National Geographic Kids Cookbook (Barton Seaver; What’s Cooking @
ALA Stage), 163
National Information Standards Organization (NISO): 8th Annual NISO/
BISG Forum: The Changing Standards Landscape (UNO), 123
Native American Historical Research. See Using Meaningful Gamification
to Motivate Library Users: A Hands-on Workshop (GAMERT)
NCAAL 9 Committee/Team Meetings (BCALA), 132
NCATE (AASL)
CAEP Coordinating Committee Meeting, 121
CAEP Program Reviewer Training, 122
Nelson, Marilyn (Poetry Blast; PopTop Stage; ALA), 165
Net Neutrality. See Information Manipulation Part I: Net Neutrality (WO
Breakout Session I; ALA)
Network, Get Oriented, Get Involved (RUSA 101), 54, 64, 124
Networking Uncommons, 25
Neuroscience on Architecture and Design. See Science + Form =
Function: The Impact of Neuroscience on Architecture and Design
(ACRL-CLS)
Nevada Library Association Annual Board Meeting (AFL), 127
Nevada Test Site Project, The: Bringing Primary Resources to
Researchers (RUSA, RUSA-HS), 70, 109, 145
New Approach to Summer Reading, A (ignite session), 76
Newbery Award Committee. See 2015 Newbery Award Committee
Meeting I/II (ALSC)
Newbery-Caldecott Awards Banquet. See 2014 Newbery-Caldecott
Awards Banquet
New Board Member Training (YALSA), 124
New Campus Library, A: Vision, Design, and Assessing Usage (LLAMABES), 70, 92, 133
New Central, The: Reimagining the Future of Flagship Libraries (LLAMABES), 70, 112, 148
New Committee Chair Orientation Meeting (RUSA-BRASS), 149
New Directions for Data Visualization in Library Public Services (RUSA,
RUSA-MARS), 73, 94, 133
New Leader Orientations. See under Orientations
New Library Imprint, The: Libraries and Self Publishing (ALA), 71, 88, 127
New Members Discussion Groups
ACRL, 63, 129
ACRL-LES, 135
New Members Round Table (NMRT; ALA)
Awards Reception, 147
Coming out of the Shell: Becoming a Powerful Public Speaker, 64,
122
Conference Orientation, 53, 67, 85, 123
Discussion Group (with LLAMA), 141
Executive Board, 141
Mentoring Social, 124
NMRT 101, 53, 67, 87, 128
267
o Index
268
Advisory Committee (ALA), 149
Office for Information Technology Policy (OITP; ALA)
Advisory Committee Meeting I/II, 122, 147
AL21C Subcommittee Meeting, 124
ALA and Moving Ahead with Digital Content, 67, 94, 132
Copyright Hot Topics and Big Ideas, 74, 132
Copyright Subcommittee Meeting I/II, 124, 140
Cutting Edge Technology in Library Services, 75, 94, 132
Digital Stuff and Copyright, 75, 109, 145
Joint Telecom Meeting (with COL), 146
Libraries as Leaders for Community Broadband Access, 106, 143
Library Advisory Committee Meeting, 123
Office for Literacy and Outreach Services (OLOS; ALA)
Advisory Committee Meeting, 127
Bookmobile Saturday
Bookmobiles 101, 27, 88, 130
Panel Discussion: Stories from the Field, 71
Saturday Author Luncheon Featuring Josh Hanagarne, 27, 71
Diversity and Outreach Fair, 23, 27, 65, 134
Jean E. Coleman Library Outreach Lecture: Equality...Equity...
Diversity: Libraries, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Mission, 65,
112, 147
Outreach Panel I/II: Library Services to the Underserved, 65, 101,
103, 139, 140
office locator. See conference office locator
OITP. See Office for Information Technology Policy (OITP; ALA)
OLAC. See Online Audiovisual Catalogers Inc. (OLAC)
OLOS. See Office for Literacy and Outreach Services (OLOS; ALA)
One Hour Cheese (Claudia Lucero; What’s Cooking @ ALA Stage), 163
One-Shot. See Tale of Two Classes, A: Embedded Librarianship vs. the
One-Shot (poster)
Online Audiovisual Catalogers Inc. (OLAC)
Cataloging Policy Committee Meeting, 124
Membership Meeting, 124
Online Computer Library Center (OCLC; UNO)
CONTENTdm Users Group Meeting, 148
Dewey Update Breakfast and ALCTS Public Libraries Technical
Services Interest Group Meeting, 126
Enhance Sharing Session, 122
From FirstSearch to WorldCat Discovery: Cooperative Discovery That
Puts You Where Your Users Are, 131
Power of Shared Data, The: What’s New and What’s Next?, 135
QuestionPoint Users Group Meeting, 142
Research Update, 149
Symposium, 124
WorldShare ILL and ILLiad Users Group, 146
WorldShare Management Services: New Ways Libraries Are Efficiently
Managing Cataloging and E-resources Workflows, 128
WorldShare Metadata Users Group Meeting, 142
online conference scheduler, 36
Online Inside: Justification, Issues and Solutions for Digital Literacy in
Correctional Settings (ASCLA), 71, 94, 132
Online Post-Its: Library Collaboration and Assessment Using Padlet
(ignite session), 78, 142
On-the-Fly Mentoring (JobLIST Placement Center; ALA), 39
Open Access. See Metadata and Indicators for Discovery and Open
Access (ALCTS)
Open Cover Letters Revealed! Job Search Stories and Advice from Newly
Hired Librarians (JobLIST Placement Center; ALA), 39, 142
Open Geoportal. See Somewhere There’s a PLACE for Us: Linking
Fedora Digital Collections and Open Geoportal (poster)
Open Houses
LITA 101, 54, 124
Placement Center (ALA), 53, 140
RUSA-HS (with All Committee Meeting), 128
RUSA-RSS (with All-Committee Meeting), 128
Opening General Session (ALA), 9, 55, 124
open meeting rule, 36
Open Refine. See Free and Good for You! Open Refine, a Valuable Tools
for Digital Collections Managers (poster)
Open Road Integrated Media (Book Buzz Theater), 16, 156
Open Source
Digital Oral Histories with Full Text Searching via Open Source
Software (UNO), 128
Open Source Interest Group (LITA), 130
Practical Linked Data with Open Source (LITA), 73, 122
Organizational Development Discussion Group (LLAMA-LOMS), 136
Organization and Planning Committee Meeting (ACRL-STS), 126
Organization and Planning Committee Meeting (RUSA), 145
Organization Committee Meeting (RUSA-STARS), 128
Orientations
Award/Notable Chair (ALSC), 124
Board Orientation
ACRL, 122
ALSC, 96, 132
LITA, 122
Council Orientation Committee Meeting (ALA), 124
Council Orientation for New and Reelected Councilors (ALA), 55, 85,
126
Freedom to Read Foundation (FTRF), 121
Hour of Power, An: United for Libraries (UNITED), 75, 96, 135
International Librarians (IRRT), 22, 54, 75, 85, 124
Leadership (RUSA-STARS), 72, 100, 139
New Committee Chair Orientation Meeting (RUSA-BRASS), 149
NMRT Conference, 53, 67, 85, 123
Placement Center (ALA), 38, 127
RUSA Chairs (STARS, RSS, MARS, HS, CODES, BRASS), 149
Other Content, The: Creating Accessible Documents and Presentations
(LITA), 73, 97, 135
Otto’s Backwards Day (Frank Cammuso; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage;
ALA), 168, 169
Our Values, Ourselves: Examining Our Values and What Others Value
About Us (RUSA President’s Program), 29, 67, 98, 135
Out-of-the-Box Book Clubs to Banish the Boring (ALA), 66, 106, 143
Outreach. See also Association of Bookmobile and Outreach Services
(ABOS): Bookmobiles 101; Marketing; Office for Literacy and Outreach
Services (OLOS; ALA)
Diversity and Outreach Fair (OLOS), 23, 27, 65, 134
Gearing Up for College: Library Support for Outreach and Early
Recruitment for Middle School Students (poster), 180
Jean E. Coleman Library Outreach Lecture: Equality...Equity...
Diversity: Libraries, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Mission
(OLOS), 65, 112, 147
Library Outreach through Digital Exhibits (poster), 181
Outreach Committee (RUSA-MARS), 128
Outreach Committee (with Executive Board and Membership
Committee; ACRL-ARTS), 126
Outreach Panel I/II: Library Services to the Underserved (OLOS), 65,
101, 103, 139, 140
Outreach with CLP—BAM! (Books and More) (See Teens, Turntables,
and Tater-Tots: Lunchroom Outreach with CLP—BAM! (Books and
More) (YALSA))
Practical Outreach: Best Practices for Engaging Your Community
(conversation starter), 76, 129
Reach Out in a New Direction: Applying Public Relations Best
Practices to Academic Outreach (poster), 180
Successful Outreach: Celebrating 5 Years of Preservation Week
(ALCTS-PARS), 71, 107, 143
Taking Our Show on the Road: Salt Lake County Library Services’
Road Home Shelter Outreach Project (poster), 181
Teens, Turntables, and Tater-Tots: Lunchroom Outreach with CLP—
BAM! (Books and More) (YALSA), 97, 135
Outreach Committee (RUSA-MARS), 128
Outreach Fair. See Diversity and Outreach Fair (OLOS)
Outreach Panel I/II: Library Services to the Underserved (OLOS), 65, 101,
103, 139, 140
Outreach with CLP—BAM! (Books and More). See Teens, Turntables,
and Tater-Tots: Lunchroom Outreach with CLP—BAM! (Books and More)
(YALSA)
OverDrive’s Roadmap Breakfast (UNO), 128
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
P
Pleasure of Being Out of Step, The (Now Showing @ ALA), 19, 146
Plug-in Wall (poster), 181
Poem That Will Note End, The (Poetry Blast; PopTop Stage; ALA), 165
Poetry Blast (Margarita Engle, Joan Bransfield Graham, Nikki Grimes,
K. A. Holt, Marilyn Nelson, Marilyn Singer, and Jacqueline Woodson;
PopTop Stage; ALA), 165
Policy and Planning Committee (ALCTS-CaMMS), 148
Policy Monitoring Committee (ALA), 142
PopTop Stage (ALA), 23, 163–165
Popular Cultures Discussion Group (ACRL), 70, 138
Poster Sessions, 179–181
ACRL-STS, 74, 148
Emerging Leaders Poster Session and Reception (ALA), 124
general information, 36, 179
International Poster Session, 22
Research Committee (ACRL-EBSS), 134
Powering Reading Clubs to a New Level (UNO), 133
Power of Integration, The (EBSCO Publishing; UNO), 129
Power of Persuasion, The: Developing Influence to Become Your Own
Best Advocate (AASL), 121
Power of Shared Data, The: What’s New and What’s Next? (OCLC;
UNO), 135
Power, Privilege, and Positionality: Applying a Critical Lens to LIS
Education (ALA), 65, 109, 145
Practical Linked Data with Open Source (LITA), 73, 122
Practical Outreach: Best Practices for Engaging Your Community (conversation starter), 76, 129
Practice Makes Perfect: Updating Borrowing Policies and Practices at a
Small Academic Library (poster), 179
Pratt Institute (alumni reunion; LS), 52
preconference events
History Genealogy Preconference (RUSA, RUSA-HS), 122
How Business Librarians Support Entrepreneurs (RUSA, RUSABRASS), 72, 121
Library Tour: Las Vegas Libraries, Legends and Highrollers (LLAMA),
122
Reference Interview, The (RUSA, RUSA-RSS), 122
Serving the Homeless in the Academic and Public Library (LLAMABES), 70, 122
Tour of Public and Academic Libraries (LLAMA-BES), 123
Train the Trainer: Keeping Up and Staying Ahead of New Trends,
Standards, Services and Technologies (IRRT), 121
Preconference Program Planning—Oakland, 2015 Committee Meeting I/II
(ACRL-RBMS), 134, 135
Preparing for Candidates to Interview Use (poster), 181
Presentation Meeting of the Publications and Research Committee
Meeting (ACRL-ARTS), 129
Preservation Administrators Interest Group (ALCTS-PARS), 68, 127
Preservation and Reformatting Section (PARS). See under Association for
Library Collections and Technical Services (ALCTS)
Preserving Library Collections and Services. See Disaster Preparedness
presidential programs
AASL, 28, 91, 129
ACRL, 28, 67, 91, 129
ALA, 10, 55, 110, 145
ALCTS, 28, 114, 148
ALSC, 28, 66, 114, 149
ASCLA, 28, 65, 104, 141
LITA, 29, 73, 109, 145
LLAMA, 29, 91, 130
PLA, 14, 29, 106, 144
REFORMA, 129
RUSA, 29, 67, 98, 135
UNITED, 15, 29, 111, 148
YALSA, 29, 72, 116, 150
President’s Program Planning 2015 Committee (ACRL), 126
President’s Reception (ALA). See under receptions
PR Forum: Stories Matter—13 Tips and One Cautionary Note for
Powerful Narratives That Drive Social Impact (ALA), 66, 99, 138
Print Archive Network (PAN) & Looking to the Future of Shared Print
(UNO), 122
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
Index p
PAC. See Public Awareness Committee (PAC) Meeting (ALA)
Padlet. See Online Post-Its: Library Collaboration and Assessment Using
Padlet (ignite session)
Palestine. See Librarians and Archivists to Palestine (SRRT)
PAN. See Print Archive Network (PAN) & Looking to the Future of Shared
Print (UNO)
Panels
EBSCO Publishing (UN0), 150
Public Libraries and Digital Inclusion (ALA), 66, 103, 141
Parade of Bookmobiles (in conjunction with ALA Diversity & Outreach
Fair), 23, 27, 65, 134
Parents’ Night Out! (poster), 180
PARS. See under Association for Library Collections and Technical
Services (ALCTS)
Participants Meeting (PCC; UNO), 146
Partnerships, Pedagogy and Purpose. See PBL Way, The: Partnerships,
Pedagogy and Purpose (AASL)
Partners in Preservation: Documenting the Nation’s Oldest City (poster),
179
Pastis, Stephen (Timmy Failure; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 164
Past President’s Breakfast (PLA), 148
Past-President’s Luncheon (AASL), 131
Pathfinder Roleplaying Game (Cosmo Eisele and Pierce Watters; Graphic
Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 170
Patron-Driven Acquisition (PDA). See Implementing Patron-Driven
Acquisition (PDA) for Ebook Acquisition That Fits Your Library (poster)
Patron-Driven Acquisition—Is It Good for Video (poster), 180
pavilions. See exhibit hall/floor
PBA. See Planning & Budget Assembly (PBA; ALA)
PBL Way, The: Partnerships, Pedagogy and Purpose (AASL), 123
PCC. See Program for Cooperative Cataloging (PCC; UNO)
PCPAC. See Public and Cultural Programs Advisory Committee (PCPAC):
Advisory Committee Meeting I/II (ALA)
Penguin Donut Sketch-Off (UNO), 140
Penguin’s Book Buzz Casino (Book Buzz Theater), 16, 156
People Experiencing Homelessness: How Libraries Can be Community
Collaborators & Catalysts for Position Action (conversation starter), 77,
133
Performance Measurement Task Force Meeting (PLA), 148
Performing Vegas: Documenting Music and Stage in Sin City (AFL), 132
Personnel Administrators & Staff Development Discussion Group I/II
(ACRL), 70, 129, 140
Persuasion Techniques for the Influential Professional. See Advocating
Smarter: Powerful Persuasion Techniques for the Influential Professional
(Spectrum Institute; ALA)
Petit, Philippe (Auditorium Speaker Series; United for Libraries President’s
Program), 15, 29, 111, 148
Philosophical, Religious, & Theological Studies Discussion Group Meeting
(ACRL), 146
Photography Service (JobLIST Placement Center; ALA), 38
Physical Delivery Interest Group (ASCLA), 71, 141
Pick, Spin, Win: Recycling History with Archival Photographs (poster),
179
Pills and Starships (Lydia Millet; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 165
Pinterest and Digital Archives (conversation starter), 77, 140
PLA. See Public Library Association (PLA)
Placement Center (ALA). See JobLIST Placement Center (ALA)
PLAmetrics User Group and Demonstration (PLA), 122
Planning & Budget Assembly (PBA; ALA), 143
Planning Committees/Meetings
ACRL-LES, 147
LLAMA-NPS, 133
RUSA-MARS, 139
PLASC. See Public Library Archives/Special Collections Roundtable
Society of American Archivists (PLASC) Meeting (PLA)
Play, Baby, Play! (ignite session), 77, 131
Playing Nice with Other People’s Toys. See Care of Borrowed Special
Collections: Playing Nice with Other People’s Toys (ALCTS)
Play, Play, Learn: Games and the Common Core Library (AASL), 74, 115,
149
PLDS Advisory Committee Meeting (PLA), 141
269
p Index
270
Printz, Michael L. See Michael L. Printz (YALSA)
Priority Group Consultant Meeting (ALSC), 126
Privacy Subcommittee (IFC), 139
PRMS. See under Library Leadership and Management Association
(LLAMA)
Problem Assignments: An Opportunity for Faculty to Collaborate with
Librarians (poster), 181
Procrastination. See Get Writing! Overcome Procrastination, Remove
Roadblocks and Create a Map for Success (ACRL)
Products and Services Committee (RUSA-MARS), 128
Professional Development. See Making MOOCs Work for Work: A
Corporate Library Approach to Professional Development (poster)
Professional Development and Recruitment Committee (BCALA), 64, 129
Professional Development and Recruitment Committee Open Session
(BCALA), 140
Professional Development Committees
ACRL, 126
RUSA-MARS, 128
Professional Development Discussion Group. See Continuing Education/
Professional Development Discussion Group (ACRL)
Professional Education Needs in the 21st Century. See Grow Forward:
Professional Education Needs in the 21st Century (ALA)
Professionalism Is Killing the Profession (conversation starter), 77, 138
Professional Values Committee Meeting (ACRL), 142
Program Committees. See also Conference Program Planning
Committees
ALCTS, 127, 149
GODORT, 145
LLAMA, 124
program content areas, 62–75
Program for Cooperative Cataloging (PCC; UNO)
Participants Meeting, 146
Program Training, 124
Programming Librarian Interest Group Meeting (ALA), 66, 136
Program Planning Committee (LITA), 130
Program Planning Meeting (MAGIRT), 144
Program Poster Session (ACRL-STS), 74
Program Reviewer Training (NCATE/CAEP; AASL), 122
Program: The Accidental Map Librarian (MAGIRT), 68, 94
Program Training (PCC; UNO), 124
Project Connect Panel (AASL), 99, 135
Project MUSE User Group Breakfast (UNO), 126
Promoting Preservation Interest Group (ALCTS-PARS), 68, 141
Promoting Sustainability in Academic Libraries. See From the Ground Up:
Promoting Sustainability in Academic Libraries (poster)
Promotion, Advocacy, and Creative Funding Ideas for Rural or Tribal
Libraries (ALA), 65, 94, 132
Promotions & Fundraising Committee (ALA-APA), 134
Prompt Book Meeting I–III (ALA), 126, 147, 150
Pros and Cons of Coming in 3rd Place, The (AASL), 66, 99, 135
PR X-change (LLAMA-PRMS), 23, 66, 105, 142
Public and Cultural Programs Advisory Committee (PCPAC): Advisory
Committee Meeting I/II (ALA), 130, 149
Publications Committees
ACRL
ANSS, 131
LES, 147
STS, 127
GODORT, 135
LITA, 136
RUSA-MARS, 145, 146
Publications & Communications Committee Meeting (RUSA-BRASS), 136
Publications Coordinating Committee Meeting (ACRL), 138, 140
Publications in Librarianship Editorial Board Meeting (ACRL), 138
Public Awareness Committee (PAC) Meeting (ALA), 134
Public Libraries (Journal) Advisory Committee Meeting (PLA), 123
Public Libraries and Digital Inclusion. See under Panels
Public Libraries in a Post-Soviet State: Challenges and Opportunities
(poster), 180
Public Libraries Interest Group (LITA), 143
Public Libraries Technical Services Interest Group (ALCTS) with Dewey
Update Breakfast (OCLC; UNO), 126
Public Library Archives/Special Collections Roundtable Society of
American Archivists (PLASC) Meeting (PLA), 130
Public Library Association (PLA)
All Committees Meeting, 128
Annual Conference 2014 & 2015 Program Subcommittees Meeting,
128
Beyond Glitz and Glitter: Great Brands Start from Within, 67, 122
Board of Directors Meeting, 133
Boba Fett at the Circ Desk: Library Leadership from The Empire
Strikes Back, 69, 86, 128
Budget and Finance Committee Meeting, 128
Building a Learning Culture from the Inside Out, 69, 102, 141
Continuing Education Advisory Group Meeting, 130
Continuing Education for Libraries: A National Conversation, 75, 96,
135
Creating a Collaborative Culture, 69, 122
Data Driven Collections: Integrating Evidence into Your Collection
Maintenance and Development Procedures, 68, 102, 141
Every Child Ready to Eat: Nutrition Education for Families Using Early
Literacy Practices, 72, 108, 145
Every Child Ready to Read
ECRR 2.0: Using Apps and eBooks in Early Literacy Programs,
65, 93, 133
Oversight Committee Meeting, 130
Going beyond Job Search Help at Queens Library, 72, 100, 139
HIP Film Fest, The: How to Plan, Partner and Execute!, 72, 113–114,
148
Ideas and Practices in STEAM Learning, 72, 108, 145
Intellectual Freedom Committee Meeting, 128
Is That a Penguin on Your Desktop?, 73, 87, 128
Is the Public Library the New Education Institution of the Future?, 72,
89, 131
Leadership Development Committee Meeting, 123
Leaning Your Library’s Materials Handling Workflows, 69, 113, 148
Legislation and Advocacy Committee Meeting, 139
Leveraging National Data to Advocate Locally, 69, 103, 141
Membership Advisory Group Meeting, 128
More That Fun in the Sun! Building Collaborative Relationships and
Using Real Data to Increase Summer Learning, 66, 94, 133
Past President’s Breakfast, 148
Performance Measurement Task Force Meeting, 148
PLAmetrics User Group and Demonstration, 122
PLDS Advisory Committee Meeting, 141
President’s Program and Awards Presentation (Auditorium Speaker
Series), 14, 29, 106, 144
Public Libraries (Journal) Advisory Committee Meeting, 123
Public Library Archives/Special Collections Roundtable Society of
American Archivists (PLASC) Meeting, 130
Smart Marketing Using Big (or Little) Data, 66, 109, 145
Stepping into the Director Role: Preparing for the Part, 69, 122
Strategic Plan Is Dead, The; Long Live Strategy, 69, 90, 131
Technology Committee Meeting, 128
2014 and 2016 Conference Committee and Program Subcommittee
Meeting, 139
Unstaffed Library, The: Challenges and Opportunities, 73, 104, 141
We Got Your Back: Community Answers to the Digital Divide, 75, 141
Public Library Trustee Discussion Group (UNITED), 69, 128
Public Relations and Marketing Section (PRMS). See under Library
Leadership and Management Association (LLAMA)
Public Relations Best Practices. See Reach Out in a New Direction:
Applying Public Relations Best Practices to Academic Outreach (poster)
Public Service Directors of Large Research Libraries Discussion Group
(ACRL-ULS), 146
Publisher/Vendor/Library Relations Interest Group (ALCTS), 67, 136, 147
Puerto Rico and Colombia: Enhancing the Library to Empower
Communities in the Digital Age (poster), 181
Pura Belpré Award 20th Anniversary Celebration Task Force (ALSC;
REFORMA), 63, 139
Pura Belpré Celebraciòn. See 2014 Pura Belpré Award Celebraciòn
(ALSC)
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Q
Qatar. See Assemble Autonomatronic Arduino and Feel Fake Fur:
Innovative New Media and Materials Enhance the Curriculum in Qatar
(poster)
Queens Library. See Going beyond Job Search Help at Queens Library
(PLA)
QuestionPoint Users Group Meeting (OCLC; UNO), 142
Quick Picks for Reluctant Young Adult Readers (YALSA), 133, 144
Quiet Strengths of Introverts, The: President’s Program with Jennifer
Kahnweiler (ALCTS), 28, 114, 148
Quirky Books for Quirky Librarians (UNITED), 63, 135
R
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
Index r
“Race Is a Social Construct and Does Not Exist”: What Academic
Librarians Have to Say about Racism in the Professions (poster), 180
Rainbow Project Author Panel. See Amelia Bloomer Project and Rainbow
Project Author Panel (SRRT)
RA Marketing in the Age of Maker Spaces. See Turning Books into a
Cool New Tool: RA Marketing in the Age of Maker Spaces (RUSA, RUSA
CODES)
Random House
Book Buzz Theater, 16, 156
Librarians Fall Book Preview (UNO), 140
Rare and Endangered Government Publications Committee Meeting
(GODORT), 141
Rare Books and Manuscripts Section (RBMS). See under Association of
College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
RBM Editorial Board Meeting (ACRL), 138
RBMS. See under Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
RBMS Information Exchange. See Leab Awards & RBMS Information
Exchange I/II (ACRL-RBMS)
RDA. See Resource Description and Access (RDA; UNO)
Reach Out in a New Direction: Applying Public Relations Best Practices
to Academic Outreach (poster), 180
Reader’s Advisory. See Discovery: The New Name for Reader’s Advisory
(ALA)
READ-ing Our Way to Student Training Success (poster), 179
Reading with Pictures: Comics That Make Kids Smarter (Gene Yang, Jim
McClain, Tracy Edmunds, and Josh Elder; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage;
ALA), 168, 169
Real Leaders in a Virtual World: Tools and Strategies for Success
(ALCTS), 73, 95, 132
RE:BOOK Altered Book Contest. See Re-Purpose Your Event: How
the RE:BOOK Altered Book Contest Became a Signature Event at the
Claremont Colleges Library (poster)
Rebranding Librarianship—Building a Knowledge Alliance (ALA), 70, 103,
141
Rebranding the Library: Generating Visibility in the Virtual Age (LITA), 73,
113, 148
Rebranding Yourself for a Career Change/Transition into Information
Services (FAFLRT), 64, 106, 143
receptions
awards (See Awards Ceremonies/Presentations/Receptions)
Awards/President’s Reception (ALA), 55, 146
Emerging Leaders (ALA): Poster Session and Reception, 124
Exhibits Closing Reception (ALA), 155
IFRT, 131
International Librarians Reception (IRRT), 22, 150
Library Champions, ALA Advocates and Legacy Society Reception,
121
library schools (See Library School (LS) events: ALISE Cooperative
Library and Information Studies Alumni Reunion)
Michael L. Printz Program and Reception (YALSA), 37, 126
Midwest Library Service Reception (UNO), 146
Opening Reception (Spectrum Institute; ALA), 70, 121
Reception and Awards (ASCLA-COSLA), 136
Student Reception (NMRT), 147
Recording Conservation Actions. See MARC 583: The Journey to
Recording Conservation Actions (poster)
Recruiting and Mentoring Committee (ALCTS-CaMMS), 132
Recruitment Assembly (ALA), 69, 148
Recycling History. See Pick, Spin, Win: Recycling History with Archival
Photographs (poster)
Redefining Humans from the Past to the Future (LITA), 63, 99, 136
Reference and User Services Association (RUSA)
Access to Information Committee Meeting, 128, 148
AFL-CIO/ALA Joint Committee on Library Service to Labor Groups,
131
Andrew Carnegie Medals for Excellence in Fiction and Nonfiction, 37,
63, 138
Awards Reception and Volunteer Appreciation Party, 146
Board of Directors Meeting I/II, 133, 150
BRASS (Business Reference and Services Section)
Business Reference in Academic Libraries Committee Meeting,
135
Business Reference in Academic Libraries Forum, 72, 133
Business Reference in Public Libraries Committee Meeting, 136
Business Reference Services Discussion Group, 72, 139
Business Reference Sources Committee Meeting, 136
Business Reference Sources Committee Publishers’ Forum, 72,
144
Conference Program Planning Committee Meeting I/II, 131, 145
Core Competencies Ad Hoc Committee Meeting, 141
Education Committee Meeting, 136
Executive Committee
Meeting, 150
Planning Meeting, 128
Mad Men: The Business of Advertising (with RUSA), 72, 111, 147
New Committee Chair Orientation Meeting, 149
Preconference: How Business Librarians Support Entrepreneurs
(with RUSA), 72, 121
Publications & Communications Committee Meeting, 136
Budget and Finance Meeting, 141
Chairs Orientation (STARS, RSS, MARS, HS, CODES, BRASS), 149
Code4ILL: How to Grow Your Own Innovation for Resource Sharing
(with RUSA-STARS), 72, 92, 133
CODES (Collection Development and Evaluation Section)
Cooperative Collection Development Committee Meeting (with
RUSA-STARS), 144
Executive Committee, 149
Hot Topics Discussion Group, 131
Literary Tastes: Celebrating the Best Reading of the Year (with
RUSA), 63, 99, 138
Reference Publishing Advisory Committee, 141
Reference Publishing Discussion Forum, 68, 136
Sophie Brody Medal Committee, 123
Turning Books into a Cool New Tool: RA Marketing in the Age of
Maker Spaces (with RUSA), 63, 90, 131
Conference Program Coordinating Committee, 148
Creative Aging @ Your Library (with RUSA-RSS), 102, 141
Executive Committee, 124
Finding Dead People: Genealogy and Local History Resources for the
ILL Practitioner (with RUSA-STARS), 72, 96–97, 135
Guideline Development for Financial Literacy Education in Libraries,
70, 128
History Genealogy Preconference (with RUSA-HS), 122
HS (History Section)
All Committee Meeting and Open House, 128
Executive Committee Meeting, 148
Genealogy & Local History Discussion Group, 136
History Genealogy Preconference (with RUSA), 122
History Librarians Discussion Group, 133
Nevada Test Site Project, The: Bringing Primary Resources to
Researchers (with RUSA), 70, 109, 145
Tour of National Atomic Testing Museum, 124
Just Ask Task Force, 144
Labor Solidarity in a “Right-to-Work” State, 70, 113, 148
Literary Tastes: Celebrating the Best Reading of the Year (with RUSACODES), 63, 99, 138
Mad Men: The Business of Advertising (with RUSA-BRASS), 72, 111,
147
MARS (Machine-Assisted Reference Section)
All Committee Meeting, 128
Best Free Web Sites, 128
271
r Index
272
Conference Program Committee, 128
Executive Committee Meeting, 148
Hot Topics Discussion Group, 67, 144
Joint Executive Committee (with RUSA-RSS), 149
Libraries in the Course Management System: Best Practices and
New Directions, 67, 131
Local Systems and Services Committee, 128
New Directions for Data Visualization in Library Public Services
(with RUSA), 73, 94, 133
Nominating Committee, 135
Outreach Committee, 128
Planning Committee, 139
Products and Services Committee, 128
Professional Development Committee, 128
Publications Committee I/II, 145, 146
User Experience Design Committee, 128
Virtual Reference Discussion Group, 67, 141
Nevada Test Site Project, The: Bringing Primary Resources to
Researchers (with RUSA-HS), 70, 109, 145
New Directions for Data Visualization in Library Public Services (with
RUSA-MARS), 73, 94, 133
Notable Books Council, 126
Organization and Planning Committee Meeting, 145
Our Values, Ourselves: Examining Our Values and What Others Value
About Us (President’s Program), 29, 67, 98, 135
preconference events
How Business Librarians Support Entrepreneurs (with RUSABRASS), 72, 121
Reference Interview, The (with RUSA-RSS), 122
President’s Program: Our Values, Ourselves: Examining Our Values
and What Others Value About Us, 29, 67, 98, 135
RSS (Reference Services Section)
Board Meeting, 131
Community Needs, Reference, & Assessment in Job & Career
Reference: RSS Job & Career Reference Committee
Discussion Forum, 133
Creative Aging @ Your Library (with RUSA), 102, 141
Discovery Services Committee Meeting, 128
Discussing Discovery Services: What’s Working, What’s Not and
What’s Next?, 72, 145
Education & Professional Development for Reference Committee
Meeting, 128
Health and Medical Reference Committee Meeting, 128
Job & Career Reference Committee Meeting, 128
Joint Executive Committee (with RUSA-MARS), 149
Library Services to an Aging Population Committee Meeting I/II,
128, 135
Of *Course* It’s Due Tomorrow: What Is the Appropriate Level of
Homework Assistance in Libraries?, 141
Open House and All-Committee Meeting, 128
Preconference: The Reference Interview (with RUSA), 122
Reference Trends and Issues I/II, 72, 144, 148
Soft Sell, The: Sales Skills for Librarians, 75, 141
State of Reference Education: What We Have learned and What
Would You Like to Find Out, 149
20th Annual Reference Research Forum (with RUSA), 72, 141
Virtual Reference Tutorial Subcommittee Meeting, 128
Young Adult Reference Services Committee, 128
RUSA 101: Network, Get Oriented, Get Involved, 54, 64, 124
Smart Investing @Your Library®: Adding Value in Your Community,
72, 90
Standards & Guidelines Committee, 141
STARS (Sharing and Transforming Access to Resources Section)
All Committee Meeting, 128
Atlas Systems Mentoring Award Committee Meeting, 128
Board Meeting, 148
Boucher Award Committee Meeting, 128
Code4ILL: How to Grow Your Own Innovation for Resource
Sharing (with RUSA), 72, 92, 133
Codes, Guidelines, and Technical Standards Committee Meeting,
128
Consortial Borrowing Committee Meeting (with LLAMA-SASS),
145
Cooperative Collection Development Committee Meeting (with
RUSA-CODES), 144
Education and Training Committee Meeting, 128
Finding Dead People: Genealogy and Local History Resources for
the ILL Practitioner (with RUSA), 72, 96–97, 135
Hot Topics Discussion Group, 72, 136
ILL Discussion Group, 72, 131
Interlibrary Loan Committee Meeting, 128
International Interlibrary Loan Committee Meeting, 128
Leadership Orientation, 72, 100, 139
Legislation and Licensing Committee Meeting, 128
Membership Committee Meeting, 128
Organization Committee Meeting, 128
Research and Assessment Committee Meeting, 128
Rethinking Resource Sharing Policies Committee Meeting, 139
Vendor Relations Committee Meeting, 128
Turning Books into a Cool New Tool: RA Marketing in the Age of
Maker Spaces (with RUSA-CODES), 63, 90, 131
20th Annual Reference Research Forum (with RUSA-RSS), 72, 141
Reference Discussion Group (ACRL-LES), 140
Reference Interview, The (RUSA, RUSA-RSS), 122
Reference Publishing Advisory Committee (RUSA-CODES), 141
Reference Publishing Discussion Forum (RUSA-CODES), 68, 136
Reference Services Section (RSS). See under Reference and User
Services Association (RUSA)
Reference Trends and Issues I/II (RUSA-RSS), 72, 144, 148
ReferenceUSA. See Gala Author Tea Sponsored by ReferenceUSA
(UNITED)
REFORMA. See National Association to Promote Library & Information
Services to Latinos and the Spanish Speaking (REFORMA)
RefWorks. See Should Libraries Promote Citation Managers to
Undergraduates?: Tracking the Use of RefWorks by Undergraduate
Students (poster)
Rejuvenate Ebook Acquisitions! (poster), 179
Renovating/Redesigning to Serve a Multipurpose Library. See Nicaraguan
Library Partners with Award-Winning Designers and Rotary International:
Renovating/Redesigning to Serve a Multipurpose Library (poster)
Re-Purpose Your Event: How the RE:BOOK Altered Book Contest
Became a Signature Event at the Claremont Colleges Library (poster),
181
Research Agenda Task Force (ACRL-STS), 145
Research and Assessment Committee Meeting (RUSA-STARS), 128
Research and Planning Committee Meeting (ACRL-WESS), 136
Research and Publication Committee (ALCTS-CaMMS), 136
Research and Scholarly Environment Committee Meeting I/II (ACRL), 138,
140
Research Committee Meeting (ACRL-STS), 126
Research Committee Poster Forum (ACRL-EBSS), 134
Research Forums
Creativity and innovation (LRRT), 75, 102, 141
Data-Driven Decision-Making (LRRT), 71, 86, 128
Library and the City, The—Historical Perspectives (LHRT), 70, 109,
145
Science and Technology Library (ACRL-STS), 150
20th Annual Reference (RUSA-RSS), 72
Research Planning and Review Committee Meeting (ACRL), 138
Research Stories. See Student to Superhero: Freshmen Tell Their
Research Stories (poster)
Research Update (OCLC; UNO), 149
Residency Interest Group Meeting (ACRL), 70, 134
Resolutions Committee (ALA), 134
Resource Description and Access (RDA; UNO)
RDA Revision Group (DCRM; ACRL-RBMS), 123, 132, 134, 135,
138, 140, 149, 150
Taking the Journey Together: Implementing RDA for Digital Libraries
(poster), 179
What Is an RDA “Record”? (ALA), 101, 139
Resource Review and Bibliography Committee Meeting (ACRL-ANSS),
134
Resources for College Libraries Editorial Board Meeting (ACRL), 138
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
Résumé Review (Critiquing) Service (JobLIST Placement Center; ALA),
38, 129
Rethinking Resource Sharing Policies Committee Meeting (RUSASTARS), 139
Retired Members Round Table (RMRT; ALA)
Discover the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute: Where Mature Minds
Bloom, 148
Meeting, 131
Retirement Fundamentals: Are You Ready to Retire?, 64, 97, 134
Retiree SIG Meeting (AASL), 142
Retirement
Consulting after Retirement: Is It Right for You? (ASCLA), 64, 88, 130
Retiree SIG Meeting (AASL), 142
Retirement Fundamentals: Are You Ready to Retire? (RMRT), 64, 97, 134
reunions, 57. See also specific colleges and universities
Review and Planning Committee (ACRL-ANSS), 140
Revisiting Discovery for Public Library Patrons (EBSCO Publishing; UNO),
131
Rhyme Schemer (Poetry Blast; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 165
ribbon cutting. See Opening General Session (ALA)
RIPM Focus Group—sponsored by EBSCO (UNO), 131
Ripple Effect. See Charlemae Rollins President’s Program: The Ripple
Effect: Library Partnerships That Positively Impact Children, Families,
Communities, and Beyond (ALSC)
RMRT. See Retired Members Round Table (RMRT; ALA)
RNTLOAK. See Rural, Native, and Tribal Libraries of All Kinds Committee
(RNTLOAK)
Road Home Shelter Outreach Project. See Taking Our Show on the
Road: Salt Lake County Library Services’ Road Home Shelter Outreach
Project (poster)
Rodriguez, Jason (Teaching with Comics; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage;
ALA), 168
Role and Limitations of Social Media as an Information Source in the
Middle East, The (ALA), 22, 109, 143
Role of Libraries in Data Management and Curation, The (LITA), 73, 104,
141
Role of the Professional in Technical Services Interest Group (ALCTS), 70,
130
Roman, Dave (Comics Bakery; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168,
170
Round Table Coordinating Assembly (ALA), 122
round tables. See specific roundtables
RSS. See under Reference and User Services Association (RUSA)
Rural, Native, and Tribal Libraries of All Kinds Committee (RNTLOAK), 143
Rural or Tribal Libraries. See Promotion, Advocacy, and Creative Funding
Ideas for Rural or Tribal Libraries (ALA)
RUSA. See Reference and User Services Association (RUSA)
RUSA 101: Network, Get Oriented, Get Involved, 54, 64, 124
Rusty Reels & Fragile Floppies: Surveying Audiovisual and Digital
Materials in Special Collections (poster), 179
Rutgers University (alumni reunion; LS), 52
Rutherford B., Who Was He? (Poetry Blast; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163,
165
Ryan, Hank Phillippi (Seedy Criminal Underbellies; PopTop Stage; ALA),
163, 165
S
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
Index s
SAC. See Subject Analysis Committee (SAC; ALCTS-CaMMS)
Safety and Security Discussion Group (LLAMA-BES), 139
Salaries & Status of Library Workers (ALA-APA), 146
Sales Skills for Librarians. See Soft Sell, The: Sales Skills for Librarians
(RUSA-RSS)
Salt Lake County Library Services. See Taking Our Show on the Road:
Salt Lake County Library Services’ Road Home Shelter Outreach Project
(poster)
SASS. See under Library Leadership and Management Association
(LLAMA)
Saturday Author Luncheon Featuring Josh Hanagarne (Bookmobile
Saturday; OLOS), 27
Say-It-in-Six Lightning Rounds: Case Studies on Using Data to Improve
Library Services (LLAMA-MAES), 71, 112, 148
Scandinavian Discussion Group (ACRL-WESS), 146
Scar Boys, The (Len Vlahos; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 164
Schneider Family Book Award Luncheon (ALA), 149
Scholarly Communication Discussion Group (ACRL), 144
Scholarly Communication Road Show Presenters (ACRL), 124
Scholarly Communications Committee Meeting (ACRL-STS), 127
Scholarly Communications Interest Group (ALCTS), 67, 132
Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition (SPARC): ACRL/
SPARC Forum, 134
Scholarship
ALA Scholarship Award Winners’ Breakfast (EBSCO Publishing;
UNO), 140
E. J. Josey Scholarship Committee (BCALA), 123
Forum for Research and Scholarship in African American Studies
(ACRL-AFAS), 135
Maximize Your Professional Time: Strategies to Cultivate a Habit of
Scholarship (ACRL), 123
Scholarships & Study Grants Committee (ALA), 139
Turn Your Intentions into Results: Strategies to Improve Productivity and
Cultivate a Habit of Scholarship (ACRL), 123
Scholarships & Study Grants Committee (ALA), 139
Scholastic (Book Buzz Theater), 16, 156
School/Public Library Cooperation (AASL, ALSC, YALSA), 146
Schumacher, Geoff (LVCC Mob Panel; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163
Science and Technology Library Research Forum (ACRL-STS), 143
Science and Technology Section (STS). See under Association of College
and Research Libraries (ACRL)
Science-Based Programming. See “S.T.E.M.”-ulating Young Minds:
Creating Science-Based Programming @ Your Library (poster)
Science + Form = Function: The Impact of Neuroscience on Architecture
and Design (ACRL-CLS), 70, 95, 131
Science Resources: Discovery & Access Committee (ACRL-STS), 127
Sci Fi for Librarians Who Don’t Like Sci Fi (YALSA), 63, 87, 129
Search Engine Optimization Interest Group (LITA), 141
Seaver, Barton (What’s Cooking @ ALA Stage), 163
Secret Shopping @ Your Library (ignite session), 76, 131
Secrets of the Terra-Cotta Soldier (Ying Chang Compestine; What’s
Cooking @ ALA Stage), 163, 162
Section Membership Committee Meeting (ACRL), 134
Security Committee I/II (ACRL-RBMS), 126, 129
Seedy Criminal Underbellies (Deborah Coonts and Hank Phillippi Ryan;
PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 165
Seegert, Alf (Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168
SEES. See under Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
Selection Committee Chair Leadership Development (YALSA), 129
Seminars Committee I/II (ACRL-RBMS), 132
Serving the Homeless in the Academic and Public Library (LLAMA-BES),
70, 122
Setting New Standard for Openness—The Alma Developer Network
(UNO), 142
Settlers of Catan (Mayfair Games; Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA),
168
Set-up Room for Coretta Scott King Book Awards Breakfast (EMIERT),
126
75th Anniversary Celebration Task Force (ACRL)
Component Committees, 129
Meeting, 126
Sex and Gender Differences in Health. See Transforming Biomedical
Research and Practice: Promoting Research and Awareness of Sex and
Gender Differences in Health (poster)
Shabazz, Ilyasah (Auditorium Speaker Series), 14, 55, 140
Sharing and Transforming Access to Resources Section (STARS). See
under Reference and User Services Association (RUSA)
Should Libraries Promote Citation Managers to Undergraduates?:
Tracking the Use of RefWorks by Undergraduate Students (poster), 180
shuttle bus service, 36–37
Sibert Award Committee. See 2015 Sibert Award Committee Meeting I–III
(ALSC)
Simon & Schuster (Book Buzz Theater), 16, 156
Sin and Vice in Special Collections: Working with Provocative Primary
Sources (ACRL-RBMS), 143
Singapore Libraries—Trend Setters in Community Engagement and
Collaboration (ALA), 22, 75, 113, 148
273
s Index
274
Singer, Marilyn (Poetry Blast; PopTop Stage; ALA), 165
Six Sisters (What’s Cooking @ ALA Stage), 163, 162
16 Acres (Now Showing @ ALA), 19, 144
Slattery, Brian Francis (The Family Hightower; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163,
165
Slavic and Eastern European Section (SEES). See under Association of
College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
Small Press/Product Area (pavilion), 157
SMART Enough to Collaborate (ignite session), 78, 142
Smart Investing @Your Library®: Adding Value in Your Community
(RUSA), 72, 90
Smart Marketing Using Big (or Little) Data (PLA), 66, 109, 145
Smith, Alexander. See McCall Smith, Alexander (Auditorium Speaker
Series)
smoking policy, 35
Social Responsibilities Round Table (SRRT; ALA)
Accessible eBooks: Ensuring That Your Library’s eContent Is
Universally Accessible to All (with ASCLA), 68, 85, 127
Action Council Meeting I/II, 128, 145
All Task Force Meeting, 126
Amelia Bloomer Project and Rainbow Project Author Panel, 63, 128
Feminists’ Night at the Movies, 65, 111, 147
Feminist Task Force, 124
Hunger, Homelessness and Poverty Task Force, 126
Intellectual Freedom in the Surveillance State, 73, 97, 135
International Responsibilities Task Force, 126
Librarians and Archivists to Palestine, 66, 133
Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday
Multicultural Exchange, 66, 104, 141
Task Force, 126
Membership Meeting and Dinner, 138
Socials
AASL-ISS, 124
ACRL-ANSS, 75, 124
ACRL-WGSS, 75, 138
GLBTRT, 146
Mentoring (NMRT), 124
Social Sciences and History and College and Medium-Sized Libraries
Discussion Group (ACRL-WESS), 145
Social Sciences Library Instruction. See What’s the Problem? Student
Centered Learning in Social Sciences Library Instruction (poster)
Social Work/Social Welfare Committee Meeting (ACRL-EBSS), 138
Sociology Librarians Discussion Group (ACRL-ANSS), 74, 129
Soft Sell, The: Sales Skills for Librarians (RUSA-RSS), 75, 141
Soiree (ACRL-IS), 74, 136
So Long, Drive-By Storytimes: Hello, Focus and Impact (ALSC), 71, 104,
141
Something to Talk About: Creating Dialogue and Transforming Viewpoints
through Library and Community Collaboration (poster), 181
Somewhere There’s a PLACE for Us: Linking Fedora Digital Collections
and Open Geoportal (poster), 179
Soon to be Famous Illinois Author Needs to Cross State Lines (ignite
session), 79, 149
Sophie Brody Medal Committee (RUSA-CODES), 123
Southeast Asia. See Library Best Practices: Fresh Innovations from
Southeast Asia (poster)
So You think You Are Information Literate?: Assessing Pre-Service
Teachers Information Literacy (poster), 180
Space Design in an Urban Academic Library. See Learning Theater, The:
Radical Space Design in an Urban Academic Library (ignite session)
Space Planning Primer (LLAMA-BES), 70, 101, 139
SPARC. See Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition
(SPARC): ACRL/SPARC Forum
Speaker, The (Now Showing @ ALA), 19, 20, 141, 147
speaker series. See Auditorium Speaker Series (ALA)
Speaking about The Speaker (ALA), 65, 115, 149
special events area, 23
special needs information, 36
specialty pavilions, 157
Spectrum Institute (ALA)
Advocating Smarter: Powerful Persuasion Techniques for the
Influential Professional, 17, 64, 122
Branching Out: Adventures in Non-Traditional Libraries and New
Emerging Roles, 17, 64, 124
Branding You! Matching Your Brand to Your Career Plan, 17, 64, 122
Breakfast, 17, 121
Closing Luncheon, 17, 142
Defining Diversity through Dialogue, 17, 64, 121
Icebreaker & Introductions, 17, 64, 121
Lunch, 123
Opening Reception, 70, 121
sponsors (ALA), 50
Springer Innovations for Academic Libraries Lunch and Learn Session
(UNO), 131, 142, 149
Sprouting Green Librarians Among the Weeds (poster), 181
SPVS. See under American Association of School Librarians (AASL)
SRRT. See Social Responsibilities Round Table (SRRT; ALA)
Standard Citations Forms Working Group of the Bibliographic Standards
Committee I/II (ACRL-RBMS), 134, 135
Standards Committee Meeting (ACRL), 142
Standards & Guidelines Committee (RUSA), 141
Standards Presenter Team (ACRL), 126
Stand Up and Shout (conversation starter), 78, 144
Stanley, Kelli (Women in Mystery; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 164
STARS. See under Reference and User Services Association (RUSA)
State and Local Documents Task Force (GODORT), 136
State Librarians Breakfast (UNO), 126
State of Reference Education: What We Have learned and What Would
You Like to Find Out? (RUSA), 149
Statistics and Reports: Data-Driven Decision-Making (ALCTS, ALCTSAS), 73, 122
Staying Afloat with RDA: Implementation Strategies and Tips for Midsized Academic Libraries (poster), 179
Steering Committees
CIFNAL (UNO), 128
Emerging Leaders Interest Group, 143
GODORT, 123, 150
LIRT, 127, 148
LSSIRT (with Membership Meeting), 128
“S.T.E.M.”-ulating Young Minds: Creating Science-Based Programming @
Your Library (poster), 180
Stepping into the Director Role: Preparing for the Part (PLA), 69, 122
Stepping Up: Providing Effective Library and Information Services,
Programs and Resources to Students with Disabilities (AASL), 74, 109,
144
Sterling (Book Buzz Theater), 16, 156
Sticking with STEM: How the Academic Library Can Help to Retain
Successful Students (ACRL, ACRL-STS), 74, 112, 147
St. James, Morgan (LVCC Mob Panel; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163
Stonewall Book Awards Brunch (GLBTRT), 63, 148
Stop Dreaming and Do It! Best Practices for Gaining Momentum,
Developing and Maintaining a Successful Residency Program (ACRL), 70,
106–107, 142
Stories from the Field—The American Dream Starts @ Your Library (ALA),
71, 107, 143
Stories Matter. See PR Forum: Stories Matter—13 Tips and One
Cautionary Note for Powerful Narratives That Drive Social Impact (ALA)
Storytime: Not Just Reading Out Loud (conversation starter), 76, 126
Stranger Than Fiction: Reader’s Advisory for Nonfiction (YALSA), 63, 116,
150
Strategic Plan Is Dead, The; Long Live Strategy (PLA), 69, 90, 131
Streaming Media Passes the Tipping Point: Now What? (ALCTS, ALCTSAS), 71, 122
STS. See under Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)
Student Centered Learning. See What’s the Problem? Student Centered
Learning in Social Sciences Library Instruction (poster)
Student Learning and Information Literacy (ACRL)
Component Committees Meeting, 142
Coordinating Committee Meeting I/II, 129, 144, 146
Student Learning Outcomes Committee (GWLA; UNO), 144
Student Reception (NMRT), 147
Student Retention Discussion Group (ACRL), 74, 134
2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n • w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g
T
Taiga Forum Meeting (UNO), 124
Tailor It to Their Needs and They Will Come: Designing Information
Literacy Instruction for Large Class Settings (poster), 180
Taking Action: Linked Data for Digital Collection Managers (LITA), 73, 95,
133
Taking Our Show on the Road: Salt Lake County Library Services’ Road
Home Shelter Outreach Project (poster), 181
Taking the Journey Together: Implementing RDA for Digital Libraries
(poster), 179
Tale of Two Classes, A: Embedded Librarianship vs. the One-Shot
(poster), 180
Tales of a 6th Grade Vampire (Marissa Moss; PopTop Stage; ALA), 163
Tan, Cheryl Lu-Lien (International Crime Fiction; PopTop Stage; ALA),
163, 164
Targeting Grad Students: Creating a Web Guide for Thesis Writers in the
Construction Industry Fields (poster), 180
Task Force to Review Competencies for Special Collections Professionals
(ACRL-RBMS), 138
Task Force to Review Guidelines on the Selection of General Collection
Materials for Transfer to Special Collections (ACRL-RBMS), 140
TBD3 (UNO), 146
“TC Reads!” Breathing New Life into Book Program (AASL), 74, 96, 134
Teaching Digital Citizenship to Youth with Autism Spectrum Disorders
(AASL), 74, 116, 150
Teaching Information Literacy Through Graphic Novels and Animation
(poster), 181
Teaching Teens How to Fail: Library Spaces and the Maker Movement
(YALSA), 72, 95, 133
Teach Me SUCCESS: Teaching Success and Strong Character through
Characters Kids Love (AASL), 74, 115, 149
Team Panel for Scowler (Daniel Kraus, Kelly Gildea, and Kirby Heyborne;
PopTop Stage; ALA), 163, 165
Technical Report Archive & Image Library (TRAIL). See TRAIL information
and Updates (UNO)
Technical Services Collaboration through Technology (ALCTS-AS), 73,
95, 132
Technical Services Directors of Large Research Libraries Interest Group
(ALCTS), 67, 122
Technical Services Discussion Group (ACRL-RBMS), 140
Technical Services Interest Group Meeting (ACRL), 75, 135
Technical Services Managers in Academic Libraries Interest Group
(ALCTS), 70, 127
Technical Services Workflow Efficiency Interest Group (ALCTS), 70, 149
Technology and Access Committee (LITA), 130
Technology Committee Meeting (PLA), 128
Technology/Library 2.0 Pavilion, 157
Technology Priorities for the New Library Reality (LITA), 73, 97, 135
TEDx: An Independently Hosted Event at Your Library (ALA), 123
Teen Reading Lounge: Engaging Teens through Interactive Humanities
Based Programming (ASCLA), 71, 97, 135
Teen Spaces 201: What’s Next for Teen Spaces in Libraries (YALSA), 70,
113, 149
Teens, Turntables, and Tater-Tots: Lunchroom Outreach with CLP—BAM!
(Books and More) (YALSA), 97, 135
Telecom Subcommittee (COL; ALA), 132
Telgemeier, Raina (Graphic Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 170
Temporary Staffing Solutions for Libraries: A Consortial Approach in
Massachusetts (ASCLA), 70, 99, 136
Tenure
Making Tenure: A Model for Collaborative Publishing (ACRL), 70, 90,
129
Tenure-Track Support Systems: Perceptions of Academic Librarians
(ACRL), 70, 109, 144
Texzines. See Deep in the Heart of Texzines (poster)
That Was Great, Now What? (LEARNRT), 74, 104, 141
The DataONE Toolkit for Librarians (poster), 179
The World Is at Our Doorstep. Are We Inviting Them In? Assessing Library
Services to International Students (poster), 180
Think Fit (ALA), 26, 37, 138
3D Printers and Library Policies (UNITED), 69, 92, 133
3D Printing at the Reference Desk & Library Makerspaces without the
Space (LITA), 70, 92, 133
Thriving When Things Go Wrong. See We F’ed Up, But We Fixed It:
Thriving When Things Go Wrong (YALSA)
Time to Reskill: An Action Plan for Literacy (ALA), 65, 98, 134
Timmy Failure (Stephen Pastis and Teri Lesesne; PopTop Stage; ALA),
163, 164
Tips for a Successful ALA Conference (NMRT), 53
To Display or Not to Display: The Question of Juvenile Literature Displays
in an Academic Library (poster), 181
TOLD. See Training, Orientation, and Leadership Development (TOLD)
Committee (ALA)
Tomasi, Peter (What Does It Take to Create a New Comic Book?; Graphic
Novel/Gaming Stage; ALA), 168, 170
w w w. A L A a n n u a l . o r g • 2 0 1 4 A L A A n n u a l C o n f e r e n c e & E x h i b i t i o n
Index t
Student SIG Meeting (AASL), 145
Student to Superhero: Freshmen Tell Their Research Stories (poster), 180
Study Habits of Distance Education Students. See In Their Own Voices:
The Study Habits of Distance Education Students (poster)
Study: Psychology Researchers’ Citing Behavior for Collection
Development (poster), 179
Subcommittee Meetings
AL21C (OITP), 124
Copyright (COL; ALA), 136
Copyright (OITP), 124
E-Government (COL; ALA), 134
Emerging Leaders (ALA), 140
Government Information (COL; ALA), 139
Grassroots (COL; ALA), 132, 139
Privacy (IFC), 139
RDA Subcommittee (SAC; ALCTS-CaMMS), 124
Subgroup Meeting (DCWG; ALA), 136, 140, 145
Subject Analysis Committee (SAC; ALCTS-CaMMS)
Meeting I/II, 139, 149
RDA Subcommittee, 124
Subcommittee on Genre/Form Implementation I/II, 132, 148
Subcommittee on Genre/Form LCGFT Literature Terms, 127
Subject and Bibliographic Access Committee Meeting (ACRL-ANSS), 129
Successful Outreach: Celebrating 5 Years of Preservation Week (ALCTSPARS), 71, 107, 143
Successful Systems Integration. See From Discovery to Delivery:
Successful Systems Integration (poster)
Summer Learning. See More That Fun in the Sun! Building Collaborative
Relationships and Using Real Data to Increase Summer Learning (PLA)
Summit View Juvenile Correctional Center Library (tour; ASCLA), 71, 147
Superfood Juices (Julie Morris; What’s Cooking @ ALA Stage), 163, 162
Superheroes Employment Agency, The (Poetry Blast; PopTop Stage;
ALA), 165
Supervisors Section (SPVS). See under American Association of School
Librarians (AASL)
Supporting Community Transformation: Becoming a Community
Engaged Academic Library (ACRL-ANSS, ACRL-EBSS), 66, 95, 131
Supporting Users and Each Other. See CAREful Change: Supporting
Users and Each Other through Times of Significant Change (poster)
Surveillance
Information Manipulation Part II: Surveillance (ALA), 111
Intellectual Freedom in the Surveillance State (SRRT), 73, 97
Meeting (ACRL), 71, 107, 142
Surveying Audiovisual and Digital Materials. See Rusty Reels & Fragile
Floppies: Surveying Audiovisual and Digital Materials in Special
Collections (poster)
Sustainability Round Table (SUSTAINRT; ALA)
Board Meeting, 133
Lightning Rounds: Sustainability at Your Library, 72, 106, 144
Sustaining an Information Literacy Instruction Program. See Know When
to Hold ‘em, Know When to Scaf-fold ‘em: The Case of Sustaining an
Information Literacy Instruction Program at Cascadia Community College
(poster)
SUSTAINRT. See Sustainability Round Table (SUSTAINRT; ALA)
Sycamore Things: A Visual Literacy Game (poster), 181
Symposium (OCLC; UNO), 129
Syracuse University (alumni reunion; LS), 52
Systems and Services Section (SASS). See under Library Leadership and
Management Association (LLAMA)
275
t Index
276
Top Library Building Trends (LLAMA-BES), 70, 115, 149
Top Technology Trends (LITA), 73, 107, 143
Top Technology Trends Committee (LITA), 130
Tor (Book Buzz Theater), 16, 156
To Tweet or Not to Tweet? (poster), 181
Tours
AASL-ISS, 121
Facility Tour of Summit View Juvenile Correctional Center Library
(ASCLA), 71, 147
Library Tour: Las Vegas Libraries, Legends and Highrollers (LLAMA),
122
Tour of National Atomic Testing Museum (RUSA-HS), 124
Tour of Public and Academic Libraries (LLAMA-BES), 123
TRAIL Information and Updates (UNO), 145
Training, Orientation, and Leadership Development (TOLD) Committee
(ALA), 122
Training Showcase (LEARNRT), 75, 144
Training Students and Volunteers. See Work Smarter, Not Harder: Training
Students and Volunteers to Provide Professional-Level Metadata for
Digital Collections (poster)
Train the Trainer: Keeping Up and Staying Ahead of New Trends,
Standards, Services and Technologies (Preconference; IRRT), 121
Transactional Leadership. See Managing Against Change: Transactional
Leadership and the Experienced Library Leader (poster)
Transformational Leadership. See Lead and Inspire: The Effect of
Transformational Leadership on Organizational Outcomes (poster)
Transforming Biomedical Research and Practice: Promoting Research
and Awareness of Sex and Gender Differences in Health (poster), 181
Transforming Collections Task Force (ALCTS), 124
Transforming Libraries (content area)
Community Relationships, 62, 66
Customer/User Expectations, 62, 67
E-Books & Collections, 62, 67–68
Library Leadership Expectations, 62, 69
Library Workforce, 62, 70
Services, 62, 71–72
Space—Physical and Virtual, 62, 70
Systems and Technology, 62, 73
Teaching & Learning, 62, 74–75
Transforming the Academic Library. See Going Analog & Getting Artsy:
Transforming the Academic Library through Creative Programming
(poster)
Tribes and Scribes: A Double Feature Highlighting Native American and
WPA Historical Research (GODORT), 74, 116, 149
TumblarianTalk (conversation starter), 78–79, 148
Turning Books into a Cool New Tool: RA Marketing in the Age of Maker
Spaces (RUSA, RUSA CODES), 63, 90, 131
Turning Outward to Lead Change in Your Community (ALA)
Aspirations, 66, 88, 127
Intentionality, 66, 101, 139
Sustaining Yourself, 66, 107, 143
Turn Quiz, 66, 95m132
Turn Your Intentions into Results: Strategies to Improve Productivity and
Cultivate a Habit of Scholarship (ACRL), 123
20th Annual Reference Research Forum (RUSA, RUSA-RSS), 72, 141
21st Century Teens: Literacy in a Digital World (YALSA), 122
2014 Alex Awards, The (YALSA), 63, 104, 142
2014 Awards Presentation (ALSC), 63, 147
2014 Congressional Election and Its Impact on Libraries. See under
Washington Office (WO; ALA)
2014 Membership Meeting (ALSC), 148
2014 Newbery-Caldecott Awards Banquet (ALSC), 37, 63, 146
2014 Pura Belpré Award Celebraciòn (ALSC), 63, 143
2014 and 2016 Conference Committee and Program Subcommittee
Meeting (PLA), 139
2015 Alex Awards (YALSA), 133, 144
2015 Award/Notable Chair Orientation (ALSC), 124
2015 Batchelder Award Committee Meeting I/II (ALSC), 136, 146
2015 Belpré Award Committee Meeting I/II (ALSC), 136, 139
2015 Caldecott Award Committee Meeting I/II (ALSC), 127, 139
2015 Component Committees Meeting I/II (ACRL), 147, 148
2015 Contributed Paper Committees (ACRL), 147
2015 Coordinating Committee Meeting (ACRL), 142
2015 Excellence in Nonfiction (YALSA), 133
2015 Geisel Award Committee Meeting I–III (ALSC), 127, 136, 146
2015 Jury Meeting (Coretta Scott King Book Awards; EMIERT), 136
2015 Michael L. Printz Committee (YALSA), 133, 144
2015 Newbery Award Committee Meeting I/II (ALSC), 132
2015 Nominating Committee I/II (ALSC), 132, 141
2015 Notable Children’s Books Committee Meeting I–IV (ALSC), 130,
132, 143, 149
2015 Notable Children’s Recordings Committee Meeting I/II (ALSC), 132,
143
2015 Odyssey Committee (YALSA), 133, 140
2015 Panel Sessions Committee (ACRL), 147
2015 Sibert Award Committee Meeting I–III (ALSC), 130, 136, 139
2015 Wilder Award Committee Meeting (ALSC), 127
2015 William C. Morris Award Committee (YALSA), 133
2015 Workshops Committee (ACRL), 147
U
UFL. See United for Libraries (UNITED)
UIUC GSLIS LSAA Meeting and Reception. See University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign Graduate School of Library and Information Science
Library School Alumni Association and Reception (alumni reunion; LS)
Ulinich, An